Hi everyone,

I hope that this message finds you well. The exciting and unique
Sustainable Development Department that I am a part of at Appalachian State
University is seeking a new departmental chair:
https://appstate.peopleadmin.com/postings/48667

While I am not on the search committee, I am happy to answer any questions
about my department, the university, and life in Boone, NC. I work with
wonderful students and faculty that are committed to social and ecological
justice and we are situated in the beautiful Blue Ridge Mountains.

Best of luck as you wrap up your semester!
All the best,
Jacqui


-- 
Dr. Jacqueline Ignatova
Associate Professor
Department of Sustainable Development
Appalachian State University
Author of
*Contesting Africa’s New Green Revolution
<https://www.bloomsbury.com/us/contesting-africas-new-green-revolution-9781786996565/>*
Zed/Bloomsbury
pronouns: she/they

*Appalachian State University acknowledges the Indigenous peoples who are
the original inhabitants of the lands on which our campus is located
<https://diversity.appstate.edu/resources/land-acknowledgement/>. The
Cherokee, Catawba and other Indigenous peoples left their mark as hunters,
healers, traders, travelers, farmers and villagers long before the
university was established. Today, descendants of these communities, which
include citizens of the eight tribal nations in North Carolina as well as
others, live and work in this region — an area with settler-colonial
policies, including those that attempt to disenfranchise, remove and
eradicate Indigenous people and their way of life. *


*This acknowledgment is aligned with our university’s core
value of creating a diverse, equitable and inclusive community. We embrace
our institutional responsibility to recognize the people, culture and
history that compose our App State Community. We acknowledge and honor the
diverse Indigenous peoples connected to this land and share in their
stewardship of these mountains and waters. We fully recognize, support and
advocate for the sovereign rights of all of North Carolina’s eight tribal
nations, which include the Coharie, the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians,
the Haliwa-Saponi, the Lumbee Tribe of North Carolina, the Meherrin, the
Sappony, the Occaneechi Band of the Saponi Nation and the Waccamaw Siouan.
We understand the historical connection our university has with these
Indigenous communities and commit to creating spaces for collaboration and
strengthening support structures to build a more equitable future together.*

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