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Page 1: Membership Book 2021-2022

Membership Book 2021-2022

Page 2: Membership Book 2021-2022

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Leadership ................................................................................................................... 1

Bienen School of Music ................................................................................................. 3

Feinberg School of Medicine ......................................................................................... 4

Kellogg School of Management .................................................................................. 13

McCormick School of Engineering .............................................................................. 16

Medill School of Journalism, Media, Integrated Marketing Communications ............... 20

Northwestern Emeriti Organization ............................................................................ 22

Northwestern University in Qatar ............................................................................... 23

Pritzker School of Law ................................................................................................ 24

School of Education and Social Policy ......................................................................... 25

School of Communication .......................................................................................... 26

University Libraries ..................................................................................................... 29

Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences ....................................................................... 30

Affiliated Faculty ........................................................................................................ 38

Page 3: Membership Book 2021-2022

1

LEADERSHIP

Robert Holmgren, Ph.D.

President

Molecular Biosciences [email protected] 847-491-5460

Dr. Robert Holmgren’s laboratory studies Hedgehog signal transduction, which plays a central role in

animal development and human disease. The focus of the lab is the identification and characterization

of new pathway components. Their approach is to use an in vivo RNAi suppressor/enhancer screen to

discover candidate genes, which are then validated and studied to determine how they function within

the pathway.

Ceci Rodgers

President-Elect

Non-Tenure Eligible Member

[email protected]

847-467-7393

Ceci Rodgers is an assistant professor and director of global journalism learning at Northwestern

University’s Medill School of Journalism and president-elect of the Faculty Senate. Rodgers teaches

business and economics reporting courses, as well as video journalism and basic writing and reporting to graduate and undergraduate

students. She is the faculty adviser for the student chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists and leads the school’s global

academic programs. Prior to Medill, Rodgers spent nearly two decades as a business correspondent and anchor for CNN and CNNfn,

reporting from Chicago, Washington, D.C., New York, and Tokyo. Her stories have appeared on CNBC, NBC, Reuters Insider,

nationally syndicated TV show Business Week Weekend and the PBS show CEO Exchange. Previously, she was the Chicago bureau

chief for Knight Ridder Financial News, and a reporter and weekend anchor at WIFR-TV in Rockford, Illinois. The Freedom Forum

Foundation awarded Rodgers a year-long fellowship in Asian studies in 1991. She won the National Commission on Working Women’s

Spot News Feature award for her story on women working in Chicago’s trading pits; the Peabody Award for CNN’s continuous

coverage of the 1987 Stock Market Crash, and CEO Exchange’s 2007 Clarion Award for best national TV talk show. She has lectured

at Jinan University in Guangzhou, China and taught multimedia reporting in Pakistan. Rodgers has a bachelor’s degree in

communication studies from Northwestern University, and a master's degree in journalism from Medill.

Page 4: Membership Book 2021-2022

2

Therese McGuire, Ph.D.

Past President

Strategy, Kellogg School of Management

[email protected]

847-491-8683

Therese J. McGuire is Professor of Strategy at the Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern

University. She has been a faculty member at Kellogg since 2002 and has held various administrative

positions, including Director of the Real Estate Program, Chair of the Strategy Department, and Senior

Associate Dean for Curriculum and Teaching. McGuire's areas of expertise are state and local public finance,

fiscal decentralization, and regional economic development. McGuire was President of the National Tax Association in 1999-2000, as well

as the editor of the NTA's academic journal, the National Tax Journal from 2001 until 2009. McGuire has a B.A. with a dual major in

Mathematics and Economics from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln and a Ph.D. in Economics from Princeton University.

Page 5: Membership Book 2021-2022

3

BIENEN SCHOOL OF MUSIC

John Thorne, M.M.

Music Performance

[email protected]

847-491-7228

John Thorne is an Associate Professor of Flute at Northwestern University’s Bienen School of Music. He

joined the Bienen School faculty after having been the Associate Principal Flute of the Houston

Symphony from 1992 until 2012. Currently, Mr. Thorne is a substitute flutist with the Chicago Symphony

Orchestra. He also performs with the Chicago Philharmonic as principal flutist.

Sarah Bartolome, Ph.D.

Music Studies

[email protected]

847-491-8948

Sarah Bartolome (G02) previously held the position of assistant professor of music education at Louisiana

State University in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. She holds a BM in voice performance and music education from

Ithaca College, an MM in music education with a concentration in voice performance and pedagogy from

Northwestern University, and a PhD in music education from the University of Washington. Her research

interests include children’s musical culture, ethnomusicology, choral culture from a global perspective,

service-learning in higher education, and music teacher preparation. She has published articles in such journals as the Journal of

Research in Music Education, Research Studies in Music Education and the Music Educators Journal.

Anne Waller, M.M.

Chair, Non-Tenure Eligible Committee

Non-Tenure Eligible Member

[email protected]

847-491-4769

Anne Waller has toured for over thirty-five years as a soloist, chamber musician, and member of the

Waller and Maxwell Guitar Duo. Ms. Waller joined the faculty of the Bienen School of Music in 1985 and

established the classical guitar program one year later. She specializes in the exploration and performance of works for nineteenth-

and early twentieth-century guitars on historical instruments. Ms. Waller has been presented in a wide variety of festival, concert,

and radio venues, and has performed, lectured and taught master classes at colleges and universities throughout the United States

and Europe. She has made recordings for the Music from Northwestern Series and Berto Records. She is the founding Artistic Director

of the Segovia Classical Guitar Series.

Page 6: Membership Book 2021-2022

4

FEINBERG SCHOOL OF MEDICINE

John Patrick F. Bebawy, M.D.

Anesthesiology

[email protected]

312-695-0061

Dr. John Bebawy’s clinical and research interests and expertise relate to Neuroanesthesia, with a focus

on interventions that affect cerebral blood flow and cerebrovascular hemodynamics. Dr. Bebawy

completed his Anesthesiology residency and Neurosurgical Anesthesiology fellowship training at

Northwestern in 2008, where he is currently faculty, Associate Director of the Neurosurgical

Anesthesiology Fellowship Program, and Director of Neurosurgical Anesthesia Education.

Clara Peek, Ph.D.

Biochemistry & Molecular Genetics

[email protected]

312-503-6973

Clara Peek is an Assistant Professor at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine in the

Departments of Biochemistry and Molecular Genetics and Medicine-Endocrinology. Dr. Peek received

her B.S. degree in Bacteriology at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and Ph.D. in Biochemistry at

The Johns Hopkins School of Medicine. She completed her K01-funded postdoctoral training in the

Department of Medicine-Endocrinology at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine. In

2018, Dr. Peek established her research group which focuses on how molecular circadian clocks control responses to nutrient stress

in skeletal muscle fibers and stem cells. The overarching goal of the laboratory is to advance our understanding of circadian timing

in metabolic physiology and disease.

Tom Hope, Ph.D.

Cell & Molecular Biology

[email protected]

312-503-1360

Over the past 25 years, Dr. Hope’s laboratory has been a pioneer of the use of cell biology and other

imaging approaches to study HIV providing unique insights into HIV biology with images and movies of

the virus interacting with cells and tissues. He is one of the founders of the discipline of HIV Cellular

Virology. His team has developed a series of imaging tools and approaches utilizing different imaging

modalities including PET/CT, bioluminescence, light sheet microcopy, standard and super-resolution

fluorescence microscopy, and electron microscopy to study HIV related mucosal immunology, HIV transmission, and HIV

Prevention Science.

