Heather Streets-Salter Curriculum Vitae · July 2014. Presenter and Panel Organizer, “Colonial...

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Heather Streets-Salter Curriculum Vitae Department of History 249 Meserve Hall Northeastern University Boston, MA 02115 Phone: 617-373-4835 Email: [email protected] Employment: 2017Professor and Director of World History Programs, Northeastern University 2014History Department Chair, Northeastern University 2012Associate Professor and Director of World History Programs, Northeastern University 20092011 Director, Undergraduate Program in World Civilizations at Washington State University 20052011 Associate Professor, Washington State University 20022011 Director, Graduate Program in World History at Washington State University 19982005 Assistant Professor, Washington State University Education: 1998 Ph.D., Modern Britain/British Empire, Duke University 1993 M.A., Modern European History, Duke University 1991 B.A., American History, Duke University Publications: Single Authored Books: World War One in Southeast Asia. Cambridge University Press, 2017. Martial Races: The Military, Race, and Masculinity in British Imperial Culture, 1857-1914. Manchester University Press, 2004. (reissued in paperback in fall 2010) Co-Authored Scholarly Books: Co-authored with Trevor Getz. Empires and Colonies in the Modern World. Oxford University Press, 2015. Thoroughly revised from the previously published Modern Imperialism and Colonialism: A Global Perspective. Pearson-Longman, August 2010. Co-Authored Textbooks: Co-authored with Jerry Bentley and Herb Ziegler. Traditions and Encounters: Brief Version, 4th edition. McGraw-Hill, 2015. Third edition September 2012. Second edition September 2009. First edition September 2006. Co-authored with Herb Ziegler and Jerry Bentley. Traditions and Encounters: A Global Perspective on the Past, 7 th edition. McGraw-Hill, 2014.

Transcript of Heather Streets-Salter Curriculum Vitae · July 2014. Presenter and Panel Organizer, “Colonial...

Heather Streets-Salter

Curriculum Vitae Department of History

249 Meserve Hall

Northeastern University

Boston, MA 02115

Phone: 617-373-4835

Email: [email protected]

Employment:

2017— Professor and Director of World History Programs, Northeastern

University

2014— History Department Chair, Northeastern University

2012— Associate Professor and Director of World History Programs,

Northeastern University

2009—2011 Director, Undergraduate Program in World Civilizations at Washington

State University

2005—2011 Associate Professor, Washington State University

2002—2011 Director, Graduate Program in World History at Washington State

University

1998–2005 Assistant Professor, Washington State University

Education:

1998 Ph.D., Modern Britain/British Empire, Duke University

1993 M.A., Modern European History, Duke University

1991 B.A., American History, Duke University

Publications:

Single Authored Books:

World War One in Southeast Asia. Cambridge University Press, 2017.

Martial Races: The Military, Race, and Masculinity in British Imperial Culture, 1857-1914.

Manchester University Press, 2004. (reissued in paperback in fall 2010)

Co-Authored Scholarly Books:

Co-authored with Trevor Getz. Empires and Colonies in the Modern World. Oxford University

Press, 2015. Thoroughly revised from the previously published Modern Imperialism and

Colonialism: A Global Perspective. Pearson-Longman, August 2010.

Co-Authored Textbooks:

Co-authored with Jerry Bentley and Herb Ziegler. Traditions and Encounters: Brief Version, 4th

edition. McGraw-Hill, 2015. Third edition September 2012. Second edition September

2009. First edition September 2006.

Co-authored with Herb Ziegler and Jerry Bentley. Traditions and Encounters: A Global

Perspective on the Past, 7th edition. McGraw-Hill, 2014.

Streets-Salter CV, February 2016

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Refereed Articles:

“The Noulens Affair in East and Southeast Asia: International Communism in the Interwar

Period,” Journal of American East Asian Relations 21 (2014): 394-414. 11,000 words.

“The Local Was Global: The Singapore Mutiny of 1915,” Journal of World History 24:3

(August 2013): 539-576. 16,718 words.

“Writing for Student Audiences: Pitfalls and Possibilities,” Special Issue of Historical

Reflections/Reflexions Historiques (June, 2012): 109-122. 6161 words.

“Military Influence in Late Victorian and Edwardian Popular Media: The Case of Frederick

Roberts,” Journal of Victorian Culture 8:2 (2003): 231-256. 9200 words.

Book Chapters:

“Anti-Colonial Movements,” in Tony Ballantyne and Antoinette Burton, editors, World Histories

from Below: Disruption and Dissent from 1750 to the Present (Bloomsbury, 2016).

