CAROL ANDERSON, Ph.D. Office: Department of …aas.emory.edu/home/documents/Vita 9-15-2016...

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CAROL ANDERSON, Ph.D. Office: Department of African American Studies, 207 Candler Library, 550 Asbury Circle, Emory University, Atlanta, GA 30322• 404.727.6847•[email protected] Education Ph.D. in History, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio, 1995. Major areas: 20 th Century U.S. International Relations; 20 th Century African American; 20 th Century American; 20 th Century European International. M.A. in Political Science, Miami University, Oxford, Ohio. Concentration in International Relations, American and Soviet Foreign Policy. A.B. in History, Miami University, Oxford, Ohio. Concentration in Soviet and European Foreign Policy. cum laude, Phi Beta Kappa. A.B. in Political Science, Miami University, Oxford, Ohio. Concentration in International Relations, American and Soviet Foreign Policy. Professional Experience EMORY UNIVERSITY. Samuel Candler Dobbs Professor of African American Studies. 2015 to present. Associate Professor of African American Studies. 2009 to 2015. Department Chair, 2015 to 2018. Teach courses covering 20 th Century African American History; Human Rights; War Crimes and Genocide; U.S. Cold War Foreign Policy; and the Civil Rights Movement. Serve on six doctoral and dissertation committees for students in History, Ethics & Society, Sociology, and the Institute of Liberal Arts. Served as the outside committee member on dissertation committees for students in History at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and Arizona State University. Co-coordinator, Mellon Mays Undergraduate Fellowship Program. 2011 to present. Interim Director, James Weldon Johnson Visiting Fellows Program. 2011-2012. UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI. Associate Professor of History. 2003-2008; Assistant Professor of History. 1996-2003. Teach undergraduate and graduate level courses in 20 th Century American History; 20 th Century African-American History; 20 th Century U.S. Foreign Policy; Human Rights Policy; War Crimes and Genocide; and the Civil Rights Movement.

Transcript of CAROL ANDERSON, Ph.D. Office: Department of …aas.emory.edu/home/documents/Vita 9-15-2016...

CAROL ANDERSON, Ph.D.

Office: Department of African American Studies, 207 Candler Library, 550 Asbury Circle,

Emory University, Atlanta, GA 30322• 404.727.6847•[email protected]

Education

Ph.D. in History, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio, 1995. Major areas: 20th Century

U.S. International Relations; 20th Century African American; 20th Century American; 20th

Century European International.

M.A. in Political Science, Miami University, Oxford, Ohio. Concentration in

International Relations, American and Soviet Foreign Policy.

A.B. in History, Miami University, Oxford, Ohio. Concentration in Soviet and European

Foreign Policy. cum laude, Phi Beta Kappa.

A.B. in Political Science, Miami University, Oxford, Ohio. Concentration in

International Relations, American and Soviet Foreign Policy.

Professional Experience

EMORY UNIVERSITY. Samuel Candler Dobbs Professor of African American Studies. 2015 to

present. Associate Professor of African American Studies. 2009 to 2015. Department

Chair, 2015 to 2018.

Teach courses covering 20th Century African American History; Human Rights; War

Crimes and Genocide; U.S. Cold War Foreign Policy; and the Civil Rights Movement.

Serve on six doctoral and dissertation committees for students in History, Ethics & Society,

Sociology, and the Institute of Liberal Arts. Served as the outside committee member on

dissertation committees for students in History at the University of Wisconsin-Madison

and Arizona State University.

Co-coordinator, Mellon Mays Undergraduate Fellowship Program. 2011 to present.

Interim Director, James Weldon Johnson Visiting Fellows Program. 2011-2012.

UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI. Associate Professor of History. 2003-2008; Assistant Professor

of History. 1996-2003.

Teach undergraduate and graduate level courses in 20th Century American History; 20th

Century African-American History; 20th Century U.S. Foreign Policy; Human Rights

Policy; War Crimes and Genocide; and the Civil Rights Movement.

Carol Anderson/Page 2 Serve on master’s, doctoral, three theses, and seven dissertation committees. Advisor for

two theses and four dissertations in U.S. foreign policy and in African American history.

Director of Undergraduate Studies. 2004/2005.

Publications

Books

Bourgeois Radicals: The NAACP and the Struggle for Colonial Liberation, 1941-1960

(Cambridge University Press, 2014).

Eyes off the Prize: The United Nations and the African American Struggle for Human

Rights: 1944-1955 (Cambridge University Press, 2003).

Myrna Bernath Book Award, Society for Historians of American Foreign

Relations, March 2004.

Gustavus Myers Outstanding Book Award, Gustavus Myers Center for the

Study of Bigotry and Human Rights, December 2003.

Truman Book Award, finalist, Harry S. Truman Library Institute, April 2004.

W.E.B. Du Bois Book Award, finalist, National Conference of Black Political

Scientists, April 2004.

Trade Press

White Rage: The Unspoken Truth of Our Racial Divide (Bloomsbury, 2016).

New York Times Bestseller, Race and Civil Rights, August 2016.

New York Times Editor’s Pick, July 2016.

#1 Best Seller, Amazon, Discrimination/Constitutional Law (June, July, and

August 2016).

#1 Best Seller, Amazon, Politics & Social Sciences/Politics & Government/

United States/State (June and July 2016).

Reviewed in: New York Times Review of Books, Washington Post, New Yorker,

Boston Globe, Financial Times, and The Globe and Mail.

Carol Anderson/Page 3 Refereed Articles

“Rethinking Radicalism: African Americans and the Liberation Struggles in Somalia, Libya,

and Eritrea, 1945-1949,” Journal of the Historical Society 11, no. 4 (December 2011):

385-423. Reprinted in Black Power Beyond Borders, ed., Nico Slate (Palgrave

Macmillan, 2013).

“International Conscience, the Cold War, and Apartheid: The NAACP’s Alliance with the

Reverend Michael Scott for South West Africa’s Liberation, 1946-1952,” Journal of World

History 19, no. 3 (September 2008): 297-326.

“From Hope to Disillusion: African Americans and the United Nations, 1944 - 1947,”

Diplomatic History 20, no. 4 (Fall 1996): 531-63. Reprinted in The

African-American Voice in U.S. Foreign Policy Since World War II, ed., Michael L.

Krenn (Garland Publishing, 1998).

Refereed Chapters in Edited Volumes

“The Histories of African Americans’ Anticolonialism in the Cold War,” in The Cold War in the

Third World, ed. Robert McMahon, in Reinterpreting American History, series ed. Wm.

Roger Louis (Oxford University Press, 2013), 178-191.

“The Cold War in the Atlantic World: African Decolonization & U.S. Foreign Policy,” in The

Atlantic World, 1450-2000, ed., Toyin Falola and Kevin Roberts (Indiana University

Press, 2008), 294-314.

“A ‘hollow mockery’: African Americans, White Supremacy, and the Development of Human

Rights in the United States,” Bringing Human Rights Home to America, eds., Cynthia

Soohoo, Catherine Albisa, and Martha F. Davis (Praeger Press, 2008), 75-101. Reprinted

in Martha F. Davis, Johanna Kalb, & Risa E. Kaufman, Human Rights Advocacy in the

United States (West, 2015).

Gustavus Myers Outstanding Book Award, Gustavus Myers Center for the

Study of Bigotry and Human Rights, December 2008.

“Clutching at Civil Rights Straws: A Reappraisal of the Truman Years and the Struggle for

African American Citizenship, 1945-1953,” in Harry’s Farewell: Interpreting and

Teaching the Truman Presidency, ed., Richard Kirkendall (University of Missouri Press,

2004), 75-104. Reprinted in The Civil Rights Legacy of Harry Truman, ed. Ray

Geselbracht (Truman State University Press, 2007).

“Bleached Souls and Red Negroes: The NAACP and Black Communists in the Early

Cold War, 1948 - 1952,” in Window on Freedom: Race, Civil Rights, and Foreign

Affairs, ed., Brenda Gayle Plummer (University of North Carolina Press, 2003), 93-113.

Carol Anderson/Page 4 Commentary for Special Journal Editions

“‘The Moral Arc of the Universe Bends Long but it Bends Toward Justice’: The Search for

Justice in International Law,” Commentary for Special Forum on War Crimes and

Genocide, Diplomatic History 35, no. 5 (November 2011): 787-91.

“‘The Brother in black is always told to wait’: The Communist Party, African-American Anti-

Communism, and the Prioritization of Black Equality – A Reply to Eric Arnesen ,” in

Labor: Studies in Working-Class History of the Americas 3, no. 4 (Winter 2006): 65-68.

Encyclopedia Entries

“An Appeal to the World,” Dictionary of American History, Supplement: America in the World,

1776 to the Present, ed., Edward J. Blum (Charles Scribner’s Sons, 2015).

“Race Relations in the 1940s and 1950s and International Human Rights,” Encyclopedia of Human

Rights, ed., David Forsythe (Oxford University Press, 2009).

“International Dimensions of the American Civil Rights Movement,” Encyclopedia of Human

Rights, ed., David Forsythe (Oxford University Press, 2009).

Works in Progress

“‘Hang your conscience on a peg’: The African National Congress and the NAACP’s Efforts to

End the World Bank’s Support of Apartheid South Africa, 1948-1953.” (Article to be

submitted to Diplomatic History)

The Ties that Silence: African American Responses to Political Violence in Haiti, the

Congo, and Nigeria, 1960-1970.

Culture and Resistance: A History of African Americans, textbook, Leslie Alexander, Curtis J.

Austin, Erik McDuffie, Walter C. Rucker, Jason R. Young (Cengage, forthcoming).

“The Politics of Respectability: The Devaluation of Black Lives and Erosion of American

Democracy’s Legitimacy.”

Reviews

Review of, Patrick Phillips, Blood at the Root: Racial Cleansing in America in New York Times

Book Review, September 2016.

Review of, Ryan M. Irwin, Gordian Knot: Apartheid and the Unmaking of the Liberal World

Order in Diplomatic History, April 2014.

Carol Anderson/Page 5 Review of, Sarah B. Snyder, Human Rights Activism and the End of the Cold War: A

Transnational History of the Helsinki Network in Journal of American Studies, November

2012.

Review of, Roland Burke, Decolonization and the Development of International Human

Rights in American Historical Review, December 2010.

Review of, Beverly Lindsay, Ralph Johnson Bunche: Public Intellectual & Nobel Poet Laureate

in African Studies Review, April 2010.

Review of, Manfred Berg, The Ticket to Freedom: The NAACP and the Struggle for Black

Political Integration in American Historical Review, December 2006.

“A New Deal for (most of) the World,” review of, Elizabeth Borgwardt, A New Deal for the

World: America’s Vision for Human Rights in H-Peace, August 2006.

“All Politics is Local: The Primacy of Race, Class, and Municipal Politics on the Civil Rights

Struggle in Alabama,” review of, J. Mills Thornton, III, Dividing Lines: Municipal

Politics and the Struggle for Civil Rights in Montgomery, Birmingham, and Selma in

Reviews in American History, December 2003.

Review of, Kenneth Janken, White: The Biography of Walter White, Mr. NAACP, in African

American Review, Winter 2003.

“Looking for Heroes in All the Wrong Places,” review of, Marc Gallicchio, The African

American Encounter with Japan & China: Black Internationalism in Asia, 1895-1945 in

Diplomatic History, Spring 2003.

“Who Killed Jim Crow?” review of, Azza Salama Layton, International Politics and Civil Rights

Policies in the United States, 1941-1960 in Peace and Change, April 2002.

Honors, Awards, and Grants

Book Awards:

Myrna Bernath Book Award for Eyes off the Prize, Society for Historians of American Foreign

Relations, March 2004.

Gustavus Myers Outstanding Book Award for Eyes off the Prize, Gustavus Myers Center for the

Study of Bigotry and Human Rights, December 2003.

Truman Book Award, finalist, for Eyes off the Prize, Harry S. Truman Library Institute, April

2004.

Carol Anderson/Page 6 W.E.B. Du Bois Book Award, finalist, for Eyes off the Prize, National Conference of Black

Political Scientists, April 2004.

Research:

National:

Pozen Chair in Human Rights, University of Chicago, 2019.

Gladstein Visiting Professor of Human Rights, University of Connecticut, January - May 2013.

Charles Warren Center for Studies in American History Fellowship, Harvard University, August

2005 - June 2006.

National Humanities Center Fellowship, Research Triangle, NC, August 2005 - May 2006.

(Declined).

Gilder Lehrman Fellowship at the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, Gilder

Lehrman Institute of American History, January 2004.

Lubin-Winant Research Fellowship, Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt Institute, December 2003.

Eisenhower Foundation, May 2003.

Ford Foundation Postdoctoral Fellowship, August 1999 - August 2000.

American Council of Learned Societies Fellowship, June - December 1998.

Eisenhower World Affairs Institute Research Grant, November 1997.

System:

Research Board Fellowship, University of Missouri System, July 2003 - June 2004.

Research Board Fellowship, University of Missouri System, June 1997 - August 1998.

CIC Dissertation Year Fellowship, Big Ten and the University of Chicago Consortium, 1994.

