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15 members 20 excellent students is one of 419 National Merit Scholars the fastest growing research 350 National Hispanic Scholars enterprises in the U.S. One of the top producers nationally of Fulbright Student Scholars economic impact excellent faculty 1 MacArthur fellow $4.25 billion 2 Nobel laureates economic impact on AZ gross product in FY 2014

3 awardees 4 651 215 345 959

5 American Philosophical Society members 15 426, 405, 355, 385 , 329,

8 National Academy of Engineering members 3 2 0 1 201 201 10 American Academy of Arts and Sciences members 201 201 2014 66,217 13 National Academy of Sciences members research expenditures jobs created 25 John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation fellows (in millions) 38 National Endowment for the Humanities fellows enrollment degrees awarded excellent programs undergraduates graduates baccalaureate...... 14,842 #1 most innovative school in the country – U.S. News & World Report master’s...... 5,268 doctoral ...... 687 #1 public and #4 university overall for 81% 19% law...... 223 international students – Institute of International Education (74,146) (17, 211) total degrees awarded...... 21,020 #2 Best Online Graduate Criminal Justice – U.S. News & World Report #4 Online MBA Programs – U.S. News & World Report #8 in the Top 10 for Veterans – Factual ASU Pell Grant recipients: ten-year trend #8 Best Online Bachelor's Programs – U.S. News & World Report

#17 for graduate education in the nation – U.S. News & World Report 24,071 23,740 22,261 Named "Military Friendly School" for seven straight years – G.I. Jobs Magazine 21,444 22,015 One of the "best buy" public colleges in the U.S. and U.K. – Fiske Guide to Colleges 16,735

12,163 11,332 11,154 10,867 10,773

2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015-2016 New Faculty Members

2015. 2016 new faculty members from the following academic units:

W. P. Carey School of Business...... 3 W. P. Carey School School of ...... 7 of Business and Mass Communication

Ira A. Fulton Schools of Engineering...... 7 Michael Baer Ph.D. University of Georgia Mary Lou Fulton Teachers College...... 14 Baer is an assistant professor in the Department of Management. His research focuses on the areas of School for the Future of Innovation...... 16 trust, fairness and impression management. He explores in Society alternative perspectives on trust in the workplace, including some drawbacks of trusting others and being trusted. Baer’s research has appeared in several top management journals, College of Health Solutions...... 17 including the Academy of Management Journal, Journal of Applied Psychology and Personnel Psychology. He holds an Herberger Institute for Design and...... 19 M.B.A. from Brigham Young University. the Arts Hendrik (Hank) Bessembinder New College of Interdisciplinary...... 23 Ph.D. Arts and Sciences Professor Bessembinder is the Francis J. and Mary B. Labriola Chair in the Department of Finance. His research College of Letters and Sciences...... 24 focuses on the design and regulation of financial markets, including stock, foreign exchange, fixed income, futures and College of Liberal Arts and Sciences...... 26 energy markets. He has published in major finance journals, including Journal of Finance, Journal of Financial Economics and Review of Financial Studies. He holds an M.B.A. from College of Nursing and...... 37 Washington State University. Health Innovation Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law..... 38 Lucile Faurel College of Public Service and...... 39 Ph.D. New York University Faurel is an assistant professor in the School of Accountancy Community Solutions and a French national who has lived in France and the U.S. Her research interests include pricing and mispricing of accounting School of ...... 43 information, voluntary disclosure, corporate innovation, contract design and incentives, executive compensation and insider Thunderbird School of Global...... 44 trading. Her research has been published in top accounting journals, including the Journal of Accounting and Economics Management and the Journal of Accounting Research.

3 Arizona State University 2015-2016 New Faculty Members

Bart Hobijn Margaret Luciano Ph.D. New York University Ph.D. University of Connecticut Hobijn is a professor in the Department of Luciano is an assistant professor in the Department Economics. His research focuses on inflation, unemployment of Management. Her research on understanding and and economic growth. Additional research interests include enhancing the quality of coordination during patient handoffs applied macroeconomics, labor market dynamics, technological from surgery to recovery won competitive international progress, econometrics and price measurement. His nearly awards. Her work has been published in leading peer- 30 academic articles have appeared in a range of publications reviewed journals, including the Academy of Management including the Journal of Monetary Economics, American Journal, Journal of Applied Psychology and Journal of Economic Review and the Quarterly Journal of Economics. Management. She received her M.B.A from Clark University.

Kirk Kristofferson Ashok Mishra Ph.D. University of British Columbia (Canada) Ph.D. North Carolina State University Kristofferson is an assistant professor in the Department Professor Mishra is the Kemper and Ethel Marley Chair of Marketing. His research centers on understanding the in the Morrison School of Agribusiness. He is recognized impact of social influence and persuasion in consumption nationally and internationally as one of the leading contexts; specifically, the motivations and social factors that agricultural and applied economists in the field today. His drive consumers to behave prosocially, and how impression- research lies at the intersection of food policy, food security management desires can impact subsequent consumer and the financial performance of agribusinesses and how choice. Kristofferson’s research has been published in the these issues impact the markets for food and the associated Journal of Consumer Research, Cambridge Handbook of input markets needed to produce food. Consumer Psychology and other publications.

Marcie LePine Balasubrahmanian Ravikumar Ph.D. Ph.D. LePine is an associate professor in the Department of Professor Ravikumar’s studies with the Department of Management and Barrett Honors College faculty member. Economics include economic development, dynamic Her research has appeared in the Academy of Management contracts and macroeconomics public finance. Before Journal and the Journal of Applied Psychology. She has joining ASU, he served four years as vice president of the received a number of teaching awards, most recently the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis and as a visiting professor 2015 John W. Teets Outstanding Undergraduate Teacher of at Washington University in St. Louis, Missouri. His more the Year Award. than 30 articles have appeared in more than 20 national and international economics-related journals.

Monika Lisjak Mark Seasholes Ph.D. Ph.D. Lisjak is an assistant professor in the Department of Professor Seasholes conducts research in the field of financial Marketing. Her research examines consumer goals and economics in the Department of Finance. He has written on behaviors. She has two streams of research, symbolic cross-border equity investments, herding behavior of individual consumption and self-control. Her work has appeared investors and loss aversion. Seasholes has taught in a number in leading journals, including the Journal of Consumer of countries, cultures and , including Harvard, Santa Research, Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, and Clara University, University of Texas-Austin, London Business Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin. She received her School, INSEAD and University of Grenoble in France, and M.S. from the University of Ljubljana, Slovenia. HKUST in Hong Kong.

4 5 Arizona State University 2015-2016 New Faculty Members

Christine Shropshire Ph.D. Arizona State University An associate professor in the Department of Management, Shropshire’s research interests include corporate Walter Cronkite School governance, board composition and effectiveness, diversity in the upper echelons and stakeholder management. Her studies currently explore the effects of diverse leadership on of Journalism and Mass firm risk-taking and shareholder activism, and the evolution of board capital with firm growth and internationalization. Prior to joining academia, Shropshire worked as a human Communications capital consultant.

Jessie Jiaxu Wang Sada Reed Ph.D. Carnegie Mellon University Ph.D. University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill An assistant professor in the Department of Finance, Reed is an assistant professor and specializes in the Wang’s research focuses on how frictions such as network examination of sports journalism practices and processes. externalities, contracting and labor search affect systemic Her dissertation analyzed American sports reporters’ risk and asset prices. In 2015, she was awarded the conflicting roles as journalists, community members and Alexander Henderson Award for Excellence in Economic sports enthusiasts, and how these roles influence their Theory and the WRDS Award for an Outstanding Paper in interactions with whistleblowers. She previously was a Asset Pricing by the Midwest Finance Association. sports journalist for several regional media outlets.

