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KRISTEN K. INTEMANN
Montana State University 530 N. Rouse #2
Department of History & Philosophy Bozeman, MT 59715
2-155 Wilson Hall, P.O. Box 172320 Cell: (406) 600-0758 Bozeman, MT 59717-2320 E-mail:
[email protected]
Office: (406) 994-5787
CURRENT POSITION
2011-Present Associate Professor, Philosophy, Department of History and Philosophy,
Montana State University
ACADEMIC EMPLOYMENT HISTORY
2005-2011 Assistant Professor, Philosophy, Department of History and Philosophy,
Montana State University
2004-2005 Assistant Professor, Department of Philosophy and Religion, Coastal
Carolina University
EDUCATION Ph.D. 2004 University of Washington (Philosophy)
M.A. 1997 University of Washington (Philosophy)
B.A. 1995 University of Iowa (Philosophy and Political Science, with honors)
ACADEMIC EXPERTISE
Areas of Specialization: Philosophy of Science, Feminist Philosophy, Practical Ethics
(Research Ethics, Biomedical Ethics, Environmental Ethics)
Areas of Competence: Social and Political Philosophy, Ethical Theory, Epistemology
AWARDS RECEIVED
2016 Award for Meritorious Research and Creativity, College of Letters and Sciences,
Montana State University
2013 Montana State University, Betty Coffey Award (awarded for outstanding research,
teaching, and service activities related to improving gender equity).
2012 Philosophy of Science Association Women’s Caucus Prize (for the best article in
feminist philosophy of science), awarded for Melo-Martín, I. and Intemann, K.
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(2011). Feminist resources for biomedical research: Lessons from the HPV
vaccines. Hypatia: A Journal of Feminist Philosophy 26(1): 79-101.
2012 Montana State University Award for Excellence (mentoring award selected by
seniors with the highest academic achievement, the MSU Alumni Association,
and the Bozeman Chamber of Commerce).
2009 President’s Excellent in Teaching Award, Montana State University (highest
teaching award at MSU).
2009 Best Paper, Untenured Faculty Member, “How Do Disclosure Policies Fail? Let
Us Count the Ways,” with Inmaculada de Melo- Martín, awarded by the
Association for Practical and Professional Ethics
PUBLICATIONS
Peer-Reviewed Journal Articles:
Intemann, K. (forthcoming). “Who Needs a Consensus Anyway? Addressing Manufactured Doubt
and Increasing Public Trust in Climate Science.” Public Affairs Quarterly.
Intemann, K. de Melo-Martin, K. (2016). The Risk of Using Inductive Risk to Challenge the Value-
Free Ideal. Philosophy of Science 83(4):500-520.
Intemann, K. (2015). Distinguishing Between Legitimate and Illegitimate Values in Climate
Modeling. European Journal of Philosophy of Science 5 (2):217-232.
de Melo-Martín, I. and Intemann, K. (2014). Who’s afraid of dissent? Perspectives On Science 22
(4):593-615.
Intemann, K. and de Melo-Martín, I. (2014). Are there limits to the obligations scientists have to
dissenters? Synthese 191 (12):2751-2765.
Intemann, K. and de Melo-Martín, I. (2014). Commercialized science: Can feminist conceptions of
objectivity help? European Journal of Philosophy of Science 4 (2):135-151.
de Melo-Martín, I and Intemann, K. (2013). Scientific dissent and public policy,” EMBO Reports
14, 231-235.
de Melo-Martín, I. and Intemann, K. (2012). Interpreting evidence: Why values can matter as much
as science. Perspectives in Biology & Medicine 55 (1):59-70.
de Melo-Martín, I. and Intemann, K. (2011). Feminist resources for biomedical research: Lessons
from the HPV vaccines. Hypatia: A Journal of Feminist Philosophy 26(1): 79-101.
Intemann, K. (2010). Twenty-five years of feminist empiricism and standpoint theory: Where are
we now? Hypatia: A Journal of Feminist Philosophy 25(4): 778-796.
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Intemann, K. and de Melo-Martín, I. (2010). Social values and evidentiary standards: The case of
the HPV vaccine. Biology and Philosophy 25(2): 203-213.