10,000 words. Refereed.

“Becoming a World Historian: Training, Topics, and Goals,” in Douglas Northrup, editor, A

Companion to World History (Wiley-Blackwell, 2012): 45-62. 7159 words. Refereed.

“World History at Washington State University,” in Patrick Manning, editor, Global Practices in

World History (Marcus Weiner Publications, 2007). 5000 words.

“The Imperial Turn in The Classroom: Academic Discourses Meet Student Response,” in

Antoinette Burton, editor. After the Imperial Turn (Duke University Press, 2003): 57-69,

5000 words.

“Identity in the Highland Regiments in the Nineteenth Century: Soldier, Region, Nation,” in

Steve Murdoch and Andrew Mackillop, editors, The Scottish Military Experience, c.

1600-1800. (Brill Academic Press, 2002): 213-236, 7440 words.

Edited Books and Volumes:

Senior editor, Oxford Encyclopedia of the Modern World, Volumes I-VIII. Oxford

University Press, 2008. Editor-in-chief, Peter N. Stearns. Responsibilities: one of eight

senior editors; solicitation, review, and editing of 230 articles in geographic area of

Britain and British Empire.

Other Publications and Reviews:

Review of Emily Rosenberg, editor. A World Connecting: 1870-1945. In the American Historical

Review, 119:2 (2014): 479-481.

Review of Satoshi Mizutani. The Meaning of White: Race, Class, and the ‘Domiciled Community’ in

British India 1858-1930. In the Journal of British Studies 52:3 (July 2013).

Review of Jon Davidann and Marc Gilbert, Cross-Cultural Encounters in Modern World

History. In World History Connected: the Ejournal of Learning and Teaching. Volume

10:1 (February 2013).

Review of Edmund Burke II, David Christian, and Ross Dunn, eds, World History For Us All:

The Big Eras: A Compact History of Humankind for Teachers and Students. In Journal of

Global History (Spring 2011).

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Review of Kelly, Christine, ed, Mrs. Duberly's War: Journal and Letters from the Crimea. H-

Albion, H-Net Reviews. (September 2008),

http://www.h-net.org/reviews/showrev.php?id=15550.

Review of Jessica Harland-Jacobs, Builders of Empire. In Social History (Fall 2008).

Review of Edward Spiers, The Scottish Soldier and Empire. In Journal of British Studies 47

(January 2008).

“Empire and Imperialism: Overview,” “Indian War,” and “Gender and Empire,” in Oxford

Encyclopedia of the Modern World (Oxford University Press, 2008). 4000 words, 1500

words, 3000 words respectively.

“Martial Races,” in International Encyclopedia of Men and Masculinities, 1 Vol., eds. M. Flood,

J.K. Gardiner, B. Pease, and K. Pringle. (Routledge, 2007). 1000 words.

“Ever-Changing Perspectives,” historiographical essay in ABC-CLIO Encyclopedia of World

History (ABC-CLIO, 2007). 3000 words.

Review of Philippa Levine, editor, Gender and Empire. In Journal of British Studies 44:1

(January 2005).

“Global Imperialism and Gender,” in William H. McNeill, editor, Berkshire Encyclopedia of

World History. (Berkshire Press, 2005). 3000 words.

Review of John R. McNeill, Something New Under the Sun: An Environmental History of the

Twentieth Century World. In World History Connected: the E-journal of Learning and

Teaching 1:2 (May 2004),

http://worldhistoryconnected.press.uiuc.edu/1.2/br_streets.html.

Review of Peter Stearns, Cultures in Motion: Mapping Key Contacts and Their Imprints in

World History. In The Journal of Colonialism and Colonial History 4:1 (Spring 2003),

http://muse.jhu.edu/cgi-

bin/access.cgi?uri=/journals/journal_of_colonialism_and_colonial_history/v004/4.1street

s.html&session=20332303.

“The Rebellion of 1857: Origins, Consequences, and Themes,” Teaching South Asia, Vol. I,

number 1 (Winter 2001), http://www.mssu.edu/projectsouthasia/tsa/VIN1/Streets.htm.

6850 words.

Review of Julie Codell and Dianne Sachko Macleod, Orientalism Transposed: The Impact of the

Colonies on British Culture. In Victorian Studies 43:1 (Autumn 2000).

Review of Hew Strachan, The Politics of the British Army. In Social History (May 1999).

Journal and Professional Editing:

2014— Series Editor, Comparative World History Series, Cambridge University Press.

