Accomplishments: College of Liberal Arts

On Oct. 22, Christopher D. E. Willoughby (Interdisciplinary, Gender, and Ethnic Studies) gave an invited talk on the history of racial science at Harvard Medical School as a part of the panel "Harvard Medical School & the Legacies of Slavery & Racism," hosted by Harvard Medical School. 
Bailey Way, Todd Jennings and Shane Kraus (all Psychology) recently published a paper, "Double trouble - Examining the co-occurrence of compulsive sexual behavior disorder and gambling disorder among two American samples," in the American Journal on Addictions. 
Amy Reed-Sandoval (Philosophy) published a book titled Intimate Borders: Feminist Migration Ethics with Oxford University Press.
Iv谩n Sandoval-Cervantes (Anthropology) published a chapter in Spanish titled, "Cuidados," (Care) in the edited volume Glosario Etnogr谩fico de las Ruralidades Mexicanas (Ethnographic Glossary of Mexican Ruralities), edited by Paola Velasco Santos and Hern谩n Salas Quintanal (Universidad Nacional Aut贸noma de M茅xico). In this chapter, Sandoval-鈥
Regine Deguzman-Lucero, Jennifer Le, and Nicole Short (all Psychology) recently published a new article titled "Associations between posttraumatic cognitions and cannabis cravings among trauma鈥恊xposed individuals using cannabis" in the British Journal of Clinical Psychology. 
Katherine Walker (English) was interviewed about her recent publication for Theatre Journal by Tarryn Chun. The video, "K. Walker on "Magic of the Mundane" can be found on YouTube.
Katherine Walker (English) published an article in Theatre Journal titled "The Magic of the Mundane: Exposing Occult Fraud in Early Modern Drama."
Roberto Lovato (English) was interviewed in a Columbia Journalism Review article titled, "The Case for Unbordered Reporting," about the resistance from editors he faced as a journalist trying to expose President Obama's incarceration of tens of thousands of Central American children separated from their mothers.
John M. Bowers (English) has been selected as 性视界传媒's nominee for the Nevada Regents' Humanities and Social Sciences Researcher Award. The winner will be announced at the Board of Regents meeting March 5-6, 2026.
Amy Reed-Sandoval (Philosophy) served as consultant and script advisor for the most recent season of the PBS Kids television show Alma's Way. One of the episodes on which she served as a consultant, "To Tell or Not to Tell," aired recently on PBS.
Nicholas Barron (Anthropology) attended the American Society for Ethnohistory meeting in San Antonio, Texas, where he organized the panel titled, "Historicizing Politically Engaged Scholarship in Native North America." The panel explored the conceptual tools needed to examine prior instances in which anthropologists and ethnohistorians entered the鈥
Jeff Schauer (History) was the subject of a feature story that also appears in the newsletter of the Nordic Africa Institute. NAI, based in Uppsala (Sweden), represents a collaboration between Nordic governments, and "conducts research and offers resources that help further understanding about contemporary Africa." The newsletter鈥