SBS Faculty Named Public Engagement Project 2023 Fellows
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Stephanie Fetta, Center for Latin American, Caribbean, and Latino Studies, and Lucy Xiaolu Wang, Resource Economics, have been named 2023 Public Engagement Faculty Fellows. They join four other faculty from across campus who will draw upon their substantial research records to impact policy, the work of practitioners, and public debates.
Fetta studies how shame is communicated through the body. For example, a furrowed brow shows the shame we feel for another, and a racing heart tells us we are not held as equals. Fetta argues racial shaming is a habit, a socially trained bodily communication that becomes second nature. As a PEP Fellow, Fetta will write op-ed pieces and give interviews on understanding the body’s role in racism, an essential step towards changing the unconscious yet potent way by which racism is perpetuated.
Wang studies how to build better organizations to promote innovation in the pharmaceutical industry, cannabis market (production through consumption) and digital health (e.g., electronic health records), within the U.S. and across the globe. As a PEP fellow, she will write news articles and op-ed pieces to engage public audiences and policymakers, to better understand how to enhance equitable access to drugs and mitigate social equity issues in the legal cannabis business.
The PEP Fellows Program, of which this group constitutes the ninth cohort, facilitates connections between fellows and lawmakers in the U.S. Congress and Massachusetts State House, journalists, practitioners and others to share their research beyond the walls of academia. The faculty fellows will receive a stipend and technical training in communicating with non-academic audiences.
“The expanding network of PEP Faculty Fellows is impacting society,” says Lisa M. Troy, director of the Public Engagement Project and associate professor in the School of Public Health and Health Sciences and the Commonwealth Honors College. “By training UMass faculty to translate their scholarship to an audience beyond academia, UMass faculty are having broader impacts locally, nationally and internationally. PEP Fellows are invited to governor task forces, onto the National Academy of Sciences committees and for congressional testimony, as well as informing the general public through various media outlets. In this way, PEP Fellows are facilitating the mission of UMass Amherst as a land grant university, to advance knowledge and improve the lives of the people of the Commonwealth, the nation and the world.”
The Public Engagement Project is a faculty-driven initiative building on a collaboration of the Institute for Social Science Research (ISSR), the Center for Research on Families (CRF) and the Transportation Center (UMTC). The PEP Faculty Fellowship has been made possible by funding from the College of Education, College of Engineering, College of Humanities and Fine Arts, College of Natural Sciences, College of Social and Behavioral Sciences, School of Public Health and Health Sciences, Office of the Provost and University Relations.
This article first appeared on UMass Amherst News & Events.