Erika Edwards
Erika Denise Edwards, Ph.D. spent her formative years in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan. She and her twin sister, Lydia Edwards (Mass State Senator) were raised by her divorced mother, an Air Force veteran.
Erika Denise Edwards, Ph.D. spent her formative years in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan. She and her twin sister, Lydia Edwards (Mass State Senator) were raised by her divorced mother, an Air Force veteran.
Erin Banks, assistant dean, Office of Undergraduate Research at UNC Charlotte, seeks to expand opportunities and promote academic success for undergraduate students through innovation, mentored scholarship, creative expression and entrepreneurship.
Greg Weeks is associate dean for Academic Affairs in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences at UNC Charlotte. He is also a professor of Political Science. Weeks has published several books and dozens of articles on Latin American politics, U.S.-Latin American relations, and Latino immigration.
Jason Windett is an associate professor in the Department of Political Science and Public Administration. He is also the associate director of the Public Policy Ph.D. program, and a core faculty member in Public Policy. His research agenda focuses broadly on the area of representation in American politics, with a focus on state politics, state courts, and gender and politics.
Jessamyn Bowling's research focuses on resilience and sexual health among sexual and gender minoritized (such as lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer) populations. She has lived and worked in Cambodia, Vietnam, Mexico, Cameroon and India.
Jill Yavorsky is an assistant professor in the Sociology Department. She earned bachelor's, master's and her Ph.D. from The Ohio State University.
John Cox, professor of Global Studies and History, directs the Center for Holocaust, Genocide & Human Rights Studies. Prior to UNC Charlotte, Cox founded and directed a genocide and human rights studies center at Florida Gulf Coast University. He earned a Ph.D. at UNC Chapel Hill in 2006.
John Szmer is a professor of Political Science and Public Policy at UNC Charlotte. He studies the judicial process, with a particular focus on the influence of gender and race.
Julia Robinson Moore (Ph.D., Michigan State University) joined the Department of Religious Studies at UNC Charlotte in 2005. She teaches courses in African American Religion, Religions of the African Diaspora, and Racial Violence in America. Her first book, "Race, Religion, and the Pulpit: Reverend Robert L.
I am a sociologist with a teaching and research background in the area of aging, health, human development and family studies. Most of my research during the past 20 years has examined the interrelations between formal and informal support systems and optimal adaptation and adjustment to developmental changes for older adults.