Responsibilities: One of three series editors, along with Michael Adas and

Douglas Northrop. Duties include soliciting monographs, reviewing proposals,

reading manuscripts, and soliciting outside reviews for all monographs in the

series.

2003—2008 Co-editor, World History Connected: The E-Journal of Learning and Teaching.

Responsibilities: solicitation of articles, twice yearly board meetings at the

American Historical Association and the World History Association annual

meetings, review and selection of articles, communication with peer reviewers

and authors, supervision of copy editor and assistant editor, management of team

of columnists, communication with University of Illinois Press, final selection of

articles, delivery of articles and reviews to press.

Streets-Salter CV, February 2016

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2004 Text Editor for Oregon Public Broadcasting’s Bridging World History Project, led

by Candice Goucher (WSU Vancouver) and Linda Walton (Portland State

University). Responsibilities: editing companion texts to 26 video episodes.

Grants:

External:

2014 PI, with Abby Mullen, National Endowment for the Humanities Grant for

Conducting the Digital Methods for Military Historians Workshop, November 10-

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2009-2011 Participant and Evaluator, Charlottesville Virginia School District Teaching

American History Grant

2002 National Endowment for the Humanities Summer Stipend

2001 Bernadotte Schmitt Research Award, American Historical Association

Internal:

2013 Faculty Research Development Award, Northeastern University

2006 Faculty Research Initiation Grant, Washington State University

2000 Faculty Research Completion Grant, Washington State University

2000 Research Travel Award, Washington State University

1999 Research Travel Award, Washington State University

Scholarly Presentations:

International:

Comment, “The Anti-Imperialist World Between the Wars, 1919-1939.” World History

Association, Ghent, Belgium. July 2016.

Comment, “Contested Spaces: Reconstructing and Negotiating Identities in Global Conflicts

(1860-1948).” World History Association, Ghent, Belgium. July 2016.

Presenter, “The Comintern’s Far Eastern Bureau in the Interwar Period and the Colonial

Response.” World History Association. San Jose, Costa Rica. July 2014.

Presenter and Panel Organizer, “Colonial Responses to Chinese Nationalism and Communism in

1920s Southeast Asia,” World History Association, Beijing, China. June 2011.

Presenter, “Dire Straits: The French Naval Rescue of British Singapore,” World History

Association, London, England. June 2008.

Comment. “Teaching Africa in World History.” World History Association Conference, Ifrane,

Morrocco. June 2005.

Presenter, "Highland Scots in the Indian Army," Scotland and India, Aberdeen, Scotland.

September 2003. Honorarium, travel expenses paid.

Comment, “Nature’s Empire: Constructions of Masculinity and Landscape in the

Pacific Northwest,” American Historical Association Pacific Coast Branch, Vancouver,

Canada. August 2001.

Presenter, “Gender and the Indian Army After 1857,” Society for Military History Conference,

Calgary, Canada. May 2001.

Streets-Salter CV, February 2016

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Presenter, “Good Races” vs. “Inferior Nationalists”: Martial Race Ideology in the War Against

Irish and Indian Nationalism, 1880-1914,” 68th Anglo-American Conference for

Historians, London, England. July 1999.

Presenter, “Side by Side in Generous Rivalry: The Martial Races and the British Military in Late

Victorian Britain,” Institute of Contemporary British History National Identities

Conference, London, England. April 1998.

National:

Comment, “New Research in World History.” American Historical Association, Denver, CO.

January 2017.

Comment, “Martial Thoughts? Political Imaginary, Memory, and Military Lives in Early Modern

India.” Association for Asian Studies, Seattle, WA. April 2016.

Presenter and Panel Organizer, “Countering the “Communist Menace”: Transnational and Inter-

imperial Responses to International Communism in 1920s Southeast Asia.” American

Historical Association, New York, NY. January 2015.

Presenter, “Communists, Conspirators, and Spies: Internationalism and Anticolonial Resistance

Across Interwar Asia.” Association of Asian Studies, Philadelphia, PA. March, 2014.

Chair, “History on Very Large Scales.” Presidential session at the American Historical

Association. Washington, D.C., January 2014.

Presenter, “A Great Game Over Hearts and Minds? Communism and Anti-Communism in

Southeast Asia, 1917-1930.” World History Association. Minneapolis, Minnesota. June

2013.

Plenary Lecture, “Globalization and the Humanities: Why We Should Care, and What We Can

Contribute. Globalization and the Humanities: Texas and the World, Texas A&M

Commerce, Commerce, Texas. November 2012.

