Symposium panel: A Discussion on Title IX and Women's Sports
Meet the Panelists
Dr. Ramona Bell is an associate professor and chair of the Department of Critical Race, Gender, and Sexuality Studies at Humboldt State University (HSU) in Arcata, California. Her teaching experience and research interests include Black feminist theories, Black representation and identity formation, and Black popular cultures. Her book Sporting Divas: Black Womanhood, Empowerment & Citizenship (Lexington, 2022) interrogates the cultural messages signified by the representations of women athletes from the African Diaspora. Dr. Bell focuses on the bodies of Black women athletes as sites where the complexities of gender, ethnicity, race, sexuality and nation are constructed and contested. Her various publications examine the intersectional framing of the Black female body and how Black women constantly negotiate, navigate, and strategize through and around these discursive boundaries towards empowerment and liberation. Dr. Bell is the organizer of HSU’s annual Hip Hop Conference.
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Erin Buzuvis is the associate dean for Academic Affairs and a professor of law at Western New England University in Springfield, Massachusetts.  She researches and writes about gender and discrimination in sport, including such topics as participation by transgender and intersex athletes, retaliation against coaches in collegiate women's sports, intersecting sexual orientation and race discrimination in women's athletics, the role of interest surveys in Title IX compliance, and Title IX and competitive cheer. She also teaches courses on administrative law, employment discrimination, Title IX, torts and property.
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Dr. Tracey M. Salisbury is an assistant professor of Interdisciplinary Studies at California State University, Bakersfield, where she has been a faculty member since 2017. She teaches Black Studies and Women Studies courses within the Interdisciplinary Studies program as well as Sport courses for the Kinesiology department. Dr. Salisbury graduated with a BA in Political Science from Holy Cross College and a MA in Sport Administration from Central Michigan University. She earned her PhD in Kinesiology with an emphasis in Sport History and Sport Sociology from the University of North Carolina, Greensboro. Dr. Salisbury’s research interests focus on Black women and sport, Black Feminism, Black popular culture particularly, rap music and hip-hop culture, and film studies focusing principally on horror. Â
Dr. Ramona Bell is an associate professor and chair of the Department of Critical Race, Gender, and Sexuality Studies at Humboldt State University (HSU) in Arcata, California. Her teaching experience and research interests include Black feminist theories, Black representation and identity formation, and Black popular cultures. Her book Sporting Divas: Black Womanhood, Empowerment & Citizenship (Lexington, 2022) interrogates the cultural messages signified by the representations of women athletes from the African Diaspora. Dr. Bell focuses on the bodies of Black women athletes as sites where the complexities of gender, ethnicity, race, sexuality and nation are constructed and contested. Her various publications examine the intersectional framing of the Black female body and how Black women constantly negotiate, navigate, and strategize through and around these discursive boundaries towards empowerment and liberation. Dr. Bell is the organizer of HSU’s annual Hip Hop Conference.
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Erin Buzuvis is the associate dean for Academic Affairs and a professor of law at Western New England University in Springfield, Massachusetts.  She researches and writes about gender and discrimination in sport, including such topics as participation by transgender and intersex athletes, retaliation against coaches in collegiate women's sports, intersecting sexual orientation and race discrimination in women's athletics, the role of interest surveys in Title IX compliance, and Title IX and competitive cheer. She also teaches courses on administrative law, employment discrimination, Title IX, torts and property.
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Dr. Tracey M. Salisbury is an assistant professor of Interdisciplinary Studies at California State University, Bakersfield, where she has been a faculty member since 2017. She teaches Black Studies and Women Studies courses within the Interdisciplinary Studies program as well as Sport courses for the Kinesiology department. Dr. Salisbury graduated with a BA in Political Science from Holy Cross College and a MA in Sport Administration from Central Michigan University. She earned her PhD in Kinesiology with an emphasis in Sport History and Sport Sociology from the University of North Carolina, Greensboro. Dr. Salisbury’s research interests focus on Black women and sport, Black Feminism, Black popular culture particularly, rap music and hip-hop culture, and film studies focusing principally on horror. Â