Page 7: Membership Book 2021-2022

5

Raj Chovatiya, M.D.

Dermatology

[email protected]

312-695-8106

Raj Chovatiya, M.D., Ph.D. is an Assistant Professor of Dermatology at the Northwestern University

Feinberg School of Medicine in Chicago, Illinois. Dr. Chovatiya received his M.D. and Ph.D. from Yale

University. He completed his internship at Yale followed by residency and postdoctoral research

fellowship at Northwestern, where he also served as Chief Resident. Dr. Chovatiya directs the Eczema

and Itch clinic at Northwestern, and his clinical focus includes atopic dermatitis, eczema, chronic itch, and other chronic

inflammatory skin disorders including psoriasis, hidradenitis, immunobullous disease, and vitiligo. Dr. Chovatiya’s research

interests include patient-reported outcomes, health services research, epidemiology, implementation science, and translational

therapy. He has published numerous abstracts and manuscripts and been recognized for his research at national and international

conferences.

Amy Kontrick, M.D.

Emergency Medicine

[email protected]

312-694-7000

Dr. Amy Kontrick is an emergency medicine doctor in Chicago, Illinois and is affiliated with Northwestern

Memorial Hospital. She received her medical degree from University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine

and has been in practice for more than 20 years. She is one of 83 doctors at Northwestern Memorial

Hospital who specialize in Emergency Medicine.

Katherine Wright, Ph.D.

Family and Community Medicine

[email protected]

312-503-4630

Dr. Wright's research examines the effectiveness of health and education policy measures while considering the

mediating and moderating factors that influence population metrics. Within this context, she has also developed

new methodological approaches to account for missing data, and has extensively analyzed large scale data such as

the Youth Risk Behavior Survey (YRBS) and the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES).

Page 8: Membership Book 2021-2022

6

Celia O’Brien, Ph.D.

Medical Education

[email protected]

312-503-3888

Dr. Celia O’Brien is Assistant Professor of Medical Education and the Director of Assessment and Program

Evaluation in the Augusta Webster, MD, Office of Medical Education (AWOME). She completed her

doctorate in Higher Education at the University of Arizona in 2011. Dr. O’Brien’s research and most recent

publications focus on student assessment, competency-based medical education, and related issues in the undergraduate medical

training environment. Within AWOME she is responsible for MD program student assessment systems and for the evaluation of

curricular outcomes. She is also a faculty tutor for problem-based learning coursework.

Courtney Blackwell, Ph.D.

Medical Social Sciences

[email protected]

Dr. Blackwell is a developmental methodologist with expertise in early childhood education and survey

development, particularly child- and parent-reported health outcomes measures. Her research focuses on

early learning and positive health development, and the complex social environmental factors that

contribute to such outcomes. Fundamental to her work is an emphasis on conducting research that

informs health and education policy and practice. She is currently an integral member of the Person

Reported Outcome (PRO) Core for the NIH-funded Environmental influences on Child Health Outcomes (ECHO) research program.

Joshua M. Hauser, M.D.

Chair, Social Responsibility Committee

Medicine

[email protected]

312-503-3478

Joshua Hauser, M.D., is Associate Professor of Medicine (Palliative Care) at the Buehler Center on Aging,

Health and Society, Institute for Public Health and Medicine. He directs the palliative medicine fellowship

at Northwestern Memorial Hospital and is Palliative Care Section Chief at the Jesse Brown (Chicago) VA

Medical Center. After graduating Harvard Medical School, Dr. Hauser completed his residency at Brigham and Women’s Hospital and

a fellowship in health services research and medical ethics at the University of Chicago. Dr. Hauser’s research focuses on patient and

family communication, palliative care, and hospice.

Page 9: Membership Book 2021-2022

7

Jonathan Leis, Ph.D.

Microbiology-Immunology

[email protected]

312-503-1166

Jonathan Leis is a Professor of Microbiology-Immunology and the Senior Associate Dean for Research

for the Office of Finance and Administration at the Feinberg School of Medicine. His work focuses on

retrovirus replication, reverse transcription, integration, virus assembly mechanisms, and molecular genetics.

Kevin Swong, M.D.

Neurological Surgery

[email protected]

312-695-7746

Dr. Swong is a neurosurgeon who specializes in disorders of the spine and peripheral nerves. His specialties include minimally invasive spine surgery, treatment of tumors of the spine and peripheral nerves, peripheral nerve decompression, and brachial plexus reconstruction. He takes a whole-patient approach and looks at all factors that may affect his patients.

Elena Grebenciucova, M.D.

Neurology

[email protected]

312-695-1100

Dr. Grebenciucova's researches multiple sclerosis treatments, specifically focusing on the effects of aging on the

immune system. According to her findings, immunosenescence as a concept is directly relevant to the world of

neuro-inflammation, as it may be a contributing factor to the risks associated with some of the current

immunosuppressive and immunomodulatory therapies used in treating multiple sclerosis (MS) and other

inflammatory disorders.

Lois Hedman, P.T., D.Sc.P.T.

Non-Tenure Eligible Member, Feinberg School of Medicine

[email protected]

312-908-6782

Dr. Lois Hedman is interested in developing the basic requirements of walking into a clinical tool to guide

examination and intervention. She is also interested in describing, measuring and intervening in balance

dysfunction post-stroke. Third, Dr. Hedman is interested in the development of clinical decision making

in PT students.

Page 10: Membership Book 2021-2022

8

Christina Lewicky-Gaupp, M.D.

Obstetrics and Gynaecology

[email protected]

312-472-3874

Dr. Lewicky-Gaupp specializes in minimally invasive surgical approaches to complex gynecologic and

pelvic floor disorders, including urinary and fecal incontinence, pelvic organ prolapse (cystocele,

rectocele), and uterine fibroids; complications after childbirth (bowel and bladder fistulas, 3rd and 4th

degree lacerations); congenital anomalies of the GU tract.

Carol Schmidt, M.D.

Ophthalmology

[email protected]

312-695-8150

Dr. Schmidt joined the Department of Ophthalmology at Northwestern 2001 after several years in

private practice in Long Grove, Barrington, and Glenview, IL. Clinically, she see patients for a wide range

of ophthalmic issues, such as detection of glaucoma, screening for diabetic retinopathy and macular

degeneration, evaluation for ocular complications of long-term systemic medications, as well as ocular

mid margin disease, dry eye, and cataracts. Her research interests have included surgical simulation in

undergraduate and graduate medical education specifically, skill development which I pursued as a Searle Fellow.

David Kalainov, M.D.

Orthopedic Surgery

[email protected]

312-337-6960

Dr. Kalanov is an orthopedic surgeon, hand surgeon and Medical Director of Musculoskeletal at

Northwestern Memorial Hospital; Kellogg EMBA graduate; Feinberg faculty NUvention Medical; Co-

Chair Northwestern Medicine Value Analysis Committee, Orthopedic Health System Clinical

Collaborative, and Systemwide Pain Management Committee.

Page 11: Membership Book 2021-2022

9

Jing Zheng, Ph.D.