Presenter, “Roundtable: Graduate Education in World History.” World History Association,

Albuquerque, New Mexico. June 2012.

Chair, “New Directions in Graduate Research at Northeastern University.” New England

Regional World History Association Conference, Salem, Mass. March 2012.

Chair and Comment, “Approaching Empire: A Roundtable Discussion of Religion, Science and

Education.” Northeastern University Gradate Student Conference in World History,

Boston, Mass. March 2012.

Presenter, “America on the World Stage: A Global Perspective to the Teaching American

History Program,” American Historical Association, Boston, Massachusetts. January

2011.

Panel Organizer and Presenter, “Webs of Empire: Intercolonial Observation, Collaboration, and

Resistance in British Malaya, the Dutch East Indies, and French Indochina,” American

Historical Association, San Diego, California. January 2010.

Comment, “Ireland and Empire,” North American Conference on British Studies, Louisville,

Kentucky. November 2009.

Presenter, “Gender and World History,” Northwest World History Association Conference,

Seattle, Washington. October 2009.

Roundtable Presenter, “Graduate Programs in World History,” World History Association,

Salem, Massachusetts. June 2009.

Streets-Salter CV, February 2016

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Roundtable Presenter, “Integrating Global Perspectives and World History into US Department

of Education Teaching American History Grant Projects,” American Historical

Association, New York, New York. January 2009.

Roundtable Panel Chair, “British Empire: Sunrise to Sunset,” North American Conference on

British Studies, Cincinnati, Ohio. 2008.

Comment on Anurag Jain’s “Behind Asian Eyes: Rudyard Kipling and the British Propaganda of

the First World War,” Society for First World War Studies, Washington, D.C. October

2007.

Presenter, “Race-ing Soldiers Across Imperial Boundaries,” World History Association,

Milwaukee, Wisconsin. June 2007.

Roundtable Panel, “Research Directions in World History.” Northwest World History

Association, Seattle, Washington. October 2006.

Comment, “Englishness and the Alien in Victorian Culture.” North American Conference on

British Studies, Denver, Colorado. October 2005.

Presenter and Comment. “Throwing Away Half of My Lectures,” and “Gendering World History

and Putting the World into Gender, Part I.” Northwest World History Association

Conference, Portland, Oregon. October 2005.

Roundtable Presentation. “Violence, Hypermasculinities, and Militarism.” GRACes Gender

Research Conference, Vancouver, Washington. October 2005.

Comment, “What is Globalization?” Global Studies in Higher Education Conference,

Champaign-Urbana, Illinois. June 2005.

Presenter, “Textbook Battles: Periodization and Change Over Time in the University World

Civilizations Class,” American Historical Association, Seattle, Washington. January

2005.

Presenter, “Bridging the Gap Between Research and Teaching: A Roundtable on World History

Connected: the Ejournal of Learning and Teaching,” World History: The Next Ten Years,

Boston, Massachusetts. March 2004 (Panel Organizer).

Presenter, “The Present and Future of World History,” Rice University History Colloquium in

conjunction with the Baker Center, Houston, Texas. February 2004. Honorarium.

Presenter, "Imperialism Online: Facilitating Discussion with Web Environments," North

American Conference on British Studies, Portland, Oregon. October 2003 (Panel

Organizer).

Presenter, "Born to be Warriors: Scottish Highlanders and the Origins of Modern Martial Race

Ideology," Association for Washington Historians, Seattle, Washington. October 2003.

Comment, "Decolonization and British Politics and Culture in the 20th Century," Pacific Coast

Branch of the North American Conference on British Studies, Rohnert Park, California.

April 2003.

Comment, "Governing the Empire, 1860's-1920's," North American Conference on British

Studies, Baltimore, Maryland. November 2002.

Presenter, “Lord Roberts and the Indian Army: The Power of Place in the Politics of Imperial

Security,” American Historical Association, San Francisco, California. January 2002.

Presenter, “ ‘A Fine and Brave People’: Masculinity, Race, and Imperial Politics in the Post-

1857 Indian Army,” 29th Annual Conference on South Asia, Madison, Wisconsin.

October 2000.

Presenter, “Military Spin Doctors in Late Victorian Society? The Case of Frederick Roberts,”

Conference on the New Imperial History, Austin, Texas. February 2000.

Streets-Salter CV, February 2016

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Presenter, “The Finest Specimen: “Martial Race” Soldiers and Images of British Imperial

Masculinity,” American Historical Association, Chicago, Illinois. January 2000 (Panel

Organizer).

