兔子先生传媒文化作品

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CNAIS faculty Clint Carroll wins NSF Grant!

Cherokee Elder and Clint Carroll

Cherokee elder Crosslin Smith discusses tribal land conservation with Clint Carroll. Photo by Myra Robertson. At the top of the page is an image of wild senna/gvhnage (Senna marilandica), one of the culturally significant plants Carroll is focused on. Photo by Clint Carroll.

CNAIS & Ethnic Studies Faculty, Clint Carroll has been awarded a prestigious early career award.听The grant from the National Science Foundation will allow Carroll to continue his work with the Cherokee people, aimed toward advocating tribal environmental education and cultural and ecological resiliency. His听research will help to preserve tribal tradition and knowledge for future generations through the Faculty Early Career Development Award, a five-year grant from the National Science Foundation.听

鈥淓ssentially the proposal and the project is geared toward producing a new generation of tribal environmental leaders,鈥 Carroll says. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 really the grand vision of it, and asking these questions that get at the issue of accessing plants and being able to operate as resource users in a checkerboarded landscape.鈥

鈥淭he health of our people is directly related to the health of our lands,鈥 Carroll continues. 鈥淏y redirecting resources to tribal land conversation and knowledge revitalization, that will have an effect on the health of our people.鈥

Carroll, assistant professor of Ethnic Studies at the University of Colorado Boulder and a citizen of the Cherokee Nation, has been working with tribal elders to promote traditional knowledge and the conservation of tribal land since 2004. Read the full article in the