Laura Dyer, biology, co-authored “Fetal blood flow and genetic mutations in conotruncal congenital heart disease,” in Journal of Cardiovascular Development and Disease, 2021, 8:90.
Genevieve Brassard, English, has published an article titled “‘The London Resistance Movement’: Plotting Postwar Dissent in Rose Macaulay’s The World My Wilderness” in Studies in the Novel, 53:2 (Summer 2021): 122-140. The article can be accessed at this link.
Matthew Warshawsky, international languages and cultures, contributed an entry called “Women of the Carvajal Family” to the Shalvi/Hyman Encyclopedia of Jewish Women, published June 23, 2021, by the Jewish Women’s Archive (https://jwa.org/encyclopedia/article/women-of-the-carvajal-family). He also presented via Zoom “Daniel Israel López Laguna’s Reworking of Psalms through the Mirror of a Trans-Iberian Jewish Worldview in Espejo fiel de vidas” at the 19th International Research Conference of the Latin American Jewish Studies Association on June 29.
Andrew Guest, psychological sciences, had his article “Activities, Advantages, and Inequalities: The Theory and Practice of Sports, Arts, and Service in Catholic High Schools” published in the Journal of Catholic Education, 24 (1), 165-182. The article can be found here.
Lauren Berger, psychological sciences, Sarina Saturn, psychological sciences, and Layla Garrigues, nursing, presented a collaborative interdisciplinary symposium highlighting “Stories of Strength and Survival: BIPOC Communities, Systemic Oppression, and COVID-19” at the 129th Annual Convention of the American Psychological Association, August 12–14, 2021 (Virtual). Four recent graduates—Devonna Begay (sociology; class of ’21), Carolina Cortes (psychological sciences; class of ’21; also chair of the ethnic studies student steering committee and advisee of Alejandro Santana, philosophy), Mati Hébert (biology, sociology; class of ’21), and Mary Grace Tiglao (psychological sciences; class of ’21)—contributed to the symposium presentations.