David Welsh Ph.D. Welsh is an assistant professor in the Department of Management. His research focuses primarily on issues related to unethical behavior in the workplace and has been published in scholarly journals including Academy of Management Journal, Journal of Applied Psychology, and Ira A. Fulton Schools Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes. His research has been featured in numerous media outlets. He also holds a J.D. from the . of Engineering

Zhongju (John) Zhang Daniel Aukes Ph.D. University of Washington Ph.D. Zhang’s research interests include incentives, user Aukes is an assistant professor in the Polytechnic School. behaviors, decision choices related to online collaborative He focuses on the design and manufacturing of robots as platforms and social media, and big data analytics. His it relates to new fabrication techniques, and creates design research focuses on the problems at the interface of tools to broaden the community of robot designers. His information systems/, management science, research topics include design, manufacturing, kinematics, marketing and economics. Zhang was the founding director dynamics and simulation of robotic and mechatronic of the M.S. degree program in business analytics and devices. He has industrial experience in manufacturing project management at the University of Connecticut. system automation.

6 7 Arizona State University 2015-2016 New Faculty Members

Hani Ben Amor Emma Frow Ph.D. Technical University Freiberg (Germany) Ph.D. University of Cambridge (England) Ben Amor is an assistant professor in the School of Frow is an assistant professor with a joint appointment in Computing, Informatics, and Decision Systems Engineering. the School of Biological and Health Systems Engineering His research focuses on developing robot learning and the Consortium for Science, Policy and Outcomes. She algorithms, which enable intelligent interactive agents, has graduate training in both natural and social sciences. such as robots and virtual characters, to autonomously Her research focuses on standards development and acquire and improve motor skills through supervised and governance in contemporary sciences, with a particular unsupervised methods. This includes the abilities to act and focus on biological engineering and synthetic biology. manipulate objects, recognize and predict human behavior, and interact with human partners.

Otakuye Conroy-Ben Julianne Holloway Ph.D. University of Arizona Ph.D. Drexel University Conroy-Ben is an assistant professor of civil and Holloway is an assistant professor in the School for environmental engineering and the first Lakota to earn Engineering of Matter, Transport and Energy. Her research a in environmental engineering. Her research interests are in the field of tissue engineering, with a focus interests include water/wastewater treatment and reuse, on designing materials to mimic the native biochemical endocrine disruption, analytical and environmental chemistry, and biophysical cues of orthopedic tissues and developing and metal resistance systems in bacteria. She plans to work a better understanding of the role dynamic biomechanics with Native American and female students to build their plays on cellular behavior. presence in engineering.

Shuguang Deng Feng Ju Ph.D. University of Cincinnati Ph.D. University of Wisconsin-Madison Deng is a professor in the School for Engineering of Matter, Ju is an assistant professor in the School of Computing, Transport and Energy. He is a chemical engineer who Informatics, and Decision Systems Engineering. His develops new adsorbents, catalysts and membranes for research interests include stochastic modeling and control sustainable energy and clean water applications. Deng’s with applications in manufacturing systems, battery group is also actively involved in conversion of algae management systems and healthcare delivery systems. to and bioproducts. He has12 years industrial He has received many awards, including the best paper experience and received the Fulbright Distinguished Chair award at an IFAC Conference on Manufacturing Modelling, in Energy Conservation in 2012. Management and Control (MIM), and the Most Popular Article in TASE, 2013.

Mohammad Ebrahimkhani Samira Kiani M.D. Tehran University of Medical Sciences (Iran) M.D. Tehran University of Medical Sciences (Iran) Ebrahimkhani is an assistant professor in the School Kiani is an assistant professor in the School of Biological of Biological and Health Systems Engineering who and Health Systems Engineering and completed her joins ASU from Massachusetts Institute of . postdoctoral training at Massachusetts Institute of His interdisciplinary research focuses to systematically Technology. Her research spans foundational and applied understand the principles of tissue repair and organ mammalian synthetic biology. She develops and applies regeneration in vitro and in vivo. He combines synthetic new CRISPR-based technologies and genetic engineering biology and human stem cells to engineer novel multicellular tools to engineer synthetic genetic circuits with therapeutic systems and personalized human tissue models. applications in vitro and in vivo.

8 9 Arizona State University 2015-2016 New Faculty Members

Richard King Hamidreza Marvi Ph.D. Stanford University Ph.D. Georgia Institute of Technology King is a professor in the School of Electrical, Computer and Marvi is an assistant professor in the School for Engineering Energy Engineering and research director for ASU’s Quantum of Matter, Transport and Energy. He studies the fundamental Energy and Sustainable Solar Technologies (QESST) center. physics behind interactions of biological systems with their Over the last 30 years, his research on photovoltaics has surrounding solid, granular and fluidic environments. Utilizing explored materials, sublattice ordering, high transparency biological insights derived from these studies, he would like tunnel junctions and high-efficiency multijunction solar cells. to develop bio-inspired robotic systems and programmable In 2006, this work led to the first solar cell of any type to interfacial structures for search and rescue, exploratory and reach 40 percent efficiency. medical applications.

Hyunglae Lee Brent Nannenga Ph.D. Massachusetts Institute of Technology Ph.D. University of Washington Lee is an assistant professor in the School for Engineering of Nannenga is an assistant professor of chemical engineering Matter, Transport and Energy. He uses robotic technologies in the School for Engineering of Matter, Transport and to better understand underlying neuromuscular mechanism Energy. His research focuses on protein engineering and in human movement. His goals are to innovate physical studying the structure-function relationships of designed human-robot interaction by incorporating key principles in proteins. Additionally, he is interested in developing and human motor control into robotics, and to advance robot- improving new techniques for structural biology, specifically aided neurorehabilitation for patients with sensory-motor cryo-electron microscopy. impairment.

Qin Lei Paolo Papotti Ph.D. Michigan State University Ph.D. Università Roma Tre (Italy) Lei is an assistant professor in the School of Electrical, Papotti is an assistant professor in the School of Computing, Computer and Energy Engineering. Her expertise focuses Informatics, and Decision Systems Engineering. His on high power converters for high/medium voltage direct research focuses on databases, with an emphasis on data current (HVDC/MVDC) transmission, medium voltage drive, integration and data cleaning at large scale. Prior to joining grid-integration of renewable energy sources, electric vehicle/ ASU, he served as a senior scientist in the Data Analytics hybrid electric vehicle, smart-grid/micro-grid, wide-band gap center at Qatar Computing Research Institute and as an device application (SiC, GaN) and energy storage. assistant professor at Università Roma Tre.

Jeremi London Theodore Pavlic Ph.D. Ph.D. The London is an assistant professor in the Polytechnic School. She Pavlic is an assistant professor with a joint appointment employs mixed methods research designs and computational in the School of Computing, Informatics, and Decision tools to address complex problems. Her research interests Systems Engineering and the School of Sustainability. He include science policy issues surrounding STEM learning in studies complex adaptive systems using a combination of cyberlearning environments, characterizing and measuring the theoretical and empirical methods. His research seeks out impact of STEM education R&D, and applications of simulation unifying theoretical frameworks of rational behavior that cut and modeling tools to understand and conduct accreditation across biology, economics and engineering. assessment processes in undergraduate engineering education.

