Jennifer Halliday is a PhD candidate in Sociology and Social Justice at the University of Windsor. She has a transdisciplinary, intersectional academic background with experience in archaeology, forensic anthropology, criminology, and sociology. Her research focuses on the intersections of ethics and environmental harms, environmental racism, and the effects of environmental degradation on human skeletal growth.
Experience
–present
Phd Student in Sociology and Social Justice, University of Windsor
Education
2019
University of Windsor, Master of Arts in Criminology
2016
Simon Fraser University, Certificate in Cultural Resource Management
2016
Simon Fraser University, Certificate in Forensic Studies
2016
Simon Fraser University, Bachelor of Arts (Honours) in Archaeology
Publications
2022
Muitas maneiras de desaparecer: Defendendo os direitos humanos por meio de padrões éticos e pesquisas mais rigorosas em uma antropologia forense crítica, Plens C (ed). Direito Humanos Sob A Perspectiva Do Direito À Vida, Da Antropologia Forense E Da Justiça No Caso De Violações,
2021
Environmental DNA as Novel Technology: Lessons in Agenda Setting and Framing in News Media, Animals
2020
Retirement inequalities: The importance of ethnic origins, Canadian Ethnic Studies