Intemann, K. (2009). Why diversity matters: Understanding and applying the diversity component
of the NSF’s broader impacts criterion. Social Epistemology 23, 3-4: 249-266.
de Melo-Martín, I. and Intemann, K. (2009). How do conflict of interest policies fail? Let us count
the ways. Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology Journal 23:1638-
1642.
Intemann, K. (2008). Increasing the number of feminist scientists: Why feminist aims are not
served by the underdetermination thesis. Science & Education, Special Issue: Women,
Science Education, and Feminist Theory, Cassandra Pinnick (ed.) 17 (10): 1065-1079.
Intemann, K. and de Melo-Martín, I. (2008). Regulating science: Should scientists be left alone?
Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology (FASEB) Journal, 22: 654-658.
de Melo-Martín, I. and Intemann, K. (2007). Can ethical reasoning contribute to better
epidemiology? A case study in research on racial health disparities. European Journal of
Epidemiology 22:215–221.
Intemann, K. (2005). Feminism, underdetermination, and values in science. Philosophy of Science
72(5): 1001-1012.
Intemann, K. (2001). Science and values: Are moral judgments always irrelevant to the
justification of scientific claims? Philosophy of Science 68(3):S506-518.
Peer-Reviewed Articles in Edited Volumes
Intemann, K. (2011). Diversity and dissent in science: Does democracy always serve feminist
aims? In Feminist Epistemology and Philosophy of Science: Power in Knowledge, Heidi
Grasswick (ed.), Dordrecht, Netherlands: Springer; 111-132.
Intemann, K. (2010). Standpoint empiricism: Rethinking the terrain in feminist philosophy of
science. In New Waves in Philosophy of Science, P.D. Magnus and Jacob Busch (eds.),
Hampshire, UK: Palgrave MacMillan; 198-225.
Invited Book Chapters
Intemann, K. (2016, forthcoming). Value management in science: Is Longino’s conception the best
option from a feminist perpective? In Values in Science, edited by Kevin Elliott and Daniel
Steel.
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De Melo-Martín and Inteman, K. (2016). Gender and medicine. In the Routledge Companion to
the Philosophy of Medicine, Miriam Solomon, Jeremy R. Simon, and Harold Kincaid (eds.).
New York: Routledge; pp. 408-418.
Intemann, K. (2016). Feminist Standpoint. Oxford Handbook of Feminist Theory, Lisa Jane Ditsch
and Mary Hawkesworth (eds). New York: Oxford University Press; pp. 261-282.
Intemann, K. and de Melo-Martín (2015). Addressing the bias paradox in biomedical research. In
Meta-Philosophical Reflections on Feminist Philosophies of Science, Maria Cristina
Amoretti and Nicla Vassallo (eds.) Dordrecht, Netherlands: Springer; pp. 75-89.
Intemann, K. and de Melo-Martín, I. (2011). Bias, impartiality, and conflicts of interest in
biomedical sciences. In Science At The Frontiers: Perspectives on the History &
Philosophy of Science, William Krieger (ed.), Landham: Roman & Littlefield. 170-193.
Intemann, K. (2011). Putting feminist research principles into practice: Objectivity and social
justice in climate change studies. In The Handbook of Feminist Research: Theory
and Praxis, 2nd edition, Sharlene Hesse-Biber (ed.), Sage Publishing; 495-510.
Reviews, Encyclopedia Entries, Letters
Intemann, K. (2014). “Feminist Conceptions of Objectivity,” Blackwell Encylopedia of Feminist
Philosophy.
Intemann, K. (2010). Science From Below by Sandra Harding, Durham: Duke University Press,
2008. Hypatia 25 (2): 464-469.
Intemann, K. (2009). Gendered Innovations in Science and Engineering by Londa Shiebinger (ed.),
Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2008. Isis 100(3): 642-643.
Intemann, K. (2008). Value-Free Science? Ideals and Illusions, Harold Kincaid, John Dupré,
Alison Wylie (eds.), Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2007 in Polish Journal of Philosophy
2(2): 143-147.
Intemann, K. and de Melo-Martín, I. (2007). Authors' financial interests should be made known to
manuscript reviewers. Nature 448 (7150): 129 2007 Jul 12.
Intemann, K. (2006). Is Science Value Free? Values and Scientific Understanding by Hugh Lacey,
New York: Routledge, 2005. History and Philosophy of Life Sciences, 28: 423-426.