Otolaryngology

[email protected]

312-503-3417

Dr. Jing Zheng received her Ph.D. from Michigan State University. Her lab aims to identify and

investigate molecules that play important roles in mammalian hearing, thus to enrich our understanding

of cochlear physiology, and to further develop a better strategy to prevent hearing loss.

Madina Sukhanova, Ph.D.

Pathology

[email protected]

312-503-8144

Madina Sukhanova is an Assistant Professor of Pathology at the Northwestern University Feinberg School

of Medicine. She finished the Clinical Cytogenetics and the Clinical Molecular Genetics ABMGG fellowships

at the University of Chicago Medical Center. Her research interests include identification of genetic

markers of prognostic and diagnostic significance in various types of cancer with particular interest in the

area of hematologic malignancies. Her papers have been published in journals such as Leukemia, Blood Advances and American

Journal of Clinical Pathology. Dr. Sukhanova teaching skills in clinical pathology were recognized when she received Clinical Pathology

Golden Apple Award in 2020 (recipient selected by trainees for excellent teaching skills, promotes trainee scholarship, investment in

trainee education).

Robert Newmyer, M.D.

Pediatrics

[email protected]

312-503-3211

Dr. Robert Newmyer is an Assistant Professor of Pediatrics in the Critical Care unit.

Dai Horiuchi, Ph.D.

Pharmacology

[email protected]

312-503-4085

The primary goals of my research group are to understand the mechanisms of deadly disease progression

in breast cancer and identify efficacious targeted therapeutic strategies that can be evaluated clinically.

Page 12: Membership Book 2021-2022

10

The Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation Department is currently holding an election.

The Physiology Department is currently holding an election.

Ana Maria Acosta, P.T., Ph.D.

Physical Therapy & Human Movement Sciences

[email protected]

312-503-2950

My research interests are in understanding the cause for movement impairments following stroke from

a neurophysiological and biomechanical perspective and develop physical and robotics-based

interventions to address these impairments. I have been involved in the development of a rehabilitation

robot that is now being used in a clinical trial targeting acute stroke participants to address their arm

movement impairments early on. I am also very involved in DEI initiatives in my department, TGS through the NUIN graduate

program and NUCATS. I am deeply committed to improving the experience of our students of minoritized backgrounds and making

Northwestern a place where they feel a strong sense of belonging.

Nicholas Soulakis, Ph.D.

Preventive Medicine

[email protected]

312-908-7914

Nicholas Soulakis is a public health scientist whose research focus lies at the intersection of epidemiology and

informatics with an emphasis on understanding the expanding, data-rich environment created by health

information technology and leveraging computationally intensive analytical techniques to monitor healthcare

quality and ultimately improve population health outcomes. His current work is an expansion into the newly

emerging field of quality informatics and patient outcomes; seeking to better understand the ascertainment of healthcare networks and

developing a more comprehensive scientific approach to understanding the dynamics of care coordination for hospitalized patient populations.

Page 13: Membership Book 2021-2022

11

Christina Boisseau, Ph.D.

Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences

[email protected]

Dr. Boisseau is an Associate Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences. Her research focuses on

anxiety and obsessive-compulsive spectrum disorders using translational research methods to identify

critical, transdiagnostic mechanisms of dysfunction and barriers to recovery. She an original coauthor of

the Unified Protocol for Transdiagnostic Treatment of Emotional Disorders and maintains a clinical practice focused on the treatment

of OCD and anxiety disorders.

Tarita Thomas, M.D., Ph.D., M.B.A

Radiation Oncology

tarita. [email protected]

Tarita Thomas, MD, PhD, MBA is a board-certified radiation oncologist and Associate Professor of

Radiation Oncology at the Feinberg School of Medicine. Dr. Thomas' research is focused on lung cancer,

head and neck cancer as well as neurologic cancer. She is also interested in quality and process

improvement in cancer care. She has been involved with national committees for developing clinical

trials aimed at improving outcomes for patients. She serves as the medical student clerkship director. Dr.

Thomas is a member of the American Society for Radiation Oncology, the American College of Radiation Oncology, the American

Society of Clinical Oncology and the American Medical Association. She has served in multiple capacities in these organizations in

order to improve patient care as well as support research and education in oncology.

Dasha Perchesky, M.D.

Radiology

[email protected]

312-695-5753

Dr. Dasha Perchesky specializes in diagnostic neuroradiology.

Page 14: Membership Book 2021-2022

12

Swati Kulkarni, M.D.

Surgery

[email protected]

312-695-0990

Dr. Swati Kulkarni, Professor of Surgery at Northwestern University, received her Doctor of Medicine degree

from the Medical College of Pennsylvania, completed her General Surgery residency at New York Presbyterian

Hospital, Weill Medical College of Cornell University and completed a Breast Surgical Oncology Fellowship at

Northwestern Feinberg School of Medicine. Prior to returning to Northwestern, she was an Assistant Professor

of Surgery and Oncology at Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center and an Associate Professor at University of Chicago Pritzker School of

Medicine. Dr. Kulkarni is an active clinical and translational researcher. Her research focuses on the relationship between obesity and

breast cancer risk, tamoxifen resistance, and identifying novel agents to treat and prevent breast cancer. She is currently the PI of an NCI-

funded multicenter Phase II study to evaluate the protective effect of a tissue selective estrogen complex (Duavee) in women with newly

diagnosed Ductal Carcinoma in Situ.

Shilajit Kundu, M.D.

Urology

[email protected]

312-908-8145

Dr. Kundu is an Associate Professor of Urology at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine.

His clinical and research interests are in urologic oncology. He has successfully conducted and published

on prospective evaluations of patients with urologic cancers including prostate, bladder, kidney and

testicular cancer and found that the impact of cancer treatment goes beyond physical limitations

associated with treatment. His recent research aims to understand the complexities associated with

patient expectations. This includes balancing factors associated with patient satisfaction including patient personality, physician-

patient relationship, information-processing style, and a comforting experience with the health care environment.

Page 15: Membership Book 2021-2022

13

KELLOGG SCHOOL OF MANAGEMENT

Linda Vincent, M.B.A., Ph.D.

Accounting Information & Management

[email protected]

847-491-2659

Linda Vincent is an Associate Professor in the Accounting Information and Management department. Prior to

joining Kellogg in 1999, Professor Vincent was an Associate Professor at the University of Chicago Graduate

School of Business. Professor Vincent’s research interests are in the areas of financial reporting and capital

markets with a focus on business combinations, divisive restructurings, real estate, pensions, and the

informativeness of financial reporting data for securities returns under different information environments and capital structures. Professor

Vincent has served on the editorial boards of the Journal of Accounting and Economics, Accounting Horizons, and the Journal of Accounting

Research. She is an ad hoc reviewer for The Accounting Review; Contemporary Accounting Research; Journal of Accounting, Auditing and

Finance; Real Estate Economics; Review of Accounting Studies; and the Review of Financial Studies. Professor Vincent was awarded the

Faculty Impact Award in 2017; Chairs’ Core Course Teaching Award in 2000; and the Sidney J. Levy Teaching Award in 2001, 2003, and 2007.

She received an MBA in Accounting and Finance from Kellogg and a PhD in Accounting from Northwestern University.

Ravi Jagannathan, M.B.A., Ph.D.

