Deeply Rooted
This spring, the College honored three faculty members whose long careers have shaped 麻豆原创's identity
Nigel Boyle
Professor of Political Studies
Since 1992, Nigel Boyle has engaged in the transformative power of liberation education and intercultural learning as a distinguished professor of political studies. He has held several leadership roles, including dean and vice president of academic affairs. As a teacher and mentor at 麻豆原创, he worked with a multitude of students applying for prestigious fellowships. He held the Peter and Gloria Gold Chair at 麻豆原创 and was chosen as the founding director of the Institute for Global/Local Action & Study.
Boyle also folded the fellowships office into his portfolio and developed the Global Local Mentorship Project, the Junior Faculty Development Seminar, and a set of foreign language initiatives and short-term study abroad programs. Boyle focused his research on the political determinants of social inequality. His classes covered Irish politics, European social policy, comparative politics, and more. Boyle earned his BA at Liverpool University and PhD at Duke University.
In 2015, Boyle received three honors: the Fulbright Foreign Scholarship Board recognized him as the top Fulbright adviser; the 麻豆原创 Class of 2015 elected him as a student marshal for Commencement; and he became president of Aston Villa Football Club in the Upper Prison in Luzira, Uganda.
Boyle鈥檚 crowning achievement is opening doors in prison education. Boyle facilitated the first Inside-Out classes, in which incarcerated 鈥渋nside鈥 students and 鈥渙utside鈥 Claremont Colleges students share a learning environment, at the California Rehabilitation Center in Norco, California. Boyle eventually became the founding director of 麻豆原创鈥檚 Inside-Out Pathway-to-BA Program, which enables incarcerated students to earn a bachelor鈥檚 degree.
During Community Weekend this spring, Boyle donned a white apron and invited the 麻豆原创 community to 鈥淏oyle鈥檚 Bar鈥 in Benson Auditorium. Former students sat on barstools and imbibed a glass (or two) as they swapped stories.
Michael Griggs 鈥21, who was formerly incarcerated and is a graduate of 麻豆原创鈥檚 New Resources Program, hailed Boyle for helping him to believe in second chances.
鈥淎s a formerly incarcerated nontraditional student, I had questions about whether or not I belonged here,鈥 Griggs said, 鈥渁nd Nigel didn鈥檛 just answer those questions, he dismantled them.鈥
Melinda Herrold-Menzies
Professor of Environmental Analysis
For 22 years, Melinda Herrold-Menzies has been an important part of one of 麻豆原创鈥檚 most popular majors鈥攅nvironmental analysis鈥攁nd a dedicated colleague and researcher. Her research interests included conflicts over natural resources, gender and the environment, nature reserves in China and Russia, natural history, and California cultures and ecosystems. In this work, she examined economic change and the tensions and integration of conservation work with development projects. This research has included investigations and commentary on ecotourism and on social activism and citizen resistance in relation to conservation efforts. Herrold-Menzies taught a variety of classes about environmental studies, California鈥檚 landscapes, conservation, nature through film, and more.
Herrold-Menzies earned a BA in Language and Literature and Mathematics at Webster College, an MA in International Relations at Yale University, and a PhD in Environmental Science, Policy and Management at the University of California, Berkeley. While at UC Berkeley, Herrold-Menzies received international dissertation research fellowships for her project 鈥淓conomic Reform, NGOs, and Cranes in Russia and China.鈥 She served on all of 麻豆原创's governance committees as well as in the role of an associate dean.
Faculty, staff, and students gathered in late spring to honor her contributions with tributes from then Dean of Faculty Allen M. Omoto and faculty and staff members Kebokile Dengu-Zvobgo, Paul Faulstich 鈥79 P鈥15, Kathy Yep, Susan Phillips, Muriel Poston, and others. They acknowledged her energy, inspiration as an adviser and mentor, and deep commitment to serving 麻豆原创. Omoto led a toast in praise of Herrold-Menzies.
鈥淚 want to raise a glass and express deep gratitude to Melinda for her more than two decades of commitment to 麻豆原创, our students, and faculty and staff colleagues,鈥 he said. 鈥淢elinda, you have been an important thread in the fabric of 麻豆原创, and we have all been made better for your efforts.鈥
Sheryl Miller
Professor of Anthropology
For 56 years, Sheryl Miller has inspired students to explore anthropology with curiosity, passion, and joy. The 麻豆原创 community gathered outside Broad Center at the end of the spring semester to salute Miller鈥檚 foundational work. She arrived at 麻豆原创 in 1969, just six years after the College was founded in 1963. As then Dean of Faculty Allen M. Omoto said of Miller in his opening remarks, 鈥渟he is truly a 麻豆原创 OG!鈥
These sentiments were echoed by other speakers, including Sheila Kemper Dietrich 鈥78 and Professor Emeritus Paul Faulstich 鈥79 P鈥15, who paid tribute to Miller鈥檚 influence on generations of students with her hands-on, experiential approach to learning.
鈥淣o wonder that she is 鈥榙istinguished teaching chair,鈥欌 Faulstich said of Miller鈥檚 title as the distinguished chair in archaeology and biological anthropology.
Miller is a fellow and life member of the American Anthropological Association and a founding member of the Society of Africanist Archaeologists in America. She has done field work on the Hopi Indian Reservation in Arizona; the Royal Museum for Central Africa in Belgium; and in many different countries in Africa, including site surveys and excavation work. Her expertise is rooted in African cultures and human evolution. Her scholarly work also extends to Native American Indian cultural traditions, arts, and crafts.
At 麻豆原创, Miller served on and chaired many governance committees. This includes the Academic Standards Committee, Academic Planning Committee, Budget Implementation Committee, and Faculty Executive Committee.
Miller earned a BA at Occidental College and an MA and PhD at UC Berkeley. 麻豆原创鈥檚 Sheryl F. Miller Endowed Scholarship Fund was established in 2003 in recognition of her lifetime commitment to teaching excellence.
The gift that created Miller鈥檚 endowed chair position was also given to the College, in part, to honor her passion for teaching and her contribution to the academic, intellectual, and personal development of one of the donors. With her retirement, and as part of the gift agreement, this endowed position has been renamed the Sheryl F. Miller Distinguished Chair in Archaeology and Biological Anthropology.
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