Fatimah Jackson

Professor of Biology and Director of the W. Montague Cobb Research Laboratory

Howard University

Description

Dr. Fatimah Jackson received her Ph.D., M.A., and B.A. (cum laude with Distinction in all Subjects) from Cornell University. Her doctoral dissertation research was on The Relationship of Certain Genetic Traits to the Incidence and Intensity of Malaria in Liberia, West Africa. She has conducted research on (and is particularly interested in): 1.) Human-plant coevolution, particularly the influence of phytochemicals on human metabolic effects and evolutionary processes and 2.) Population substructure in peoples of African descent, developing Ethnogenetic Layering as a computational tool to identify human microethnic groups and differential expressions of health disparities. Trained as a human biologist, Dr. Jackson has published extensively in such journals as Human Biology, Biochemical Medicine and Metabolic Biology, Journal of the National Medical Association, American Journal of Human Biology, Annals of Human Biology, BMC Biology, and most recently the American Journal of Public Health. Dr. Jackson's research has been funded by: USAID, Ford Foundation, Huber Foundation, Rockefeller Foundation, NIH (NIMHD and NHGRI), Wenner-Gren Foundation, and EPA. Dr. Jackson has taught at Cornell University, University of California - Berkeley, University of Florida, University of Maryland - College Park (where she is Distinguished Scholar Teacher and Professor Emerita), University of North Carolina - Chapel Hill and now at Howard University. She has been a Visiting Scholar at University of Georgia and University of Khartoum in Sudan and she was a Senior Fulbright Fellow in Egypt. She has been awarded the Nick Norgan Award for 2009 Best Article Published in Annals of Human Biology. In 2012 she was the first recipient of the Ernest E. Just Prize in Medical and Public Health Research, Avery Research Institute, College of Charleston and Medical University of South Carolina (University of South Carolina). In 2012, she was also Coined by Rear Admiral Dr. Helena Mishoe, National Institutes of Health, NHLBI and US Public Health Service.

Sessions

Science in Sacred Spaces: An Interfaith dialogue on science communication with faith communities
October 14, 2022
1:00 – 2:00 PM
Virtual
NASW Professional Development SessionPlatform: Zoom WebinarVideo AvailableVirtual
Speakers
Deb Haarsma
President, BioLogos
Fatimah Jackson
Professor of Biology and Director of the W. Montague Cobb Research Laboratory, Howard University
Marni Gelbart
Director of Programs for the Personal Genetics Education Project (pgEd), Harvard Medical School
Nalini Nadkarni
Professor of Biological Sciences, University of Utah
Rebecca Randall
Journalist, Freelance
Organizer and Moderator
Ciara Reyes-Ton
Digital Content Editor, BioLogos
Organizer
Katy Hinman
Director, Dialogue on Science, Ethics, and Religion, American Association for the Advancement of Science