Research

My doctoral project addressed longstanding problems of structural racism in academic nursing by investigating how the discipline engaged with ideas of racialized social difference – often called “culture” – from the mid-1950s through the rise of “cultural competence” in the late 1980s. It situated this story in the contexts of nursing’s post-war entry into the university, developments in mid-century social science, and social justice movements that set the health of historically excluded communities on the national policy agenda. I argue that racism and sexism functioned both as intersectional oppressions and in perceived opposition to and competition with each other in this process: more plainly, that the historically feminized field of nursing strategically leveraged whiteness in its effort to legitimize itself academically. In doing so, it reified that whiteness as the center and mainstay of its disciplinary framework, including its approaches to racialized social difference.

Illustrating the operating mechanics of whiteness in nursing’s cultural theorizing is the first step in my broader research program targeting structural and systemic barriers to health justice and equity. I work to support and amplify community priorities and knowledge throughout my research, particularly as it pertains to sexual/reproductive health.

Current projects include:
  • Postdoctoral Fellow in the ACTIONS program at UCSF, working with California’s Reproductive Health Service Corps to co-create, support, and evaluate reproductive justice curricula.
  • Community of Practice Fellow with the Roots of Reproductive Justice project, partnering with national organizations working to ground Reproductive Justice strategy in Reproductive Justice history.
  • 2024-2025 Research Fellow with the Consortium for History of Science, Technology, and Medicine, working on historical research into the intersection of racialization and sexual/reproductive public health nursing in the early 20th c.