Finance

[email protected]

847-491-8338

Dr. Ravi Jagannathan is the Chicago Mercantile Exchange/John F. Sandner Professor of Finance at

Northwestern University's Kellogg School of Management, Co-Director of the Financial Institutions and

Markets Research Center at the Kellogg School, and the Chair of the Advisory Committee on Investment

Responsibility. Ravi has served on the editorial boards of leading academic journals, and is a former

executive editor of the Review of Financial Studies. Ravi's research interests are in the areas of asset pricing, capital markets, and

financial institutions. His articles have appeared in the Journal of Political Economy, Journal of Financial Economics, Journal of Finance,

and Review of Financial Studies, and other leading journals.

Noshir Contractor, Ph.D.

Management and Organizations

[email protected]

847-491-3669

Noshir Contractor is the Jane S. & William J. White Professor of Behavioral Sciences in the McCormick School of

Engineering & Applied Science, the School of Communication and the Kellogg School of Management. He is the

Director of the Science of Networks in Communities (SONIC) Research Group. He is investigating factors that

lead to the formation, maintenance, and dissolution of dynamically linked social and knowledge networks in a

wide variety of contexts including communities of practice in business, translational science and engineering communities, public health

networks and virtual worlds.

Page 16: Membership Book 2021-2022

14

Nabil Al-Najjar, Ph.D.

Managerial Economics & Decision Sciences

[email protected]

847-491-5426

Al-Najjar's research focuses on the development of learning-based models of decision making in

markets, games and contracts. His papers have been published in top scholarly journals such the Journal

of Economic Theory, Games and Economic Behavior, Journal of Political Economy, Econometrica, among

others. For his excellence in teaching, Al-Najjar has twice been the recipient of the school's Sidney J. Levy

Award, in 1996-97 for his class in microeconomics, and 2006-07 for his class in competitive strategy. He

has also received the Chairs' Core Teaching Award for his class in microeconomics, as well as several Certificate of Impact awards. Al-

Najjar received his PhD in Economics from the University of Minnesota. Prior to joining the Kellogg faculty in 1995, he was a faculty

member at the University of Quebec in Montreal.

Angela Lee, Ph.D.

Marketing

[email protected]

847-467-5334

Angela Y. Lee is the Mechthild Esser Nemmers Professor of Marketing at the Kellogg School of

Management. Angela is a consumer psychologist. Her expertise is in consumer learning, emotions and goals.

Her research focuses on consumer motivation and persuasion, cross-cultural consumer psychology, and

nonconscious influences of memory on judgment and choice. She was the recipient of the 2006 Stanley Reiter

Best Paper Award for her research on self-regulation and persuasion, and the 2002 Otto Klineberg Award for

best paper on international and intercultural relations. Angela is a Fellow of the Society of Experimental Social Psychology, a Fellow of the

American Psychological Society, and a Past President of the Association for Consumer Research. She is the Editor-In-Chief of the Journal of

the Association for Consumer Research, an associate editor at the Journal of Consumer Psychology, and serves on the editorial boards of

the Journal of Consumer Research, the Journal of Marketing Research.

Martin Lariviere, Ph.D.

Chair, Budget and Planning Committee

Operations

[email protected]

847-491-8169

Martin Lariviere joined the faculty at the Kellogg School in 2000. His research has focused on applying

economic analysis to operations management problems. He has been a member of the editorial boards of

Manufacturing & Service Operations Management, Management Science, and Operations Research. He has

held a number of leadership positions in the Manufacturing and Service Operations Society. He is a

Distinguished Fellow of the MSOM Society and a recipient of the Saul Gass Expository Writing Award.

Page 17: Membership Book 2021-2022

15

For Senator Therese McGuire of Strategy , see Leadership above.

Mark McCareins, J.D.

Non-Tenure Eligible Member

[email protected]

847-467-5150

R. Mark McCareins is a Clinical Professor of Business Law in the Strategy Department where he teaches

courses on Antitrust and Competition, Business Law, and Non-Profit Governance and Organization. Mark is

also Co-Director of the JD/MBA program at Kellogg. Mark received a Student Impact Award for his teaching

of Business Law in the fall quarter of 2016 and served as the Co-Chair of the Kellogg Vertical Merger

Conference in January 2019.

Page 18: Membership Book 2021-2022

16

McCORMICK SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING

Hao Zhang, Ph.D.

Chair, Salary & Benefits Committee

Biomedical Engineering

[email protected]

847-491-2946

Dr. Hao Zhang’s research focuses on biomedical optics, including optical coherence tomography, super-resolution microscopy, ophthalmic imaging, and molecular imaging. He received his doctorate from Texas A&M University.

Luis Amaral, Ph.D.

Chemical and Biological Engineering

[email protected]

847-491-7850

Amaral conducts and directs research that provides insight into the emergence, evolution, and stability

of complex social and biological systems. His research aims to address some of the most pressing

challenges facing humanity, including the mitigation of errors in healthcare settings, the

characterization of the conditions fostering innovation and creativity, or the growth limits imposed by sustainability. Professor

Amaral has published over 170 scientific peer-reviewed papers in leading scientific journals. Those papers have been cited in excess

of 24 thousand times. His research has been featured in numerous media sources, both in the US and abroad.

Marco Nie, Ph.D.

Civil & Environmental Engineering

[email protected]

847-467-0502

Dr. Nie’s primary interest is to better understand and predict the behavior of transportation networks,

and to formulate new design and control strategies to improve mobility, reliability and sustainability of

these systems. Unlike other networks such as communication and social networks, the behavior of a

transportation network depends on the interactions between human activities (travel choice and driving behavior), physical

characteristics of the infrastructure and network topology. As a result, Dr. Nie’s analyses of transportation systems take an

interdisciplinary approach that draws on tools from optimization, network science, traffic flow theory, economics, and statistics.

His research covers various aspects of transportation systems analysis, ranging from developing specialized routing algorithms to

designing Pareto-improving congestion pricing schemes. Despite their diversity, most problems that I have been working on

address research questions that not only are of theoretical interest but also promise relevant real-world impacts.

Page 19: Membership Book 2021-2022

17

Sara Sood

Computer Science

[email protected]

847-491-5078

Sara Owsley Sood is the Chookaszian Family Teaching Professor (Professor of Instruction) and

Associate Chair for Undergraduate Education in Computer Science. She earned her Ph.D. in Computer

Science at Northwestern in 2007. From 2007 to 2014, she was an Assistant, then Associate Professor at

Pomona College. Her research was situated in Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning, on understanding the expression and

impact of emotion in online communication. In moving back to Northwestern in 2014, Sood’s focus shifted to teaching introductory

Computer Science. She is especially dedicated to increasing the participation of under-represented groups in computer science.

Thrasos Pappas, Ph.D

Electrical & Computer Engineering

[email protected]

847-467-1243

Hermann Riecke, Ph.D.

Chair, Faculty Handbook Committee

Engineering Science & Applied Mathematics

[email protected]

847-491-8316

Dr. Riecke’s research interests are mostly in the area of computational neuroscience. One focus is

plasticity mechanisms and how they restructure neuronal networks. Dr. Riecke is particularly fascinated

by the role of feedback from higher brain areas in the restructuring of networks and the information processing performed by the

networks resulting from it, as it is observed in the olfactory system. To gain insight into these phenomena he investigates networks

of simplified neuron models. Another focus is the coherent dynamics of networks of simple and more complex neurons, which

underlie the rhythmic activity observed in many brain areas. In work on the retina he has focused on biophysically detailed neuron

models. A second area of interest has been the study of spatially extended dynamical systems with focus on pattern formation.

