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Nine New Graduate Students: Welcoming the 2025 Cohort

Aug. 22, 2025 —The Department of Anthropology is thrilled to welcome its new cohort of graduate studentsthe largest in recent memory. These nine brilliant young scholars were chosen from a highly-competitive applicant pool and join a vibrant academic community at a critical juncture in the university’s history.

Three incoming students will join the department’s Archaeology program. Andrew Goebel, a graduate of Carthage College, plans to study human-animal relationships and the influence of animals on religion and folklore. Segun Moses Okegbile, who has completed degrees at the University of Ibadan, is interested in human-environment interactions and adaptation strategies in West Africa. Laura Wildman, an SMU alumna (and former Anthropology Club President!), returns to the department to study expressions of grief in the archaeological record, focusing on child burials.

The other six incoming students join the Cultural Anthropology program at SMU. Jackson Chappell, a graduate of the University of Utah, is interested in the relationship between politics, economics, and hierarchy in Norway. Jose M. Dominguez, joining us from California State University, Dominguez Hills, plans to study resilience and stress among child migrants. Madalyn White, who completed her BA at Texas State University, hopes to conduct research on small-scale farmers in Honduras.

Our final three Cultural Anthropology students will further specialize in Medical Anthropology. A.J. Nicholson, a graduate of California State Polytechnic University, plans to study how people navigate end-of-life care in North America. Michelle Zernick, who joins the department from California State University, Long Beach and the University of California, Irvine, is interested in early psychosis intervention and mental healthcare decision-making, particularly among d/Deaf people. Finally, Beiyi Zhang, who holds degrees from Huazhong University of Science and Technology and the Chinese University of Hong Kong, plans to conduct research on the lived experiences of youth with ADHD in contemporary China.

Please join us in welcoming the 2025 cohort to SMU!

 

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Christopher Roos Publishes Major Article in PNAS

Aug. 20, 2025 — Professor Christopher I. Roos recently led the publication of a seminal fire history paper in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Roos and a team of scientists, including members of the White Mountain Apache and San Carlos Apache tribes, leveraged a large dataset of thousands of fire-scarred trees across Arizona and New Mexico to demonstrate that Ndee (Western Apache) people managed fire across their ~19,000 square mile homeland in central Arizona. Tree-ring analysis revealed that fires on Ndee homelands were more frequent, smaller, occurred disproportionately in late April and May, and ultimately buffered the impacts of climate when compared to the rest of the region. Roos and colleagues argued that the centuries of Ndee fire stewardship could be a model for fire management. 

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Forthcoming Book: Mike Adler’s Transilient Acts and Resilient Villages

Aug. 20, 2025Associate Professor Michael A. Adler has completed a new book, Transilient Acts and Resilient Villages: Pueblo Community Persistence in the Northern Rio Grande, which will be published in April 2026 by the University of Arizona Press. Drawing on decades of research among Tiwa-speaking peoples in the Northern Rio Grande, Adler’s book offers both an engaging history of Pueblo communities and a novel conceptual framework—centering what he calls “transilience”—for the study of group persistence and transformation. The book is available for preorder on the publisher’s website.