Sarah Fox

PhD Student
launchDownwind
Thematic Research Area
Regional Research Area

About

Sarah Fox, author of Downwind: A People’s History of the Nuclear West (University of Nebraska Press 2014, paperback 2018) is a Killam Doctoral scholar and a PhD candidate in history at University of British Columbia. Her current research examines the contested terrain of ecological restoration, remediation, and environmental justice in the Pacific Northwest. Fox continues to work on downwinder and radiogenic community issues in her capacity as a board member of the nonprofit group Consequences of Radiation Exposure (CORE). She holds a master’s degree in History and Folklore from Utah State University and a bachelors degree in American Studies from the Evergreen State College. She recently concluded a two-year term as a guest faculty in University of Puget Sound’s Environmental Policy and Decision-Making Program.


Sarah Fox

PhD Student
launchDownwind
Thematic Research Area
Regional Research Area

About

Sarah Fox, author of Downwind: A People’s History of the Nuclear West (University of Nebraska Press 2014, paperback 2018) is a Killam Doctoral scholar and a PhD candidate in history at University of British Columbia. Her current research examines the contested terrain of ecological restoration, remediation, and environmental justice in the Pacific Northwest. Fox continues to work on downwinder and radiogenic community issues in her capacity as a board member of the nonprofit group Consequences of Radiation Exposure (CORE). She holds a master’s degree in History and Folklore from Utah State University and a bachelors degree in American Studies from the Evergreen State College. She recently concluded a two-year term as a guest faculty in University of Puget Sound’s Environmental Policy and Decision-Making Program.


Sarah Fox

PhD Student
launchDownwind
Thematic Research Area
Regional Research Area
About keyboard_arrow_down

Sarah Fox, author of Downwind: A People’s History of the Nuclear West (University of Nebraska Press 2014, paperback 2018) is a Killam Doctoral scholar and a PhD candidate in history at University of British Columbia. Her current research examines the contested terrain of ecological restoration, remediation, and environmental justice in the Pacific Northwest. Fox continues to work on downwinder and radiogenic community issues in her capacity as a board member of the nonprofit group Consequences of Radiation Exposure (CORE). She holds a master’s degree in History and Folklore from Utah State University and a bachelors degree in American Studies from the Evergreen State College. She recently concluded a two-year term as a guest faculty in University of Puget Sound’s Environmental Policy and Decision-Making Program.