University:

Scholarly Writing and Support Fund, Center for Faculty Excellence and Development, Emory

University, November 2013.

Subvention Grant, College of Arts and Science/Laney Graduate School, Emory University,

August 2013.

Carol Anderson/Page 7

Conference Subvention Grant for SHAFR’s Summer Research Institute, Emory University, June

2010.

Faculty International Travel Award, University of Missouri, October 2007.

Summer Research Fellowship, University of Missouri, June - August 2005.

Center for Research in Arts & Humanities, University of Missouri, May - August 2005.

Research Council Small Grant, University of Missouri, May - August 2004.

Research Council Grant, University of Missouri, August 2003 - July 2004.

Summer Research Fellowship, University of Missouri, June - August 1999.

Research Council Grant, University of Missouri, June 1997 - May 1998.

Summer Research Fellowship, University of Missouri, June - August 1997.

Eugene Roseboom Prize (for best paper in a graduate-level seminar), Department of History, The

Ohio State University, 1993.

Graduate Student Alumni Research Award, The Ohio State University, 1992.

Teaching:

Williams Award for Excellence in Teaching, College of Arts & Science, Emory University,

May 2016.

Faculty for Woodruff Library Undergraduate Research Award Winner, Hannah Conway,

“Behind the Lens of the Civil Rights Movement: The Power of Photography for Both

Revealing and Concealing History,” Emory University, April 2016.

Faculty for Woodruff Library Undergraduate Research Award Winner, Samantha Keng,

“Model Minority Awakenings: Vincent Chin, Asian America’s Emmett Till—

Understanding the Hate Crime that Ignited a New Civil Rights Movement,” Emory

University, Apri1 2016.

Crystal Apple Award for Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching, Emory University, February

2016.

Recognition for Teaching Excellence, (Alyssa Weinstein), Phi Beta Kappa, Emory University,

November 2015.

Carol Anderson/Page 8

Faculty for Woodruff Library Undergraduate Research Award Winner, Dominique Hayward,

“Innocents’ Death,” Emory University, April 2015.

Faculty for Woodruff Library Undergraduate Research Award Winner, Alyssa Weinstein,

“Forgetting our History: American Failure to Protect Human Rights in Rwanda and Syria,”

Emory University, April 2015.

Faculty for Woodruff Library Undergraduate Research Honorable Mention, Jacob Teich,

“Overcoming the Ghost of Leo Frank: Atlanta Jews and the Civil Rights Movement,”

Emory University, April 2015.

Faculty for Woodruff Library Undergraduate Research Award Winner, Laurabeth Goldsmith,

“Theresienstadt: A Concentration Camp Camouflaged as The ‘Model Jewish Settlement,’”

Emory University, April 2014.

John Emory Award (for being a leading difference maker in the lives of students through

advising and guiding), Paladin Society, Emory University, April 2014.

Williams Award for Excellence in Teaching, nominated, Emory University, January 2014.

Recognition for Teaching Excellence, (Kathryn Kruse), Phi Beta Kappa, Emory University,

April 2013.

Faculty for Woodruff Library Undergraduate Research Award Winner, Elizabeth Graham,

“Cultural Relativism versus Human Rights: US Foreign Policy on Female Genital

Circumcision,” Emory University, April 2013.

Faculty for Woodruff Library Undergraduate Research Honorable Mention, Sweta Maturu,

“United States Involvement in International Conflicts and Civil Uprisings: American

Human Rights Policy towards Egypt during the Arab Spring,” Emory University, April

2013.

Recognition for Teaching Excellence, (Mia Ozegovic), Phi Beta Kappa, Emory University,

November 2012.

Recognition for Teaching Excellence, (Delia Solomon), Phi Beta Kappa, Emory University, April

2012.

Faculty for Woodruff Library Undergraduate Research Award Winner, Hannah Coleman,

(Freshman Award) “Clinton’s Strategic ‘G’ Word: The United States’ Failure in Preventing

the Rwandan Genocide,” Emory University, April 2012.

Recognition for Teaching Excellence, (Katherine Kimura), Phi Beta Kappa, Emory University,

November 2011.

Carol Anderson/Page 9

Recognition for Teaching Excellence, (Laura Withers), Phi Beta Kappa, Emory University,

November 2011.

Faculty Advisor for Undergraduate International Research, CIPA-IDN, Laura Withers,

“Social and Governmental Responses to and Support for Female Rape Victims and Their

Children in Rwanda,” Emory University, Fall 2011.

Faculty for Woodruff Library Undergraduate Research Award Winner, Emily Jastromb, “Facing

History: Memory and Recovery in the Aftermath of Atrocity,” Emory University, April

2011.

Faculty for Woodruff Library Undergraduate Research Honorable Mention, Katherine Kimura,

“The Hidden Casualties of World War II: The Struggle for Remorse, Redress, and

Recognition in Japan and the United States,” Emory University, April 2011.

Crystal Apple Award for Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching, Emory University, February

2011.

Faculty Advisor for Undergraduate International Research, CIPA-IDN, Tamara Freilich,

“Changing Inequitable Gender Norms in South Africa: A Man’s Role in the Feminization

of AIDS,” Emory University, Fall 2010.

Recognition for Teaching Excellence, (Teresa Green), Phi Beta Kappa, Emory University,

December 2009.

Outstanding Mentor and Professor, Honors Convocation, University of Missouri, May 2009.

Mizzou Class of ‘39 Outstanding Faculty, Alumni Association, University of Missouri, February

2009.

Mentor, Ronald E. McNair Scholars Program, 2007-2008; 2008-2009.

Outstanding Mentor and Professor, Honors Convocation, University of Missouri, May 2008.

Outstanding Mentor and Professor, Honors Convocation, University of Missouri, May 2007.

Mentor, Summer Emerge Undergraduate Research Program, University of Missouri, 2007.

Maxine Christopher Shutz Distinguished Teaching Award, University of Missouri, October

2006.

Outstanding Mentor and Professor, Honors Convocation, University of Missouri, May 2005.

Carol Anderson/Page 10 Mizzou Class of ‘39 Outstanding Faculty, Alumni Association, University of Missouri,

February 2005.

Outstanding Mentor and Professor, Honors Convocation, University of Missouri, May 2003.

Most Valuable Professor (MVP), Athletic Department, University of Missouri, July 2003.

Most Inspiring Professor, Athletic Department, University of Missouri, April 2003.

Teaching Excellence Spotlighted in “Telling Lessons,” Mizzou: The Magazine of the MU Alumni

Association, Vol. 91, No. 3 (Spring 2003).

Outstanding Mentor and Professor, Honors Convocation, University of Missouri, May 2002.

William T. Kemper Fellowship for Teaching Excellence, University of Missouri, April 2001.

