Gender Violence in the American Southwest – Debra Martin (University of Nevada – Las Vegas)

Gender Violence in the American Southwest – Debra Martin (University of Nevada – Las Vegas)

Using Ancestral pueblo data as a case study on how to engage with why
gender violence is so universal and pervasive across time and space.

Biography

Debra L. Martin is an expert in human osteology and bioarchaeology, which involves the analysis of skeletonized human remains from archaeological as well as historic and contemporary settings. She conducts research in the areas of nonlethal violence and inequality, gender differences and paleopathology, and the bioarchaeology of human experience with a focus on groups living in risky and challenging desert environments. She is on the editorial board of the journal Landscapes of Violence and is also the editor for Bioarchaeology and Social Theory series, Springer. She is co-editor of the International Journal of Osteoarchaeology and an associate editor for the Yearbook of Physical Anthropology. Her recent publications include co-editing Bioarchaeology of Violence (UPF) and Bioarchaeological and Forensic Perspectives on Violence (Cambridge) as well as co-authoring Bioarchaeology of Climate Change and Violence (Springer).

Education

Ph.D. : University of Massachusetts, 1983

$10.00 donation requested at the door for non-members

Date October 20, 2025Time @ 7:00 pm - 8:00 pmVenue at Pecos Trail CafeVenue Google Map Link + Google MapVenue Phone (505) 982-9444Category | Lecture Meeting

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