Presenter, “Manly in His Warlike Creed: Martial Races and the Construction of Anglo-Indian

Masculinity,” North American Conference on British Studies, Boston, Massachusetts.

November 1999.

Presenter, “Our Scottish Lads Are Willing and Our Scottish Limbs Are Strong: The

Romanticization of Highlanders and the Highlands in British Imperial Ideology,” North

American Conference on British Studies, Colorado Springs, Colorado. October 1998.

Presenter, "The Right Stamp of Men": Military Imperatives and Popular Imperialism in Late

Victorian Britain,” North American Conference on British Studies, Chicago, Illinois.

October 1996.

Presenter, "Colonial Policy in Highland Scotland and Punjab,” Social Science History

Association, Baltimore, Maryland. November 1993.

Teaching and Advising:

Courses:

Spring 2017 Hist 5102: World History Theory and Methodology, Graduate, 8 students

Fall 2016 Hist 2211: The World Since 1945, Undergraduate, 93 students

Hist 7976: Directed Study (Graduate), 4 students

Spring 2016 Hist 5102: World History Theory and Methodology, Graduate, 8 students

Hist 7976: Directed Study (Graduate), 1 student

Fall 2015 Course releases for being department chair

Hist 7976: Directed Study (Graduate), 2 students

Spring 2015 Hist 2211: The World Since 1945, Undergraduate, 114 students

Hist 5102: World History Methodologies, Graduate, 7 students

Hist 7976: Directed Study (Graduate), 1 student

Fall 2014 Course releases for being department chair

Hist 7976: Directed Study (Graduate), 6 students

Spring 2014 Hist 2211: The World Since 1945, Undergraduate, 124 students

Hist 5102: World History Methodologies, Graduate, 8 students

Hist 4911: Senior Project (Undergraduate), 1 student

Fall 2013 Used two course releases

Hist 7976: Directed Study (Graduate), 5 students

Spring 2013 Hist 1215: Origins of Today, Undergraduate, 32 students

Hist 5102: World History Methodologies, Graduate, 5 students

Hist 7976: Directed Study (Graduate), 1 student

Fall 2012 Hist 1200/01: History Freshman Colloquium, Undergraduate, 17 students

Hist 2211: The World Since 1945, Undergraduate, 41 students

Hist 7976: Directed Study (Graduate), 2 students

Spring 2012 Hist 1110: Introduction to World History, Undergraduate, 7 students

Hist 5102: World History Methodologies, Graduate, 10 students

Fall 2011 Hist 570: (Washington State University): World History Theory and Methodology,

Graduate, 10 students

Hist 571: (Washington State University): Topics in World History: Network Analysis and

Streets-Salter CV, February 2016

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Diffusion Theory, Graduate, 5 students

Spring 2011 GENED 111: World Civilizations Since 1500 (Washington State University),

Undergraduate, 124 students

Fall 2010 Hist 570: World History Theory/Methods (Washington State University),

Graduate, 6 students

Hist 436: Global Imperialism (Washington State University), Graduate, 54

students

Spring 2010 GENED 111: World Civilizations Since 1500 (Washington State University),

Undergraduate, 94 students

Fall 2009 Hist 570: World History Theory/Methods (Washington State University),

Graduate, 4 students

Hist 459/559: Modern Britain (Washington State University), Undergraduate, 24

students

Supervision of Graduate Students:

PhDs Graduated:

2016 Malcolm Purinton, Empire in a Bottle: Commerce, Culture, and the Consumption of Beer

in the British Empire, 1870-1914 (Northeastern University)

2015 Amanda Townsley Link, Specters of empire: Remembrance of the Great War in the Irish

Free State, 1914-1937 (Washington State University)

2013 Shawna Herzog, Convenient Compromises: A History of Slavery and Abolition in the

British East Indies, 1795–1841 (Washington State University)

2013 James Bradford (co-chair), Opium in a time of uncertainty: State formation, diplomacy,

and drug control in Afghanistan during the Musahiban Dynasty, 1929-1978 (Northeastern

University)

2012 Samantha Christiansen (co-chair), Beyond liberation: Students, space, and the state in

East Pakistan/Bangladesh 1952-1990 (Northeastern University)

2012 Dalia Wassner, Argentine intellectuals as harbingers of modernity: The democratization

projects of Marcos Aguinis (Northeastern University)

2012 Cherri Wemlinger, Making their voices heard: Expressions of world opinion to the

League of Nations during the Italo-Ethiopian Dispute (1934-1938) (Washington State

