Biography

Dr. Shaunna L. Scott

University of Kentucky, USA

Associate Professor


Email: shaunna.scott@uky.edu


Qualifications

1983-1988 Ph.D., University of California, Anthropology

1982-1983 M.A., University of California, Anthropology

1978-1982 B.A., University of Kentucky, Anthropology and Political


Publications

  1. Stephanie McSpirit, David Brown, Shaunna L. Scott, and Jessica Pulliam. 2010. “Major Impacts and Challenges Facing Kentucky’s Streams and Wetlands: A Summary of Agency, Other Expert and Stakeholder Views.” Journal of the Kentucky Academy of Science http://www.kyscience.org/journal/view-journals.php
  2. Shaunna L. Scott.(2009) “Discovering What the People Knew: The 1979 Appalachian Land Ownership Study.” Action Research 7(2): 185-205.
  3. Shaunna L. Scott. (2008) “Revisiting the Appalachian Land Ownership Study: An Oral Historical Account.” Appalachian Journal 35 (2): 236-252.
  4. Stephanie McSpirit, Shaunna L. Scott, Duane Gill, Sharon Hardesty and Dewayne Sims. (2007) “Public Risk Perceptions after an Appalachian Coal Waste Disaster: A Survey Assessment.” Southern Rural Sociology 22 (2): 83-110.
  5. Shaunna L. Scott, Stephanie McSpirit, Sharon Hardesty and Robert Welch. (2005) “Post Disaster Interviews with Martin County Citizens: ‘Gray Clouds’ of Blame and Distrust.” Journal of Appalachian Studies 11 (1&2): 7-29.
  6. Stephanie McSpirit, Shaunna L. Scott, Sharon Hardesty and Robert Welch. (2005) “EPA Actions in Post-Disaster Martin County, Kentucky: An Analysis of Bureaucratic Slippage and Agency Recreancy.” Journal of Appalachian Studies 11 (1&2): 30-58.
  7. Shaunna L. Scott, Walter Bower, Tammy Werner and Patricia Whitlow. (2004). “Gender Inequities in the College Classroom: Findings and Strategies from the Literature on Teaching and Learning.” Kentucky Journal of Excellence in College Teaching and Learning. www.kentuckyjournalofexcellence.org/
  8. Shaunna L. Scott. (2002) “From Sociology of Appalachia to Sociology in Appalachia: Transforming SOC 534 into a Field Research Class.” Journal of Appalachian Studies 8 (1): 144-65.
  9. Shaunna L. Scott. (2001) “Civics Lessons from Another Place: A Case Study of the Northern Ireland Women’s Festivals.” Journal of Appalachian Studies 7 (2): 187-226.
  10. Shaunna L. Scott. (1996) “’Dead Work’: The Construction and Reconstruction of the Harlan Miners Memorial.” Qualitative Sociology 19 (3): 365-94.
  11. Shaunna L. Scott. (1996). “Drudges, Helpers and Team Players: Oral Historical Accounts of Farm Work in Appalachian Kentucky.” Rural Sociology 61 (2): 209-26.
  12. Shaunna L. Scott. (1996). “Gender Among Appalachian Kentucky Farm Families: The Kentucky Farm Family Oral History Project and Beyond.” Journal of Appalachian Studies 8 (3): 103-14.
  13. Shaunna L. Scott. (1995). “Teaching for Democracy: Reflections on Teaching Appalachian Studies.” Journal of the Appalachian Studies Association 7: 131-39.
  14. Dwight Billings and Shaunna L. Scott. (1994) “Religion and Political Legitimation. Annual Review of Sociology. Palo Alto, CA: Annual Review, Inc. 20: 173-234.
  15. Shaunna L. Scott. (1994). “’They Don’t Have to Live by the Old Traditions’: Saintly Men, Sinner Women and an Appalachian Pentecostal Revival.” American Ethnologist 21 (2): 227-44.
  16. Shaunna L. Scott. (1993) “’Gone Away from God’: Class, Gender and Community in Religious Discourse during a Pentecostal Revival.” Journal of the Appalachian Studies Association 5: 100-09.
  17. Shaunna L. Scott. (1983). “Grannies, Mothers and Midwives: An Examination of Traditional Southern Lay Midwifery.” Central Issues in Anthropology 4 (2): 17-29.
  18. Shaunna L. Scott (1995) Two Sides to Everything: The Cultural Construction of Class Consciousness in Harlan County, Kentucky. Series on Public and Oral History. Michael Fritsch, editor. Albany: State University of New York Press.

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