Gerald Taiaiake Alfred, author, educator and activist, will speak at ASU on the “Resurgence of Traditional Ways of Being: Indigenous Paths of Action and Freedom.”
Gary Paul Nabhan, Arab-American writer and food and farming advocate, will lecture on his recent book, “Where Our Food Comes From,” at a fundraising event to support opportunities for undergraduate English majors.
Don Johanson, a professor in the School of Human Evolution and Social Change, discusses the significance of Lucy, the iconic 3.2 million-year-old fossilized skeleton that changed our perception of the human trajectory.
ASU’s Django Paris has been awarded the Mary Catherine Ellwein Outstanding Dissertation Award for Qualitative Research Methodology from the American Educational Research Association.
ASU's School of Human Evolution and Social Change is the new home of dozens of Latin American folk art pieces that represent the beliefs, practices and creative expressions of Latin American peoples.
ASU’s Institute for Humanities Research has taken the lead in promoting excellence and innovation in humanities scholarship by contributing to scholarly research and engaging the community.
ASU is one of seven universities in the United States selected for a new program to infuse university-based humanities and social science research into the Department of Defense.
A documentary film and panel discussion centering on humanitarian efforts in northern Uganda will highlight an evening hosted by ASU's master's program in Social Justice and Human Rights at the university's West campus.