Research

Publications

Fuller, S. Indigenous Ontologies: Gullah Geechee Traditions and Cultural Practices of Abundance, Human Ecology Journal. February 2021

Fuller, S., et al., Investigating Best Practices: Doctoral Fieldwork Experiences With and Without Indigenous Communities in Settler-colonial Societies. ACME Journal. December 2019

Fuller, S. Don’t Know Nothin’ ‘bout Subsistence. We Gullah! Construction of Self as Indigenous in the Americas. Critical analysis of imported African land-based cultural practices that can be defined in an unexpected way as indigenous. Relating Worlds of Racism: Dehumanisation, Belonging, and the Normativity of Whiteness edited volume, publisher Palgrave 2019

Fuller, S., Review of Karjanen, D., The Servant Class City: Urban Revitalization versus the Working Poor in San Diego. H-Citizenship, H-Net Reviews. October 2017

Selected Presentations and Abstracts

Gullah Geechee Indigenous Articulation in the Americas Research Abstract GGIAA

Ethnographies of Belonging: Indigeneity and Blackness in the Americas, Conference Abstract Abstract_Belonging

Fuller, S. Geographies of Settler Colonialism. Paper: Indigeneity, Diaspora, and Belonging. American Association of Geographers Conference. New Orleans April 2018

Chair: Fuller, S. Decolonization Epistemologies: Black Women Creating Space Between the Words. American Association of Geographers Conference. New Orleans April 2018

Fuller, S.  Rethinking Science and Nature: A Roundtable. American Society for Environmental History Conference. Riverside March 2018

Fuller, S. Categorizing the Characteristics of Blackness: Color, Colorism and Social Liminality in the Diaspora. Paper: We Gullah! Construction of Self as Indigenous in the Americas. Association for the Study of the Worldwide African Diaspora Conference. Seville, Spain. November 2017

Fuller, S., Race, Indigeneity, and the Social Sciences. Paper: Ethnographies of Belonging: Indigeneity and Blackness in the Americas. Native American and Indigenous Studies Association Conference. Vancouver, Canada June 2017

Fuller, S. Knowledge, Power, Land: Asserting Indigenous Authority through State Resource Institutions. Paper: Shifting Tides, Shifting Power: Gullah Geechee Managing Fisheries. Native American and Indigenous Studies Association Conference. Austin. May 2014

Fuller, S. Exploring Race and Identity through the Confluence of African American and Native American Histories. Native American and Indigenous Studies Association Conference. Saskatoon, Canada June 2013

Fuller, S. Climate Change and Indigenous Peoples: Economy and Policy. Paper: Banking on the Sea: Role of Gullah Geechee Women in the Local Economy. Panel presentation at Association of American Geographers Conference. Los Angeles. April 2013

Fuller, S. Contested Landscapes and Indigenous Peoples: Knowledge, Territory, and Sovereignty. Paper: Gullah Geechee Indigenous Articulation. Panel presentation at Association of American Geographers Conference. Los Angeles. April 2013

Fuller, S. Livelihood Strategies: Gullah Geechee Fisherwomen in South Carolina. Paper presented Black Environmental Thought Conference. University of Minnesota. Minneapolis. September 2012

Fuller, S. De Gullah/Geechee Nation: The Living Estuary of the Sea Islands: A Cultural Connection to Restoration. Panel presentation at Restore America’s Estuaries Conference. Tampa. October 2012. Available at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NNSBVCgc8xk

Fuller, S. Improving Coastal Management Outcomes: Discussions on Diversity within the Profession & Engagement of Diverse Stakeholders, Presented at Coastal Management Zone conference, Chicago. July 2011

Fuller, S. Unusual Suspects: Resurgence, Resilience and Regeneration in the face of Climate Change. Served on symposium planning committee. University of California Berkeley, College of Natural Resources. Berkeley. October  2010

Fuller, S. Transforming Our Communities: An inclusive approach to environmental justice. Presented at Environmental Justice Symposium. Boalt Hall Law School, University of California Berkeley. Berkeley. March 2005

Media

Toxic Fish and Poor Communities: An interview with Sharon Fuller. Mother Jones by L. Macabasco 2006.

Something Fishy: Contaminated Waters Threaten a Lifeline for Low-Income People of Color, ColorLines, Summer 2005.

Richmond Youth Fight for the Environment. Oakland Tribune. August 9, 2004. Available at https://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P2-19488393.html

Fishing a Toxic Bay, San Francisco Chronicle, April 15, 2004. Available at http://www.sfgate.com/bayarea/article/PERSONAL-PERSPECTIVE-Fishing-a-toxic-bay-2793046.php

Sharon Fuller of Ma’at Youth Academy Honored as 2004 Woman of the Year. prweb. March 24, 2004. http://www.prweb.com/releases/2004/03/prweb113353.htm