University of Redlands Our House 2020-21

Page 26

SPONSORED RESEARCH Boeke, Faith and Wes Bernardini. Mapping Viking History. $2000. University of Redlands COVID-19 Rapid-Response Spatial Grant. 2021. Coles, Kimberley, Citizen Governance: redistricting, cartography, and the political-technocrat. $2000. University of Redlands COVID-19 Rapid-Response Spatial Grant. 2021. Glover, John, Digitizing the Green Book. $2000. University of Redlands COVID-19 Rapid-Response Spatial Grant. 2021. Hewitt, Jessie R., Dirty Little Secrets: Medical Confidentiality in France and the French Empire, 1870-1920. $7,000. Graves Award in the Humanities. 2020.

James Spee Professor, School of Business

Horan, Thomas A., James B. Pick, and Avijit Sarkar, Spatial Business Initiative. $200,000. Esri Inc. 2020.

Understanding clan and tribal sustainability through millennia An insightful conversation with an Australian colleague led James C. Spee to conceive and co-edit Clan and Tribal Perspectives on Social, Economic, and Environmental Sustainability: Indigenous Stories From Around the Globe (Emerald Publishing Limited, 2021). “In Australia, every course in every university must have some content that reflects the role of indigenous people,” says Spee, professor of strategic management, sustainable business, and entrepreneurship, with a joint appointment with the School of Business and the Department of Environmental Studies. The book examines sustainability on all continents from the indigenous perspective and what it has meant for survival—socially and economically—across millennia. The collection of chapters are written by an array of experts, including members of clans and tribes. In addition to serving as

24 | www.redlands.edu/provost

editor, Spee wrote a chapter, “Sustainable Relationships Are the Foundation of Tribal Clan Perspective.” Lawrence Gross, the San Manuel Band of Mission Indians Endowed Chair of Native Studies, Race, and Ethnic Studies at the University, penned the chapter, “The Resolution by the White Earth Anishinaabe Nation to Protect the Inherent Rights of Wild Rice.” The book approaches issues using a triplebottom line—people, planet, profit—and assesses the themes of wellness, politics, leadership, entrepreneurship, and sustainability. “Each chapter brings out the ways the tribal and clan views differ from those of Western culture,” says Spee, who has incorporated the book and its authors (as speakers) in his U of R sustainable business course. “This book gives readers a path for listening to diverse voices and learning from them.”

Horan, Thomas A., James B. Pick, and Avijit Sarkar, Spatial Business Initiative. $200,000. Esri Inc. 2021. Klooster, Daniel, Forest Transitions in Michoacán, México. $2000. University of Redlands COVID-19 Rapid-Response Spatial Grant. 2021. Larsen, Lillian and Shana Higgins, Redrawing the Map: Re-envisioning Religion in the Inland Empire. $5000. University of Redlands Spatial Inquiries Grant Award Program. 2020. Larsen, Lillian, Redrawing the Map of Religion: California’s Middle Eastern/Arab American Medical Networks. $2000. University of Redlands COVID-19 Rapid-Response Spatial Grant. 2021. Lyons, Rebecca, Global Distribution of the Endocrine Disruptor, 4-Nonylphenol, in Glaciers and Permanent Snow Fields. $5000. University of Redlands Spatial Inquiries Grant Award Program. 2019. Nelson, Jennifer and Steve Wuhs, Mapping Events and Flows related to Reproductive Rights. $4000. University of Redlands COVID-19 Rapid-Response Spatial Grant. 2021. Olson, Avery B., and Adriana Ruiz Alvarado, Student Affairs Professional Identity: The Role of Social Identity in Professional Socialization and the Development of Professional Identity. $1000. NASPA Region VI. 2020.


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.