Currently Accolades: Published/Exhibited for February 1, 2021

A woman poses in the stacks of the PSU library

 

  1. Rochelle Bloom, anthropology research assistant, and Douglas Deur, anthropology faculty, co-authored “Reframing Native Knowledge, Co-Managing Native Landscapes: Ethnographic Data and Tribal Engagement at Yosemite National Park,” published in Land.
  2. M. Allen Cunningham, English adjunct faculty, wrote a novel titled “Q&A,” published with Regal House Publishing.
  3. Carrie Collenberg-Gonzalez, world languages and literatures faculty, published a chapter titled “The Deutsche Sommerschule am Pazifik: A Model and Asset to Small German Programs” in the book “Outreach Strategies and Innovative Teaching Approaches for German Programs,” edited by Melissa Etzler and Gabriele Maier and published by Routledge.
  4. Douglas Deur, anthropology faculty, and Jamie Hebert, anthropology research assistant, co-authored “‘Their Markers as they Go’: Modified Trees as Waypoints in the Dena’ina Cultural Landscape, Alaska,” published in Human Ecology.
  5. Yiping Fan, urban studies and planning faculty, and Julia Freybote, business faculty, published “The Impact of Municipal Water Use Restrictions on the Pricing of Water-Sensitive Features in Single-Family Homes” in the Journal of Real Estate Research.  
  6. Samantha Hamlin PhD ’18, and Max Nielsen-Pincus, environmental science and management department chair, co-authored “From Gray Copycats to Green Wolves: Policy and Infrastructure for Flood Risk Management,” published in the Journal of Environmental Planning and Management.
  7. Steven Johnson, government, self-published a novel titled “Junk Drawer at the Edge of the Universe.”
  8. Timm Menke, world languages and literatures faculty emeritus, wrote the entry “Konvergenz und Divergenz: zum Verhältnis von Martin Walser und Arno Schmidt” in “Einheit in der Vielfalt? Germanistik zwischen Divergenz und Konvergenz” published by Asiatische Germanistentagung in 2019 in Sapporo, Japan.
  9. Byeongdon (“Don”) Oh, sociology, co-authored a paper titled “Legal Status and Psychosocial Well-being of Central Asian Migrant Women in Russia” in the Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies. 
  10. Jeremy Spoon, anthropology faculty, co-authored “Cultural and Spiritual Significance of Nature: Guidance for Protected and Conserved Area Governance and Management” in the Best Practice Protected Area Guidelines, Series No. 32.
  11. Jack Straton, physics and university studies faculty, had one of his photographs chosen to be part of Modern Art National, a joint show of 2D and 3D art, in Anna, Texas from Dec. 15, 2020 through Jan. 9.
  12. Hyeyoung Woo, sociology faculty, and Elizabeth Withers, sociology graduate student, co-authored an article titled “Low Income Dynamics and Depression over the Life Course in South Korea” in Advances in Life Course Research.