Suzanne Chan-Serafin

Suzanne Chan-Serafin earned her undergraduate degree in Economics and Psychology from Smith College, Massachusetts. She completed her Ph.D. in Organizational Behavior from Tulane University in 2006, and wrote her dissertation, “Weaving a Tangled Web of Lies for Your Organization: What has a Humanized Organization and Guilt Got to Do with it?” under the direction of Professors Arthur P. Brief, Michael J. Burke, and Ann E. Tenbrunsel.

Jonathan Anomaly

Dr. Jonathan Anomaly earned a B.A. from UC Berkeley, an M.A. from Columbia University, and a Ph.D. from Tulane University. Anomaly has taught at PPE programs around the US, including Duke University, UNC Chapel Hill, the University of Virginia, and the University of Arizona.

Jill Bradley

Jill Bradley earned her B.S. in psychology (summa cum laude) from Truman State University in 1999 and her M.S. from Tulane University in 2003. She completited her Ph.D. in Industrial/Organizational Psychology from Tulane University in May, 2006.

Andrea Houchard

Andrea Houchard earned her B.A. in literature from Ohio State University and her M.A. in philosophy from the University of Southern Mississippi. She is currently a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of Philosophy at Tulane, and is writing her dissertation, “The Social Recognition of Rights,” under the supervision of Professor Gerald Gaus.

Her research interests include moral theory, political philosophy, aesthetics, and philosophy and literature.

Sophy Wang

(Sophy) Qian Wang earned a bachelor’s degree in philosophy from Fuldan University in 2000 and an M. Phil. in philosophy from the University of Hong Kong in 2002. She earned a doctorate in philosophy from Tulane University in 2007, and wrote her doctoral dissertation, on human rights and liberal toleration in John Rawls’s Law of Peoples, under the supervision of Professor Bruce Brower.

Dr. Wang’s principle research interest lies in political philosophy, specifically human rights and individual liberty.

She is attending New York University School of Law.

Shane Courtland

Shane Courtland earned a B.A. in Philosophy at the University of Minnesota, Duluth, in 2001. He wrote his doctoral dissertation, “A Hobbesian Account of Public Reason,” under the supervision of Professor Eric Mack, receiving his doctorate from the Tulane Department of Philosophy in 2008. Dr. Courtland’s research interests include Ethics, Meta-ethics, Political Philosophy, Animal Rights, and Social Contract Theory.

Catherine Wilkins

Catherine Wilkins earned a B.A. in Humanities from the University of South Florida in 2000 and an M.A. in Art History from Tulane University in 2003. In 2005-2006, she was the recipient of a Frei Universitat Berlin Exchange Fellowship. In 2008 she received her Ph.D. from the Department of History at Tulane, completed her doctoral dissertation, “Re-presenting the Heroic Landscape: Appropriations and Adaptations as Social Critique in Postwar Germanies,” under the supervision of Professors Marline Otte (History) and Marilyn Brown (Art History).

Marla Baskerville

Marla Baskerville received her doctorate in Organizational Behavior from the A. B. Freeman School of Business at Tulane University in 2008. She is wrote dissertation, “No Longer a Private Affair: The Influence of Context and Sexuality on the Work Outcomes of Women” under the direction of Professor Arthur B. Brief. Her research interests include workplace diversity, modern sexism, sexuality in the workplace, minority recruitment, decision making under stress and organizational politics.

Mark Lentz

Mark W. Lentz, associate professor of Latin American history at Utah Valley University, is a historian of colonial Mexico, Central America, and the Atlantic World. His current interests include interpreters in the conquest and colonization of Yucatan and interethnic relations in colonial and early national Mexico and Guatemala.

Manuel Grau

Manuel Grau is a dissertation candidate in philosophy at Tulane University, writing his dissertation, “A Defense of a System with no Meaning-Restrictions and a Verificationist Account of Truth,” under the direction of Professor Graeme Forbes He is concurrently enrolled in the Mathematics Department’s M.S. program, and is completing a thesis, “An Application of Algebraic Logic,” under the direction of Professor Micheal Mislove. His research interests include non-classical logic, decision theory, and the work of Rudolf Carnap.

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