Provost’s Teaching Award for Outstanding Junior Faculty, University of Missouri, September

2000.

Gold Chalk Award for Outstanding Graduate Teaching, Graduate and Professional Council,

University of Missouri, April 2000.

Outstanding Mentor and Professor, Honors Convocation, University of Missouri, May 1999.

Teaching Excellence Spotlighted in “Assignments in Diplomacy,” Mosaic: Magazine of the

College of Arts & Science (Winter 1998).

Outstanding Professor at MU, Maneater Student Poll, University of Missouri, 1997.

Scholarship & Service:

Expertise: Politico 50, “thinkers, doers and visionaries transforming politics,” Politico, 2016.

The Women of Emory Excellence Award for Public or Digital Scholarship, Center for Women,

Emory University, 2016.

OAH Distinguished Lecturer, 2015 - 2018.

Journal of American History, Editorial Board, 2014 - 2017.

PBS: American Experience, Black Diplomacy, documentary advisor, 2016.

PBS: American Experience, Joseph McCarthy, documentary advisor, 2014.

Carol Anderson/Page 11 PBS: American Experience, Klansville, documentary advisor, 2014.

American Historical Association/Smithsonian National Museum of African American History

and Culture, Conference Planning Committee, 2013 - 2015.

Public Voices Fellowship: The Op-Ed Project, Center for Women, Emory University, 2013 - 2014.

Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) Exhibition, “And the Struggle Continues,” Co-

curator, Schatten Gallery, Woodruff Library, Emory University, March 2012 - December

2013.

Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations Summer Research Institute, “Freedom

and Free Markets: Histories of Globalization and Human Rights,” Co-Director, June 2011.

United Nations, Expert Participant in the Third Session of the Forum on Minority Issues:

Minorities and Effective Participation in Economic Life, Geneva, Switzerland, December

2010.

U.S. State Department, Historical Advisory Committee, 2005 - 2010.

U.S. State Department, U.S.-Brazil Joint Action Plan to Eliminate Racism and Promote Equality,

Area Expert, May 2010.

Center for Applied and Behavioral Sciences, “Color-blind Seminar,” invited expert, Stanford

University, June 2009.

Aspen Institute, Open Society Institute, “Rethinking Race, Crime, and Punishment in America,”

invited expert, June 2008.

Diplomatic History, Board of Editors, 2008-2010.

Strickland Distinguished Visiting Scholar, Middle Tennessee State University, October 2008.

Passport, Board of Editors, Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations, 2005 - 2007.

Fellowship, Grant Proposal, and Manuscript Reviewer American Academy in Berlin, fellowship proposal reviewer, 2013.

Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada, proposal reviewer, 2008, 2011,

2013.

PSC/City University of New York Enhanced Grant, proposal reviewer, 2013.

National Endowment for the Humanities, Landmark Review Panel, 2010.

Carol Anderson/Page 12 American Council of Learned Societies, proposal reviewer, 2006 - 09.

Manuscript Reader for Cambridge University Press, Oxford University Press, Harvard University

Press, Cornell University Press, University of North Carolina Press, University of Pennsylvania

Press, Stanford University Press, University of Florida Press, University of Kentucky Press,

University of Tennessee Press, Random House, McGraw-Hill, Houghton Mifflin, Palgrave

Macmillan, Prentice-Hall, Diplomatic History, Journal of American History, International History

Review, Journal of Cold War Studies, and the Journal of Policy History.

Leadership: American Historical Association, Nominating Committee, 2009 - 2011, Chair.

The Harry S. Truman Library Institute for National and International Affairs,

Board of Directors, 2006 - 2015.

Chair, Committee on Research, Scholarship and Academic Relations, 2008 - 2015.

Chair, Grants and Fellowship Sub-committee, 2001 - 2008.

The Historical Society, Board of Governors, 2008 - 2013.

Academic Conference Presentations

American Historical Association Commentator: “Blurring the Color Line: Black Diplomacy in the Middle East and North

Africa during the Early Cold War,” January 2016.

“‘For the emancipation of black people everywhere’: The African National Congress and

NAACP’s Coalition to Destroy Apartheid,” January 2012.

“Jim Crowing the American Century,” Roundtable: Henry Luce’s American Century,

January 2011.

“Allies of a Kind: India and the NAACP’s Alliance to end Racial Oppression in South

Africa, 1946-1951,” January 2009.

“The Site of the Revolution: The United Nations and Third World Liberation,”

Roundtable: The Cold War and the Third World, January 2008.

Commentator: “Internationalism, Institutions, and Identities: The Politics of Postwar

Transition,” January 2004.

“‘With Friends Like These. . .:’ Eleanor Roosevelt, the Struggle for African-Americans’

Human Rights, and the Limits of Liberalism, 1947-1952,” January 2002.

Carol Anderson/Page 13

“Bleached Souls and Red Negroes: The NAACP and Black Communists in the Early

Cold War, 1947-1952,” AHA-Pacific Coast Branch, August 1998.

Organization of American Historians “‘Whittling Away’ at Domestic Jurisdiction: The NAACP’s and the Afro-Asian Bloc’s

Anti-Colonial Strategy in the United Nations,” April 2014.

Roundtable with Professors John Bracey and Patricia Sullivan on the “Centennial of the

NAACP,” March 2009.

“The Ghost of Wilson Past: South African Colonialism and the Haunting of America’s

Anti-Colonialist Rhetoric, 1919 - 1960,” March 2007.

Commentator: “Black Radicalism and Communism in the Twentieth Century,” March

2006.

“Conscience, the Cold War, and Apartheid: The NAACP, the Rev. Michael Scott, and the

Fight in the UN against South African Control of South West Africa, 1948 - 1952,”

March 2005.

“A Black Panther in ‘fat cats’ Clothing: The NAACP and the UN Battle for Eritrea,

Libya, and Somalia, 1948 - 1950,” April 2002.

“‘With Friends Like These. . .’: Eleanor Roosevelt, the NAACP, and the Limits of

Liberalism,” April 2000.

“Eyes Off the Prize: African Americans and the Struggle for Human Rights in the Early

Cold War,” April 1996.

“African Americans and the United Nations: 1944-47,” April 1993.

Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations

Commentator: “Their Own Battles: Indigenous Anti-Communist Networks, the Third

World, and the Global Cold War,” June 2015.

“‘Hang your conscience on a peg’: The African National Congress and the NAACP’s

Efforts to Stop the World Bank’s Loans to Apartheid South Africa, 1948 - 1953,”

June 2014.

“Allies of a Kind: India and the NAACP’s Alliance to end Racial Oppression in

South Africa, 1946 - 1951,” June 2010.

