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Frauds / Re: Margaret Noodin, Professor
« Last post by WINative on November 09, 2024, 10:28:29 pm »Sharity Bassett is the wife of Mark Freland, Noodin's hand-picked successor, and is listed as both the Manager and Associate Director of the Electa Quinney Institute- where her husband is director. She is promoting this new book on Haudenosaunee Women's Lacrosse.
More on-going red flags at UW-Milwaukee's American Indians Studies Department with its long history of hiring Pretendians and their supporters.
Dr. Sharity Bassett is excited to begin her new roles at UWM as Visiting Assistant Professor of Women & Gender Studies and Manager of the American Indian Student Center. She has been involved in collaborative research with Haudenosaunee communities in New York state, Ontario, and Montreal since 2011. Prior to that, she worked with urban American Indian communities in Denver, CO, as an activist and ally. Her manuscript, Haudenosaunee Women Lacrosse Players: Making Meaning through Rematriation, is forthcoming with Michigan State University Press. Prior to coming to UWM, Dr. Bassett was an Assistant Professor of American Indian & Indigenous Studies at South Dakota State University, where she developed strong research ties with Indigenous partners at the Oglala Sioux, Rosebud, and Standing Rock, and Sisseton-Wahpeton nations. Dr. Bassett contributes sound Indigenous qualitative and archival research and methodologies, as well as a strong track record mentoring students.
https://uwm.edu/womens-gender-studies/people/bassett-sharity/
https://www.facebook.com/sharitylee.bassett
More on-going red flags at UW-Milwaukee's American Indians Studies Department with its long history of hiring Pretendians and their supporters.
Dr. Sharity Bassett is excited to begin her new roles at UWM as Visiting Assistant Professor of Women & Gender Studies and Manager of the American Indian Student Center. She has been involved in collaborative research with Haudenosaunee communities in New York state, Ontario, and Montreal since 2011. Prior to that, she worked with urban American Indian communities in Denver, CO, as an activist and ally. Her manuscript, Haudenosaunee Women Lacrosse Players: Making Meaning through Rematriation, is forthcoming with Michigan State University Press. Prior to coming to UWM, Dr. Bassett was an Assistant Professor of American Indian & Indigenous Studies at South Dakota State University, where she developed strong research ties with Indigenous partners at the Oglala Sioux, Rosebud, and Standing Rock, and Sisseton-Wahpeton nations. Dr. Bassett contributes sound Indigenous qualitative and archival research and methodologies, as well as a strong track record mentoring students.
https://uwm.edu/womens-gender-studies/people/bassett-sharity/
https://www.facebook.com/sharitylee.bassett