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Our Team

Co-Director | Associate Professor of African History 

Muey Saeteurn specializes in the history of decolonization, nation-building, socio-economic development, and agrarian change in twentieth-century Kenya and the world. The thread that runs through her research and the courses she teaches concerns the ways in which rural African women and men shaped large-scale historical processes while positioning themselves as central actors in the making of the modern globalized world. Her first book, Cultivating Their Own: Agriculture in Western Kenya During the “Development” Era, was published in 2020 with the Rochester Studies in African History and the Diaspora series at the University of Rochester Press. Her current book project is titled Custodians of Tea: A History of Kenya's Tea Producers in the Late Cold War Era

 

Sabrina Smith

Co-Director | Assistant Professor of Latin American History

Sabrina Smith specializes in the history of the African Diaspora to Mexico and Central America. Her research and teaching examines the everyday experiences of African-descended people, and particularly women, in Latin America. She is currently working on her first book manuscript on African-descended women and men in colonial Oaxaca

 

 

 

Myles Ali

Streering Commitee Member | Assistant Professor

Myles Ali is an Assistant Professor in the Department of History and Critical Race and Ethnic Studies at the University of California, Merced. He is a historian of Africa, who focuses on the history of slavery, emancipation, trade, and colonialism in British Sierra Leone in West Africa. Myles received his PhD in History at York University, and he is a former University of California Chancellor’s Postdoctoral Fellow and recipient of an American Council of Learned Societies Fellowship. He is currently working on his first book manuscript, Captive Lives: Experiences of Slavery and Freedom in Colonial Sierra Leone.

 

Nicosia Shakes 

Streering Commitee Member | Assistant Professor

Nicosia Shakes is a scholar and artist specializing in African Diasporic political activism, race, gender and sexuality, and theatre and performance. Her book is titled, Women’s Activist Theatre in Jamaica and South Africa: Gender, Race, and Performance Space.  It won the National Women’s Studies Association/University of Illinois Press First Book Prize in 2017 and was published by UIP in 2023. The book examines the critical interventions made by theatre projects formed and operated by African and African-descended women. Through performance, these groups theorize about racial, gender and economic justice in Jamaica and South Africa. 

 

 

Maria Martin

Streering Commitee Member | Assistant Professor

Maria Martin is an Assistant Professor of African History with the Department of History and Critical Race & Ethnic Studies at the University of California, Merced. She holds a PhD in African American and African Studies with a concentration in history and women’s studies from Michigan State University where she is known for her hip hop teaching methods. Dr. Martin has also taught internationally in Nigeria at the University of Ibadan in the Gender Studies program. Prior to teaching in Nigeria, she conducted research there using oral histories and archives that centered building an intellectual history of Nigerian women’s activism in the nationalist movement.

 

 

Christina Baker

Streering Commitee Member | Associate Professor

Christina Baker is an Associate Professor of Critical Race and Ethnic Studies. Her interests center on the social construction and ideologies of race and gender, with an emphasis on Black feminist theory and praxis, media representations of Blackness, and experiences of women of color in film/media, higher education, and other social institutions. She is the author of Contemporary Black Women Filmmakers and the Art of Resistance (The Ohio State University Press), the edited collection Kasi Lemmons: Interviews (University Press of Mississippi), as well as several articles.

 

Kevin Dawson

Streering Commitee Member | Associate Professor

Kevin Dawson is associate professor of history at the University of California, Merced, and the recipient of the 2022–23 Kemble Fellowship in Maritime History at The Huntington. He is the author of Undercurrents of Power: Aquatic Culture in the African Diaspora (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2018), winner of the 2019 Harriet Tubman Prize from the New York Public Library’s Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture.

 

 

Whitney Pirtle

Streering Commitee Member | Associate Professor

Dr. Whitney N. L. Pirtle is a sociologist with broad, interdisciplinary expertise in critical race theory, social inequality, health disparities and health equity, Black feminist sociology and praxis, and mixed methodologies. Throughout her research and writing, as well as teaching and service to the field and her communities, she centers equity, inclusion, and justice.

 

 

Nigel Hatton

Streering Commitee Member | Associate Professor

Nigel Hatton is an associate professor in the Literatures in English section of the Department of Literatures, Languages, and Cultures, and in the Department of Philosophy at the University of California, Merced. His research and teaching span the areas of literature and philosophy, human rights and literature, critical refugee studies, and narrative medicine. His scholarship has appeared in the James Baldwin Review, Literatur in Wissenschaft und Unterricht, A-Line: A Journal of Progressive Thought, Globalization in Literature, Kierkegaard Research: Sources, Reception and Resources, and other publications. He is a contributing author to Departures: An Introduction to Critical Refugee Studies (2022) and co-editor of the Critical Refugee Studies Book Series from University of California Press. 

 

Daniel Thompson

Streering Commitee Member | Assistant Professor

Daniel Thompson an anthropologist and geographer who is committed to rigorous and critical ethnographic research and community collaboration. His current project is focused on how diaspora businesspeople from the Horn of Africa think about climate change as they pursue transnational investment across the US-Africa connection. Since 2015, he has been conducting research on the intersections between cross-border smuggling and diaspora investment in the Ethiopia-Somalia border regions, especially in the city of Jigjiga, Ethiopia. He is presently revising a manuscript based on this research.

 

 

Virginia Mateo | Student Assistant | History Major | UC Merced