“The Not So Good ‘Good Negro’: The NAACP’s Defiance Campaign Against

U.S. Foreign Policy in South West Africa, 1948 - 1952,” June 2003.

Carol Anderson/Page 14

“A Black Panther in ‘fat cats’ Clothing: The NAACP and the Battle for the Italian

Colonies, 1948 - 1950,” June 2001.

Commentator: “Breaking the Color Line: African-American Diplomats Since the

1930s,” June 1997.

“African Americans, the United Nations, and the Struggle for Human Rights, 1944 -

1947,” June 1995.

Association for the Study of Afro-American Life & History

“‘Hang your conscience on a peg’: The African National Congress and

the NAACP’s Efforts to Stop the World Bank’s Loans to Apartheid South Africa,

1948-1953,” September 2015.

“Your Struggle is my Struggle: India and the NAACP’s Alliance to end Racial

Oppression in South Africa, 1946-1951,” September 2010.

“‘To the Highest Court in the World, the United Nations’: The NAACP’s International

Strategy for Black Equality, 1945-1955,” October 2004.

“Blacks and the United Nations: 1944-47,” October 1993.

Association for the Study of the Worldwide African Diaspora “Follow the Bodies: The NAACP and the Diplomacy of African Anticolonialism,”

October 2007.

The Berkshire Conference on the History of Women Commentator, “U.S. Women’s Organizations, Citizenship and Gendered Diplomacy

in the 20th Century,” June 2008.

The Historical Society “Freedom Fighters on the Cold War Plantation: The Missed Histories of African

Americans’ Anticolonialism,” June 2010.

“The NAACP and Political Liberation Movements in Africa and Asia,” June 2008.

Southern Labor Studies “‘Violating Capitalist Principles on the Altar of a Racist Ideology’: The African National

Congress, the NAACP, and the Origins of the Divestment Movement, 1948-1952,”

March 2013.

The Southern Historical Association Roundtable: “Mid-career Challenges for Women Historians.” November 2009.

Carol Anderson/Page 15

Southern Association of Women Historians Roundtable: “Writing the Second Book,” June 2015.

World History Association Commentator: “Out with the Puppets, In with the Anti-Communist Crusaders: Indigenous

International and Transnational Anti-Communist Networks in the Third World,”

June 2015.

American Anthropological Association “From the White Man’s Burden to the Supremacy of Equality: The NAACP’s Alliance

with the Reverend Michael Scott for South West Africa’s Liberation, 1946-1951,”

November 2008.

Special Topic Conferences “‘Hang Your Conscience on a Peg’: The African National Congress and the NAACP’s

Efforts to Stop the World Bank’s Loans to Apartheid South Africa, 1948‑ 1953,”

Future of the African American Past, Smithsonian National Museum of African

American History and Culture, May 2016.

“Cold War Human Rights,” The Life of the Law: A Symposium Commemorating the 50th

Anniversary of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, The Miller Center and the University

of Virginia Law School, May 2014.

“Black Leadership: The NAACP and the Struggle for Colonial Liberation, 1941-1960,”

Manning Marable Conference, Institute for Research in African-American Studies,

Columbia University, April 2012.

“Rethinking Radicalism: African Americans and the Liberation Struggles in Somalia,

Eritrea, and Libya, 1945-1951,” Black Power Beyond Borders, Carnegie Mellon

University, April 2011.

“When the Levees Broke: A History of Un-Civil Rights in America,” NAACP

Centennial, University of Sussex, Brighton, United Kingdom, September 2009.

“Allies of a Kind: India and the NAACP’s Alliance to End Racial Oppression in South

Africa, 1946-1951,” NAACP Centennial, University of Kansas, February 2009.

“‘I put first. . .and then the fight for Negro Rights’: Black Communists, the Struggle

for African-American Equality, and the Credibility Gap, 1935-1955,” James and

Esther Jackson, the American Left, and the Origins of the Modern Civil Rights

Movement, New York University, October 2006.

Chair, “Race and Foreign Policy,” The Global Impact of 1956: Race, Neutralism, and

National Liberation, Mershon Center for International Security Studies, The Ohio

State University, October 2006.

Carol Anderson/Page 16

“Left out in the Cold (War): African Americans and Human Rights,” Symposium on the

Causes and Consequences of the Cold War, Harry S. Truman Presidential Library,

July 2006.

“Human Rights Delayed. . .Human Rights Denied: How Race and Racism Shaped

U.S. Human Rights Policy in the Immediate Post-War Era, 1944-1955,” Human

Rights at Home Roundtable, Columbia University School of Law, May 2005.

“Clutching at Civil Rights Straws: A Reappraisal of the Truman Years and the Struggle

for African-American Citizenship, 1945-1953,” Conference on the Legacy of

Truman’s Farewell Address, Harry S. Truman Presidential Library, July 2003.

“‘With Friends Like These. . .’: Eleanor Roosevelt, the Struggle for Black Equality, and

the Limits of Liberalism, 1947-52,” Conference on the African Diaspora,

University of Nebraska-Lincoln, February 2001.

“Bleached Souls and Red Negroes: The NAACP and Black Communists during the Early

Cold War, 1947 - 1952,” African Americans During the Age of American

Expansion, 1898-1998, Penn State University, March 1999.

“Democracy Begins at Home (or at Least it Should): The African-American Response to

the Truman Doctrine,” Conference on the 50th Anniversary of the Desegregation of

the Military, Harry S. Truman Presidential Library/University of Missouri-Kansas

City, July 1998.

“Democracy Begins at Home: The African-American Response to the Truman Doctrine,”

Presidential Symposium on Rethinking the Cold War, Mississippi State University,

November 1997.

Invited Lectures

Universities

“White Rage: The Unspoken Truth of our Racial Divide,” University of New Mexico, January

2017.

“‘We Fight!’ Red Tails, Black Soldiers, and the Civil Rights Movement,” University of Missouri,

October 2016.

“White Rage: The Unspoken Truth of our Racial Divide,” Atlanta University Center, October

2016.

“White Rage: The Truth of Our Racial Divide,” Anne Braden Institute for Social Justice Research,

University of Louisville, November 2015.

Carol Anderson/Page 17 “‘When the Levees Broke’: A History of Un-Civil Rights in America,” CAUSE, Carnegie Mellon

University, October 2015.

“‘The Danger of the Single Story’: African Americans’ Anticolonialism in the Early Cold War,”

Keynote, MURAP, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, July 2015.

“Bourgeois Radicals: The NAACP’s Anticolonialism in the Early Cold War,” Penn State

University, October 2014.

“‘The Danger of the Single Story’: African Americans’ Anticolonialism in the Early Cold War,”

International History Group, Dartmouth College, September 2014.