Specific topics investigated have been bifurcation theory with symmetry, spatially localized patterns, complex patterns, and spatio-

temporal chaos.

Page 20: Membership Book 2021-2022

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Jill Wilson, Ph.D.

Industrial Engineering & Management Sciences

[email protected]

Jill Hardin Wilson is a Professor of Instruction and the Assistant Department Chair in IEMS. She is the Director of Undergraduate Studies for the BS in Industrial Engineering, the Co-Director of the McCormick undergraduate Minor in Data Science & Engineering, and on the faculty of the Master of Engineering Management program. She has spent her career working towards the improvement of STEM curriculum, teaching, and advising. Jill received her PhD in Algorithms, Combinatorics, and Optimization from Georgia Tech.

Robert Chang, Ph.D.

Materials Science and Engineering

[email protected]

Dr. Chang’s research group focuses unconventional solar cell design, fabrication and analysis, nanostructured carbon sheets, tubes and molecules, photonic crystals, amorphous semiconducting oxide films, and nanostructured plasmonic materials in the infrared.

Cheng Sun, Ph.D.

Mechanical Engineering

[email protected]

847-467-0704

Dr. Sun’s primary research interests are in the fields of Emerging applications of nano-electronics,

nanophotonics, nano-electromechanical systems and nano-biomedical systems necessitate

developments of viable nano-manufacturing technologies. His research group is engaged in developing

novel nano-scale fabrication techniques and integrated nano-system for bio-sensing and high-efficiency

energy conversion.

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Casey Ankeny, Ph.D.

Non-Tenure Eligible Member

[email protected]

847-467-7435

Casey J. Ankeny, PhD is an Associate Professor of Instruction and Director of MS Program in Biomedical

Engineering. Casey received her bachelor’s degree in Biomedical Engineering from the University of

Virginia and her doctorate degree in Biomedical Engineering from Georgia Institute of Technology and

Emory University where she studied the role of shear stress in aortic valve disease. Currently, she is investigating cyber-based

student engagement strategies in flipped and traditional biomedical engineering courses. She aspires to understand and

improve student attitude, achievement, and persistence in student-centered courses which employ standards-based grading

and reflection.

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MEDILL SCHOOL OF JOURNALISM, MEDIA, INTEGRATED MARKETING COMMUNICATIONS

Judy Franks

Integrated Marketing Communications

[email protected]

847-467-2067

IMC Lecturer Judy Franks joined the Medill IMC faculty in 2008 following a 23-year career in Chicago’s

leading ad agencies, where she rose to the executive ranks across both the media and creative strategy

disciplines. She teaches undergraduate Media and Message Delivery, graduate Media Economics and

Technology and undergraduate Consumer Insight, and she serves as the Faculty Advisor for graduate

students pursuing a concentration in Media Strategy. Franks teaches across Medill's full-time, part-time

and online programs. With extensive experience in corporate training and development, Franks also develops executive education

programs for Medill IMC.

Kalyani Chadha

Journalism (Graduate)

[email protected]

847-467-4337

Kalyani Chadha is an associate professor of journalism at Medill. Her research is primarily centered around

the examination of journalistic practice as well as the societal implications of new media technologies in

varied contexts. Informed by critical and sociological theorizing, her scholarship is international in its

orientation, with a particular emphasis on journalism-related developments in India and media

globalization in Asia. Her recent work focuses on the implications of the rise of right-wing media in India.

Additionally, she is also co-editing a collection on journalism and precarity. Chadha’s work has appeared in a variety of journals such

as Journalism Studies, Journalism Practice, Digital Journalism, Journal of Media Ethics, the International Journal of Communication

and Media, Culture and Society, as well as several edited anthologies and encyclopedias. Chadha currently serves on the editorial

boards of Journalism Practice and Digital Journalism and is head of the Mass Communication and Society Division of the Association

for Communication in Journalism and Mass Communication.

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Caryn Ward

Journalism (Undergraduate)

[email protected]

847-467-7689

Caryn Ward is an associate professor at Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism. She teaches

both graduate and undergraduate students and specializes in teaching video journalism and multimedia.

She is also an opinion writer and has been published in the Chicago Tribune, Al Jazeera, Huffington Post and

other media outlets. Ward writes about a variety of subjects, from feminism to politics and pop culture as

well as collegiate and Olympic wrestling. Before joining the faculty at Medill, Ward spent more than 25 years

in various news jobs at local television stations across the country. She’s worked as a reporter, producer, executive producer,

managing editor and news director. Ward has won five Emmy awards for her work in television news. Ward has her master’s degree

in journalism from Medill and a liberal arts degree from Smith College.

For Senator Ceci Rodgers, the NTE representative for Medill School of Journalism, see Leadership above.

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NORTHWESTERN EMERITI ORGANIZATION

Richard Cohn, M.D.

Pediatrics

[email protected]

312-312-6160

Dr. Cohn came to Northwestern University as a pediatric nephrologist in 1980 where he worked at

Children’s Memorial Hospital, now Lurie Children’s Hospital for 34 years. He was Medical Director of the

Kidney Transplant Program for over 20 years, supervising care for almost 400 children. Dr. Cohn’s other

interests were childhood nephrotic syndrome and hypertension. He retired from clinical care in 2014 and is

now Professor Emeritus of Pediatrics.

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NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY IN QATAR

João Queiroga

Communication Program (NU-Q)

[email protected]

João Queiroga is a Portuguese award-winning filmmaker and educator. As a director, his work screened at

the International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam (IDFA), Hot Docs Canadian International

Documentary Festival, British Film Institute (BFI), DocLisboa and many others. His hybrid documentary film

“Our Skin” was recently nominated for an Iris Award and won the Lili Award. He has also worked for several

non-profit organizations, such as Cinema/Chicago and the Chicago International Film Festival, as well as Fortune 500 companies as

an editor and cinematographer. Additional experience includes assignments with Chicago Filmmakers, the Beijing International

Movie Festival, WGN-TV Chicago and Cannes International Film Festival. He is a Calouste Gulbenkian scholar, a Hoffman scholar, a

Davis UWC scholar, and a Fulbright recipient. Most recently, Queiroga served as the Chair of the Post-Production Department at New

York Film Academy. He is currently an Assistant Professor in Residence at Northwestern University in Qatar.

Abraham Abusharif, Ph.D.

Journalism (NU-Q)

[email protected]

Ibrahim N. Abusharif, Ph.D., is an associate professor in residence at NU-Q, in the journalism and strategic

communication program. His academic interests include the study of the intersections of religion and

media, particularly digital media disruptions and religious authority. He also researches the origins,

promulgation, and effects of key journalistic framing terminologies used in prominent Western print news

sources for Middle East events and ongoing affairs. (As an example, you may access here Parsing “Arab

Spring,” a study of the phrase “Arab Spring,” its implications, usages, spread, and origins.) Currently, he is examining the usages of

“Salafism” and “Islamism” in popular media and in academia.

James Hodapp, Ph.D.

