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  • and the Indigenous North (4) NAIS 321: Visual Sovereignty and Indigenous Film (4) NAIS 361: Storied Survivance (4) NAIS 363: Race and Indigeneity (4) NURS 404: Healthcare Diversity (4) RELI 227: Introduction to Christian Theologies (4) (when the topic is ‘Native American Theologies’) RELI 236: Native American Religious Traditions (4) RELI 397: Indigenous Traditions of the Pacific Northwest (4) (when not used to satisfy the Northwest Language and Worldviews requirement) SOLU 101: Southern

  • Professor of Philosophy and Law Anthony Kwame Appiah, who will share his reflections on how widely held identity categories are used and abused. Ara Norenzayan, Professor of Psychology at the University of British Columbia and a co-director of UBC’s Centre for Human Evolution, Cognition and Culture, will address the evolutionary origins of religion and the psychology of religious diversity in today’s globalized world. Dean Spade, Associate Professor at Seattle University School of Law, will challenge

  • and Non-STEM Majors*** 12. Jasper M. Bragg, Jordyn Horton, Queeni L. Duong How Scarcity/Abundance Priming in a Religious or Nonreligious Context Influences Infidelity Likelihood* Session 2: 5:20-6:05 p.m.* PSYC242 Advanced Research Methods Project ** PSYC481 Research Seminar presenters ***PSYC499 Capstone presenters1. Mayra A. Cortez, Morgan E. Holmes , Matthew P. Potter2. Ben Helgeson and Josh Sandoval3. Aislyn Nihan4. Sonika Nigam and Marissa Smith5. Ashlee R. Owens, Brianna P. Ramirez, Sophia G

  • writing on any subject in U.S. history, and Organization of American Historians’ Ellis W. Hawley prize for best book in post-Civil War U.S. political history. Dochuk has also co-edited a number of essay collections, including Sunbelt Rising: The Politics of Space, Place, and Region (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2011), American Evangelicalism: George Marsden and the State of American Religious History University of Notre Dame Press, 2014), and Faith in the New Millennium: The Future of Religion

  • for her for many reasons: there is a course offered on Ancient Greek which is important to studying the New Testament, Greece has such a rich religious history, CYA has a balance of structure and independence, and it fit perfectly with her major and minor. While in Athens, Erika was able to take classes in Modern Greek (which she was able to practice by going to cafés and talking to locals) and Ancient Greek, a monotheistic religion course, a religion class on Orthodox Christianity, a philosophy

  • Margaret Murdoch ’24: Contributing to a cure at Fred Hutch Cancer Center Margaret Murdoch ’24, a biology and religious studies major with a minor in gender and sexuality studies, spent their summer in Seattle alongside some of the nation’s best scientists. Experimenting, analyzing, and observing at Fred Hutch Cancer Center , they were able to assist in… October 18, 2023 Alumni, Internships, Career

  • Margaret Murdoch ’24: Contributing to a cure at Fred Hutch Cancer Center Margaret Murdoch ’24, a  biology  and  religious studies  major with a minor in  gender and sexuality studies,  spent their summer in Seattle alongside some of the nation’s best scientists. Experimenting, analyzing, and observing at  Fred Hutch Cancer Center , they were able to assist in… October 18, 2023 Biology

  • , Christian social ethics, the Harlem Renaissance, race, politics and black church life. His current book project includes a religious critique of whiteness in the Harlem Renaissance. In addition, he is working on a book analyzing the reception of Bonhoeffer by liberation activists in apartheid South Africa. Dr. Williams received his Ph.D. in Christian ethics at Fuller Theological Seminary in 2011. He earned a Master’s degree in Theology from Fuller in 2006 and a Bachelor’s degree in Religious Studies

  • Perspectives on Religious Ethics Savannah Phelan, Building Bridges Through Ritual: Creating Space for Native Christian Identity within the Sweat Lodge Ashley Piehl, Religiously Whaling: The Ritual, Tradition, and Identity of the Makah Nicole Plastino, “There is No God Where I Am”: Thelema as a Case Study for Legitimizing Esoteric American Religiosity Connor Rowell, The Asymptotic Theology of Israel: Near Approaches to Monotheism in Israelite Thought Sarah Smith, Joseph and Aseneth: Redefining Jewish

  • defined as events sponsored to raise money for charitable, tax-exempt organizations external to the University. The following policy allows recognized student organizations to use University facilities and sponsor events to raise money for another tax-exempt charitable, educational, or religious off-campus organization as defined under the Internal Revenue Code Section 501 (c) (3). The proposed recipient must be an IRS-recognized 501 (c) (3) organization. A copy of the IRS determination letter