“Bourgeois Radicals: The NAACP’s Anticolonialism in the Early Cold War,” Mississippi State

University, September 2014.

“‘When the Levees Broke’: A History of Un-Civil Rights in America,” Human Rights Program,

University of Chicago, April 2014.

“‘The Danger of the Single Story’: African Americans’ Anticolonialism in the Early Cold War,”

Brown University, March 2014.

“When the Levees Broke: A History of Un-Civil Rights in America,” Keynote, MURAP,

University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, July 2012.

“‘The Danger of the Single Story’: African Americans’ Anticolonialism in the Early Cold War,”

Vanderbilt University, December 2011.

“When the Levees Broke: A History of Un-Civil Rights in America,” Keynote for launch of

M.A. in North American Studies program, Augsburg University, Augsburg, Germany,

November 2011.

“When the Levees Broke: A History of Un-Civil Rights in America,” Teaching American History

Program, University of Kansas, July 2011.

“Rethinking Radicalism: African American Anti-colonialism, 1941 - 1960,” Modern America

Workshop, Princeton University, March 2010.

“Allies of a Kind: India and the NAACP’s Alliance to end Racial Oppression in South

Africa, 1946-1951,” McNutt Distinguished Lecture, Indiana University, March 2009.

“Bourgeois Radicals: The NAACP and the Struggle for Colonial Liberation, 1941-1960,” Mershon

Center for International Security Studies, The Ohio State University, November 2008.

“‘When the Levees Broke’: Un-Civil Rights in America,” Keynote Address, University of

Memphis, September 2007.

Carol Anderson/Page 18

“‘Abandoned a Long Time Ago’: African Americans, Human Rights, and the Struggle for

Real Equality,” Central Connecticut State University, May 2006.

“Bourgeois Radicals: The NAACP and Third World Liberation, 1941-1960,” Sahin Lecture

Series, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, April 2006.

“On the Fringes of Society and at the Center of Democracy: African Americans, Human Rights,

and Public Policy,” Simmons College, November 2005.

“From the New Deal to New Orleans: The History and Consequences of the Denial of African

Americans’ Human Rights,” Boston University, October 2005.

“Internationalizing the Domestic, Domesticating the International: The Global Struggle for

African American Equality,” Teaching American History Symposium, Bowling Green

State University, June 2005.

“‘Out of the Shadow of States’ Rights’: An Assessment of African American Equality during the

Truman Presidency,” University of Nevada-Reno, April 2005.

“‘We Are Not What We Seem’: The Roles of Mary McLeod Bethune, Eleanor Roosevelt, Edith

Sampson, and Mary Pillsbury Lord in the Quest for African Americans’ Human Rights,”

Women’s History Month, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, March 2005.

“‘To root for the underdog, to feed the hungry, to heal the sick’: Race, the University, and the

Urban Community,” Whitney Young, Jr. Distinguished Lecture, School of International

and Public Affairs, Columbia University, March 2005.

“‘Saving Black America’s Body and White America’s Soul’: The NAACP’s International

Efforts to end Lynching,” Indiana University Purdue University at Indianapolis, February

2005.

“Social Justice, Equality, and Human Rights: The Possibilities, the Paradox, and the Problems in

American Society,” Human Rights Program, Columbia University, December 2004.

“Lynching Democracy: The International Effects of America’s Human Rights Violations,”

Kohlenberg-Towne Lecture, Truman State University, October 2004.

“Truth, Justice, and the American Way: Lynching and the Effects on U.S. Foreign Policy,”

College of Arts and Science, Miami University, January 2004.

“In Search of Democracy: Race and American Leadership in the United Nations,” The Mershon

Center for International Studies, The Ohio State University, November 2003.

Carol Anderson/Page 19 “The Jim Crow Leader of the Free World: The United States, the South, and America’s Human

Rights Dilemma,” Stephens College, March 2003.

“Eyes Off the Prize: Human Rights & Black Inequality,” Lincoln University, February 2003.

“The Charge of the Right Brigade: The Senate’s Attack on the UN and Human Rights,”

Symposium on Human Rights, Trinity College, September 2002.

“Eyes Off the Prize: African Americans, the United Nations, and the Struggle for Black

Equality, 1944-1955,” University of Rochester, April 2001.

“‘With Friends Like These. . .’: Eleanor Roosevelt, the Struggle for Black Equality, and the

Limits of Liberalism, 1947-52,” Ohio University, October 2000.

“Bleached Souls and Red Negroes: The NAACP and Black Communists during the Early Cold

War, 1947 - 1952,” University of Nebraska-Lincoln, October 1999.

“Bleached Souls and Red Negroes: The NAACP and Black Communists during the Early Cold

War, 1947 - 1952,” Spelman College, February 1999.

“Martin Luther King and the Dream of Human Rights,” Convocation Speaker, William Woods

University, January 1999.

“‘We Charge Genocide’: African Americans, the United Nations, and the Genocide

Convention,” Conference on Genocide, Dillard University, April 2002.

Law Schools

“When the Levees Broke: The History of Un-Civil Rights in America,” College of Law,

University of Texas at Austin, February 2009.

“Race to Human Rights: From Cleo Wright to Katrina,” College of Law, UCLA, March 2008.

“‘When the Levees Broke’: Un-Civil Rights in America,” Day-Pitney Lecture, Keynote

Address, College of Law, University of Connecticut, March 2008.

“Human Rights, the Cold War, and the Struggle for Black Equality,” Boalt Hall, College of Law,

University of California at Berkeley, February 2008.

“‘It’s like deja vu all over again’: African Americans’ Ongoing Quest for Equality and Human

Rights,” International Law and the U.S. Constitution, Keynote Address, School of Law,

Fordham University, October 2007.

Carol Anderson/Page 20 “‘What do you do with an obsolete slave labor force?’: African Americans and the Human

Right to Education,” Keynote Address, College of Law, American University, February

2007.

“‘When the Levees Broke’: Un-Civil Rights in America,” Keynote Address, College of Law,

University of Toledo, February 2007.

“‘Abandoned a Long Time Ago’: African Americans, Human Rights, and the Struggle for

Real Equality,” Valerie Gordon Human Rights Lecture, Northeastern University College

of Law, March 2006.

“Depraved Indifference: The Denial of African Americans’ Human Rights,” Dickinson College

of Law, Penn State University, October 2005.

Organizations

“‘We Fight!’: Red Tails, Black Soldiers, and the Civil Rights Movement,” Kansas City Public

Library and the Truman Library Institute, September 2015.

“‘Danger of the Single Story’: African Americans’ Anti-colonialism in the Early Cold War,”

National History Center and the Woodrow Wilson Center, March 2015. (C-SPAN).