Works in progress
De Melo-Martin, I. and Intemann, K. Dealing With Dissent (book manuscript to be completed
December 2016 with interest from Oxford University Press, Kristin Shrader-Frechette,
editor).
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Intemann, K. Science from a Social Justice Standpoint (Book project expected to be completed by
spring 2018).
Smith, J., Handley, I,. Rushing, R., Belou, R., Kambich L., Skewes M., Shannhan, E, Honea, J.,
and Intemann K. Benefiting the Whole: How Transforming a University to Support Women
Faculty in STEM Improves Job Satisfaction for All Faculty. (Under Review at the Journal
of Diversity in Higher Education). (On this manuscript I wrote sections that incorporated
feminist theory into justifying the methodological approaches of the study and the
interpretation of the results.
Skewes, M. C, Shanahan, E. A, Smith, J. L, Honea, J., Belou, R., Rushing, S,, Intemann, K., &
Handley, I. M. Absent Autonomy: Relational Competence and Gendered Paths to Faculty
Self-Determination in the Promotion and Tenure Process. (Under Review at the Journal of
Diversity in Higher Education. On this manuscript I wrote sections related to how
autonomy has been conceptualized within feminist literature and the implications the study
had for certain feminist claims.)
PROFESSIONAL PRESENTATIONS
Contributed Refereed Conference Papers:
2016 Evidence, desires and values in climate change research, accepted symposium
paper for the Biennial Meetings of the Philosophy of Science Association Meetings
in Atlanta, GA.
2015 The risk of using inductive risk to challenge the value-free ideal, with Inmaculada
de Melo-Martín, Biennial Meetings of the Society for Philosophy of Science in
Practice, Arhaus, Denmark.
2014 Evaluating the Naturalistic Turn: Do we care what scientists think or do? With
Inmaculada de Melo-Martín, at the Meetings of the Philosophy of Science
Association, Chicago, IL.
2014 Activism and advocacy in standpoint theory, at the Biennial Meetings of the
International Association of Women Philosophers, Madrid, Spain.
2014 Are there limits to seek and engage dissent? with Inmaculada de Melo-Martín,
Pacific Division Meetings of the American Philosophical Association, San Diego.
2013 Are there criteria for normatively appropriate dissent? with Inmaculada de Melo-
Martín, Conference on the Special Role of Science in a Democracy, Copenhagen,
Denmark.
2013 Are there limits to our obligations to dissenters? with Inmaculada de Melo-Martín,
at the Society for the Social Studies of Science (4S) Meetings, San Diego, CA.
2012 “Problems With Profit-Driven Research: Can Feminist Philosophy of Science
Help?” with Inmaculada de Melo-Martín, at the Biennial Philosophy of Science
Association Meetings. San Diego, CA.
2012 “Commercialized Science and Bias: What Would Feminists do?” with Inmaculada
de Melo-Martín, at the Fourth Biennial Meeting of Feminist Epistemology,
Methodologies, Metaphysics, and Science Studies (FEMMSS), Penn State
University, University Park, PA
2012 “What Good Is Astrobiology Anyway?” at Astrobiology Science Conference,
Atlanta, GA
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2012 “Commercialization of Biomedical Research & The Limits of Impartiality,” with
Inmaculada de Melo-Martín, Symposium Session, American Philosophical
Association, Pacific Division Meetings, Seattle (scheduled).
2011 “Scientific Dissent and Public Policy,” with Inmaculada de Melo-Martín at the
European Philosophy of Science Association Meetings in Athens, Greece.
2011 “Commercialization of Science: Can a Feminist Conception of Impartiality Help?”
with Inmaculada de Melo-Martín at the Feminism and Bias Conference,
Humboldt University, Berlin, Germany.
2011 “The Ethical Risks of Protocells: Why ‘Precaution’ may not be the best principle” at
ithe International Society for the Study of Origins of Life, Montpelier,
France. (Poster presentation).
2011 “Scientific Dissent, Objectivity, and Public Policy,” with Inmaculada de Melo-Martín
at the Biennial Meeting of the Society for Philosophy of Science in Practice,
University of Exeter, UK.
