Ora Marek-Martinez

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ora Marek-Martinez
OccupationIndigenous Archaeologist
TitleAssistant Professor
Academic background
EducationNorthern Arizona University (BA, MA), University of California Berkeley (PhD)
ThesisArchaeology For, By, and With the Navajo People- the Nihook'aa Dine'e' Bila' Ashdlaa'ii Way (2016)
Doctoral advisorMargaret W. Conkey
Academic work
DisciplineArchaeology
Sub-disciplineSouthwest
InstitutionsOffice of Native American Initiatives, NAU
Websitehttps://directory.nau.edu/person/ovm

Ora Marek-Martinez (Diné/Nez Perce/Hopi) is an American archaeologist noted for her leadership in Tribal Historic Preservation and advocating for Indigenous research methods in the U.S. Southwest.[1]

Ora Marek-Martinez began a bachelor's degree in Mechanical Engineering at Northern Arizona University in 1996, before switching to Anthropology and History.[2] She graduated in 2001 and then earned a master's in Applied Cultural Anthropology in 2003, also from Northern Arizona University. During her M.A. program she also participated in the Navajo Nation Archaeology Department (NNAD) Student Training Program which was run in cooperation with NAU.[3] She received her doctorate in Anthropology-Archaeology in 2016 from the University of California Berkeley.[1] Her doctoral dissertation serves as the foundation for her community-based archaeological practice for, by, and with the Navajo people.[4]

Career

Selected Bibliography

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI