Academic Impact of Public-Facing Work

I’m deeply committed to public sociology, to speaking to the needs, priorities and concerns of citizens and policymakers, and to ensuring my work is impactful not only within the Ivory Tower but beyond.

However, these efforts are mutually-reinforcing. As detailed below, my public-facing work is regularly cited in academic research, and I frequently do talks at universities nationwide on my public-facing work.

Citations in Books, Journals, White Papers, etc.

Why Don’t Some People Want to Get the Vaccine? Here’s Why” cited in:

Abu Bakr, Raida et al. (2023). “Pandemic Around the World: The New Norm.” Effects of the Covid-19 Pandemic on Employee Well-Being (pp. 1-12). Gateway East, SG: Springer Nature Singapore Ltd.

White Men Swung to Biden. Trump Made Gains with Black and Latino Voters. Why?” cited in:

Hsu, V. Jo. “Irreducible Damage: The Affective Drift of Race, Gender, and Disability in Anti-Trans Rhetorics.” Rhetoric Society Quarterly 52(1): 62-7.

Noland, Marcus & Eva Yiwen Zhang. “COVID-19 and the 2020 U.S. Presidential Election.” Peterson Institute for International Economics, March 2021 (see notes 18 and 19).

Shams, Tasheen. “The Immigrant Threat Narrative and the Politics of Resentment.” Contemporary Sociology: A Journal of Reviews 51(1): 1-5.

Bisom-Rapp, Susan (2022). “The Role of Law and Myth in Creating a Workplace that ‘Looks Like America.’” Berkeley Journal of Unemployment and Labor Law 43(2): 251-306.

Cox, William. “Developing Scientifically Validated Bias and Diversity Training that Work: Empowering Agents of Change to Reduce Bias, Create Inclusion, and Promote Equity.” Management Decision. DOI: 10.1108/MD-06-2021-0839.

Honeycutt, Nathan & Lee Jussim. “Political Bias in the Social Sciences: A Critical, Theoretical and Empirical Review.” Ideological and Political Bias in Psychology: Nature, Scope and Solutions. Springer, 2022.

Kroneberg, Clemens. “Ethnic Diversity, Social Networks and the Social Resilience of Schools.” A Research Agenda for Social Networks and Social Resilience (pp. 73-86). Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar Publishing.

McKibbin, Molly. “The Current State of (Trans)Racial Discourse.” Rethinking Rachel Dolezal and Transracial Theory (pp. 1-51, see note 20). Springer, 2021.

Olt, Philip. “Developing Social Empathy With Higher Education.” The Proper Role of Higher Education in a Democratic Society. IGI Global, 2021 (see p. 12).

Paul, James & Robert Maranto. “Elite Schools Lead: An Empirical Examination of Diversity Requirements in Higher Education Job Markets.” Studies in Higher Education.

Williams, Joanna. Rethinking Race: A Critique of Contemporary Antiracism Programs. London, UK: Civitas (see pp. 56, 66, 69).

Cable news profits from its obsession with Trump. Viewers are the only victims” cited in:

DiMaggio, Anthony. “The Enablers — ‘Liberal’ Democratic Institutions and Neofascistic Politics.” Rising Fascism in America. Routledge, 2021. (See note 67)

Police Punish the ‘Good Apples’” cited in:

Harris, David et al. (2021). Forming a San Francisco Truth Commission: An Overview of Anti-Black Police Violence in San Francisco. Berkeley International Human Rights Law Clinic. See note 484.

LoMonte, Frank & Jessica Terkovich. “You Have a Duty to Remain Silent: How Workplace Gag Rules Frustrate Police Accountability.” Akron Law Review 55(1). See note 215.

Moosa, Imad (2023). “Western Exceptionalism: The Rule of Law, Judicial Independence and Transparency.” The West Versus the Rest and the Myth of Western Exceptionalism. New York, NY: Palgrave Macmillan (see p. 130).

Todak, Natalie w/ Lindsay Leban & Benjamin Hixon. “Are Women Opting Out? A Mixed Methods Study of Women Patrol Officers’ Promotional Aspirations.” Feminist Criminology. DOI: 10.1177/15570851211004749

Amy Cooper: The Paradox of the Shameless White Liberal” cited in:

Ng, Eddy & Andrew Lam. “Black Lives Matter: On the Denial of Systemic Racism, White Liberals and Polite Racism.” Equality, Diversity and Inclusion 39(7): 729-739 (see pp. 731-2).