University)

2011 Aaron Whelchel, “The schoolmaster is abroad”: The diffusion of educational innovations

in the nineteenth century British Empire (Washington State University)

2011 Mark Moreno, World at war: Mexican identities, insurgents, and the French occupation,

1862–1867 (Washington State University)

2011 Cynthia Ross, Guam: At the crossroads of Spanish imperial militarization, ecological

change, and identity in world history (Washington State University)

2010 Jon Middaugh, Transnational cultural market: A concept for understanding cultural

transmission across the Mexico-United States border, 1920-1946 (Washington State

University)

2008 Maryanne Rhett, ‘Quasi-barbarians’ and ‘wandering Jews’: The Balfour Declaration in

light of world events (Washington State University)

Streets-Salter CV, February 2016

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2008 Amitava Chowdhury (co-chair), Horizons of memory: A global processual study of

cultural memory and identity of the South Asian indentured labor diaspora in the Indian

Ocean and the Caribbean (Washington State University)

2007 Armand Garcia, José Martí and the global dimensions of late nineteenth-century Cuban

nation building (Washington State University)

2003 Mary Jane Maxwell, Journeys of faith and fortune: Christian travelers in the fifteenth and

early sixteenth century dar al-Islam (Washington State University)

2001 Jason Knirck, Women of the Dáil: The gendering of Irish politics, 1916–1927

(Washington State University)

Current Ph.D. Students (Chair only):

Matthew Bowser

Allison Chapin

David DeCamp

Bridget Keown

Thanasis Kinias

James Parker

Luke Scalone

Ph.D. Committees (Northeastern University only, since 2012):

David Albanese (defended August 2015)

Feruza Aripova

Jackie Gronau

Regina Kazyulina

Abby Mullen (defended April 2017)

Mikhail Rekun (defended March 2016)

James Robinson

Olivier Schouteden

Akin Sefer

Dan Squizzero

Sana Tannoury-Karam

Matthew Williamson (defended April 2017)

MA Theses (Chair only, Washington State University)

2012 Tyler Schroeder, British Imperialism in China

2011 Nathan Sowry, 1816 Rebellion in British East Indies

2011 Nathan Marr, British military preparedness in the Interwar period

2011 Johnna Lash, Chinese in British Malaya

2009 Lewis Patterson, British-German Naval Arms Race, 1890-1914

2009 Lorelei Stirling, Public Gardens in London

2006 James Covi, U.S. Education Policy in the Philippines

2005 Jon Flashnick, British-American Boundary Dispute in the Pacific Northwest

2003 Aubrey Lafferty, Civil War in Irish History

Streets-Salter CV, February 2016

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Supervision of Undergraduate Students:

2014 Emily Aronoff, The Economic Policies of Imperialism and Effects on Post-

Colonial Development

Advising Activities:

2015-- Faculty advisor to four-six undergraduate History majors per year

2012-- Mentoring and advising to each class of History graduate students in my role as

Director of World History programs

2003-- Committee chair for sixteen successfully defended Ph.D. students, and current

chair for four more

Honors and Awards:

2012 Nomination for Northeastern University Excellence in Teaching Award

2004 William F. Mullen Excellence in Teaching award, Washington State University

Institutional Service:

Department Service:

Northeastern University:

2016--2017 Undergraduate Program Director

2014-- History Department Chair

2014--2015 Co-Undergraduate Program Director, with Bill Fowler

2012-2013 Chair, US and the World Search, History Department

2012-2013 Chair, Public History Search, History Department

2012-2014 Member of the Graduate Studies Committee

2012 Member of the Undergraduate Committee, Spring semester

2012, 2013, 2014 Member of the FACS Committee, History department

Washington State University:

2002-2011 Member, Graduate Studies Committee, Department of History

2007-2008 Chair, History Department Search Committee for Africa/World Position

2005-2006 Member, History Department Search Committee for Asia Position

2004-2005 Chair, History Department Search Committee for South Asia Position

2002--2011 Director, Ph.D. Program in World History

2001-2002 History Department Search Committee for Modern China Position

1998-1999 Member, History Department Committee for the Revision of Tenure

Guidelines

College Service:

Northeastern University:

2015-- Chair, Undergraduate Academic Advisory Committee

Streets-Salter CV, February 2016

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2015-- Member, CSSH College Council