10 11 Arizona State University 2015-2016 New Faculty Members

François Perreault Georgios Trichopoulos Ph.D. University of Quebec (Canada) Ph.D. The Ohio State University Perreault is an assistant professor in the School of Trichopoulos is an assistant professor in the School of Sustainable Engineering and the Built Environment. After Electrical, Computer and Energy Engineering. He has completing his doctoral degree in environmental sciences, he expertise in electromagnetic and antenna design. His moved to as an NSERC postdoctoral fellow in research focuses on millimeter wave (mmW) and terahertz the Department of Chemical and Environmental Engineering. (THz) technology for biomedical sensing, imaging and high His research explores the interface between biological and data-rate wireless communication applications. He comes to engineered systems, with an emphasis on environmental ASU from a senior researcher position with ElectroScience nanotechnology, nanotoxicology, environmental microbiology Lab at OSU. and water quality.

Panagiotis Polygerinos Wenlong Zhang Ph.D. King’s College (England) Ph.D. -Berkeley Polygerinos is an assistant professor with the Polytechnic Zhang is an assistant professor in the Polytechnic School. School. He is a mechanical engineer and his research His academic specialty lies in dynamic system analysis, interests focus on the realization of tasks that are essential modeling and control. His research focuses on the to the design, implementation and integration of novel, design and control of large-scale and/or human-involved affordable robotic systems and mechatronic devices that cyber-physical systems, with applications to gait analysis have significant potential to improve patient care and and rehabilitation, collaborative robotics and advanced human activity. manufacturing.

Jiangchao Qin Ming Zhao Ph.D. Purdue University Ph.D. University of Qin is an assistant professor in the School of Electrical, Zhao is an associate professor in the School of Computing, Computer and Energy Engineering. He focuses on the Informatics, and Decision Systems Engineering. His investigation and development of highly efficient, modular, research is in the areas of experimental computer reliable, fault-tolerant power electronic converters and systems, including distributed/cloud, big-data and high- their utility applications, including integration of renewable performance computing systems. He is also interested in and distributed energy resources, power quality solutions, the interdisciplinary studies that bridge computer systems transmission, distribution and power electronic loads. research with other domains. In 2013, he was recognized with a National Science Foundation CAREER Award.

Jorge Sefair Ph.D. Sefair is an assistant professor in the School of Computing, Informatics, and Decision Systems Engineering. His research focuses on the use of optimization techniques for decision- making under uncertainty. In particular, he develops models for optimal design of resilient systems that will maintain a critical level of operation even under adverse uncertain circumstances. In particular, he is motivated by applications of operations research in environment, public policy and .

12 13 Arizona State University 2015-2016 New Faculty Members

Yi-Chun (Shelly) Hong Ph.D. University of Georgia Hong is an assistant professor of . Her experiences in teaching and in instructional design have contributed to her interest in developing learners’ real world ill-structured problem-solving abilities. Her research Mary Lou Fulton investigates ways to design effective online learning environments that facilitate a learner’s reflective thinking skills and collaborative learning abilities during problem- Teachers College solving processes.

Katie Bernstein Jeongeun Kim Ph.D. University of California-Berkeley Ph.D. Bernstein is an assistant professor. Her research, supported Kim is an assistant professor who studies how the social, by The International Research Foundation for English political and economic environments affect the organization Language Education (TIRF), focuses on the language and and administration of colleges and universities, and how literacy practices of emergent bilingual children learning diverse constituencies on campus are influenced. Her English in preschool. Before , Bernstein scholarship and teaching intersects methodology and spent several years as a teacher of linguistically diverse organizational theory and policy. She applies methodological preschoolers in Belgium and in California. tools to address organizational changes, strategies and policy in the context of higher education institutions.

Kathleen Farrand Craig Mertler Ph.D. The Ohio State University Ph.D. Farrand is an assistant professor interested in practices that Mertler is an associate professor. He teaches action improve the social and academic success of all learners in research, statistical analysis and assessment methods. He inclusive early childhood classrooms. Her research includes has served as a methodology expert on more than 100 teacher pedagogy, self-efficacy of preservice teachers and dissertations and theses. He has authored 10 books, technology interventions in early childhood. She is on the numerous refereed articles and presented more than 35 editorial and executive board of the Council for Exceptional research papers at education conferences. He conducts Children-Division of Visual Impairments and Deaf/ workshops on action research, classroom assessment and Blindness. data-driven decision-making.

Danah Henriksen Amanda Vickery Ph.D. Michigan State University Ph.D. University of Texas-Austin Henriksen is an assistant professor. She has published Vickery is an assistant professor. Her research utilizes a more than 20 articles/chapters in venues such as TC Black feminist framework to examine the pedagogical Record and Educational Technology, and practitioner practices of Black teachers. Additionally, she explores the journals such as Educational Leadership. She is associate silences of Black women in the social studies curriculum chair of the creativity SIG for the Society of Information and how these narratives can be integrated into the Technology and Teacher Education. She is also an award- curriculum. Vickery regularly presents her work at the winning instructor, teaching across online, F2F and hybrid National Council for the Social Studies and the American contexts. Education Research Association.

14 15 Arizona State University 2015-2016 New Faculty Members

Lynne Watanabe Andrew Maynard Ph.D. Michigan State University Ph.D. University of Cambridge (England) Watanabe is an assistant professor of literacy education. Professor Maynard directs the Risk Innovation Laboratory Her research focuses on how context influences young and is a world leader in the responsible development and children’s abilities to read and write different genres use of emerging technologies and innovative strategies – particularly informational texts. Her examinations of of risk assessment, management and communication. contexts both within the U.S. and in Botswana focus on His integrative approaches to risk support sustainable how connecting home, community and school contexts development in a complex, interconnected and resource- can foster language and literacy learning. constrained world.

Mark Wiederspan Lekelia (Kiki) Jenkins Ph.D. University of Michigan Ph.D. Wiederspan is an assistant professor. His research focuses Jenkins is an assistant professor in the School for the on the impact of college affordability and financial aid on Future of Innovation in Society. A marine conservation college access and persistence. Prior to graduate school, scientist, she specializes in theorizing and developing novel he worked as a policy analyst for the National Student innovation strategies that effectively combine technology Loan Program. development, stakeholder engagement and conservation policy to reduce by-catch, improve renewable energy projects, and enhance environmental, social and economic sustainability for marine communities.

School for the Future of College of Health Innovation in Society Solutions

Diana Bowman Bradley Doebbeling Ph.D. Monash University (Australia) M.D. Bowman is an associate professor in the School for Doebbeling is a professor in the School for the Science the Future of Innovation in Society and the Sandra of Health Care Delivery. He is a physician-researcher, Day O’Connor College of Law. Her research analyzes mentor and consultant in informatics, healthcare systems and informs the development of smarter governance engineering and implementation science. He focuses on and regulation of innovation in order to simultaneously making a difference in improving care, using data and enhance creativity, improve public health, and stimulate technology to drive practice change, and involves active deliberation of the ethical, legal and societal dimensions partnership with operations, clinicians and patients. of emerging technologies.

16 17 Arizona State University 2015-2016 New Faculty Members

Bruce Kaplan Meghan Vidt M.D. Ph.D. -Wake Forest University A leader in transplantation, Professor Kaplan’s work in the Vidt is an assistant professor in exercise science and School for the Science of Health Care Delivery has created health promotion in the School of Nutrition and Health a better understanding of complex systems. He has held Promotion. Using a comprehensive approach, she studies two endowed chairs, has more than 250 peer-reviewed musculoskeletal biomechanics of the shoulder and upper publications (with 14,000 citations) and published the limb to assess mobility, function, and injury risk in various definitive text book in immunotherapy. He is deputy editor of populations, including older adults, patients with a rotator the American Journal of Transplantation and advisor to the cuff tear and workers. This work is accomplished through journal Nature Reviews. the application of experimental, computational and medical imaging techniques.