Who Gets to Decide What’s Racist?” cited in:

Campbell, Bradley. “Social Justice and Sociological Theory.” Society 58: 355-364.

Fleras, Augie (2023). A Reckoning with Racism: Changing the Conversation. Leiden, NL: Brill (see p. 150).

Kaufmann, Eric. “The Social Construction of Racism in the United States.” Manhattan Institute, 7 April 2021.

Williams, Thaddeus. Confronting Injustice Without Compromising Truth. Zondervan Academic (see chapter 8).

Yu, Liya (2022). Vulnerable Minds: The Neuropolitics of Divided Societies. New York, NY: Columbia University Press (see p. 150).

Universities Run on Disposable Scholars” cited in:

Herlihy-Mera, Jeffrey (2022). Decolonizing American Spanish: Eurocentrism and the Limits of Foreignness in the Imperial Ecosystem. Pittsburgh, PA: University of Pittsburgh Press (see ch. 5).

Hirschfeldt, Denis (2021). “Turning Coffee into Unions: Mathematicians and Collective Bargaining.” A Conversation on Professional Norms in Mathematics. American Mathematical Society (see note 1).

Hollowell, Adam & N. Joyce Payne (2023). “COVID-19, Higher Education and Social Inequality.” The Pandemic Divide: How COVID Increased Inequality in America (pp. 261-262). Durham, NC: Duke University Press.

Wilson, Rebekah et al. (2022). “Academic Casualization, Precarity, and Information Practices: A Scoping Review.” Proceedings of the Association for Information Science and Technology 59(1): 833-836.

Wilson, Sarah & C. Veronica Smith. “Contingent Faculty Performing Scholarship and Service: Examining Academic Labor and Identity at a Public Flagship University.” Academic Labor: Research & Artistry 5(1): 168-196.

Disposable People” cited in:

Brayton, Sean. “The Workplace Comedy and Pandemic Politics in Greg Daniels’ Upload.” Studies in Media and Communication 9(1): 19-29.

ibid. (2021). “Hallmark Whiteness and the Paradox of Racial Tokenism.” Studies in Popular Culture 43(2): 24-47.

Saad-Filho, Alfredo. “A Neoliberal Health Crisis.” The Age of Crisis : Neoliberalism, the Collapse of Democracy and the Pandemic. Springer, 2021 (pp. 59-74).

Potholes in the Road to Institutional Reform” cited in:

Stovall, Preston. “Education as a Public Resource for Addressing American Political Polarization.” Civil American 5(1).

The New York Times’ obsession with Trump, quantified” cited in:

Ungar-Sargon, Batya. Bad News: How Woke Media is Undermining Democracy. Encounter Books, 2021 (e.g. pg. 125).

Seizing the Means of Knowledge Production” cited in:

Douthat, Ross. The Decadent Society: How We Became Victims of Our Own Success. Simon & Schuster, 2020 (see pg. 97).

Ideological Discrimination in Academia is More Complicated Than You Think” cited in:

Pearce, S.J. “The Myth of the Myth of the Andalusian Paradise.” Far Right Revisionism and the End of History (pp. 29-68). Routledge, 2020. See note 25.

Academic and Political Elitism” cited in:

Aroney, Nicholas (2020). “Law, Education and Religion-Pathways to the Good Society.” St. Marks Review 252: 19-37.

Kotkin, Joel (2020). The Coming of Neo-Feudalism: A Warning to the Global Middle Class. New York, NY: Encounter Books (see Chapter 8, note 42).

Too Noxious for Tenure?” cited in:

Perlmutter, David. “A Communication Unit Administrator’s Perspective on Speech Controversies in the Classroom and on Campus.” Testing Tolerance: Addressing Controversy in the Journalism and Mass Communication Classroom (pp. 69-81). Rowman & Littlefield, 2020.

For Better or Worse, Universities Help Shape Local, Regional Politics” cited in:

Stovall, Preston. “Education is the Art of Making Humanity Ethical.” Human Diversity in Context (pp. 209-235). Edizioni Università di Trieste, 2020.

Viewpoint Diversity Transcends Politics” cited in:

Goodhart, David. Head, Hand, Heart: Why Intelligence is Over-Rewarded, Manual Workers Matter, and Caregivers Deserve More Respect. Free Press, 2020 (see p. 283).

Actually, Students Seem Substantially less Free than the General Public” cited in:

Fenton, Jane. “Talking ‘Bout iGeneration: A New Era of Individualistic Social Work Practice?The British Journal of Social Work. DOI: 10.1093/bjsw/bcz099 (see sections 4 and 17).

ibid. “‘You Can’t Say That!’: Critical Thinking, Identity Politics, and the Social Work Academy.” Societies 9(4), 71 (see note 85).

