Publications
“The Race Politics of Bison Conservation, ” forthcoming in Environmental Ethics
Abstract: At the turn of the 20th century American bison (Bison bison) hybridization with cattle (Bos taurus) was considered a major threat to the continued existence of the species. The goal of conserving specifically “pure-blooded bison,” a qualification first iterated by William Hornaday in 1887, continues to be salient in conservation practice even today. This paper argues that this conception of bison ‘purity’ was likely forged in the context of eugenics and white supremacist thought. It is argued that the legitimacy of conservation management practices that seek to preserve ‘purity’ in a given population should be shown through analyses of the actual benefits of such a practice for the population (such as maintenance of locally adaptive traits) rather than reliance on intuitions that purity is simply valuable for its own sake. This paper concludes that, in the case of bison, there are no benefits that demonstrate the value of purity as a conservation priority.
“Nin Gii Nisaa A’aw Waawaashkeshii: Engaging Animal Rights Theory with Ojibwe and Cree Theories of Hunting Ethics,” forthcoming in Environmental Ethics
Abstract: In this paper, I argue that animal rights theorists commit willful hermeneutical ignorance (WHI), a form of epistemic injustice, when they fail to engage with Indigenous hunting practices as components of robust and nuanced philosophical traditions. In doing so, they obscure the nature of their disagreement with Indigenous theories over the ethicality of hunting. I argue that there is a fundamentally different understanding of taking life at the heart of the disagreement between animal rights and certain Indigenous theories. These different conceptions are essential to these theories’ moral evaluations of hunting and are supported by distinct conceptual frameworks. Yet inter-framework disagreement is exactly the kind of thing rendered invisible to those who perpetrate WHI—as they uncritically privilege their own conceptual framings. Ultimately, I argue that responsible cross-cultural philosophical dialogue must engage with this disagreement at the framework-level.
MA Thesis

In Spring 2023 I defended my Master’s thesis, titled Nin Gii Nisaa A’aw Waawaashkeshii: Engaging Animal Rights Theory with Ojibwe and Cree Theories of Hunting Ethics. You can find all three chapters here.
Here is a visual I made for a poster presentation at ROME in 2023:

Interdisciplinary & Collaborative Projects
From 2021-2023 I was a student researcher with The Center for Human Carnivore Coexistence and received a $1200 student research grant.