Li Liu Dongwen Wang M.D. Peking Union Medical College (China) Ph.D. Columbia University Liu is an assistant professor in the Department of Biomedical Wang is a professor in the Department of Biomedical Informatics. With special interest on genomic medicine Informatics. His research focuses on the use of information and bioinformatics, she develops computational methods technology to disseminate clinical evidence, manage to integrate genomics, machine learning and evolution to information in collaborative workflows and provide discover disease biomarkers. technology-mediated behavioral interventions. His work has been applied to address a number of clinical and public health challenges such as the improvement of childhood immunization rates.

Xin Luo Ph.D. University of Science and Technology of China Luo is an assistant professor in the Department of Speech and Hearing Science. He is a hearing scientist with an engineering background who uses an interdisciplinary approach of signal processing, psychoacoustics, electrophysiology and computational modeling to understand Herberger Institute for the mechanisms of electric hearing with cochlear implants and design signal processing strategies to enhance cochlear implant performance in challenging listening tasks. Design and the Arts

Lynda Ransdell Jason Caslor Ph.D. Arizona State University D.M.A. Arizona State University Associate dean for faculty affairs in ASU’s School of Nutrition Caslor is an assistant professor of instrumental conducting and Health Promotion, Professor Ransdell served previously in the School of Music. Prior to ASU, he served as at Montana State (dean), Boise State (department head) and assistant professor at Memorial University in St. John’s, the University of Utah (Employee Wellness and Graduate Newfoundland, Canada where he conducted the Wind Programs). She is a fellow of the American College of Sports Ensemble and oversaw the undergraduate and graduate Medicine (ACSM), and has more than 100 publications. Her instrumental conducting programs. Caslor also spent three research interests include theory-based interventions, improving seasons as resident conductor with the Thunder Bay athletic performance and enhancing faculty success. Symphony Orchestra.

18 19 Arizona State University 2015-2016 New Faculty Members

Chingwen Cheng Gordon Hawkins Ph.D. University of Massachusetts-Amherst M.M. University of Maryland Cheng is an assistant professor in Landscape Architecture/ Hawkins is an assistant professor in the School of Music Urbanism within The Design School. Her research interests and critically acclaimed internationally for his in-depth lie in the understanding of interaction between social interpretations and luxuriant baritone voice. Most recent and ecological systems and the role that planning and engagements include Der Ring des Nibelungen, Rigoletto, design interventions can play to improve resilience and Tosca, Nabucco, Der Freischütz, Lohengrin, Un Ballo sustainability of our built environments. She is a Registered in Maschera, Porgy and Bess, and Aida. Hawkins has Landscape Architect and a LEED Accredited Professional. shared the stage with such distinguished artists as Placido Domingo, Mirella Freni and Luciano Pavarotti.

Brian DeMaris Lauren Hayes M.M. New England Conservatory Ph.D. University of Edinburgh (Scotland) DeMaris joins the ASU School of Music as director of the Hayes is an assistant professor in the School of Arts, Lyric Opera Theatre program. He also serves as music Media + Engineering. A composer and performer originally director of Mill City Summer Opera and artist-faculty at the from Glasgow, Scotland, she works with combinations of Aspen Music Festival. He has worked with a wide range bespoke software, prepared piano, analogue monosynths, of opera companies and festivals, and appeared in recitals, drum machines and live electronics. Her practice competitions and master classes throughout the U.S. and explores new strategies for live electronic performance abroad. by investigating the performer’s physical relationship with the digital realm, and seeking to deepen this through the modality of touch.

Laura Emmery Kristin Hunt Ph.D. University of California-Santa Barbara Ph.D. University of Wisconsin-Madison Emmery is an assistant professor of music theory in An assistant professor in the School of Film, Dance and the School of Music. Prior to ASU, she taught at Emory Theatre, Hunt studies the adaptation, contestation and University and University of California-Santa Barbara. Her activist reclamation of ancient/classical performance dissertation on Elliott Carter’s string quartets incorporates structures. Her professional practice includes applied sketch study in tracking Carter’s historical evolution and theatre, theatre in education, theatre for social justice and compositional process. Emmery has publications in peer- devising. reviewed journals, forthcoming articles and a monograph on Carter’s string quartets under review.

Heather Green Adam Nocek M.F.A. University of Arizona Ph.D. University of Washington Green is an assistant professor in the School of Art. Nocek is an assistant professor in the School of Arts, Her projects and installations examine historical and Media + Engineering. His research and teaching are ecological narratives of the northern Gulf of California and at the intersections of continental philosophy, science/ Sonoran Desert. She has worked in collaboration with a technology studies, digital culture/aesthetics and design/ diverse range of individuals including scientists, poets and technoscience. Nocek has published essays on media fishermen. Her work has been exhibited in Uruguay, Mexico theory, artificial life, architecture, the history of biotechnology and in museums and galleries both regionally and across and process philosophy. He received a M.S. in philosophy the U.S. from Boston College.

20 21 Arizona State University 2015-2016 New Faculty Members

Peter Schmelz Ph.D. University of California-Berkeley Schmelz is an associate professor in the School of Music. His primary area of expertise is 20th-century music, New College of especially music after 1945, with a focus on the music produced in Russia, Ukraine and the Soviet Union, including that by Shostakovich, Schnittke and Silvestrov. His other Interdisciplinary Arts interests include popular music and culture in the U.S. and Eastern Europe, music and the cold war, politics, film and sound studies. and Sciences

Jason Thompson Sreetharan Kanthaswamy Ph.D. Northwestern University Ph.D. University of California-Davis Thompson is an assistant professor of music education Kanthaswamy is an associate professor in the School in the School of Music. He teaches courses that explore of Mathematical and Natural Sciences. His expertise is sociocultural issues in arts education, socially engaged in population, forensic and conservation genetics. His practice in design and the arts, and arts in urban contexts. research on primate genetics and genomics centers on Thompson is particularly interested in research on how the investigation of anthropogenic and natural forces that culture influences and mediates music instruction and shape and structure genetic variation of natural and captive how music teachers develop the competencies needed for animal populations. His research aims to establish species- working in diverse teaching environments. specific genetic markers and enhance population genetics databases.

Christopher Wells Francine McGregor Ph.D. University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill Ph.D. University of Connecticut Wells is an assistant professor of musicology in the McGregor is an assistant professor in the School of School of Music and managing editor of the Journal of Humanities, Arts and Cultural Studies. She is a medievalist Jazz Studies. He received the Glen Haydon Award for an who writes on 14th-15th-century British literature, Outstanding Dissertation in Musicology and the Edgar particularly Chaucer and secular narrative. Her current A. Toppin Award for Outstanding Research in African project considers the intersections of equine veterinary American Music for his work on drummer/bandleader medicine and late medieval popular literature. Chick Webb and swing music in Harlem during the .

Sian Mooney Ph.D. Oregon State University Mooney is associate dean and professor in the School of Social and Behavioral Sciences. She is an applied economist working on problems at the interface of human decision-making and the environment, particularly climate change, agriculture and water. She is adept at working with multidisciplinary teams and is also interested in exploring faculty motivations and rewards from team-based science.

