Anthony Hazard, Jr.
Tony Hazard is Professor of Ethnic Studies and History at Santa Clara University. Dr. Hazard’s research and teaching engage United States history, race and racism, and the history of anthropology. Dr. Hazard is an interdisciplinary historian whose work is steeped in the Black Studies tradition. He has been a Graduate Associate at the Center for the Humanities at Temple University, a Postdoctoral Fellow in Science in Human Culture at Northwestern University, a Library Resident Fellow at the American Philosophical Society, and an Inclusive Excellence Postdoctoral Fellow at Santa Clara University. Dr. Hazard earned the PhD in History at Temple University and the BA in African American Studies and Psychology at Arizona State University. He is the author of two books, Postwar Anti-racism: The U.S., Unesco and “Race,” 1945-1968 (New York: Palgrave, 2012) and Boasians At War: Anthropology, Race, and World War II (New York: Palgrave, 2020). His current research project explores the Afro-Indigenous history of his Narragansett (Rhode Island) ancestors and family from the colonial encounter to the present.
- Ethnic Studies 30: Intro to African American Studies
- Ethnic Studies 133 Malcolm and Martin (cross-listed with HIST 168)
- Ethnic Studies 135: African Americans in Postwar Film (cross-listed with HIST 185)
- Ethnic Studies 149: Civil Rights and Anti-Colonial Movements (cross-listed with HIST 153)
- Ethnic Studies 172: Whiteness Studies in the 21st Century (cross-listed with HIST 183)
- Ethnic Studies 175: Black Power (cross-listed with HIST 113)
- Ethnic Studies 178: Race and World War II (cross-listed with HIST 178)