Affiliated Faculty
Dr. Alma Rosa Alvarez
Professor – English
BA, English and Mexican-American Studies, California State University, Dominguez Hills;Ìý MA, PhD, University of California, Santa Barbara
Pronouns: she/her/hers
Dr. Alvarez is a professor of English at Âé¶¹´«Ã½ where she specializes in teaching U.S. Ethnic Literature. Her courses explore the way marginalized figures attempt to construct identities, particularly to counteract negative representations. Dr. Alvarez has written a book titled Liberation Theology in Chicana/o Literature: Manifestations of Feminist and Gay Identities.
Office:ÌýCentral 254
Phone: 541.552.6629
E-Mail: alvarez@sou.edu
Dr. Melissa Anderson
Associate Professor – Hannon Library
Dr. Anderson is the Campus Engagement & Research Services librarian.
Office:ÌýHannon Library 149
Phone: 541.552.6820
E-Mail: andersm18@sou.edu
Travis Campbell
Assistant Professor
PhD. Economics, University of Massachusetts, 2022
Travis Campbell is an Assistant Professor of Economics at Âé¶¹´«Ã½. His research applies microeconomics to social justice issues, focusing on economic inequalities by race, gender, and sexuality in the US. His other research focuses on social movements and public health policy, among other topics. His research has been published in The Lancet Regional Health – Americas, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Health Economics, Metroeconomica, and others. He uses his research expertise to incorporate the economics of race, gender, and sexuality into all of his courses. At Âé¶¹´«Ã½ he teaches Micro and Macroeconomics, Quantitative Methods and Application, Healthcare Economics, Labor Economics, and Gender Issues in Economics.
Office: Taylor Hall 220
Phone: 541.552.6434
E-Mail: campbelt1@sou.edu
Dr. Brook Colley
Associate Professor, Chair – Native American Studies
PhD, Native American Studies, University of California, Davis
Pronouns: she/her/hers
Dr. Colley is the Chair and an Associate Professor of Native American Studies at Âé¶¹´«Ã½. Her teaching and research interests include Queer Indigenous Studies, Native women, Native cinema(s), federal Indian law & policy, intertribal relations & conflict, and community health & healing. Dr. Colley has a forthcoming book titled Reframing Tribal Relations in the Casino Economy that investigates intertribal conflict and coalition in the tribal casino era.
Office:ÌýTaylor Hall 18b
Phone: 541.552.6751
E-Mail: colleyb@sou.edu
Katherine Fox
Assistant Professor – Anthropology and Healthcare Administration
PhD, Medical Anthropology, Âé¶¹´«Ã½ Methodist University (Dallas), 2022; MA, Medical Anthropology, Âé¶¹´«Ã½ Methodist University (Dallas), 2015; BA, Spanish/Anthropology (Dual Major), Indiana University of Pennsylvania, 2013
Katherine’s interests are in medical anthropology, LGBTQ+ health, immigration, Latinx and LGBTQ+ identities, social media and health behavior, qualitative research methods
Office:ÌýTaylor Hall 217
Phone: 541.552.6322
E-Mail: foxk@sou.edu
Dr. Joshua Goodman
Assistant Professor – Psychology
PhD, Counseling, Clinical, & School Psychology, UC, Santa Barbara; MA, Counseling Psychology, UC Santa Barbara; BA, Psychology, Whitman College
Pronouns: he/him/his
Dr. Goodman is an Assistant Professor of Psychology. His research focuses on parent support for LGBTQ+ youth, with an emphasis on the development and assessment of interventions to facilitate parent and family support. Dr. Goodman currently teaches Human Sexuality, and has previously taught a range of psychology courses related to gender and LGBTQ+ communities. Dr. Goodman’s clinical background includes extensive work with LGBTQ+ populations, including in university counseling centers and an LGBTQ+ community counseling center.
Office:ÌýEd/Psych Building 222
Phone:Ìý541.552.8299
E-Mail: goodmanj@sou.edu
Laurie Kurutz
Professor – Costume Technology
MFA, Production Design & Technology, School of Theatre, Ohio University (Athens); BFA, Theatre Arts, Âé¶¹´«Ã½ Oregon College
Laurie is an accomplished costume maker and tailor, specializing in period costumes and menswear at the Oregon Shakespeare Festival, Seattle Opera, Berkeley Repertory Theatre, and many other Tony Award-winning theatres. In addition to publishing in national educational journals, she regularly presents at national theatre and educational conferences. Her scholarship includes costume technology, burlesque costume and practice.