22 23 Arizona State University 2015-2016 New Faculty Members

Tess Neal Marianne Moore Ph.D. Ph.D. Neal is an assistant professor in the School of Social and Moore is an assistant professor of science and mathematics. Behavioral Sciences. She is a researcher and licensed She uses ecological, physiological and evolutionary tools to psychologist. Neal’s research focuses on human inference examine relationships between wildlife and their pathogens and decision-making. The core questions motivating her and to uncover mechanisms by which species evolved to research are: “How do people reason with and integrate resist or succumb to infectious diseases. She focuses on bat information to make inferences and judgments?” and “What white-nose syndrome, its impacts on exposed populations affects people’s ability to do this well?” She studies these and its potential threat to Arizona species. basic science questions in applied settings, such as in the legal system, scientific healthcare, mental health systems and government. Eric Nystrom Ph.D. Nystrom is an assistant professor. Prior to joining ASU, he was associate professor of history at the Rochester Institute of Technology. He is an historian of science and technology whose book “Seeing Underground: Maps, Models, and College of Letters Mining Engineering in America” investigates the creation and impact of the visual culture of mining engineering in the late 19th and early 20th century, particularly upon the and Sciences process of engineering professionalization.

Denise Bates Fábio Suzart de Albuquerque Ph.D. University of Arizona Ph.D. Universidad de Alcalá (Spain) Bates is an assistant professor of interdisciplinary studies Suzart de Albuquerque is an assistant professor of and organizational leadership. She is an historian whose science and mathematics. His research focuses on the interdisciplinary research focuses on leadership, activism, macroecological issues, including the spatial patterns community development and nation-building among of species, the effect of habitat loss and fragmentation southeastern Native communities in the mid-20th century. on biodiversity, and conservation biogeography over Her book, “The Other Movement: Indian Rights and Civil broad scales. Rights in the Deep South,” led to the development of two forthcoming books and a leadership project with the Coushatta Nation of Louisiana.

Heather Curry Leandra Swanner Ph.D. University of South Florida Ph.D. Harvard University Curry is an assistant professor of communication studies. Swanner is an assistant professor and a researcher with Her research focuses on the relationship between ASU’s Center for Biology and Society. She is an historian of community and economic insecurity in urban spaces and science and technology whose cross-disciplinary research places, engaging semiotic phenomenology as a means of explores the role of narrative in shaping scientific seeing into urban problems, such as homelessness and, just development, as well as the intersection of Big Science, as importantly, public policies and responses to those who Native communities and spiritual geographies. live homeless. She received her M.A. in women’s and gender studies.

24 25 Arizona State University 2015-2016 New Faculty Members

Wendy Williams Jonathan Barth Ph.D. Arizona State University Ph.D. George Mason University Williams is an assistant professor of English education Barth is an assistant professor in the School for Historical, in interdisciplinary humanities and communication at the Philosophical and Religious Studies, and is associated with Polytechnic campus. Her research examines the out-of- the Center for Political Thought and Leadership. Barth school writing practices of culturally diverse spoken word specializes in the history of money, with a particular focus on poets and rappers in order to build bridges between formal early America and early modern Britain, and he is especially academic literacy instruction and the voluntary writing interested in the influence of money in political, economic adolescents compose in their everyday . and cultural questions.

Heather Bean Ph.D. Georgia Institute of Technology Bean is an assistant professor in the School of Life Sciences. She is a bioanalytical chemist who uses multidimensional chromatography and mass spectrometry to characterize the metabolomes of pathogenic microbial College of Liberal Arts communities in chronic lung infections. These data are mined for biomarkers that will be incorporated into new diagnostics for lung infections, as well as for novel avenues and Sciences for therapeutic intervention.

Athena Aktipis Daniel Berliner Ph.D. University of Pennsylvania Ph.D. University of Washington Aktipis is an assistant professor in the Department of Berliner is an assistant professor in the School of Politics Psychology whose transdisciplinary research investigates and Global Studies. He studies the politics of transparency the interrelationship between biological and cultural and open government policies around the world, as well influences on human generosity. Her work on cooperation as social and environmental governance in global supply and conflict in biological systems includes cancer evolution chains. His research has appeared in the American Political and the human microbiome. Aktipis is a cooperation theorist, Science Review, Journal of Politics, International Studies social psychologist, theoretical evolutionary biologist and Quarterly, Policy Studies Journal, and World Development. cancer biologist working at the intersection of these fields.

Marlon Bailey H. Russell Bernard Ph.D. University of California-Berkeley Ph.D. University of Illinois Bailey is an associate professor of women and gender Trained as an anthropologist, Bernard is the director of studies in the School of Social Transformation. He is an ASU’s Institute for Social Science Research (ISSR) and ethnographer whose research focuses on gender, sexuality, a research professor in the School of performance and HIV/AIDS prevention among Black and Social Change. An expert on social science research LGBT communities. His book, “Butch Queens Up in Pumps: methods, he has pursued research in Greece, Mexico Gender, Performance, and Ballroom Culture in Detroit,” and the U.S. on diverse topics, including technology and received the Alan Bray Memorial Book Prize from the GL/Q social change, language death and social network analysis. Caucus at the Modern Language Association. Bernard is a member of the National Academy of Sciences.

26 27 Arizona State University 2015-2016 New Faculty Members

José Causadias Kit Elam Ph.D. University of Minnesota-Twin Cities Ph.D. Southern Illinois University Causadias is an assistant professor in the T. Denny Sanford Elam is an assistant professor in the T. Denny Sanford School of Social and Family Dynamics. His research and School of Social and Family Dynamics. His research teaching focuses on advancing the field of culture and in developmental psychology and behavior genetics biology interplay, that inquiry of how cultural and biological investigates how the interplay between children’s genetic processes (especially genetic) have evolved together to predisposition and family processes contributes to children’s shape human and animal behavior, and particularly, how this socio-emotional, behavioral and health outcomes over time. relationship shapes mental health and well-being among immigrants.

Marisa Elena Duarte Emir Estrada Ph.D. University of Washington Ph.D. University of Southern California Duarte is an assistant professor in the School of Social Estrada is an assistant professor in the School of Human Transformation and researcher with the Consortium for Evolution and Social Change whose academic focus on Science, Policy and Outcomes. She is an information immigration and gender is influenced in great part by her scientist who applies qualitative and decolonizing own immigration experience. She studies immigrants from methodologies to reveal the social impacts of information, Mexico and Central America who work in the informal knowledge and technology in indigenous and U.S.-Mexico sector of unregulated or semi-regulated jobs. Currently, borderland contexts. she is doing research with the children of these workers, examining their role in the family’s economic survival.

Christian Dwyer Gillian Gile Ph.D. University of Cambridge (England) Ph.D. University of British Columbia (Canada) Dwyer is an associate professor in the Department of Gile is an assistant professor in the School of Life Physics. His field of expertise is electron microscopy, where Sciences. She is an evolutionary microbiologist who uses electrons are used to probe the properties of materials at molecular biology and comparative genomics approaches the nanometer and atomic length scales. Dwyer’s research to investigate aspects of microbial eukaryote evolution, involves a close coupling of state-of-the-art instrumentation particularly plastid evolution and the biodiversity of termite with electron scattering theory in order to extract maximum hindgut symbionts. quantitative information from the experiments.

Meagan Ehlenz Cassandra Gipson-Reichardt Ph.D. University of Pennsylvania Ph.D. Ehlenz is an assistant professor in the School of Geographical Gipson-Reichardt is an assistant professor in the Sciences and Urban Planning. Her major fields of study Department of Psychology whose research includes the include urban revitalization and community development, with exploration of the neurobiological substrates of addiction and specializations in the role of anchor institutions in urban places the identification of novel pharmacological and behavioral and mechanisms for building community wealth. Prior to joining interventions for the treatment of drug abuse. Her work ASU, she was a research associate at the Penn Institute has the potential to contribute to the development of novel for Urban Research, a planning consultant in Southeastern therapeutic options aimed at reversing nicotine-induced Wisconsin and senior planner for the City of Milwaukee. alterations and improving smoking cessation outcomes.

