I am an Assistant Professor of Economics
at Norwich University. My research and
teaching interests are in feminist
economics, health, public policy, and
economic pedagogy. My current research
focuses on violence against women and
girls, including public space sexual
harassment and intimate partner violence.
My research emphasizes that such violence
not only constrains a person’s capability
for life and bodily health but can also
result in other significant unfreedoms
including deprivation of the capability
for economic well-being. Recent
publications on these topics have appeared
in the journal *Feminist Economics*, the
*Handbook of Interpersonal Violence and
Abuse Across the Lifespan*, and *The
Routledge Handbook of Feminist Economics*.
I earned my M.S. and Ph.D. in
Economics from the University of Utah and
a B.A. in Economics from the University of
Colorado, Boulder. I also hold a Higher
Education Teaching Specialist (HETS)
designation and am committed to
implementing more effective,
research-backed practices in her
classrooms and encouraging diversity in
economics education more broadly. I
have published on the necessity of
plurality and innovation in economics
education, with articles on teaching
appearing in *The International Journal of
Pluralism and Economics Education*, *The
Review of Political Economy,* and the
*Journal of Economics Education*. At
Norwich University, I teach Health
Economics and Policy, Public Finance,
Economics of Race and Gender in the 20th
Century, Principles of Microeconomics, and
The Structure and Operation of the World
Economy.