Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Niara Sudarkasa

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Occupation
  
Anthropologist

Name
  
Niara Sudarkasa

Role
  
Anthropologist


Niara Sudarkasa archivelasentinelnetUserFilesFile0510121Niar

Full Name
  
Gloria Albertha Marshall

Born
  
August 14, 1938 (age 85) (
1938-08-14
)
Fort Lauderdale, Florida

Books
  
The Strength of Our Mothers: African & African American Women & Families : Essays and Speeches

Education
  
Columbia University, Oberlin College

Niara Sudarkasa (born August 14, 1938) is an American scholar, educator, Africanist and anthropologist who holds thirteen honorary degrees, and is the recipient of nearly 100 civic and professional awards. In 1989 Essence magazine named her "Educator for the '90s", and in 2001 she became the first African American to be installed as a Chief in the historic Ife Kingdom of the Yoruba of Nigeria.

Biography

Niara Sudarkasa was born Gloria Albertha Marshall on August 14, 1938, in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. Niara was a gifted student who skipped several grades in elementury. She graduated from high school and accepted early admission to Fisk University on a Ford Foundation scholarship when she was 15 years old. She left Fisk and transferred to Oberlin, earning an associates degree in anthropology and English from Oberlin in 1957. She received her master's degree in anthropology from Columbia University. While completing her Ph.D. she taught at Columbia University, becoming the first African-American woman to teach there when she earned her Ph.D. in 1964.

Soon after earning her Ph.D., Sudarkasa was appointed assistant professor of anthropology at New York University, the first black woman to hold that position. She was also the first African American to be appointed to the Department of Anthropology at the University of Michigan in 1969. While at Michigan, she became involved in civil rights and student issues. When she left Michigan in 1986, Sudarkasa became the first female to serve as president of Lincoln University in Pennsylvania.

During Surdarkasa's presidency at Lincoln University the school increased enrolment, strengthened its undergraduate and international programs and put into place an ambitious minority recruitment effort.

In the late 1990s, after concerns over improper use of university funds, nepotism and other financial irregularities led the state to withhold its $11m budget contribution, Sudarkas resigned from Lincoln University. She was succeeded by interim president James Donaldson, and then by Ivory Nelson.

Currently she is the Distinguished Scholar-in-Residence at the African American Research Library and Cultural Center in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, and sits on the board of directors for several organizations including the Academy for Educational Development.

References

Niara Sudarkasa Wikipedia