2010 “How Climate Change Impacts Research Could Benefit from Feminist Research
Principles,” at the annual meeting of the Society for the Social Studies of
Science, Tokyo, Japan.
2010 “Understanding Problems with Impartiality in Biomedical Research,” with
Inmaculada de Melo-Martín, at the Objectivity in Science Conference,
University of British Columbia, Vancouver, B.C., Canada
2010 “The Homebirth Debate: Why Scientists Need to Start Talking About Values,” with
Inmaculada de Melo-Martín, at the Biennial Meeting of the IAPh
(International Association of Women Philosophers), London, Ontario,
Canada.
2010 “Whose Benefits? Which Costs? Objectivity and Social Justice in Climate Change
Impacts Studies,” at the annual meeting of the Association for Practical and
Professional Ethics, Cincinnati, OH.
2009 “25 Years of Feminist Empiricism and Standpoint Theory: Where Are We Now?” at
the Hypatia 25th Anniversary Conference, University of Washington, Seattle,
WA
2009 “Lessons from the HPV Vaccine,” at the Western Regional INBRE/COBRE
Conference, Big Sky, MT
2009 “Evidence for Use: Drug Development & Testing,” with Inmaculada de Melo-
Martín, Biennial Meeting of the Society for Philosophy of Science in
Practice, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN.
2009 “Social Values in Drug Development and Testing: The Case of the HPV Vaccine,”
with Inmaculada de Melo-Martín, Biennial Conference for Feminist
Epistemologies, Methodologies, Metaphysics, and Science Studies,
University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC.
2009 “How Do Disclosure Policies Fail? Let Us Count the Ways,” with Inmaculada de
Melo-Martín, Annual Meetings for the Association for Practical and
Professional Ethics, Cincinnati, OH.
2008 “Social Values and Evidentiary Standards: The Case of the HPV Vaccine,” with
Inmaculada de Melo-Martín, Biennial Meeting of the Philosophy of Science
Association, Pittsburgh, PA.
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2007 “Why Biomedical Researchers Need Ethicists and Vice Versa: A Case Study in Oral
Contraceptives Research,” Annual Meeting of the American Society for
Bioethics and Humanities, Washington, D.C.
2007 “Values & the Production of Scientific Knowledge: Ethics, Autonomy, and Stem Cell
Research,” with Inmaculada de Melo Martín, Annual Meeting of the Society
for the Social Studies of Science, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
2007 “Toward a More Feminist Conception of Democracy and Dissent in Science,”
Biennial Conference for Feminist Ethics And Social Theory, Clearwater, FL
2007 “Is (Adversarial) Democratic Science the Best Model for Feminist Science?” Biennial
Conference for Feminist Epistemologies, Methodologies, Metaphysics, and
Science Studies, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ
2006 “Ethical Judgments and Measuring Race in Epidemiology,” Annual Meeting of the
Society for the Social Studies of Science. Vancouver, BC, Canada.
2006 “Science, Health, and Values: Ideology and the Concept of Race in U.S.
Epidemiology 1980-Present,” European Social Science History Conference,
Amsterdam, The Netherlands
2006 “Objectivity, Values, and the Duty to be Impartial in Reporting," Annual Meetings
for the Association for Practical and Professional Ethics, Jacksonville, FL
2004 “Feminism, Underdetermination, and Values in Science,” Biennial Meeting of the
Philosophy of Science Association, Austin, TX
2004 “Making Room for Values in Science: Social and Contextual Empiricism,” Biennial
Conference on Feminist Epistemologies, Methodologies, Metaphysics, and
Science Studies, University of Washington, Seattle, WA
2004 “What Can Epistemology Offer Feminist Science Studies?” International Association
of Women Philosophers, University of Göteborg, Sweden
2004 “Feminist Politics and Theory Justification: Rethinking the Role of
Underdetermination in Feminist Philosophy of Science" Society for
Analytical Feminism, at the Central Division Meeting of the American
Philosophical Association, Chicago, IL
2003 “A Feminist Critique of the “Gap Argument” in Feminist Science Studies,” Pacific
Division Meeting of the Society for Women in Philosophy, Eugene, OR
2001 “Moral Judgments and Theory Justification,” Conference on Value-Free Science:
Ideal or Illusion at the Center for Ethics and Values in the Sciences,
University of Alabama, Birmingham, AL
2000 “Science and Values: Are Moral Judgments Always Irrelevant to the Justification of
Scientific Claims?” Biennial Meeting of the Philosophy of Science
Association, Vancouver, B.C.