On the Grievance Studies/ Sokal Squared Hoax” cited in:

Lagerspetz, Mikko. “‘The Grievance Studies Affair’ Project: Reconstructing and Assessing the Experimental Design.” Science Technology and Human Values. DOI: 10.1177/0162243920923087.

Reilly, Ian (2021). “Airing Grievances: Academic Hoaxing and the Performance of Boundary Work.” Lateral 19(1):

Data on how Ideological (Under)Representation Compares to (Under)Representation Along the Lines of Race, Gender or Sexuality.” cited in:

Felsch, Maximillian (2023). “The Scientific Shortcomings of Postcolonial Theory.” International Studies. DOI: 10.1177/00208817221142485

Gorman, Lawrence & Maria Polski (2021). “Digital Media May Cultivate Awareness and Responsibility in Users: A Case for Optimism.” Explorations in Media Ecology 20(3): 337-353.

Honeycutt, Nathan & Lee Jussim. “A Model of Political Bias in Social Science Research.” Psychological Inquiry 31(1): 73-85.

Rom, Marc. “A Liberal Polity: Ideological Homogeneity in Political Science.” PS: Political Science & Politics. DOI: 10.1017/S1049096519000842

Three Strategies for Navigating Moral Disagreements” cited in:

Brayton, Spencer & Natasha Casey. “Not Tolerating Intolerance: Unpacking Critical Pedagogy in Classrooms and Conferences.” Libraries Promoting Reflective Dialogue in a Time of Political Polarization . ACRL Press, 2019 (see p. 181).

Wills, Jeremiah et al. “Students’ Religiosity and Perceptions of Professor Bias: Some Empirical Lessons for Sociologists.” The American Sociologist. DOI: 10.1007/s12108-018-9388-y.

Any Progressive Scholar Could End Up Like George Ciccariello-Maher” cited in:

Friedman, Jonathan. “Chasm in the Classroom: Campus Free Speech in a Divided America.” PEN America, 2019 (see note 382).

Trump Will Likely Win Reelection in 2020” cited in:

Beier, Jesse. “Dispatch from the Future: Science Fictioning (in) the Anthropocene.” Interrogating the Anthropocene. Palgrave, 2018 (pp. 359-400).

Hughey, Matthew. “Gender and Race in American Elections: From the Pathos of Prediction to the Power of Possibility.” Sociological Forum. DOI: 10.1111/socf.12609

A Lack of Ideological Diversity is Killing Social Research” cited in:

Bale, Jeffrey & Tamir Bar-On. Fighting the Last War: Confusion, Partisanship and Alarmism in the Literature on the Radical Right. Lexington Books, 2022 (see p. 24).

Carey, John et al. Campus Diversity: The Hidden Consensus. Cambridge University Press, 2019 (see p. 214).

Dollahite, David, Justin Hendricks & Loren Marks (2023). “A Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Audit of the American Families of Faith Project: Exploring Lifespan Spiritual Development in Religiously and Racially Diverse Families.” Religions 14(3).

Funk, Kevin & Sebastian Sclofsky. “The Liberal Ideology: On Intellectual Pluralism and the Marginalization of Marxism in US Political Science.” PS: Political Science and Politics 54(3): 593-597.

Olson, Dorothy & Tarja Tikkanen. “The Developing Field of Workplace Learning and the Contribution of PIAAC.” International Journal of Lifelong Education.  DOI: 10.1080/02601370.2018.1497720 (see p. 11).

Unkule, Kalyani. “Seeing All Beings As Oneself: Internationalizing Higher Education for Universal Harmony.” Frontiers: The Interdisciplinary Journal of Study Abroad. Vol. 30, No. 1 (see p. 40).

The Big Debate About Microaggressions” cited in:

Delston, Jill. “The Ethics and Politics of Microaffirmations.” Philosophy of Management. DOI: 10.1007/s40926-021-00169-x

How America Failed Afghan Women” cited in:

Wilson, Cybele. “A Justification for Conflict: The Use of the ‘Gentler Sex’ in a Post 9/11 Context.” Solo Flight (Canadian Forces College). JCSP 43 DL (see note 15).

Dylan Roof’s Extremism Was Not an Aberration” cited in:

Grano, Charles. “Charleston and the Postracial Logics of ‘Race War.’” Rhetoric, Race, Religion and the Charleston Shootings. Lexington Books, 2019 (see pp. 10, 11, 24, 26).

