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| Dr. Nancy J. Taniguchi |
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| Professor |
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| Specialities |
| American West (including Pacific trade, Japanese Americans, California and Utah generally); U.S. legal history; mining history |
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| Education |
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Ph. D., American History, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, 1985.
Marriner Eccles Graduate Fellow, 1983-1985.
M.A., History, University of Utah, 1981.
B.A., Anthropology, University of Arizona, 1968, summa cum laude.
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Organizations
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Archivist of the California Institute for Peruvian Studies (CIPS), a registered California non-profit. See www.cipstudies.org.
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| Books |
Necessary Fraud: Progressive Reform and Utah Coal. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1996.
Castle Valley, America: Hard Land, Hard-won Home. Utah State University Press, 2004.
WINNER, 2005 Best Book Award from the Utah State Historical Society
WINNER, 2006 Award of Merit, American Society for State and Local History
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| Book Chapters |
"Stigmatizing Okies," in Gordon Morris Bakken, ed., California History: A Topical Approach (Arlington Heights, Ill.: Harlan Davidson, Inc., 2003).
"World War I, the American Interior, and Pacific Markets: A Look at Distant Impacts," Studies in Pacific History: Economic, Social and Political History (London: Ashgate/Variorum Publishers, 2002).
"Weaving A Different World: Women and the California Gold Rush," in Richard J. Orsi and Kevin Starr, eds., Rooted in Barbarous Soil: People, Culture, and Community
in Gold Rush California (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2000). 22 published articles; 21 published book or exhibition reviews; 3 California history textbook peer reviews
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California State University, Stanislaus
One University Circle
Turlock, California 95382
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