Invited Talks
2015 “Beyond bias: Why values are important in climate modeling,” Department of Land
Resources Speaker Series, Montana State University, Bozeman, MT. November 2,
2015.
2015 “Can we distinguish normatively appropriate dissent?,” with Inmaculada de Melo-
Martin, Conference on Climate Change and Dissent, Bielefeld Univerity, Germany,
October 28, 2015.
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2015 “Confronting skepticism about climate science: Do we need a consensus?”
California State University Fullerton, March 27, 2015.
2015 “The tangled web of values and evidence in public health policy” Notre Dame
University, March 23, 2015.
2014 Values and Climate Science: Who Needs a Consensus Anyway? Lewis and Clark
College, Department of Philosophy, January 31, 2014.
2014 Values and Climate Science: Who Needs a Consensus Anyway? Keynote Address
for the Graduate Student Conference on Philosophy, University of Washington,
Seattle, WA. January 11, 2014.
2013 “Values in Climate Modeling: The Good, the Bad and the Ugly,” Workshop on the
Role of Climate Models, Eindhoven, Netherlands, October 31, 2013.
2013 “Values in Climate Science: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly,” Middlebury College,
October 28th, 2013.
2013 “Values, Advocacy, and Activism in Biomedical Research,” keynote address at the
2013 Conference on Values in Science, Medicine, and Technology, at
The University of Texas at Dallas, May 22-24, 2013.
2013 “Why Values Matter: The Case of Vaccine Development.” Consejo Superior de
Investigaciones Científicas (CSIC), Departmento de Ciencia, Technología, y
Sociedad, May 14, 2013.
2013 “Ciencia con ánimo de lucro: parcialidad y conflictos de intereses,” Universidad de
Oviedo, Oviedo, Asturias, Spain. March 20, 2013.
2013 “Science for Profit: Objectivity, Bias and Conflicts of Interest in Biomedicine,”
Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia, Madrid, Spain, February 19, 2013.
2009 "What Lies Ahead: Envisioning New Futures for Feminist Philosophy," keynote
panel at the Hypatia 25th Anniversary Conference, University of Washington, Seattle
WA.
2009 “Whose Benefits? Which Costs? Social Justice in Economic Studies on Climate
Change,” at the Michael Malone Conference on Economic History, Big Sky, MT
2007 “Broader Impacts and the Participation of Underrepresented Groups in Science,” at
the NSF Broader Impacts Criterion Workshop, Colorado School of Mines, Golden,
CO
2007 “Scientists as Advocates,” at the Ethics and Climate Change Conference, University
of Washington, Seattle, WA
2006 “Should Scientists Make Ethical Value Judgments?” at Montana State University,
Department of Ecology, Bozeman, MT
2004 “Ethics and the Aims of Science”, for the Beyond Science and Values conference at
the Rock Ethics Institute, Penn State University, University Park, PA
Invited Commentary
2009 Commentary on Jay Odenbaugh’s “Climate Consensus and Contrarians,” at the
Inland Northwest Philosophy Conference in Moscow, ID.
2006 Comments on “Kitcher on the Ethics of Inquiry,” by Robert B. Talisse and Scott
Aikin at the Eastern Division Meetings of the American Philosophical Association,
Washington, D.C.
