
Sheryl Shirley
B.A., California State Polytechnic University; M.A., Ph.D., University of Texas at Austin
Sheryl L. Shirley is Professor of Political Science at 橙子视频app and has focused her research and teaching on human rights and social justice. She has published in the International Journal on World Peace, the National Women鈥檚 Studies Association Journal, and presented her research at international conferences of the International Studies Association (ISA), the Latin American Studies Association (LASA), and many other interdisciplinary conferences.
Dr. Shirley began her research in Guatemala more than thirty years ago, for her Master鈥檚 (1988) and Doctorate (1997) in the Department of Government at the University of Texas at Austin. Field visits play an essential role inspiring her research and teaching about human rights, ethnic conflict, and U.S. intervention in courses such as Latin American Politics, American Foreign Policy, Humanitarianism, and Global Problems. In 2006, she participated in an international human rights delegation focused on the impacts of collective violence and international megaprojects in Rabinal and Huehuetenago, Guatemala. The trip to Rabinal helped inform her subsequent research using primary documents from the World Bank to investigate the international financing of megaprojects and led to her International Studies Association presentation in 2007, 鈥淧ost-Washington Consensus or the Chimera of Inclusive Policymaking?鈥 The 2006 visit to Huehuetenago inspired her research on a World Bank-funded gold mining project in the Mam and Sipakapense Maya communities and a 2009 conference paper presentation, 鈥淎ll that Glitters: Guatemalan Gold Processing and Dreams of Democratic Development鈥 with Katherine Donahue at the 28th Annual Congress of the Latin American Studies Association, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
Her recent research focuses on human rights, transitional justice, and the recuperation of historical memory in Latin America. For victims of collective violence and those who wish to prevent future ethnic conflict, museums and historical sites provide an opportunity to recuperate historical memory. In 2016, Dr. Shirley traveled to Buenos Aires, Argentina to visit the Espacio Memoria y Derechos Humanos ex Esma, a space dedicated to the victims of the Argentina鈥檚 counterinsurgency, and presented research on South American compliance with the international women鈥檚 convention, the Convention on the Elimination of All forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW). In January 2020 Dr. Shirley returned to Guatemala to visit the house of memory, Kaji Tulam, a museum dedicated to rebuilding collective memory, Guatemala鈥檚 Holocaust museum, and conducted research in the Centro de Investigaciones Regionales de Mesoam茅rica (CIRMA), a non-profit foundation in Antigua, Guatemala, dedicated to the rescue and preservation of Guatemala鈥檚 visual and documentary history.
Dr. Shirley鈥檚 commitment to human rights is also evident in her service for more than a decade as Commissioner of the New Hampshire Commission for Human Rights, New Hampshire鈥檚 primary anti-discrimination agency. The agency is responsible for investigating and hearing complaints in employment, housing, and public accommodations.
Dr. Shirley has overseen student research on a wide range of interdisciplinary topics related to foreign policy, human rights, and environmental sustainability. Her students have used open access primary documents from the World Bank, CEDAW, and the National Security Archives to analyze policymaking and to present findings at undergraduate social science conferences and PSU鈥檚 showcases of student research. Dr. Shirley has also assisted students as the faculty adviser to the 橙子视频app Democrats since 2004. During the 2019- 2020 presidential primary season, she advised students as they organized campus events featuring Democratic presidential primary candidates: Bernie Sanders, Pete Buttigieg, Beto O鈥橰ourke, Andrew Yang, and Elizabeth Warren.
Publications/Presentations/Exhibitions
- 2017 鈥淚ntergovernmental Women鈥檚 Human Rights: Potemkin Villages or Tools for Change?鈥 paper presented at the 58th Annual Convention of the International Studies Association in Baltimore, Maryland, February 22-25th, 2017.
- 2016 鈥淐EDAW: Compliance and Contestation in Latin America,鈥 paper presented at the Second Pan-American Interdisciplinary Conference, Buenos Aires, Argentina, February 26th, and published in European Scientific Institute, May, 2016.
- 2012 鈥淔acilitating Cross Cultural Encounters,鈥 Presentation at the 4th Annual New Hampshire Culture of Peace Conference, Keene State College, Keene, New Hampshire, March 3.
- 2009 鈥淎ll that Glitters: Guatemalan Gold Processing and Dreams of Democratic Development鈥 with Katherine Donahue. Paper presented at the 28th Annual Congress of the Latin American Studies Association, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, June 11-14.
- 2008 鈥淒o 鈥淕ood鈥 Fences Make Good Neighbors?: A Comparative Study of the Israeli-Palestinian and U.S.-Mexican Militarized Borders鈥 with Filiz Otucu. Paper presented at the Annual Conference of NESTVAL, Plymouth, New Hampshire, November 1, 2008.
- 2008 鈥淲alls: Securing Nations or Violating Human Rights?鈥 Paper delivered at the International Conference on Nationalism and Human Rights, Istanbul Bilgi University, Istanbul, Turkey, June 27-29.
- 2008 鈥淥utsourcing Counterinsurgency: Revisiting Cold War Counterinsurgency in Latin America.鈥 Paper presented at the 49th Annual Conference of the International Studies Association, San Francisco, California, March 26-March 29.
- 2006 鈥淐ounterterror Running Wild: Lessons from Cold War U.S. Foreign Policy toward Latin America.鈥 Paper presented at the 37th Annual Conference of the International Studies Association- New England and Northeastern Political Science Association, Boston, MA, November 9-11.
Awards or recognition
- 2007 and 2010 Appointments by Governor John H. Lynch to the New Hampshire Commission for Human Rights
- 1999 Recipient of the Theodora J. Kalikow Award
Courses Taught
- Global Problems, Power, and Politics
- American Foreign Policy
- Women in World Politics
- Latin American Politics