There is No Social Change Without Coercion” cited in:

Alpert, Avram. “Philosophy Against and in Praise of Violence: Kant, Thoreau and the Revolutionary Spectator.” Theory, Culture & Society.  DOI:10.1177/0263276416651976 (see page 16).

Netanyahu’s Politics of Fear Has Worked” cited in:

Ben David, Yael. “The Subjective Experience of Power: It’s Implications for the Maintenance of, and Resistance to, Power Relations Among Jewish and Palestinian Citizens of Israel.” Journal of Sociology. DOI: 10.1177/1440783318808904.

Why America Lacks Credibility in the Middle East” cited in:

Hoehn, Andrew R. et al. Strategic Choices for a Turbulent World: In Pursuit of Security and Opportunity. RAND Corporation, 2017 (see note 18).

ISIL’s Barbaric Acts are Highly-Successful Propaganda” cited in:

Al-Majdhoub, Fatima M. & Azizah Hamzah. “Framing the Islamic State: A Content Analysis of News Coverage by CNN & Al-Jazeera.” Malaysian Journal of Communication. Vol. 32, No. 1 (see page 356).

Sourgens, Frederic G. “The End of Law: The ISIL Case Study for a Comprehensive Theory of Lawlessness.” Fordham International Law Journal. Vol. 39, No. 2 (see note 247).

Werleman, C.J. The New Atheist Threat: The Dangerous Rise of Secular ExtremismDangerous Little Books, 2015 (see chapter 11, note 5).

Israel and Palestinians Need a One-State Solution” cited in:

Ghanem, As’ad & Dan A. Bavly. “Seeking an Egalitarian State in Palestine/Israel: The Recent Debate about Binationalism.” Constellations. Vol. 23, No. 3 (see note 53).

de Martino, Claudia. The New Israeli Order: Beyond the Two-State Paradigm. Castelvecchi, 2017 (see note 49).

Don’t Think of the ‘Islamic State’ in Religious Terms” cited in:

Horton, Scott. Fools Errand: Time to End the War in AfghanistanCreateSpace, 2017 (see chapter 1, note 49).

Teodorescu, Adriana. “Narratives of Death and Immortality in the ‘Islamic State’ Discourses on Twitter.” Death in Contemporary Popular Culture (pp. 215-236). Routledge, 2019.

Mexican Drug Cartels Are Worse Than ISIL“cited in:

Bellal, Annyssa. “Beyond the Pale? Engaging the Islamic State on International Humanitarian Law.” Yearbook of International Humanitarian Law. Vol. 18 (see note 112).

Braham, Persephone. “True-Crime, Crime Fiction and Journalism in Mexico.” In Globalization and the State in Contemporary Crime Fiction. Palgrave MacMillan, 2016 (see page 122).

Garcia, Jose A. “Review: Robert J. Bunker & John P. Sullivan (Eds.), Studies in Gangs and Cartels.”  Journal of International Relations Research. Vol. 5 (see note 55).

Hayes, Heather A. “‘This New World is not for the Faint Hearted’: Confronting the Many Dimensions of Philippe-Joseph Salazar’s Words Are Weapons: Inside ISIS’s Rhetoric of Terror.” Philosophy & Rhetoric 52(3). See page 308.

McNeal, Kelley. “Contextualizing Global Media Literacy in the Standards-Based Classroom: Moving Beyond the Culture of the Dichotomous ‘Like.’” In Global Media Literacy in the Digital Age: Teaching Beyond the Borders (16). Peter Lang Publishing Inc., 2015 (see p. 135-6).

By Hyping ISIL Threat, U.S. is Falling into Group’s Trap” cited in:

Webb, Brandon with Jack Murphy & Peter Nealen. The ISIS Solution: How Unconventional Thinking and Special Operations Can Eliminate Radical IslamSt. Martin’s Press, 2014 (see note 33).

Zelizer, Barbie. “Cold War Redux and the News: Islamic State and the U.S. Through Each-Other’s Eyes.” Critical Studies in Media Communication. Vol. 35, No. 1 (see page 18).

ibid. “Journalism’s Deep Memory: Cold War Mindedness and Coverage of Islamic State.” International Journal of Communication. Vol. 10 (see p. 6077).

The Myth and Reality of Sectarianism in Iraq” cited in:

Blatt, Charlotte. “Operational Success, Strategic Failure: Assessing the 2007 Iraq Troop Surge.” Parameters (the U.S. Army War College Quarterly). Vol. 47, No. 1 (see note 20).