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GRANTS RECEIVED
2015 Oplontis Project Grant ($5000) for curriculum development related to the
Museum of the Rockies exhibit “Leisure and Luxury in the Age of
Nero: The Villas of Oplontis,” College of Art and Architecture, MSU
2012 Scholarship and Creativity Award ($18,000), Office of the Vice President for
Research, Creativity, and Technology Transfer, MSU
2009-2011 NIH INBRE Subaward Grant, ($50,000) “Promoting Socially Responsible
Science,” Grant number: P20 RR-16455-09
2009-2010 Scholarship and Creativity Award ($7,500), Office of the Vice President for
Research, Creativity, and Technology Transfer, MSU
2009 (Spring) Research Enhancement Award ($1545), College of Letters and Sciences,
Montana State University
2009 (Spring) Buy-out for Enhancing Scholarship and Teaching (BEST Program), College
of and Science, Montana State University
2008-9 Scholarship and Creativity Award ($11,000), Office of the Vice President for
Research, Creativity, and Technology Transfer, MSU
2008 (Fall) Research Enhancement Award ($1570), College of Letters and Sciences,
Montana State University
2007 (Fall) Research Enhancement Award ($1581), College of Letters and Sciences,
Montana State University
2007 Scholarship & Creativity Award ($8122), Office of the Vice President for
Research, Creativity, and Technology Transfer, MSU
2007 Research & Creativity Award ($3000), College of Letters and Sciences, MSU
2007 (Spring) Research Enhancement Award ($1586), College of Letters and Sciences,
Montana State University
2006 (Fall) Research Enhancement Award ($3000), College of Letters and Sciences,
Montana State University
2006 (Fall) Buy-out for Enhancing Scholarship and Teaching (BEST Program), College
of Letters and Science, Montana State University
2006 Scholarship & Creativity Grant ($6500), Office of the Vice President for
Research, Creativity, and Technology Transfer, MSU
2006 Research & Creativity Award ($3000), College of Letters and Sciences, MSU
2006 (Spring) Research Enhancement Award ($3000), College of Letters and Sciences,
Montana State University
2005 (Fall) Research Enhancement Award ($1470), College of Letters and Sciences,
MSU
2004 Scholarship for Teaching and Learning Grant, Center for Effective Teaching
and Learning, Coastal Carolina University, to conduct research
examining the effectiveness of service learning in ethics courses.
2003 Participant, NEH Summer Institute on Science and Values, University of
Pittsburgh (5 week seminar for U.S. college faculty)
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TEACHING
Lower Division Courses Taught Upper Division Courses Taught Introduction to Philosophy Contemporary Moral Problems
Introduction to Ethics Philosophy of Science
Science, Pseudoscience & Subjectivity Philosophy & Feminism
Biomedical Ethics Feminist Epistemology
Critical Thinking Environmental Ethics
Logic Science & Values
Social and Political Philosophy Business Ethics
Introduction to Women’s & Gender Studies Research Ethics
Philosophy of Law
Co-taught Honors seminar: Science, Ethics, and Politics from Ancient Rome to Today (Spring
2017)
Philosophy Capstone Seminars: Objectivity (SP 2007), Environmental Justice (F 2010),
Objectivity and Bias in Science (F 2013), Science, Values, and Public Policy (F 2015), How Can
we Know About the Past? Evidence, Representation, and Ethics in Practice (F 2016).
Graduate Seminars: Science, Objectivity & Values (PHIL 500), Research Ethics (PHL 591)
SERVICE & PUBLIC OUTREACH
Departmental Service
2016-Present Committee Member, Graduate Program Committee, Department of History
& Philosophy, MSU
2015-2016 Search Committee Member, Wallace Stegner Chair in Western History,
Department of History & Philosophy, MSU
2013-2015 Executive Committee Member, Department of History & Philosophy, MSU
2013-2015 Organizer, Hausser Lecture, Department of History & Philosophy, MSU
2012-2013 Committee for the Stegner Center for Interdisciplinary Research
2011-2013 Director, Center for the Program on Science, Society, and Ethics
2008-2012 Associated Faculty of Montana State University, Department Representative
2008-2011 Annual Review Committee, Department of History & Philosophy, MSU
2008-2009 Search Committee, Assistant Professor in Philosophy of Mind, Department of
History and Philosophy, MSU
2006-Present Coach, Intercollegiate Ethics Bowl of the Association of Practical and
Professional Ethics (coaching a team of five MSU undergraduates for the
regional and national competitions each year)
2006-2009 Awards Committee, Department of History & Philosophy, MSU
2006 Search Committee, Assistant Professor in History of Biology, Department of
History and Philosophy, Montana State University
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College Service
2016-Present Committee Member, College of Letters & Sciences, Promotion and Tenure
Committee, MSU
2011-Present Chair, Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies, Montana State University
2011-Present Faculty Advisor, Triota (Women and Gender Studies Honors Society)
2010-Present Executive Committee Member, Women’s & Gender Studies, MSU
2010-Present Committee at Large Member, Women’s & Gender Studies, MSU
2009-2010 Public Health Internship Committee, College of Letters & Sciences, MSU
University Service
2016-Present Committee Member, Conflicts of Interest Management Committee, Office of
the Vice Present for Research, MSU
2015-2016 Committee Member, Social Sciences and Humanities Grant Review
Committee, Office of the Vice President for Research, MSU
2014-Present Committee Member, Social Science Research Team Project TRACS (tasked
with collecting and analyzing data related to the NSF ADVANCE Grant),
Montana State University.