“When the Levees Broke: A History of Un-Civil Rights in America,” Keynote, Southern Labor

Studies Association, March 2015.

“Human Rights vs. Civil Rights: Implications for the Unfinished Agenda,” Keynote,

International Association of Official Human Rights Agencies, August 2014.

“When the Levees Broke: A History of Un-Civil Rights in America,” Keynote, US Human Rights

Network, December 2013.

“When the Levees Broke: Un-Civil Rights in America,” National Forum on the Human Right to

Housing, National Law Center on Homelessness & Poverty, June 2011.

“Bourgeois Radicals: The NAACP’s Alliance with the Reverend Michael Scott for South West

Africa’s Liberation, 1946-51,” German Historical Institute, March 2011.

“African Americans and Independence Struggles in Asia and Africa,” National History

Center and the Woodrow Wilson Center, March 2010.

“When the Levees Broke: The History of Un-Civil Rights in America,” Common Ground

and the Hagendorn Foundation, March 2010.

“Cold War Civil Rights,” Georgia Historical Society, March 2009.

Carol Anderson/Page 21 “Eyes off the Prize: Framing and Unframing the Struggle for Equality in the United States,”

Libra Foundation, February 2009.

“Race and Rights: Jim Crow’s Role in Shaping the UN Declaration of Human Rights,”

Amnesty International Southern Regional Conference, October 2008.

“Rac(e)ing Human Rights: Jim Crow’s Role in Shaping the UN Declaration of Human Rights,”

ACLU Annual Conference, June 2008.

“Civil Rights and Human Wrongs: The Truman Administration and the Quest for African

American Equality,” William J. Clinton Presidential Library, November 2007.

“New Orleans: America’s Roadmap to a Human Rights Catastrophe,” Keynote Address,

Amnesty International, USA, March 2007.

“Civil Rights Victories and Human Rights Defeats: A Reassessment of the Truman

Administration’s Commitment to African-American Equality,” President

Truman and Civil Rights, Harry S. Truman Presidential Library, July 2006.

“The Ghost of Dred Scott: African Americans and Human Rights Public Policy in 20th Century

America,” Human Rights in the United States, Racial Justice Collaborative of the Public

Interest Program, April 2006.

“Cold War on Terror: National Security Policy and the Narrowing of Progressive Dissent,”

International Human Rights Funders Group, January 2006.

“Activists at the Gate: The Role of Race and NGO’s in Shaping U.S. Human Rights Policy,”

Women’s Human Rights Network of California, January 2006.

“‘Not One Jot or Tittle Less’: Human Rights and its Direct Challenge to Systemic Inequality in

the United States,” Human Rights at Home, U.S. Human Rights Fund, January 2006.

“Human Rights at Home,” Human Rights Division, Ford Foundation, October 2005.

“The Creation of a Kansas City Statesman: Roy Wilkins and the Struggle for Human Rights,”

Harry S. Truman Presidential Library, November 2003.

Media Presentations

Carol Anderson, “America is more racially divided than it has been in decades: The widening

breach predates the backlash against Obama by decades,” Financial Times, August 3,

2016.

Carol Anderson/Page 22 Carol Anderson, “America wouldn’t need police reform now if it hadn’t botched education reform

decades ago,” Quartz, July 20, 2016.

Carol Anderson, “The Democrats’ demographic firewall is under attack,” Los Angeles Times, July

17, 2016.

Carol Anderson, “Donald Trump exposes the GOP’s dirty secret: They build everything by

nurturing white rage,” Salon, May 29, 2016.

Interviews on White Rage, racial turmoil in the United States, and the 2016 Presidential election

with NPR, Radio Italy, TV-One, Chicago Review of Books, KOMO-Seattle, Atlanta Black

Star, Dan Rodricks’s Roughly Speaking, Baltimore Sun, WYPR – Baltimore, WNUR –

“This is Hell!,” Pacifica Radio, the Takeaway, C-Span Book-TV, the BBC, and the

Canadian Broadcast Company.

Carol Anderson, “Baltimore, Ferguson won’t bring change: Revelations about racial inequality

Spur outrage, but not change. Again,” Boston Globe, May 1, 2015.

http://www.bostonglobe.com/opinion/2015/05/01/baltimore-ferguson-won-bring-change/

EeNOcqjdLBiI4BybpxkH8J/story.html

Historical expert quoted in, Frank Bruni, “Hollywood Trumps Harvard,” New York Times, April

22, 2015.

“Hollywood and Slavery,” Press Play, interviewed, NPR, Station KCRW-LA, April 22, 2015.

Historical expert quoted in, Jamil Smith, “Ben Affleck Was Wrong, But Henry Louis Gates Made

It Worse: Helping the Hollywood star hide a slaveholding ancestor was truly shameful,”

New Republic, April 2015.

Carol Anderson, “Selma: The Past Isn’t Even Past, Especially on Twitter,” American Historical

Association: Perspectives, March 2015.

“Moving Forward on Ferguson,” interviewed, On Second Thought, Georgia Public Broadcasting,

December 2, 2014.

New Day, interviewed, CNN, November 29, 2014.

World Have Your Say, interviewed, BBC, November 28, 2014.

“Is Ferguson as Much about White Rage as Black?” interviewed, The Takeaway, NPR, November

26, 2014, https://www.wnyc.org/radio/#/ondemand/416278.

Carol Anderson, “Ferguson isn’t about black rage against cops. It’s white rage against progress,”

Washington Post, August 29, 2014,

http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/ferguson-wasnt-black-rage-against-copsit-was-

Carol Anderson/Page 23

white-rage-against-progress/2014/08/29/3055e3f4-2d75-11e4-bb9b-997ae96fad33_story.

html. Republished as, “Emory Prof: Ferguson is about White Rage,” Atlanta Journal

Constitution, November 25, 2014; “White Rage Doesn’t Have to Take to the Streets,”

Chicago Tribune, November 26, 2014.

Most widely shared op-ed published by the Washington Post in 2014.

Carol Anderson, “What Would the Soviets Say About Michael Brown? From Birmingham to

Ferguson, a brief history of how racial tensions at home have undermined America

abroad,” Foreign Policy, August 25, 2014,

http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2014/08/25/michael_brown_ferguson_katrina_bir

mingham_us_foreign_relations#latest.

Hidden Colors 3: The Rules of Racism, interviewed, dir. Tariq Nasheed, King Flex Entertainment,

2014. DVD.

“Desegregation in the U.S.: Fifty Years After the Civil Rights Act of 1964,” interviewed,

German National Public Radio “Deutschlandfunk,” July 2, 2014,

http://www.deutschlandfunk.de/50-jahre-gleichberechtigung-die-aufhebung-

der.724.de.html?dram:article_id=290732

“Breaking Stand Your Ground,” interviewed, In Contact, WPBA-TV, PBS Affiliate, May 11,

2014.