DeBrabander, Ludo. “Violent Jihadism and the International Chessboard.” In The Lure of I.S.: Syrian Fighters and (de) Radicalization. Pelckmans, 2015 (see page 79).

Fernandez, Alberto M. “Here to Stay and Growing: Combatting ISIS Propaganda Networks.” Brookings Project on U.S. Relations in the Islamic World (see note 26).

Gelvin, James. “A New Middle East?” The Contemporary Middle East in an Age of Upheaval. Stanford University Press 2021 (see note 24).

Jacoby, Tim & Nassima Neggaz. “Sectarianism in Iraq: The Role of the Coalition Provisional Authority.” Critical Studies on Terrorism. DOI: 10.1080/17539153.2018.1487178.

Karagiannis, Emmanuel. The New Political Islam: Human Rights, Democracy and JusticeUniversity of Pennsylvania Press, 2017 (see Chapter 5, note 9 & Chapter 6, note 14).

Proctor, Keith &  Beza Tesfaye. “Investing in Iraq’s Peace: How Good Governance Can Diminish Support for Violent Extremism.” Mercy Corps, December 2015 (see notes 19, 20).

Taspinar, Omer. What the West is Getting Wrong about the Middle East: Why Islam is not the Problem. I.B. Tauris, 2021.

Timreck, Sarah. “Playing Identity Politics in Iraq.” International Affairs Review. Vol. 26, No. 2 (see note 2).

Israel, Not Hamas, Orchestrated the Latest Conflict in Gaza” cited in:

Crump, David. Like Birds in a Cage: Christian Zionism’s Collusion in Israel’s Oppression of the Palestinian People. Cascade Books, 2021 (see pp. 243-244).

Gray, Gavin. “The Manichaean Worldview: Japanese Foreign Policy and the Danger of Dualistic Interpretations of International Affairs.” Journal of Osaka Jogakuin University. Vol. 11 : pp. 81-102 (see note 66). 

Robinson, Glenn E. “Gaza 2014: Hamas’ Strategic Calculus.” Parameters (the U.S. Army War College Quarterly). Vol. 44, No. 4 (see note 29).

Collapse of the Syrian Opposition” cited in:

Huzaifah, Syed. “Syria.” Counter Terrorist Trends and Analyses 8(1). See p. 90.

The Endgame in Syria/ Ending the Games in Syria” cited in:

Hirthler, Jason. The Sins of Empire: Unmasking American ImperialismCreateSpace, 2015 (see page 70).

Red Lines Drawn with Syrian Blood” cited in:

Ryan, David & David Fitzgerald. Obama, U.S. Foreign Policy and the Dilemmas of Intervention. Palgrave Pivot, 2014 (see pg. 125).

Shallow Democracy v. Deep State: An Archeology of the Crisis in Egypt” cited in:

Khalifa, Sherif. Egypt’s Lost Spring: Causes and Consequences. Prager, 2014 (see chapter 19, note 22).

The Ties That Bind Obama to Bush Run Across the Middle East” cited in:

Movkebayeva, A. & А. Reshetnyak. “The Middle East Democratization Policy of the U.S.: from the Suez Crisis to the Arab Spring.” Bulletin of Kyrgyz National University: Series on International Relations & International Law. Vol. 69, No. 1 (see note 10).

Public Talks

2022

September 26:The Bifrucation of America (and Other Countries)” delivered for the Center for Global Humanities Lecture Series at the University of New England.

February 25: Discussant for panel “Meritocracy and the Populist Response,” for conference “Renewing America’s Civic Compact” — hosted by the School of Civic and Economic Thought and Leadership at Arizona State University, in partnership with the Cronkite School of Journalism & Mass Communication and the Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law.

January 20:We Have never Been Woke” delivered for the Menard Family George Washington Forum on American Ideas, Politics and Institutions at the Ohio State University.

2021

September 29: Discussant for event, “Race, Identity and Ideology” for the SNF Agora Conversations: Diversity and Democracy series at Johns Hopkins University.

June 3: Moderator for panel, “DEI Training Programs: What Do They Aim For? What Should They Aim For?” hosted by Heterodox Academy. 

April 19: Discussant for roundtable, “The Great Demographic Illusion: Majority, Minority and the Expanding American Mainstream” hosted by AEI (aired on C-SPAN 2 “Book TV” on May 16 and 22).