Liberal Arts (NU-Q)

[email protected]

James Hodapp is an assistant professor in residence in the Liberal Arts Program specializing in African,

world, and postcolonial literatures. Hodapp received his PhD from the University of Maryland, his MA from

the University of Chicago, and his BA from the American University. Before joining NU-Q in Fall 2018, he

served as an assistant professor in the department of English for four years at the American University of

Beirut. He has also taught at the University of Maryland, Harold Washington College, Wilbur Wright College,

and several other universities and colleges.

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LAW SCHOOL

Clint Francis, J.D.

Law Instruction

[email protected]

312-503-8340

Clint Francis is a tenured member of the Northwestern University Pritzker School of Law faculty, where

he has been on the faculty since 1978. He teaches and researches in the areas of Corporate

Restructuring/Bankruptcy, Commercial Law, Intellectual Property, Intellectual Capital Management,

and Medical Innovation. 2015-2018 he served, on behalf of Northwestern, as the Founding Dean of

Hamad bin Khalifa University Law School, a member of Qatar Foundation. Professor Francis obtained

his initial legal training in New Zealand, where he completed LLB and LLM degrees, and was admitted as a Barrister and

Solicitor of the New Zealand Supreme Court. He subsequently completed a Doctorate in Law at the University of Virginia

School of Law.

Allan Horwich, J.D.

Chair, Committee on Cause

Non-Tenure Eligible Member

[email protected]

312-503-3230

Allan Horwich has practiced law with Schiff Hardin for more than 45 years, where he maintains a limited

role in serving clients and in administration. Allan has taught at Northwestern Pritzker School of

Law since 1999 (full-time since 2009). His teaching focuses on compliance and litigation under the

securities laws. His practice was concentrated in securities litigation and securities and corporate counseling.

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SCHOOL OF EDUCATION AND SOCIAL POLICY

James Rosenbaum, Ph.D.

Education & Social Policy

[email protected]

847-491-3795

Education researcher James Rosenbaum's current major area of research concerns the college-for-all

movement, college attendance and coaches, high-school-to-work transitions, and linkages among

students, schools, and employers. For two decades, he conducted an extensive research project on the

effects of relocating poor inner-city black families in public housing to subsidized housing in the white

middle-class suburbs of Chicago. This quasi-natural experiment, known as the Gautreaux Program, has enabled him to study the

effects of these moves on children's educational outcomes and job opportunities, as well as the social and economic effects on the

mothers. These studies encouraged the federal government to create its Moving to Opportunity (MTO) program, implemented by

the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. A specialist in research on work, education, and housing opportunities,

Rosenbaum has published six books and numerous articles on these subjects.

Lilah Shapiro, Ph.D.

Non-Tenure Eligible Member

[email protected]

847-467-3815

Lilah Shapiro is a qualitative sociologist whose research focuses broadly on the intersections

among race/ethnicity, religion, social class/social location and identity in the contemporary American

context. Her work explores how each of these constructs affect individual and group identity and

experience more broadly (e.g. self-concept, gender roles, family dynamics, cultural and educational

investment, etc.) both at individual stages of development and across the life course. A particular interest is in examining how group

or master narratives shape individual life stories and exploring who has the power to determine the course and content of a

narrative. She holds a Ph.D. in Human Development from the University of Chicago and is a former fellow at the Martin Marty Center

for the Advanced Study of Religion.

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SCHOOL OF COMMUNICATION

Beverly Wright, Ph.D.

Communication Sciences & Disorders

[email protected]

847-491-2453

Beverly Wright and her students explore the general principles of auditory learning, a process that

leads to dramatic improvements in perceptual skills. The lab seeks to identify the circumstances that

are necessary for learning to occur as well as those that disrupt learning. These principles are examined

using stimuli ranging from simple sounds to speech, and tasks ranging from fine-grained discrimination

to categorization and intelligibility.

Ellen Wartella, Ph.D.

Communication Studies

[email protected]

Ellen Wartella is an internationally recognized scholar of the influence of media and technology on children’s health and development. She has authored or coauthored more than 200 publications in this area and has received various awards for her work including at Northwestern University the Ver Steeg career award, a Career Productivity Award from the International Communication Association where she is also a Fellow, the Distinguished Scholar Award from the National Communication

Association, a Distinguished Alumni Award from the University of Minnesota, and an Honorary Doctor of Humane Letters from St. Vincent College.

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Mary Zimmerman, Ph.D.

Performance Studies

[email protected]

847-491-3623

Mary Zimmerman is a writer and director for the theater. She is a member of the Lookingglass Theatre

Company and is an Artistic Associate of the Goodman Theatre. She has earned national and

international recognition in the form of numerous awards, including a MacArthur

Fellowship. Metamorphoses, for which she received the Tony Award for Best Direction, was developed

at Northwestern. Other acclaimed works include The Steadfast Tin Soldier, The White Snake, Journey to the West, The Odyssey, The

Arabian Nights, The Notebooks of Leonardo da Vinci, and Eleven Rooms of Proust. She is the director and co-librettist of the 2002

opera Galileo Galilei, music by Philip Glass, at the Goodman Theatre, and director of Lucia di Lammermoor, La Sonnambula, Armida

and Rusalka at the Metropolitan Opera in New York. Zimmerman's interests lie in the adaptation of literary texts for performance

and directing theatre.

Kyle Henry, MFA

Radio/Television/Film

[email protected]

Kyle Henry is a filmmaker and Assistant Professor who teaches within the MFA for Documentary Media

and undergraduate programs. His fiction feature films Room and Fourplay premiered at Sundance and

Cannes' Director's Fortnight film festivals. He’s edited eleven fiction and documentary features for

other directors, including the Emmy Award winning PBS documentary Where Soldiers Come From. His

latest feature fiction film Rogers Park was both a New York Times and Los Angeles Times critics pick, and

is available for viewing via most major streaming services.

Julie Marie Myatt

Theatre

[email protected]

Julie Marie Myatt is a lecturer in the Department of Theatre. Her plays have been produced at Oregon

Shakespeare Festival, The Kennedy Center, Guthrie Theatre, South Coast Repertory, Magic Theatre

and Cornerstone Theatre, among others. She has had commissions from Roundabout Theatre, Denver

Center Theatre Company, Yale Rep, Cornerstone Theatre Company, ACT Seattle, and South Coast

Repertory. Myatt received a Walt Disney Studios Screenwriting Fellowship, a Jerome Fellowship, a McKnight Advancement Grant,

and was the Mellon Foundation Playwright-in-Residence at South Coast Repertory 2013-2016. She is an alumna of New Dramatists.

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Belma Hadziselimovic

Non-Tenure Eligible Member

[email protected]

847-491-2403

Belma Hadziselimovic is a speech-language pathologist who has worked across a variety of settings,

including private practice, inpatient and outpatient rehabilitation, and early intervention. Her primary

clinical interests lie in the area of acquired neurogenic disorders of language and cognition.

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UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES

Gina Petersen

Librarian

[email protected]

847-491-2176

Gina Petersen is the Assessment Librarian for Northwestern University Libraries. Her research explores

the impact library staff, services, and interfaces have on research and teaching. In addition she evaluates

library and campus programming. She earned her MS in Library and Information Science from the

University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.

Steven Adams, M.S.

