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・ Joyce Kennedy
・ Joyce Kilmer
・ Joyce Kilmer Memorial Bad Poetry Contest
・ Joyce Kilmer Memorial Forest
・ Joyce Kilmer Middle School
・ Joyce Kilmer-Slickrock Wilderness
・ Joyce King
・ Joyce Kirby
・ Joyce Kozloff
・ Joyce Kulhawik
・ Joyce Kurtz
・ Joyce L. Kennard
・ Joyce L. Stevens
・ Joyce La Mers
・ Joyce Laboso
Joyce Ladner
・ Joyce Lambert
・ Joyce Lankester Brisley
・ Joyce Lebra
・ Joyce Lee
・ Joyce Lester
・ Joyce Lester Shield
・ Joyce Lewis
・ Joyce Lussu
・ Joyce M. Broadsword
・ Joyce M. Roche
・ Joyce M. Woollard
・ Joyce MacIver
・ Joyce MacKenzie
・ Joyce Maker


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Joyce Ladner : ウィキペディア英語版
Joyce Ladner
Joyce Ann Ladner (born October 12, 1943) is an American civil rights activist, author, civil servant and sociologist.
==Early life and education==
Ladner was born in Battles, Wayne County, Mississippi, on October 12, 1943, and grew up in nearby Hattiesburg. She was raised with four brothers and four sisters. Ladner began school at the age of three and graduated high school in 1960 with her older sister, Dorie. She went to Tougaloo College in Tougaloo, Mississippi, where she earned her B.A. in sociology in 1964, and then to Washington University in St. Louis, where she earned her Ph.D. in 1968.〔("Joyce A. Ladner" ). The Mississippi Writers Page. April 2003.〕 During college, Ladner and her sister Dorie organized civil rights protests alongside Medgar Evers and other students from the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee. She and her sister were arrested and jailed for their activism. She told PBS of her activism in Mississippi:
In 1968, she was appointed assistant professor of sociology and curriculum specialist at the South Illinois University at East St. Louis. In 1969, she became a senior research fellow at the Martin Luther King Center for Nonviolent Social Change in Atlanta, Georgia. Other major research positions that followed include transracial adoption work funded by the Cummins Engine Foundation, and a visiting fellowship at the Metropolitan Applied Research Center.
In 1970, Ladner conducted postdoctoral work as a research associate at the University of Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. In Tanzania, she completed research on "The Roles of Tanzanian Women in Community Development." In 1977, she embarked on a study of "The Impact of the Civil Rights Movement on the Career Patterns of Ex-Activists," which was funded by the Ford Foundation. The next year she served on the committee on Evaluation of Poverty Research at the National Academy of Sciences.
Ladner taught at colleges and universities in places such as Illinois, Connecticut, Tanzania and Washington D.C.〔("Joyce Ladner" ). The History Makers. Retrieved July 11, 2013.〕 She first joined Howard University in 1973, then left for Hunter College, and then returned to Howard in 1981. At Howard she worked for the academic affairs office, served as vice president of academic affairs, and in 1994, was made interim president,〔 becoming the first woman to hold the position at the university. She said she liked the job and was disappointed to be passed over for the full presidency.

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