28 29 Arizona State University 2015-2016 New Faculty Members

William Graves Jianling Liao Ph.D. University of Wisconsin-Madison Ph.D. University of Iowa Graves is an associate professor in the Department Liao is an assistant professor in the School of International of Physics and a researcher in the Center for Applied Letters and Cultures. She specializes in second language Structural Discovery. He is an accelerator physicist who acquisition and focuses her study on the development is building a novel x-ray light source on campus that will of second language speaking and writing abilities, and be used in a wide range of applications including finding computer mediated communication in second language the atomic-level structure of biomolecules, phase-contrast learning. At ASU, she also directs the Chinese Language medical imaging and x-ray studies of condensed matter. Flagship program and the Chinese language program.

William Hedberg Julian Lim Ph.D. Harvard University Ph.D. Hedberg is an assistant professor in the School of Lim is an assistant professor of history in the School of International Letters and Cultures. His research focuses Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies. Trained in on the Japanese reception of Chinese vernacular fiction history and law, she focuses on immigration, the U.S.-Mexico and drama during the Edo and Meiji periods (17th–20th border and race. Using interdisciplinary and transnational century). He explores the ways in which engagement with approaches, Lim studies the history of diverse immigrants unfamiliar linguistic forms and literary genres engendered in the U.S.-Mexico borderlands, and the development of new ways of conceptualizing Japan’s cultural relationship immigration policy and law on the border. She also holds a to China. J.D. from University of California-Berkeley.

Katie Hinde Sarah Lindstrom Johnson Ph.D. University of California- Ph.D. Johns Hopkins University Hinde is an associate professor in the School of Human Lindstrom Johnson is an assistant professor in the T. Denny Evolution and Social Change. She studies the effects of Sanford School of Social and Family Dynamics. Her work primate and human breastmilk on offspring, such as how uses a positive youth development approach to identifying it helps babies grow, shapes immune and neurobiological ways to prevent youth involvement in risk behaviors, which development, and is linked to health and disease. Hinde is focuses on supporting development assets and improving a passionate advocate of public science, best known for the environments in which youth learn and grow. Much creating “March Mammal Madness.” She joins ASU as part of her work involves partnerships with youth-serving of the new Center for Evolution and Medicine. organizations.

Adam Lampert Wei Liu Ph.D. Weizmann Institute of Science (Israel) Ph.D. The Ohio State University Lampert is a theoretical ecologist and assistant professor in Liu’s interests range from lipids, a class of small yet the School of Human Evolution and Social Change. He is essential molecules in cellular membranes and controlling interested in general principles that apply to a wide variety the conformation, to the biological behavior of membrane of ecosystems at different spatial, temporal and organismal proteins. Most recently, his research builds understanding of scales. He has wide-ranging interests in sustainability, receptors, primarily GPCR-mediated biological processes including identifying cost-effective management efforts for involved in cancer development. He joins ASU as an restoration of degraded ecosystems and identifying how assistant professor in the School of Molecular Sciences. asymmetric and cooperative behaviors/traits evolve.

30 31 Arizona State University 2015-2016 New Faculty Members

Sabina Low Samuel McClure Ph.D. University of Denver Ph.D. Baylor College of Medicine Low is interested in applied research on relationship McClure is an associate professor in the Department of dynamics in family, peer and school contexts. An assistant Psychology’s Cognitive Science Program. His research professor in the T. Denny Sanford School of Social and uses a combination of human neuroimaging (fMRI and Family Dynamics, her research agenda incorporates school EEG), behavioral studies and computational models. and community-based studies focused on understanding McClure’s work has made fundamental contributions and promotion of healthy relationship adjustment, school to understanding the function of the human dopamine success and mental health, with emphasis on the role system in learning and decision-making, including novel of socio-economic and cultural factors on relationship methodologies that permit direct measurement of activity functioning. from dopaminergic nuclei.

Alejandro Lugo Jeremy Mills Ph.D. Stanford University Ph.D. Scripps Research Institute Lugo is professor and director of the School of Transborder Mills is an assistant professor in the School of Molecular Studies. As a sociocultural anthropologist who specializes in Sciences. His research interests center on using the study of culture, gender and history at the U.S.-Mexico computational modeling algorithms to engineer proteins border, his research and teaching interests range from with new or enhanced properties. Mills comes to ASU from border theory, , colonialism, and capitalism Seattle where he carried out postdoctoral studies at the to cultural production and transformation in the context of University of Washington. transnationalism and globalization.

Joshua MacFadyen William Moore Ph.D. University of Guelph (Canada) Ph.D. University of Colorado MacFadyen is an assistant professor of environmental Professor Moore’s research in the School of Politics and humanities in the School of Historical, Philosophical and Global Studies focuses on dissident–state interactions: Religious Studies and the School of Sustainability. He coercion, human rights, protest, rebellion, repression and uses digital history methods such as historical geographic terror. He is particularly interested in how political institutions information systems (GIS) to examine the social and (the popular franchise, legislatures, courts, civil and political ecological problems of energy in Canadian and U.S. rights) impact those interactions, and in escalatory and de- agriculture, particularly during the transition from traditional escalatory dynamics. to modern agro-ecosystems.

Carlo Maley Salvatore Oddo Ph.D. Massachusetts Institute of Technology Ph.D. University of California-Irvine Maley is an associate professor in the School of Life Oddo is an associate professor in the School of Sciences. His research team investigates genomic data Life Sciences and researcher with the ASU-Banner mining, phylogenetics, computational modeling and wet Neurodegenerative Research Center in the Biodesign lab techniques to solve these problems. He focuses on Institute. He uses genetics to better understand the developing better methods to prevent cancer and improve molecular mechanism underlying age-dependent cancer management, including evolution of cancer neurodegenerative disorders, such as Alzheimer’s. He is suppression mechanisms in large, long-lived animals such also a faculty member in ASU’s Interdisciplinary Graduate as elephants and whales (a problem called Peto’s Paradox). Program in Neuroscience.

32 33 Arizona State University 2015-2016 New Faculty Members

Matthew Peeples David Sailor Ph.D. Arizona State University Ph.D. University of California-Berkeley As an archaeologist, Peeples brings an array of evidence Sailor joins ASU as a professor in the School of to understanding how and why large-scale social groups Geographical Sciences and Urban Planning. His research emerge, spread, change or dissolve over time. He is an focuses on the urban climate system and its implications for assistant professor in the School of Human Evolution and energy, air quality, and human health and comfort. Sailor will Social Change with research currently focused on the take a leadership role in developing a new Urban Climate prehistory of the Cibola region of New Mexico and Arizona. Research Initiative.

Jonathan Pettigrew Rashad Shabazz Ph.D. Pennsylvania State Ph.D. University of California-Santa Cruz Pettigrew joined the School of Human Shabazz’s academic expertise brings together theories of Communication as an assistant professor. He is a health race and racism, Black cultural studies, gender studies and communication scholar with expertise in developing, critical prison studies, within a methodological framework implementing and evaluating health interventions. His that draws on history, human geography, philosophy and current research in prevention science includes leading a literature. He is an associate professor in the School of team in Nicaragua, Central America, to develop culturally- Social Transformation. His research explores the ways in grounded drug and violence prevention programs. which race, class, sexuality and gender articulate through geographies of anti-Black racism.