Chair, Student Affairs Committee

Librarian

[email protected]

847-467-2511

Steven M. Adams is Librarian for The Graduate School (TGS), Communication Sciences and Disorders,

Psychology, and Counseling. Steven has an additional appointment as the Faculty Mentor for the 7th class

of Posse Scholars and is Co-Chairing the NU Change Makers Review Committee. Steven also serves as

Board Chair for the Black Metropolis Research Consortium. Previously, he was the Biological and Life Sciences Librarian and Interim

Psychology Librarian at Princeton University. Steven earned a B.A. in Biology in 1998 and an M.L.S. in 2000 from Clark Atlanta

University.

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WEINBERG COLLEGE OF ARTS & SCIENCES

Marquis Bey, Ph.D.

African-American Studies

[email protected]

Marquis Bey's (they/them, or any pronoun) work focuses on blackness and fugitivity, transness, and black

feminist theory. Bey is particularly concerned with modes of subjectivity that index otherwise ways of

being, utilizing blackness and transness—as fugitive, extra-ontological postures—as names for such

otherwise subjectivities. These two analytics (rather than endowments of the epidermis or specific bodily

morphologies) are the axes around which Bey thinks about subjectivity formation and deformation,

abolition, and political work. Currently, Bey is at work of multiple projects. Forthcoming with Duke

University Press is Bey’s monograph Black Trans Feminism, which attempts to theorize the convergence of blackness, transness, and

black feminism via the Black Radical Tradition, critical theory, and contemporary literature. Additionally, forthcoming with University

of Minnesota Press’s Forerunners series is Bey’s short text The Problem of the Negro as a Problem for Gender, which deeply meditates

on Nahum Chandler’s work, putting into conversation his thinking on paraontologpy and desedimentation with the transness and

gender nonnormativity of transgender studies. Lastly, Bey is in the early stages of a collection of autotheory essays meditating on

the relationship between blackness and the category of cisgender, tentatively entitled Cistem Failure.

The Anthropology Department is currently holding an election.

Hannah Feldman, Ph.D.

Art History

[email protected]

Hannah Feldman is Associate Professor of Art History and core faculty in Middle Eastern and North

African Studies as well as Comparative Literary Studies. Her research, teaching, and advising center on

late modern and contemporary art and visual culture. Her first book, From a Nation Torn: Decolonizing

Art and Representation in France (Duke, 2014), has been reviewed in over ten national and

international publications, including Art Journal, Art Bulletin, and The American Historical Review. The book revises accounts of

mid-century French aesthetics to argue for the centrality of decolonization to the contemporaneous theorization of urban space,

photography, the public, spectacle, and the very project of writing history. Research for this project was supported by grants and

fellowships from the Getty Research Institute, the Samuel H. Kress Foundation, the Alice Kaplan Institute for the Humanities, the

Andrew W. Mellon Art History Publication Initiative, and the Canadian Center for Architecture.

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Pamela Bannos, M.F.A.

Art Theory & Practice

[email protected]

847-491-8774

Pamela Bannos is an artist and researcher who explores the links between visual representation, urban

space, history, and collective memory. Her recent projects include investigations of Chicago’s Lincoln

Park and the grounds of the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago. She also exhibits photographic

works. Bannos has a BA in psychology and sociology from Drake University and an MFA in photography

from the University of Illinois at Chicago. Her 2017 book, Vivian Maier: A Photographer’s Life and

Afterlife, is published by the University of Chicago Press. Bannos has taught photography in the department of art theory and practice

since 1993.

Thomas Gaubutz, Ph.D.

Asian Languages and Cultures

[email protected]

847-491-2766

Thomas Gaubatz is a scholar of early modern Japanese literature, media, and society. His current project

examines the ways in which literary representations of the townsman served to contain tensions,

contradictions, and hierarchies emerging in urban society between the mid-17th and mid-18th century.

Thomas received his Ph.D. in Japanese Literature from Columbia University in 2016.

Regan Thomson, Ph.D.

Chair, Faculty Rights and Responsibilities Committee

Chemistry

[email protected]

847-467-5963

Regan J. Thomson was born in New Zealand in 1976, and received his Ph.D. in 2003 at The Australian

National University. Following postdoctoral studies at Harvard University, he joined the faculty at

Northwestern University in 2006 where he is currently Professor of Chemistry. Regan’s research interests

include natural product synthesis and discovery, and atmospheric chemistry. He is the recipient of an NSF CAREER Award, an Amgen

Young Investigator Award, and an Illinois Division American Cancer Society Research Scholar Award.

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Taco Terpstra, Ph.D.

Classics

[email protected]

847-491-8039

Taco Terpstra is a socioeconomic historian of ancient Rome. His core research focuses on Roman long-

distance trade, specifically on the question of how merchants organized their business to overcome the

problems posed by preindustrial conditions. He is the author of Trading Communities in the Roman

World: A Micro-Economic and Institutional Perspective (Brill, 2013) as well as a number of articles on

Roman trade. His teaching includes courses on Roman economic history and the archaeology of Roman Campania.

The Earth and Planetary Science Department is currently holding an election

Joseph Ferrie, Ph.D.

Economics

[email protected]

847-491-3616

Joseph Ferrie is an economic historian who uses micro-level longitudinal data to study economic

mobility. Using data from census manuscripts, passenger ship records, tax lists, and city directories, he

has compared mobility in Britain, the United States and France from the 1850s to the present. He is also

interested in determining the link between early-life circumstances and later life outcomes, and the

migrant from rural areas to cities and towns. He is a research associate of the National Bureau of

Economic Research.

Barbara Newman, Ph.D.

English

[email protected]

847-491-5679

Professor Newman (Ph.D. Yale) is known for her work on medieval religious culture, comparative literature,

and women's spirituality. Her most recent books are a translation of Mechthild of Hackeborn's The Book of

Special Grace (2017) and Making Love in the Twelfth Century (2016). She is also the editor/translator

of Thomas of Cantimpréé: The Collected Saints' Lives (2008), and the author of Medieval Crossover: Reading the Secular against the

Sacred (2013), Frauenlob's Song of Songs: A Medieval German Poet and His Masterpiece (2006), God and the Goddesses: Vision,

Poetry, and Belief in the Middle Ages (2003), and From Virile Woman to WomanChrist: Studies in Medieval Religion and

Literature (1995), as well as three books on Hildegard of Bingen: an edited volume, Voice of the Living Light: Hildegard of Bingen and

Her World (1998); an edition and translation of Hildegard's collected songs, Symphonia Armonie Celestium Revelationum (1988, rev.

1998); and Sister of Wisdom: St. Hildegard's Theology of the Feminine (1987).

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The French and Italian Department is currently holding an election.

The German Department is currently holding an election.

David Schoenbrun, Ph.D.

History

[email protected]

847-491-7278

David Schoenbrun (Ph.D., UCLA, 1990) has been learning, teaching, and writing about Africa since 1978.

He is the author of two books and numerous articles and the Co-Executive Producer of two films. He

works with historical linguistics, archaeology, paleoecology and biogeography, oral traditions,

comparative ethnography, and more conventional documentary sources to study East Africa’s earlier

history.

Jennifer Cole, Ph.D.