Carol Anderson, “The Long Journey of Affirmative Action,” OZY, May 1, 2014,

http://www.ozy.com/c-notes/the-long-journey-of-affirmative-action/31266.article

Historical expert quoted in, Kunbi Tinuoye, “Donald Sterling is the Classic Example of the Slave

Master Mentality,” The Grio, April 30, 2014,

http://thegrio.com/2014/04/30/donald-sterling-slave-master-mentality/

Carol Anderson, “Florida Shooter saw Black, Thought ‘threat’,” CNN.com, February 12, 2014,

http://www.cnn.com/2014/02/12/opinion/anderson-dunn-trial/index.html

The Voting Rights Act in the aftermath of the Supreme Court’s decision, interviewed, Just

Peace, WRFG-Radio, September 2013.

Historical expert quoted in, Victoria Loe Hicks, “Landmark Decisions: Events Shake up Many,

but Historical Heft not yet Known,” Atlanta Journal-Constitution, June 30, 2013.

“The Presidency and Civil Rights,” panelist, John F. Kennedy Presidential Library, C-Span,

February 2012.

The Hidden History of the Quest for Civil Rights:

The Tulsa Race Riot of 1921

Carol Anderson/Page 24

The Scottsboro Boys

The Spectacle Lynching of Claude Neal

The Missouri Sharecroppers Strike of 1939

Red Tails and WWII-era Race Relations

The Lynching of Cleo Wright

The 1946 Columbia, Tennessee Race Riot

Obtaining Civil Rights, Not Human Rights

Video Series for Emory University, February 2012.

http://news.emory.edu/stories/2012/02/hidden_history_of_civil_rights_movement_tulsa/campus.

html

“Eleanor Roosevelt: Another Perspective on the UN Declaration of Human Rights,” interviewed,

BBC, September 2008.

“Eyes off the Prize,” interviewed, Wake-Up, WBAI, New York, New York, March 2007.

“Truman and Civil Rights,” panelist, Civil Rights in America: The 58th Anniversary of Truman’s

Desegregation of the Military, C-Span, January 2007.

“Human Rights and the African-American Experience,” interviewed, Making Contact, National

Radio Project, San Francisco, California, February 2006.

“Eyes Off the Prize,” interviewed, Up Front, KALW, San Francisco, California, January 2006.

“Human Rights. . .Civil Rights: There is a Difference,” interviewed, Black Nouveau, PBS

Affiliate Milwaukee Public Television, August 2005.

“The Push for Human Rights,” interviewed, Africa Today, KPFA, Berkeley, California, June

2004.

Committees

National:

Ways and Means Committee, Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations, 2014 - 2017.

Myrna Bernath Committee, Society for Historian of American Foreign Relations, 2012 - 2014,

Chair, 2014.

Nominating Committee, American Historical Association, 2009 - 2011, Chair, 2011.

Historical Advisory Committee, U.S. State Department, 2005 - 2010.

Annual Conference Program Committee, Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations,

2008 - 2009; 2009 - 2010.

Carol Anderson/Page 25 Diversity Committee, Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations, Co-Chair, 2007 -

2011.

Myrna Bernath Committee, Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations, 2005 - 2007.

Holt Dissertation Grants Committee, Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations, 1998

- 2000, Chair, 2000.

Minority Access Committee, Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations, 1993 - 2000.

Minority Faculty Development, Midwest Higher Education Consortium, 1993 - 1996.

University:

Executive Council, Laney Graduate School, Emory University, 2015 - 2018.

Longstreet Search Committee, Department of English, 2015 - 2016.

Executive Board, James Weldon Johnson Institute for the Study of Race and Difference, 2015 –

2016.

Executive Committee, Fox Center for Humanistic Inquiry, 2014 - 2016.

James Weldon Johnson Institute Fellowship Selection Committee, Emory University, March

2011; April 2015; March 2016.

McMullan Award Selection Committee, Honors Program, Office of Undergraduate Education,

March 2015.

Dean’s Advisory Committee for the Senior Associate Dean of Faculty, Spring 2014.

Director of Diversity, Recruitment, and Community Search Committee, Graduate School, Spring

2014.

Mellon Mays Undergraduate Fellowship Selection Committee, Emory University, Co-

Coordinator, 2011- present.

Race and Science Search Committee, Race and Difference Initiative, Emory University, 2011.

Martin Luther King Scholarship Committee, Emory University, 2010.

Diversity Committee, University of Missouri, 2007 - 2008.

Campus Writing Program Board, University of Missouri, 2004 - 2005.

Carol Anderson/Page 26 Curriculum, Instruction, and Advising Committee, College of Arts & Science, University of

Missouri, 2004 - 2005.

History of Journalism Search Committee, School of Journalism, University of Missouri, 2005.

Graduate Fellowship Awards Panel, Graduate School, University of Missouri, 2004.

Vice Chancellor for Student Affairs Search Committee, University of Missouri, 2002.

McNair Scholars Program, Department Liaison, 2001 - 2003; 2006 - 2008.

Graduate Fellowship Awards Committee, Graduate School, University of Missouri, 2001.

Department:

Self-Study Committee, Department of African American Studies, Emory University, 2015 - 2016.

Graduate Admissions Committee, U.S. Caucus, Department of History, Emory University, 2015.

Curriculum Committee, Department of African American Studies, Emory University, 2011-

present.

Graduate Studies, Department of History, University of Missouri, 2006-2008.

South Asian Search Committee, Department of History, University of Missouri, 2006 - 2007.

Faculty Responsibility, Department of History, University of Missouri, 2004 - 2005.

Graduate Studies, Department of History, University of Missouri, 2002 - 2003.

Graduate Financial Aid, Department of History, University of Missouri, 2002 - 2003.

Faculty Awards, Department of History, University of Missouri, 2001 - 2002.

Seminars and Lectures, Department of History, University of Missouri, 2001 - 2002.

U.S. History from 1877 - 1919 Search Committee, Department of History, University of Missouri,

2000 - 2001.

Graduate Studies Committee, Department of History, University of Missouri, 1997 - 2000.

Arvarh Strickland Endowed Chair in African-American History & Culture Search Committee,

Department of History, University of Missouri-Columbia, 1997 - 1999.

Carol Anderson/Page 27

Associations

American Historical Association

Association for the Study of Afro-American Life and History

Association for the Study of the Worldwide African Diaspora

Organization of American Historians

Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations

World History Association

References

Will be furnished upon request