Historiograph(ies)
Eric Herschthal (Ohio State University), “Slavery, Health, and Healing Now: The State of the Field”
Wangui Muigai (Brandeis University), “A City’s Neglect on Trial: US v. Helen G. Jackson”
Giuliana Perrone (University of California—Santa Barbara), “Unfinished Freedom: The Long Legal Afterlives of Slavery in the United States”
Sharla Fett (Occidental College), “Confronting the Chattel Principle: Black Health and Healing in the Age of Slavery”
Spatialit(ies)
Maria K. John (University of Massachusetts—Boston), “‘Don’t Get Sick After June’: a seventy-year long survival strategy for American Indians navigating structural racism and funding disparities in the Indian Health Service”
Carla Yanni (Rutgers University), “A History of Gendered and Racial Exclusion in College Dormitories, 1880 to 1920”
Rhonda Y. Williams (Vanderbilt University), “‘Now that I understand the system …’: Unpacking Structural Inequality through Place, Activism & Oral History”
Legalit(ies) and Communit(ies)
George Aumoithe (Princeton University), “A Forum Against Social Difference in Healthcare: Contesting Inequality and Healthcare Rights in the Medicaid Hearings of 1968”
Elizabeth Nelson (Indiana University–Purdue University Indianapolis), “Writing the History of Death, Race, and Disability in an Institution of Confinement”
Kimani Paul-Emile (Fordham University), “American Drug Regulation: Substance or Abuse?”
Aziza Ahmed (Northeastern University), “Law, Science, and Social Movements”
Methodolog(ies)
Ezelle Sanford III (Princeton University), “The Patient’s View from Behind the ‘Color Line:’ Alternative Approaches toward Recovering African American Clinical Experiences”
Tala Khanmalek (Princeton University), “‘Wild Tongues Can’t Be Tamed’: Rumor, Racialized Sexuality, and the 1917 Bath Riots in the U.S.-Mexico Borderlands”
Kwame Holmes (Bard College), “Black White-Collar Professionals and the Histories of Black Emotion in the Civil Rights Era”
Graham Mooney (Johns Hopkins University), “Primary Care in a Hyper-segregating City: Health, Justice, and the 1948 Baltimore Medical Care Plan”