Linguistics

[email protected]

847-491-7020

Jennifer Cole is Professor and Chair of Linguistics, and Faculty Affiliate in Cognitive Science. She has a PhD

in Linguistics from M.I.T. (1987), and taught at Yale (1987-1999) and the University of Illinois at Urbana-

Champaign (1999-2016) prior to joining Northwestern. She is a Fellow of the AAAS and the International

Speech Communication Association, and founding Editor of Laboratory Phonology. Dr. Cole investigates prosody and speech dynamics

in human languages, and the cognitive systems that support real-time speech production and comprehension, using computational and

statistical methods that enable automated analysis of large, multi-talker/hearer datasets in all human languages.

Ezra Getzler, Ph.D.

Mathematics

[email protected]

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For Senator Robert Holmgren of Molecular Biosciences , see Leadership above.

Fred Turek, Ph.D.

Chair, Research Affairs Committee

Neurobiology

[email protected]

847-467-6512

Dr. Fred Turek graduated from Stanford University in Stanford, California in 1973, receiving a PhD in

Biological Sciences; he then completed a two-year postdoctoral fellowship at the University of Texas,

where he studied in the Department of Zoology before becoming an Assistant Professor at Northwestern

University in 1975. He was Chair of the Department of Neurobiology and Physiology from 1987-1998. He is presently the Director of

the Center for Sleep and Circadian Biology and is the Charles E. and Emma H. Professor of Biology in the Department of Neurobiology

and has joint appointments in the Departments of Neurology and Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at the Feinberg School of

Medicine.

Rachel Zuckert, Ph.D.

Philosophy

[email protected]

847-491-2556

Rachel Zuckert is Professor of Philosophy, affiliated with German; she has been at Northwestern since 2006.

Her publications include Kant on Beauty and Biology and Herder's Naturalist Aesthetics, both from Cambridge

University Press, as well as articles in her areas of specialization (18th-19th c. European philosophy, on

themes in aesthetics, philosophy of biology, and philosophy of history).

Enectali Figueroa-Feliciano, Ph.D.

Physics & Astronomy

[email protected]

847-467-3511

Enectali Figueroa-Feliciano is interested in finding physics beyond the standard model. We know the

standard model of particle physics is not the most fundamental description of nature: it fails to explain

various phenomena such as the mass of neutrinos, dark matter, the expansion of the Universe, and gravity.

We focus on dark matter and neutrinos as they are one of the most promising avenues for finding new

physics in the next decade.

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Karen Alter, Ph.D.

Political Science

[email protected]

847-491-4842

Karen J Alter is a Professor of Political Science and Law. Karen is co-chair of the Organization of Women

Faculty and a member of the Provost Advisory Council for Women. She is co-director of the Research Group

on Global Capitalism and Law, formerly affiliated with the Buffett Institute. Alter’s research interests

include the politics of international law, global capitalism and law, ethics in international affairs, and the

future of multilateralism. In addition, Alter has new research on Gender and Status in American Political Science: Who

Determines Whether a Scholar is Noteworthy? which is being extended to examine gender dynamics related to digital status,

meaning the digital metrics and algorithms that are developing to measure, compare, and project the relative status of scholars.

David Uttal, Ph.D.

Psychology

[email protected]

847-467-1925

David Uttal is a Professor of Psychology and Education at Northwestern University. Along with teaching,

he leads a research laboratory of undergraduate, graduate students, and post-docs. His interests include

Maps, Symbolic Representation, Informal Learning, & Spatial Thinking in STEM Education.

Brannon Ingram, Ph.D.

Religious Studies

[email protected]

847-467-4170

Brannon D. Ingram is a specialist in Islamic studies. He works on Islam in South Asia and South Africa, with

a particular interest in how Muslims have debated Sufism, Islamic law, and politics in the modern era. He

received his B.A. in Religion from Reed College, his M.A. in Islamic Studies from Leiden University, and his

Ph.D. in Religious Studies from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

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Ilya Kutik, Ph.D.

Slavic Languages & Literature

[email protected]

847-491-8248

Ilya Kutik (Ph.D., Stockholm University, 1994) is a renowned poet and a founder of Russian Metarealism

in poetry.

Carol Heimer, Ph.D.

Chair, Educational Affairs Committee

Sociology

[email protected]

847- 491-7480

Carol A. Heimer is Professor of Sociology at Northwestern University and Research Professor at the

American Bar Foundation. She received her BA from Reed College and her PhD from the University of

Chicago. Heimer has written on risk and insurance (Reactive Risk and Rational Action), organization

theory (Organization Theory and Project Management, co-authored with Stinchcombe), the sociology of law and the sociology of

medicine (For the Sake of the Children, co-authored with Staffen, winner of both the theory and medical sociology prizes of the

American Sociological Association). A recipient of the Ver Steeg Award for graduate teaching, she usually teaches courses on law,

medicine, and qualitative methods, with occasional forays in to topics such as the sociology of moral experience.

Denise Bouras, M.A.

Spanish & Portuguese

[email protected]

847-491-8089

Denise Bouras received her B.A. from Marquette University, where she studied Spanish literature and

journalism. She earned her M.A. in Spanish literature from The University of Chicago, where she is also

currently working on her Ph.D. Since 2001 she has been dedicated to teaching Spanish language and

educating others about Hispanic culture and has taught a variety of courses, from elementary to

advanced levels. At Northwestern University she currently teaches Spanish 203, (Individual & Society

through Written Expression) and has previously taught Spanish 199 (Language in Context: Contemporary Spain). Denise has

recently become a member of the Council on Language Instruction and is very interested in expanding her knowledge on foreign

language acquisition and teaching methodologies. Finally, you can also find her at one of the Department’s numerous film

showings throughout the year, as she is currently enjoying her involvement in the coordination of the film series.

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Arend Kuyper, Ph.D.

Statistics

[email protected]

847-491-8708

My primary work is dedicated to developing and implementing methods, techniques, and strategies for

teaching statistics, especially for introductory statistics and data science related courses. Current work

includes updating the introductory statistics course to both include more statistical computing and

introduce more data science topics. I have also been working on the development and design of the

department’s data science courses.

Mark Witte, Ph.D.

Chair, Governance Committee

Non-Tenure Eligible Member

[email protected]

847-491-8481

Mark Witte's research deals with applied questions in macroeconomics and public finance. His main

interests are in consumption theory and topics in taxation. His teaching interests include

macroeconomics, money and banking, public finance, and the economics of the environment and the

extraction of natural resources. He has been voted onto the Associated Student Government honor roll numerous times in

recognition of both his teaching and student advising. He has been honored with a Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences (WCAS)

Distinguished Teaching Award, and a WCAS Distinguished Leader in the Undergraduate Community Award.

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AFFILIATED FACULTY

Roger Boye

Parliamentarian

Medill School of Journalism, Media, Integrated Marketing Communications

[email protected]

847-491-2069

Roger Boye is an associate professor emeritus-in-service. He has taught at Medill since he received a master’s degree with highest distinction in 1971 and was the school’s assistant dean and director of undergraduate studies for nearly 18 years. He has directed the Medill-Northwestern Journalism Institute since 1985 and has taught in the Institute since 1971. He is faculty chair of the Communications

Residential College and has chaired the Graduate Fellowship Committee as well as Medill’s Curriculum Committee and Academic Standards Committee.

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Building a tradition of shared governance at Northwestern