- Bienvenidos, Bula, Haeremai, Camai, Bepuwave
- Capacity-building among tribal governments & rural communities
- Environment, health, information technology, natural resources, & science
- Community-based research & economic development & management
- Organizational culture nuclear weapons labs
- Complex systems
- Cultural resources & museums
- Strategic planning, public involvement
- Teaching, including community outreach and public interpretation

My basic philosophy in community–based research (a.k.a., grass–roots science) has always been—
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- that technical skills and expertise are to be developed within the communities in order for this knowledge base to be retained after a contract or grant period ends.
I believe that when communities ask their own questions, have their own data, and their own collation, analysis, and interpretation of others’ data they will
- understand the disease and health trends of their communities;
- be able to predict the health trends and prepare for appropriate action for the communities;
- portray the total health and environment program requirements of the tribal communities to other communities, organizations, and Congress;
- allocate scarce resources for their own protection in the most productive manner;
- participate fully in the development of health information systems, useful to other rural communities, especially in areas of the release of hazardous materials and environmental threat;
- enable tribal leadership to effectively communicate environmental and health concerns to their respective communities;
- enable the communities to choose wisely among various outside offers of technical and scientific help; to control the quality of the data, research, analysis, and products from outside contractors, consultants, and agencies; and to oversee and coordinate the efforts of BIA and IHS executed on behalf of tribal communities.
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There doesn’t seem to be any other way to show my profile, so here it is on this page.My special areas—
* Capacity–building among tribal governments and rural communities in environment, health, information technology, natural resources, and science * Community–based research, economic development, & management * Organizational culture of nuclear weapons laboratories * Complex systems * Cultural resources & museums * Strategic planning, public involvement * Teaching, including community outreach and public interpretationMy previous projects include—
- Head, environment, safety, & health programs, Eight Northern Indian Pueblos Council, New Mexico tribes (water quality standards, solid waste, emergency response, hazards of traditional arts, community-based research center)
- Statewide coordinator, public involvement, New Mexico Highway & Transportation
- Regional coordinator, resource conservation & development, Lower Kuskokwim watershed, remote western Alaska
- Health careers advisor and tutor, Yukon Kuskokwim Health Corp.
- Statewide specialist for rural solid waste, Alaska Dept. of Environmental Conservation, Villages north of Alaska Range
- Faculty, Anthropology & Maori Studies, University of Auckland, Aotearoa / New Zealand. Impact of diet, disease, and social change on indigenous and immigrant populations. Associate Faculty in Environmental Studies Graduate Programme
Faculty, applied business & office technology, Kuskokwim Campus, rural Alaska community college - Manager, regional non–profit bookstore and Native crafts, Moravian Book Store, western Alaska
- Museums, cultural resources, New England USA, Southwest USA, Midwest USA, Fiji
- Girl Scout nature director and unit leader
- Post–doctoral fellowship, long–term impacts of diet, disease, and cultural change (isotope biogeochemistry & health), Los Alamos National Laboratory
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- Ever wondered what good would come of a Ph.D. in the house?
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Stable carbon isotopes do not date but nevertheless lead full lives. mpb
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