Kathleen J. fitzgerald, PHD |
Kandice L. Grossman, PHD |
Kathleen has spent 25 years in academia. Her research and teaching interests are in pedagogy and social stratification; specifically, race/ethnicity, gender, and sexuality. She is the author of Recognizing Race and Ethnicity: Power, Privilege, and Inequality, 2nd Edition (2017) and Beyond White Ethnicity: Developing a Sociological Understanding of Native American Identity Reclamation (2007), in addition to numerous journal articles. She has been teaching the sociology of inequalities for twenty-five years, teaching a wide variety of subjects to a wide variety of studens. Fitzgerald earned all her degrees in sociology: her PhD from the University of Missouri, her MA from Southern Illinois University at Edwardsville, and her bachelor’s degree from St. Louis University. She earned tenure at Columbia College of Missouri in 2007, and has since taught at Loyola University New Orleans, Xavier University of Louisiana, and Tulane University. She currently works as a diversity and inclusion consultant and owns her own firm, Moving Beyond Diversity (movingbeyonddiversity.org).
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Kandice has been teaching at the college level for over twenty years. Her teaching and research interests are in women’s and gender studies, sexuality, race, class, and gender, social inequalities, and environmental sociology. She earned a PhD in sociology from the University of Missouri, a MA in women’s and gender studies from University of Manchester, UK, and a BA in history from Columbia College. In addition to this text, Kandice has published several works that center Indigenous and queer people of color critiques, explore ecological feminisms, and engage with critical geographies. She is currently a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Missouri conducting research on the role of place and identity for rural Missourians, including the ways that gender and sexuality intersect with class and geography.
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