Alyssa Rhoden Evgenya Shkolnik Ph.D. University of California-Berkeley Ph.D. University of British Columbia (Canada) Rhoden joins the School of and as Shkolnik joins the School of Earth and Space Exploration an assistant professor. She studies icy satellite lithospheres as an assistant professor. She comes to ASU after four and tidal tectonics. She has worked on icy lithospheres years at the Lowell Observatory in Flagstaff, Arizona. Her since her undergraduate study with University of Arizona, research interests include exoplanet magnetic fields and the when the Galileo spacecraft returned the first images of radiation environments of exoplanets with the implications Jupiter’s satellite Europa. Today, she is a mainstay in the for habitability. Additionally, she is the lead or co-investigator steadily growing field of icy satellite geophysics. of two CubeSat missions.

Jennifer Richter Nicholas Stephanopoulos Ph.D. Ph.D. University of California-Berkeley Richter is an assistant professor in the School of Social Stephanopoulos is an assistant professor in the School of Transformation and the School for the Future of Innovation Molecular Sciences and the Center for Molecular Design and Society. Her research examines justice, equity and and Biomimetics at . His work democracy in technology innovation, emphasizing how focuses on engineering protein-DNA nanomaterials, with the creation and operation of large-scale energy systems applications in drug delivery, nano-robotics, renewable distributes benefits, risks and opportunities for effective energy and tissue engineering for regenerative medicine. participation in energy system design across diverse groups and communities.

34 35 Arizona State University 2015-2016 New Faculty Members

Cindi SturtzSreetharan Ph.D. University of California-Davis Trained as a linguistic anthropologist, SturtzSreetharan studies contemporary language use, especially as it is related to ideas of gender. Focusing in on masculinity, her current field-based research in Japan considers such issues as men’s social authority as nested in their everyday College of Nursing and conversational style. She is an associate professor in the School of Human Evolution and Social Change. Health Innovation

Heather Throop Felipe Gonzales Castro Ph.D. State University of New York-Stony Brook Ph.D. University of Washington Throop is an associate professor with a joint appointment For more than 30 years, Professor Castro has conducted in the School of Earth and Space Exploration and the health research with Hispanics, studying factors in the School of Life Sciences. She is an ecosystem scientist prevention of drug abuse, cancer, type 2 diabetes and other who studies relationships among vegetation change, chronic diseases. He is the originator of the Integrative biogeochemical cycles and climate change. Throop’s work Mixed Methods research methodology that informs the focuses on desert ecosystems in the southwestern U.S. design of efficacious interventions to prevent chronic and sub-Saharan Africa. disease and enhance health.

Dov Zazkis Julie McNulty Ph.D. University of California-San Diego Ph.D. Oregon Health and Science University Zazkis is an assistant professor in the School of McNulty is an assistant professor whose research interest is Mathematical and Statistical Sciences. His research is in holistic care and psychosocial support for cancer survivors the area of mathematics learning at the college level. In and the financial impact of cancer. Also a registered nurse, particular he explores how students comprehend and learn she conducts a needs and resource assessment study at how to construct mathematical proofs. He has a master’s the and works toward developing a support and from University of Northern British Columbia and pursued empowerment intervention to improve quality of life in Latina postdoctoral appointments at Rutgers and Oklahoma State. breast cancer survivors.

36 37 Arizona State University 2015-2016 New Faculty Members

College of Public Sandra Day O’Connor Service and Community College of Law Solutions

Laura Napoli Coordes Stuart Bretschneider J.D. Ph.D. The Ohio State University Coordes is an associate professor. Her research interests Bretschneider is a Foundation Professor in the School include corporate reorganizations, venue and forum of Public Affairs. He joins ASU from shopping, and municipal bankruptcies under chapter 9 where he was professor of public administration and of the Bankruptcy Code. Her teaching interests include international affairs at the Maxwell School of Citizenship bankruptcy law, secured transactions, corporations and and Public Affairs, and director of the Center for Technology contracts. Before coming to the College of Law, Coordes and Information Policy. Bretschneider is widely recognized practiced in the Business, Finance and Restructuring as a scholar and as one of the most prolific and productive Department at Weil, Gotshal & Manges in New York. academic mentors in public administration.

Erik Luna Mary Brown J.D. Stanford Law School Ph.D. Louisiana State University Luna is a Foundation Professor of Law. He teaches and Brown is an assistant professor in the School of Social writes primarily in the areas of criminal law and procedure. Work. Her expertise is community transformation, vulnerable He has served as a Fulbright Scholar in New Zealand and children and families, social determinants of health and held visiting positions with the Max Planck Institute for social capital. She received her M.P.A. from Louisiana State Foreign and International Criminal Law, the Cuban Society University and M.S.W. from the University of South Carolina. of Penal Sciences, and the Office of the Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court in The Hague.

Katie Cotter Ph.D. University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill Cotter is an assistant professor in the School of Social Work. Her research focuses on the risk and protective factors associated with youth development, with a particular emphasis on aggressive and violent behavior. Cotter plans to further develop the knowledge base and ultimately use this information to develop and evaluate prevention and intervention programs. She received her M.S.W. from the State University of New York-Buffalo.

38 39 Arizona State University 2015-2016 New Faculty Members

Kristin Ferguson-Colvin Hyunsung Oh Ph.D. University of Texas at Arlington Ph.D. University of Southern California Ferguson-Colvin is an associate professor in the School of Oh is an assistant professor in the School of Social Work. Social Work. Her expertise is in homelessness and runaway His research expertise is depression, chronic illness and youth, supported employment, social enterprises, university- co-morbidity, social networks and self-care behaviors, and agency research partnerships and global social work. She primary care settings. His goal is to promote healthy life received her M.S.W. from the University of Michigan and B.A. of low-income racial minorities in primary care settings or from the . communities. He received his M.S.W. and B.A. from Yonsei University in Seoul, Korea.

Brian Gerber Dustin Pardini Ph.D. State University of New York-Stony Brook Ph.D. University of Alabama Gerber is an associate professor in the School of Public Pardini is an associate professor in the School of Affairs and director of the Emergency Management Criminology and Criminal Justice. His research focuses Homeland Security program. He has extensive experience on the precursors and outcomes associated with the performing policy analysis and evaluation work for state development of antisocial (e.g., violence, theft) and and local government agencies, as well as major national substance-using behaviors from childhood to adulthood, nonprofits engaged in disaster relief and recovery work. as well as evaluating the impact that early psychosocial interventions can have on these problems. He received his M.A. in child clinical psychology from University of Alabama.

Anthony (Tony) Grubesic Jesenia Pizzaro Ph.D. The Ohio State University Ph.D. Professor Grubesic is the director of the Center of Spatial Pizzaro is an associate professor in the School of Reasoning and Policy Analytics. His areas of interest are Criminology and Criminal Justice. Pizarro has worked diverse, including geographic information science, urban with various police departments throughout the country in health, environmetrics, economic analysis, public policy joint efforts to curb the violence in the municipalities they evaluation and spatial analytic methods. He received his M.A. serve. Her research focus is on violence and homicide. She in geography from the University of Akron, Ohio. received her M.S. and B.S. in criminal justice from Rutgers University, New Jersey.

Eric Legg Akheil Singla Ph.D. University of Utah Ph.D. The Ohio State University Legg is an assistant professor in the School of Community Singla is an assistant professor in the School of Public Resources and Development. His research interests include Affairs. His research expertise is public finance and public community sports and youth development with specific sector management. His dissertation was entitled “Risk interests in sense of community and transformational Management or Risky Business?” leadership. He is the founder of a community-based youth sport not-for-profit organization, and is the current national volunteer chair of learning and leadership development for the United States Tennis Association (USTA).

