Associate Professor and Chair,
Department of History and Political Science
Email: lhill@mytu.tuskegee.edu
Office Phone: 334-724-4974
Office Address: John A. Kenney Hall
Room 70-103
1200 West Montgomery Road
Tuskegee, Alabama 36088
Biographical Sketch:
Dr. Lisa Beth Hill received her Ph.D. from Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia in 1999.
Current research focuses on emancipated African Americans in New Haven, CT, during the Reconstruction Era with emphasis on women’s activism. Research on this topic addresses the issues of race, gender, political, and income inequality in New England during the late nineteenth century and its effects on the early to mid -twentieth century.
Representative Publications:
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Hill, Lisa Beth. The African American Reader, Revised edition, (Dubuque, IA: Kendall-Hunt Publishing Co.), Fall 2012. (Foreward, Afterword and article authored by Dr. Hill).
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Hill, Lisa Beth. The African American Reader, First edition, (Dubuque, IA: Kendall-Hunt Publishing Co.), Fall 2009. (Foreward, Introduction and Afterword and authored by Dr. Hill).
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“Daisy E. Lampkin.” Essay in Black Women in America: An Historical Encyclopedia, edited by Darlene Clark Hine, (Brooklyn: Carlson Publishing Company), 1993. Reprint, 2002.
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“The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.” Article in The Reader’s Companion to U.S. Women’s History, edited by Wilma Mankiller, Gwendolyn Mink, Gloria Steinem, et al., (New York: Houghton Mifflin Company), 1998.
History and Political Science
JIMMEH
Research Fields:
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International/Comparative Politics
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Public Administrative/ Public Policy
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Development Issues
Collaborations:
Tuskegee University
Brooklyn College, CUNY
Joe B. Jimmeh, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor, History & Political Science
College of Arts & Science
Email: kaija@mytu.tuskegee.edu
Office Phone: (334)724-4495/ (334) 421-1434
Office Address: John A Kenney Hall,
Room 70-102
Tuskegee University
Tuskegee, AL 36088
Biographical Sketch:
With educational background in the Social Sciences (Economics, Politics, History, Sociology, and Public Administration), Dr. Jimmeh obtained his PhD in International Relations from Syracuse University. His current research is on Liberia, Africa, and Comparative Perspectives on Public Administration and Public Policy.
Representative Publications:
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Jimmeh, Joe; "Imperialism and Anti-Imperialism in Liberia: The Struggle for Territorial Integrity, Sovereignty, and Democracy," Palgrave Encyclopedia on Imperialism and Anti-Imperialism. New York: Palgrave MacMillan, (2015)
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Jimmeh, Joe, Lisa Bratton and Godfrey T. Vincent. South Africa...San Diego, California: Cognella Academic Publishing, (2014).
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Jimmeh, Joe; Vincent, Godfrey. Contending Perspectives on Neoliberal Globalization (2014). Cognella Academic Publishing, San Diego, CA.
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Jimmeh, Joe. “Comparative Social Development: The Use of Symbols by African and African-American Elites.” Journal of Alabama Academy of Service (1990)
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Jimmeh, Joe. “Development as a Social Problem” in selected Social Problems and Issues (Copley, 1988)
James B. McSwain Ph.D
Professor, History and Political Science
College of Arts and Sciences
Email: jmcswain/2mytu.tuskegee.edu
Office Phone: 334-727-8200
Office Address: John A. Kenney Hall
Room 70-108
1200 West Montgomery Road
Tuskegee, Alabama 36088
History and Political Science
MCSWAIN
Research Fields:
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Risk, Hazards and Disasters in Historical Context
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Petroleum Industry on the Gulf Coast
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19th C Fire Insurance and Petroleum Hazards
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Riparian Rights on Alabama Gulf Coast
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Risk Management, Vulnerability Studies
Professional Activities:
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Life member, The Bibliographic Society, London, England
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Elected Member of Board of Directors, Gulf South History & Humanities Conference, 2009-2012
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Book Review Editor, Gulf South Historical Review, 1988-1997
Book Reviews in History: Reviews of New Books, Memphis Commercial Appeal, Journal of Mississippi History, Georgia Historical Quarterly, Albion, Perspectives on Political Science, Alabama Review, EH-Net, Pacific Historical Review, Enterprise & Society, Journal of Southern History and the Canadian Journal of History.
Biographical Sketch:
Dr. James B. McSwain received his Ph.D. from Memphis State University in 1986. Current research on the risk management of petroleum addresses how four Gulf South municipalities—Houston, Galveston, New Orleans and Mobile—used their police powers to devise public policies to regulate the storage and distribution of fuel oil, 1901-2012. He is currently completing a book manuscript on this topic under a contract from Louisiana State University Press.
Representative Publications:
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James B. McSwain, “Fire Hazards and Protection of Property: Municipal Regulation of the Storage and Supply of Fuel Oil in Mobile, Alabama, 1894-1910,” Journal of Urban History 28 (#5 July 2002): 599-628.
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James B. McSwain, “Urban Government and Environmental Policies: Regulating the Storage and Distribution of Fuel Oil in Houston, Texas, 1901-15,” Journal of Southern History 71 (#2 May 2005): 279-320.
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James B. McSwain, “Gushers, Reservoirs, and Pipelines: Tracing Houston’s Rise to Energy Prominence,” Cite: The Architecture + Design Review of Houston 79 Summer 2009, pp. 34-35.James B. McSwain, “To Antique and New Lands: Travels ‘Without’ as Journeys Within,” Gulf South Historical Review 7 (#1 Fall 1991): 80-92.
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