Professor, Applied Intercultural Arts Research - GIDP | Professor, Arid Lands Resources Sciences - GIDP | Member of the Graduate Faculty | Research Anthropologist | Professor, American Indian Studies-GIDP | Professor, School of Anthropology
Dr. Stoffle is the head of an applied cultural anthropology research team that conducts various kinds of funded studies. Current studies 2013-2016) include 1) the Kaibab Paiute Aboriginal Water Uses, 2) EFMO, the Traditional Cultural Property potential of Effigy Mounds National Monument, Iowa, 3) SLBE, Odawa traditional plants at Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lake Shore, Michigan, 4) ARCH, Ethnographic Overview and Assesment, Arches National Park, Utah, 5) CANY, Ethnographic overview and Assessment Canyonlands National Park, Utah, 6) HOVE, Ethnographic Overview and Assessment HovenweaNational Park, Utah, and 7) BUFF, Ethnobotany and TEK at Buffalo National River National Park, Arkansas with the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma. In addition, the team has participated in studies of Marine Protected Areas in The Bahamas and American Indian cultural affiliation studies at more than a dozen other National Parks in the United States. Undergraduates, graduates, and post-graduates participate in the research. In general, potential team members spend a semester with the team learning basics and determining interest and skill fit with the studies being conducted. After this mutual learning period students are incorporated into the team based on their level of education, skills, and interests in one or more of the studies.Students are encouraged to find their own research topic with the broader set of research activities. The team often presents papers at professional meetings together and will jointly publish when appropraite.