Office:ÌýTHTR 163
Phone: 541.552.6366
E-Mail: kurutzl@sou.edu
Jennifer Longshore
Senior Instructor – Art & Art History
MA, Art History, University of California, Davis; BA, Art History, Humanities, California State University, Fresno
Pronouns: she/her/hers
Longshore’s courses explore and analyze art and creativity from a variety of perspectives including globalization, activism, sustainability, critical theory, race, gender, and ethnicity. She particularly enjoys mentoring students as they develop activist art projects in collaboration with local community agencies. She serves on the Âé¶¹´«Ã½ Gender, Sexuality and Women’s Studies Council and advises the City of Ashland Public Arts Commission when new proposals are being considered. She is a member of the Community Emergency Response Team in Ashland and enjoys singing in the Rogue World Ensemble, salsa dancing, and practicing archery.
Office:ÌýArt Building 119
Phone: 541.552.6566
E-Mail: longshoj@sou.edu
Dr. Diana Maltz
Professor – English
BA, Bennington College; MA, Ph.D. Stanford University
Pronouns: she/her/hers
Dr. Maltz is a Professor of English at Âé¶¹´«Ã½. She teaches several literature classes that are cross-referenced with GSWS, including The Decadent 1890s; Class, Culture, and Feminism in Victorian and Edwardian Britain; Slumming in the Nineteenth Century; and the British Novel after 1850.
Office:ÌýCentral Building 250
Phone: 541.552.6634
E-Mail: maltzd@sou.edu
Emily Miller-Francisco
Professor – Library
BA, Psychology, Earlham College, MA, Theology, Graduate Theological Union, MLIS, Simmons College
Pronouns: she, her, hers
Dr. Miller-Francisco is the librarian for the GSWS program and provides research guidance for a wide range of GSWS-related topics. She also purchases library books and other information resources to support research in this area.
Office:ÌýLIB 229C
Phone: 541.552.6819
E-Mail: millere@sou.edu
Dr. Jessica Piekielek
Professor – Sociology and Anthropology
PhD and MA, University of Arizona; BA, Guilford College
Pronouns: she/her/hers
Dr. Jessica Piekielek’s research and teaching interests include conservation, environmentalism, applied anthropology, border and migration studies, Mexico, U.S., and Latin America.
Office:ÌýTA 222
Phone: 541.552.6599
E-Mail: piekielj@sou.edu
Dr. Alena Ruggerio
Professor
PhD, Communication, Indiana University, 2003; MA, Communication, Ohio University, 1997; BSC, Communication, Ohio University, 1996
Dr. Alena Ruggerio (she/her) teaches Public Speaking, Interpersonal Communication, Persuasion, Argumentation, and Critical Thinking, Advanced Public Speaking, Becoming a Communication Scholar, Political Communication, Gender and Communication, Women Transforming Language, Evaluation of Public Communication, Communication and Media Theory, and Conflict Management. She has led study abroad programs in Oviedo, Spain, and Athens, Greece. She was honored to receive Âé¶¹´«Ã½â€™s Distinguished Teaching Award and Distinguished Service Award, as well as AHA International’s Outstanding Visiting Faculty of the Year Award. The editor of Media Depictions of Brides, Wives, and Mothers (Lexington Press) and co-author of Feminism in Practice: Communication Strategies for Making Change (Waveland Press), Dr. Ruggerio’s research at the intersection of rhetoric, feminism, and religious studies has appeared in book chapters, scholarly journals, and web publications. She is active in the National Communication Association and the Western States Communication Association and serves as Affiliate Faculty of the Âé¶¹´«Ã½ Gender, Sexuality, and Women’s Studies Council.
Office:ÌýBritt 154
Phone: 541.552.6673
E-Mail: ruggeria@sou.edu
Dr. Kelly Szott
Associate Professor – Sociology and Human Service
PhD and MA, Sociology, Syracuse University; BA, Social Science, University of Michigan
Pronouns: she/her/hers
Dr. Szott is a medical sociologist who uses qualitative methods to study drug use and addiction. She received her Ph.D. in sociology from Syracuse University along with a Certificate in Advanced Studies in Women’s and Gender Studies. During her doctoral studies, she completed a National Institute on Drug Abuse doctoral fellowship program. Her research examines how public health programs, such as needle exchange, and health care practitioners conceptualize the health of people who inject drugs. Her current project focuses on heroin use and harm reduction responses in rural contexts. Her work comes out of a concern for the ways drug users are treated by institutions entrusted to care for them. Her research has been published in the International Journal of Drug Policy, Health, and Critical Public Health. Kelly enjoys getting to know her students and doing creative and community-based projects in her classes.
Office: Ashland – TA 219, Medford – HEC 201E
Phone: Ashland – 541.552.8254, Medford – 541.552.8153
E-Mail: szottk@sou.edu
Contact the GSWS Program
Âé¶¹´«Ã½ Gender, Sexuality, and Women’s Studies Program
1250 Siskiyou Blvd.
Ashland, OR 97520
541.552.6759
– Questions About GSWS? –