April 9: “Intellectual Diversity: What is To Be Done?” delivered at the  31st Annual Symposium on Science, Reason and Modern Democracy at Michigan State University.

March 30: Lead a faculty workshop on viewpoint diversity in higher ed for the New York Law School (NYLS).

March 12: Discussant for event, “State Legislators and Academic Freedom” hosted by PEN America.

February 18: Panelist for session, “Are People of Color Becoming Swing Voters” for the event “The 74 Million Voter Question” hosted by the USC Dornsife Center for the Political Future.

2020

November 20: Featured speaker for the Education Reform Lecture Series, hosted by the University of Arkansas Department of Education Reform.

November 8: Panelist for the “Election Reflection” session of the 3rd Annual Decolonizing International Relations Conference hosted by the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University.

October 13: Delivered remarks and participated on a panel introducing the American National Social Network Survey report, “Socially Distant: How Our Divided Networks Shape Our Politics” hosted by the Survey Center on American Life.

July 30: Featured in a panel on “The Great Awokening” hosted by the Manhattan Institute.

February 21-23: Discussant for the colloquium, “Sociology and the Classical Liberal Tradition” hosted by the Institute for Humane Studies.

2019

May 9: Featured participant for the public debate/ discussion, “Academic Freedom: What is To Be Done?” at Oxford University.

April 16: Featured speaker for “Respect + Rebellion: The State of Debate on Campus” sponsored by The Village Square,  hosted by Florida State University.

April 4: Panelist for Whose Freedom, Whose Speech? The Future of the Campus Community ” sponsored by PEN America and the Office of University Life at Columbia University.

March 13: Lecture, “Getting Good at Disagreeing,” delivered on behalf of USC’s Digital Centership Conservatory.

March 7:  Panelist for “Open Inquiry, Viewpoint Diversity, and Constructive Disagreement: Pathways for Advancing Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion?” at 2019 annual conference of the National Association of Diversity Officers in Higher Education (NADOHE).

February 22: Discussant for panel “Tribalism in American Life,” for conference “Polarization and Disagreement: Combatting America’s Civic Crisis” — hosted by the School of Civic and Economic Thought and Leadership at Arizona State University, in partnership with the Cronkite School of Journalism & Mass Communication and the Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law.

January 26: Moderator for “In Conversation” series discussion on Eleanor Burgess’ The Niceties — produced by McCarter Theatre Center at Princeton University.  

2018

April 21: Moderated panel, “Bridging the Political Divide: Lessons from Leaders Who Take Risk” at the 1st Annual Bridge USA Summit (part of Earth X 2018).

February 13: Delivered Digital Centership lecture, “How Minds Change / Information Integrity / Power in Positivity / Humble Expertise.”

2017

September 27: Participated in a dialogue with former U.C. Berkeley Chancellor Nicholas Dirks on the importance of viewpoint diversity on campus at the Times Higher Education U.S. Student Success Forum 2017.

2013

September 25: “Obstacles to a Negotiated End to the Crisis in Syria” delivered to a community discussion group at Trinity Presbyterian Church on behalf of the UA Center for Middle East Studies.

February 28: “A Primer on Mali” presented at the Cinema Africa Village of Nations Culture Celebration hosted by the US Army Culture Center in conjunction with UA South, Cochise College, and the Sierra Vista Public Library.

February 14: “Getting to the Facts of the Syrian Civil War,” delivered to a Voyager RV Senior Citizen Community on behalf of the UA Center for Middle East Studies.

2012

November 9: “Hume& Kierkegaard: The Limitations of Rationalism and Empiricism & the Nature of Faith,” a guest lecture for PHIL 233: Philosophy of Religion

November 3: “Introduction to the Arab Spring” delivered as part of the workshop, “War, Conflict Resolution, and Reconstruction in the Modern Middle East,” on behalf of the UA Center for Middle East Studies.

October 27: “A Survey of the People, Languages, Religions, and Cultures of the Greater Middle East” delivered as part of the workshop, “War, Conflict Resolution, and Reconstruction in the Modern Middle East,” on behalf of the UA Center for Middle East Studies.

October 26: “Diplomacy, Geopolitics, and the Syrian Civil War” presented at the “Syria Bleeds” panel hosted by UA STAND.

October 12: “Inductive v. Deductive Reasoning: Terms & Methods,” a series of guest-lectures for three discussion-sections of PHIL 110: Logic and Critical Thinking

2011

October 21: “Four Iterations of the Problem of Evil,” a guest lecture for PHIL 233: Philosophy of Religion

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