40 41 Arizona State University 2015-2016 New Faculty Members

Stacia Stolzenberg Ph.D. Claremont Graduate University Stolzenberg is an assistant professor in the School of Criminology and Criminal Justice. Her expertise is child maltreatment, promoting and protecting children and their families. She received her M.S. in applied development psychology from Claremont Graduate University. School of Sustainability

William Terrill Datu Buyung Agusdinata Ph.D. Rutgers University Ph.D. Delft University of Technology (Netherlands) Professor Terrill is in the School of Criminology and Criminal Agusdinata is an assistant professor. Working together with Justice. His research focuses on police behaviors, with an subject-matter experts, he develops and applies system emphasis on police use of force policies and practices. He approaches and tools to understand the dynamic behaviors holds a M.A. from Rutgers University, New Jersey, and a of complex systems in order to inform decision-making in B.S. in criminal justice from Pennsylvania State University- addressing sustainability issues in domains such as energy, Harrisburg. transportation, supply chain, nanomedicine and climate change adaptation.

Christine Vogt Tyler DesRoches Ph.D. -Bloomington Ph.D. University of British Columbia (Canada) Professor Vogt is in the School of Community Resources DesRoches is an assistant professor. His area of and Development and is the director of the Center for specialization is the history and philosophy of economics. Sustainable Tourism. The center will host faculty and student DesRoches is a founding editor of the Erasmus Journal for research, discovery and outreach in tourism and related Philosophy and Economics and his articles have appeared in fields, and sharpen tourism development and industry journals such as the Canadian Journal of Forest Research, performance toward more sustainable thinking, planning Journal of the History of Economic Thought, and History of and outcomes. She conducted tourism and parks research Political Economy. at Michigan State University for 16 years.

42 43 Arizona State University 2015-2016 New Faculty Members

Richard Ettenson Ph.D. Professor Ettenson is the Keickhefer Fellow of Global Marketing and Brand Strategy. His expertise helps companies and executives align their business strategy with their marketing and branding efforts to create value Thunderbird School of for customers, employees and shareholders. He has published extensively in the world’s leading management journals, including Harvard Business Review, MIT Sloan Global Management Management Review, , Financial Times, and Ad Age.

Seigyoung Auh Andrew Inkpen Ph.D. University of Michigan Ph.D. University of Western Ontario (Canada) Auh is an associate professor of marketing and a research Inkpen is the J. Kenneth and Jeanette Seward Chair in faculty member with the Center for Services Leadership in Global Strategy. His research and teaching interests include the W. P. Carey School of Business. His research interests the management of multinational firms, with a particular include front-line employee customer orientation and focus on strategic alliances, mergers and acquisitions, engagement. His teaching efforts range from service organizational learning and global strategy. He is a coauthor marketing and consumer decision-making to global of “The Global Oil and Gas Industry: Management, Strategy, marketing strategy and global marketing management. and Finance.” He is actively involved in a variety of executive He is the associate editor of the Journal of International education programs at Thunderbird. Marketing.

Lena Chua Booth Mansour Javidan Ph.D. Arizona State University Ph.D. University of Minnesota Booth is an associate professor of finance and a multiple- Javidan is the Garvin Distinguished Professor and director time teaching award winner in the Thunderbird graduate of Najafi Global Mindset Institute. An award-winning degree programs. She’s also taught in various custom executive educator and author, he is also an expert advisor executive education programs around the world. Her to the World Bank and a senior research fellow to the U.S. academic research has appeared in several distinguished Army. He is the vice chair of the board of directors of the peer-reviewed journals. She’s also authored various case International Leadership Association and served on the studies on financial analysis, investment analysis and board of directors of the world-renowned research project valuation, risk management, leveraged buyout and global titled GLOBE. financial management.

David Bowen Michael Moffett Ph.D. Michigan State University Ph.D. University of Colorado Professor Bowen is the G. Robert and Katherine Herberger Professor Moffett has held academic positions at the Chair in Global Management and an affiliated faculty Brookings Institution, Oregon State University, University of member within the Center for Services Leadership, W. P. Michigan, University of Hawaii and universities in Denmark, Carey School of Business. Bowen also twice served as Finland, India, Norway and Yugoslavia. His primary fields of Thunderbird’s chief academic officer. His areas of expertise expertise are international finance and the global oil and in teaching executive education and academic degree gas industry. He has served as an executive education programs, and in publications include leadership, human consultant to more than 50 global companies and resources management and services. organizations.

44 45 Arizona State University 2015-2016 New Faculty Members

Roy Nelson Mary Sully de Luque Ph.D. Cornell University Ph.D. University of Nebraska Nelson is an associate professor of global studies and Sully de Luque is an associate professor of management academic director of Thunderbird’s Bachelor of Global whose research interests include the micro and macro Management program. He teaches courses on principles influences of culture in organizations, global leadership, of global management, corporate social responsibility, organizational effectiveness, CSR, stakeholder decision- states and markets in the global economy, and the regional making and training. She is a research scholar with the business environment of Latin America. He received his M.A. GLOBE project and serves on its board. Also, she is from Cornell, M.A. from Yale and B.A. at Stanford University. academic co-director of Project Artemis, a program that helps women entrepreneurs grow their businesses in developing countries.

Christine Pearson Mary Teagarden Ph.D. University of Southern California Ph.D. University of Southern California A professor of global leadership, Pearson’s research Professor Teagarden’s expertise is in global strategic has an applied focus in the dark side of organizations, management and strategic human resource management. from exceptional, highly dramatic organizational crises Her research focuses on global competitiveness and (e.g., workplace homicide, executive kidnapping, product capability building through offshore manufacturing and tampering) to much more frequent, low-intensity workplace service, innovation, high technology transfer, sustainable disregard and disrespect of . Her research and teaching development and talent management in Latin America, the in Europe, Asia, Middle East and Latin America has examined Asian Pacific Rim, and big emerging markets including India leadership, crisis management, teaming, interpersonal and China. She has more than 125 publications and is the relations and personal leadership development. editor of Thunderbird International Business Review.

Kannan Ramaswamy Bill Youngdahl Ph.D. Virginia Tech Ph.D. University of Southern California Professor Ramaswamy’s primary research expertise is An associate professor, Youngdahl designs and delivers in global strategy issues facing large multinationals. He executive education programs that focus on leading diverse designs and directs a suite of senior leadership programs global teams. He coauthored a book titled “Leading Global for global companies. His research interests include Projects - for Professional and Accidental Project Leaders” institutional development in emerging markets, private-public and has a long list of top-tier journal articles. His industry partnerships in oil and gas, and leadership acumen for global experience includes work as an engineer, a project manager corporations. He has won numerous awards for top-tier and a consultant. He is also the founder of a tech start-up. research publications and teaching excellence at national and institutional levels.

Graeme Rankine Ph.D. University of Washington Rankine is an associate professor of marketing and a research faculty member with the Center for Services Leadership in the W. P. Carey School of Business. His expertise includes corporate reorganization and restructuring, global finance and accounting, and activity-based costing and management. His research on corporate name changes and on stock splits has appeared in The Wall Street Journal, New York Times and other outlets.

46 47 ASU is a comprehensive public research university, measured not by whom it excludes, but by whom it includes and how they succeed; advancing research and discovery of public value; and assuming fundamental responsibility for the economic, social, cultural and overall health of the communities it serves. charasuter .asu.edu/faculty