2014-2015 Committee Member, Emerging Scholars Award Committee, Montana State
University
2013-Present Committee Member, ADVANCE Grant Project TRACS Implementation
Team (tasked with implementing programs aimed at changing the University
culture to recruit and retain women in STEM disciplines), Montana State
University
2013-Present Equity Policy Committee, Montana State University
2011-Present Founding Member, President’s Commission on the Status of University
Women, MSU
2010-2013 McNair Scholar Mentor, McNair Scholars Program, MSU
2009-2011 Chair, Contemporary Issues in Science CORE Curriculum Committee, MSU
2009-2011 CORE 2.0 Steering Committee, MSU
2007-2009 Member, Contemporary Issues in Science CORE Committee, MSU
2008-2013 Guest lecturer for ethics component of the MSU Physics Department’s REU
Summer Program.
2008-2009 Research Integrity Committee, Subcommittee on the Responsible Conduct of
Research, MSU
2007-2009 Committee Member, Contemporary Issues in Science CORE Curriculum
Committee, MSU
2006-2008 MSU Catapolooza, Bookstore Faculty Volunteer
2005-2007 Faculty Advisor, MSU Student Recycling/Green Club
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Professional Service
2017 Program Committee Member, Annual Conference on Values in Medicine,
Science, and Technology, University of Texas, Dallas, TX
2016 Program Committee Member, Descartes Lectures on Science, Values, and
Democracy, Tilburg University, Netherlands
2015-2016 Program Committee Member, International Symposium on Ethics in
Engineering, Science, and Technology, Vancouver, British Columbia,
Canada
2011-2013 Program Committee Member, Philosophy of Science Association Biennial
Meetings, San Diego, CA
2011-2013 Panel Member, National Science Foundation, Advisory Panel, Washington
D.C.
2010-2012 Committee Member, Higher Education Program & Policy Council, American
Federation of Teachers, Washington D.C.
2010-2012 Committee Member, Task Force on Diversity in Higher Education, American
Federation of Teachers, Washington, D.C.
2006-2010 Co-Chair, Philosophy of Science Association Women’s Caucus
2005-2009 Executive Board Member, Society for Analytical Feminism
2005-2009 Program Committee for Central Division Meetings, Society for Analytical
Feminism
Served as reviewer for: The National Science Foundation, Philosophy of Science, European
Journal for Philosophy of Science, Synthese, Episteme, Erkentis, Social Epistemology, Philosophy
& Biology, Hastings Center Report, Science & Education, Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal,
British Journal of Philosophy of Science, International Journal of Philosophy of Science, Studies in
History and Philosophy of Science, Perspectives in Science, Philosophy and Technology, Hypatia:
A Journal of Feminist Philosophy.
Languages: English and Spanish (fluent reading, writing, and speaking)
REFERENCES:
Heidi Grasswick, Professor of Philosophy and George Nye & Anne Walker Boardman Professor of
Mental and Moral Science, Middleburry College ([email protected] )
Hugh Lacey, Professor Emeritus, Swathmore College, ([email protected] )
Elizabeth Potter, Andrew Alice Quigley Professor of Women Studies, Mill College
([email protected] )
Kristina Rolin, Senior Researcher, The Finnish Centre of Excellence in the Philosophy of the Social
Sciences, Department of Political and Economic Studies, University of Helsinki
([email protected] )
Kristin Shrader-Frechette, O'Neill Family Professor, Department of Biological Sciences and
Department of Philosophy, University of Notre Dame ([email protected] )
Miriam Solomon, Professor of Philosophy, Temple University ([email protected] )
Alison Wylie, Professor of Philosophy, University of Washington ([email protected] )