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  • Contributors

Martin W. Ball received his Ph.D. in religious studies at the University of California at Santa Barbara in 2000 and has conducted research on the Mescalero Apache Mountain Spirit tradition since 1995.

Yale Belanger is an assistant professor in the Political Studies Department at the University of Saskatchewan.

Jonathon Erlen holds a Ph.D. in history. He is an assistant professor in the Graduate School of Public Health at the University of Pittsburgh.

Eric Freedman, J.D., is assistant professor of journalism at Michigan State University, where he is associated with the Knight Center for Environmental Journalism.

Lawrence W. Gross is an assistant professor at Iowa State University with a joint appointment in religious studies and American Indian studies. He is also Anishinaabe, being enrolled with the White Earth Nation of northern Minnesota.

Anthony G. Gulig, an assistant professor of history at the University of Wisconsin- Whitewater, has traveled and studied northern Saskatchewan for the past ten years.

Claudia Haake was born and raised in Germany. She holds an M.A. from Johns Hopkins University (1997) as well as a Ph.D. in history from the Universität Bielefeld (Germany, 2001). After spending 2002-2003 as Metcalf Fellow at the University of Western Ontario, she is now a member of the Department of History at the University of York, where she teaches American history. Her primary interest is Native societies in the Americas.

Bruce E. Johansen is the author of Indigenous People and Environmental Issues: An Encyclopedia (Greenwood Press, forthcoming). [End Page 505]

Kelley E. Rowley (Blackfoot Nation) holds a B.A. in political science and M.A.s in English and American studies. Currently he is a Ph.D. candidate in American studies at the Center for the Americas at the University at Buffalo, researching mnemonic devices and Native American oral presentation conventions, and he is faculty at Cayuga Community College.

Dorothee Schreiber is a Ph.D. student at the Institute for Resources and Environment at the University of British Columbia.

Jay Toth holds an M.A. in history and an M.S. in health planning. He is an archeologist with the Ho-Chunk Nation. [End Page 506]

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