Jacqline Wolf Tice

@jacqline

Active 3 years, 3 months ago

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Jacqline Wolf Tice

About Me

Jacqline Wolf Tice is an Adjunct and Course Manager for the University of Oklahoma College of Law’s Indigenous Peoples Law graduate program. She has a Master of Legal Studies degree specializing in Indigenous Peoples Law, and researches issues at the nexus of tribal sovereignty, environment, and culture. Her MA in Environmental Policy Design from Lehigh University provides a philosophical (ethical/eco-centric) and cultural model for developing environmental policy. Her field research and analysis of the issues facing the Mandan Hidatsa Arikara Nation at Ft. Berthold Reservation in the wake of the oil boom there has been featured at the Association for Environmental Studies and Sciences conferences at the University of Arizona and American University, Washington DC and published with co-author and cultural anthropologist, David Casagrande. Their chapter, “The Sovereignty Paradox: Negotiating Values Amid Tribal Adaptation to Shale Oil Extraction” is included in the peer-reviewed academic volume, Global Im-Possibilities: Exploring the Paradoxes of Just Sustainabilities, published by Bloomsbury Press in July 2021. Jacqline has designed and delivered community health programs in Latino populations as a Certified Health Education Specialist. Her undergrad degree is in Public Health and she continues to research the relationship between health and justice in minority populations. Jacqline is also a Master Watershed Steward for Penn State Extension Lehigh Valley, where she lives.