2014-2015 Member, CSSH Humanities Task Force

2014 Member, Unpaid Co-Op Evaluation Committee

2014 Member, CSSH Resources Committee

2014 Member, CSSH Research Development Council

2012-2014 Member, Digital Humanities Cluster Hire Search Committee

2012 Member, Committee for the Internationalization of the Curriculum, CSSH,

Fall semester

Washington State University:

2009-2011 Board Member, Thomas S. Foley Institute

2009-2011 Director, World Civilizations Undergraduate Program

2007-2011 Member, Committee for Tenure and Promotion, Department of Women’s

Studies

2007-2011 Member, Dean’s Committee on Resource Allocation, College of Liberal

Arts

University Service:

Northeastern University:

2015-- Member, University Undergraduate Curriculum Committee

2012-2013 Participant in the Provost’s pilot group, Research Development Initiative

(ReDI)

Washington State University:

2010-2011 Nominee and Participant in the Provost’s Leadership Development Group

2000-2002 Chair, Faculty Senate Library Committee

1999-2000 Member, Faculty Senate Library Committee

Service to the Discipline:

2016-- Elected to Serve on the Jerry Bentley World History Prize Committee,

American Historical Association

2016 Outside Faculty Evaluator for Tenure and Promotion of Ruth Mostern,

University of Pittsburgh

2016 Outside Dissertation Examiner for Cao Yin, National University of

Singapore, for “Red Turbans on the Bund: Sikh Migrants, Policemen, and

Revolutionaries in Shanghai, 1885-1945”

2015-- Member of the World History Association Dissertation Prize Committee

2015-- Re-elected to the Executive Council of the Northeast Regional World

History Association

2015-- Elected to Advisory Board for H-Empire

2015 Reviewed Article Manuscript, “‘It Gives us a Power and Strength which

we do not Possess’: Martiality, Manliness and India’s Great War

Enlistment Drive" for Modern Asian Studies

Streets-Salter CV, February 2016

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2014 Reviewed Manuscript Proposal for “The New World History” by Ross

Dunn and Laura Mitchell for the University of California Press, December

2014 Reviewed Manuscript, “A Concise History of the World” by Merry

Wiesner-Hanks for Cambridge University Press, September

2014-- Joined editorial Staff for “Debates in World History” Series, Senior Editor

Peter Stearns, for Bloomsbury Press

2014 Outside Faculty Evaluator for Tenure and Promotion of Denis Gainty,

University of Georgia

2012-- Elected to Advisory Board for H-World, November

2012 Reviewed Imperial History Text on History and Theory by Simon Potter

for Palgrave MacMillan, November

2012 Reviewed manuscript called "The Silenced and Indispensables: Subaltern

Men in Private Security" for the International Feminist Journal of Politics

2012--2014 Elected to the Executive Council of the Northeast Regional World History

Association

2010--2013 Election to the Finance and Nominations Committee of the World History

Association.

2009 Member of the Graduate Essay Prize Committee for the Pacific

Coast Conference on British History

2009 Article Reviewer for Northern Scotland, entitled “Highland Soldier:

Image and Impact”

2008 Manuscript Reviewer for Pearson Longman UK, for Bruce Collins’

War and Empire: The Expansion of Britain, 1790-1830

2008 Article Reviewer for Journal of Military History (September)

2007-2010 Executive Council Member for the World History Association

2005-2009 Associate Executive Secretary for the North American Conference on

British Studies (largest British-studies organization in the United States

and Canada)

2005 Reader and Evaluator, National Endowment for the Humanities Summer

Stipend award

2005-2010 Member, Birdsall Prize Committee in Military History, American

Historical Association

2004-ongoing Advisory Board Member, World History Network, directed by Pat

Manning

2003 Manuscript Reader for Manchester University Press, for Edward Spiers'

The Victorian Soldier in Africa (August)

2003 Manuscript Reader for Brill Academic Press, for Chandar Sundaram's The

Indianisation of the Indian Army (November)

1999-2005 Board of Editors, Project South Asia: A Digital Library of Teaching

Resources About South Asia for Colleges and Universities, Missouri

Southern State College

Streets-Salter CV, February 2016

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Community Engagement:

2015 Audio interview with Trevor Getz for New Books and World Affairs for

the book Empires and Colonies in the Modern World. Located at:

http://newbooksinworldaffairs.com/list/ 2000 Contributor, “Voices from the Front Line,” 4-Part Radio Production on the

Lives of Scottish Soldiers, producer, Chris Lowell, aired on Radio

Scotland, September-October 2000

Professional Development:

February, 2016 Speaker for the Oxbridge Dinner Series for Business Students,

Northeastern University, February 26

2016 Presenter on the panel “Tools to Organize Research,” organized by

ADVANCE Office of Faculty Development at Northeastern University,

March 15.

