Megan Kleeschulte is an ally and serves the Association on American Indian Affairs as its Project Manager facilitating our Exercising Cultural Sovereignty Education Project, funded by the Mellon Foundation. The Association is the longest serving national Native nonprofit, since 1922. This comprehensive curriculum development project will develop interactive curriculum in the areas of NAGPRA, domestic and international repatriation, and protection of sacred places for in-person and online training. Megan has extensive expertise developing and facilitating curriculum development for numerous grants funded by the National Institute of Justice, and worked as the primary investigator on a Tribal Researcher Capacity Building Grant that was a collaborative endeavor between Native Nations, the University of Tennessee at Knoxville (UTK), and the medical examiner’s office in Pima County, Arizona. The National Institute of Justice grant focused on providing in-person and online training opportunities to medicolegal practitioners on NAGPRA. As a doctoral candidate at the UTK and through her work at the Forensic Anthropology Center at UTK, Megan provides training for domestic and international law enforcement and federal agencies on forensic anthropological and field recovery methodologies.
Megan Kleeschulte, Project manager
Association on American Indian Affairs
6030 Daybreak Circle, Suite A150-217 Clarksville, Maryland 21029 |
The Association is a not-for-profit 501(c)(3) publicly supported organization.
We do not take federal grants. Support our work here. FEIN: 13-1623902 |
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