
Faculty & Staff
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Affiliated Faculty
Art
- William Wolff
Biology
- Philip D. Anderson
- Ann Jo Auerbach
- Chelsea Berns
- Christina J. Bradley
- Noah Bressman
- Christopher H. Briand
- Michael S. Carter
- Xuan Chen
- Jessica K. Clark
- Roie L. Cordrey
- Jeremy R. Corfield
- Elizabeth A. B. Emmert
- Floyd (Les) Erickson
- Samuel B. Geleta
- Mary Roman Gunther
- Aaron S. Hogue
- Kimberly L. Hunter
- Jocelyn Koller
- Krispen L. Laird
- Eric B. Liebgold
- Victor A. Miriel
- Claudia Morrison-Parker
- Kumudini Munasinghe
- Jennifer F. Nyland
- Wanda S. Perkins
- Dana L. Price
- Kimberly Quillin
- Betty Lou Smith
- Ryan C. Taylor
- E. Eugene Williams
Conflict Analysis & Dispute Resolution
- Tom Boudreau
- Toran Hansen
- Brian Polkinghorn
Communication Arts
- Vinita Agarwal
- Paul Scovell
Education Leadership
- Guy Elzey
- Christy Harper
- Daniel Hines
- John Kiser
- Christina Vickers
English
- Stephanie Bernhard
- Ryan Conrath
- Dave Johnson
Geography and Geosciences
- Thomas Cawthern
- Mara Chen
- Mark deSocio
- Daniel Harris
- Arthur Lembo
- Darren Parnell
- Arthur Lembo
- Darren Parnell
- Andrea Presotto
- Keota Silaphone
- Brent Skeeter
- Brent Zaprowski
History
- Creston Long
- Emily Story
Honors
- Andrew Martino
Library
- Emily Zerrenner
- Erin Weber
Philosophy
- Cristina Cammarano
- Grace Clement
- Yujia Song
Psychology
- Karl Maier
- Mark Walter
Sociology
- Tim Dunn
- Shawn McEntee
- Ryan Sporer
University Writing Center
- Melissa Bugdal
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Emeritus Professors
Joan Maloof
Joan Maloof is an Emeritus Professor of Environmental Studies and Biology. She is a writer, ecologist, and conservationist with a unique voice in today’s times. Maloof founded and directs an organization with the goal of creating a network of protected forests across the US. That organization, the Old-Growth Forest Network, now has thousands of supporters. Maloof travels widely to educate others regarding the extent and condition of our forests, and to encourage their preservation.
Maloof has studied and worked with plants her entire life; her formal education includes a B.S. in Plant Science, a M.S. in Environmental Science, and a Ph.D. in Ecology. She has four published books: The Living Forest (2017); Nature’s Temples (2016); Among the Ancients (2011) and Teaching the Trees (2005). Maloof has also published in numerous journals such as Ecology and The American Journal of Botany. For more on Joan's current activities, visit The Old Growth Forest Network.
Contact Joan Maloof >
James Hatley
James Hatley is a professor of Environmental Studies. His areas of expertise include 20th century continental philosophy, environmental philosophy, and philosophy of the arts. He was awarded Salisbury University’s Distinguished Faculty Award in 1998 and has won numerous awards for his sculpture and photography artwork. Hatley is the author of more than twenty articles and a monograph, Suffering Witness: the Quandary of Responsibility after the Irreparable (SUNY Press, 2000). He also edited Interrogating Ethics: Embodying the Good in Merleau-Ponty (Duquesne University Press, 2006) and Faces of Nature: Levinas and Environmental Thought (Duquesne University Press, 2012). He guest edited The Journal of Environmental Philosophy in the fall of 2008, with a special issue entitled: “Species of Thought—In the Approach of a More-than-human World.”
He is on the executive committee of the International Association for Environmental Philosophy and hosted their 2010 conference here at SU. Hatley has team taught with almost all environmental studies faculty at SU and published on interdisciplinary environmental studies pedagogy. He took a group of students on a study abroad program to Japan in January 2011 and January 2013, studying environmental spirituality while walking a sacred pilgrimage route through the mountains.
For more of Jim's thoughts, visit his blog >
Contact James Hatley >