2015-16 Organizer and host for the Global History Seminar Series, featuring

Antoinette Burton (University of Illinois) and Michael Vann (Sacramento

State University)

November, 2015 Presenter for Primary Source Webinar on “Putting the World in World

War I”

March, 2015 Presenter for Primary Source Webinar on “Best Approaches to Teaching

World History”

March, 2015 Speaker for the Oxbridge Dinner Series for Business Students,

Northeastern University, March 26

2014-15 Organizer and host for the Global History Seminar Series, featuring

Amitava Chowdhury (Queens University) and Patrick Manning

(University of Pittsburgh)

2014 Teacher for Summer Dissertation Workshop in World History Reunion,

held at the University of Pittsburgh, July 22-26

April, 2014 Organizer and Editor for a Forum on “Teaching the World Since 1945,” in

World History Connected: The Ejournal of Learning and Teaching

February, 2014 Speaker for the Oxbridge Dinner Series for Business Students,

Northeastern University, February 18

November, 2013 Teaching World History Workshop, Invited Presentation at MIT,

November 1

February, 2013 Speaker for the Oxbridge Dinner Series for Business Students,

Northeastern University, February 4

April, 2012 Speaker for the Oxbridge Dinner Series for Business Students,

Northeastern University, April 4

March, 2012 Invited Teacher for a One-Week Honors Master Course on Southeast Asia

in World History at the University of Leiden, March 5-9

2012 Organizer and Teacher for the Summer Dissertation Workshop in World

History, held at Northeastern University for two weeks in July-August

2012 Invited Speaker for the “World Histories From Below Teacher Training

Workshop” at the University of Illinois, April 5-8

Streets-Salter CV, February 2016

14

2011-2012 Organizer for Northeastern University’s Global Seminar Series in World

History

November, 2010 Facilitator for Workshop for World Civilizations Faculty and World

History Graduate Students by Noted World Historian Kevin Reilly,

Pullman, Washington.

Jan-Dec, 2010 Designer and Author of Two Web-Based Distance Degree Courses for

Washington State University: World Civilizations I and World

Civilizations II (GenEd 110 and 111). Responsible for syllabus, all content

material, web exercises, assessments, and projects.

2009-2011 Participant and Co-Grant-Writer for a Summer Dissertation World History

Graduate Workshop, held at the University of Pittsburgh in June, 2010 and

June 2011

2009-2011 Director of World Civilizations Undergraduate Program. Responsibilities:

rewriting the curriculum, setting learning and content goals, evaluating

and assessing instructors and students for 30 sections each semester (apx.

3000 students and 12 instructors).

2009-2011 Participant and Evaluator, Charlottesville Virginia School District

Teaching American History Grant.

October, 2009 Facilitator and Lead Contact for Two Workshops for World Civilizations

Faculty and World History Graduate Students by noted World historians

Jerry Bentley and Robert Strayer, Pullman, Washington.

2004 Organizer, History Forum on Slavery, March 1.

2003-2011 Co-Organizer and Co-Founder of the Northwest Affiliate of the World

History Association Annual Conference. First annual conference held at

WSU Vancouver, October 16-17, 2004; second annual conference held at

Portland State University, October 22-23, 2005; third annual conference

held at the University of Washington, October 14-15, 2006; fourth annual

conference held at Washington State University, October 14-15, 2007;

fifth annual conference held at Washington State University-Vancouver,

October 2008; sixth annual conference held at Lakeside School, Seattle,

October 2009; seventh annual conference held at the University of

Oregon, October 2010.

2003-2006 Active Member and Presenter, Gendering Research Across the Campuses

(GRACe), Washington State University.

October 17, 2001 Presenter, “Using Online Environments to Facilitate Student Interaction,”

CTLT Brown Bag lunch series.

Jan-Feb, 2001 Presenter, 2-day Co-Teach Seminars on Teaching Innovations.

May, 2000 Participant, Co-Teach Weeklong Seminar on “Using Technology in the

Classroom.”

2000-2002 Member, Junior Faculty Writing Group, with Linda Heidenreich, Jose

Alamillo, and Matthew Guterl of the Comparative American Cultures

department.

Fall ’98 and ’99 Workshop Series for History Department Graduate Students on “Preparing

for the Job Market,” “Giving Professional Papers,” and “Interviewing.”