Dr. William Westerman is a folklorist, applied anthropologist, and former museum director with interests in refugees, human rights, social justice, and indigenous and immigrant communities. He has an AB from Harvard University and an AM and PhD in folklore and folklife from the University of Pennsylvania. He is currently an assistant professor in the Department of Sociology, Anthropology, and Social Work at New Jersey City University, where he is also the coordinator of a program in ethnic and immigration studies. Previously, he was a lecturer in Princeton University’s writing program; he has also taught in a master’s program in cultural sustainability at Goucher College and the Macaulay Honors College of the City University of New York. Besides, he is a faculty member in the New Jersey Scholars Program for exceptional high school students. He has served as the director of the National Cambodian American Heritage Museum and Killing Fields Memorial in Chicago and at the Drake House Museum of Plainfield. Other experiences include research and curating at the Philadelphia Folklore Project and the National Museum of American Jewish History.
Dr. Westerman’s teaching and research interests encompass immigration, with a special focus on refugee rights and the role of arts and culture in immigrant and refugee communities; ethnographic museums of immigration; indigenous rights and language sustainability; folklore and the sociology of culture; applied anthropology and social justice; and visual sociology. He is also the editor of Transformations: The Journal of Inclusive Scholarship and Pedagogy. His publications include articles on applied folklore, pedagogy, museum studies, and Cambodian-American arts and culture. He is the co-author of The Giant Never Wins: Lakhon Bassac (Cambodian Folk Opera) in Philadelphia (Philadelphia Folklore Project, 1994). He has also curated numerous exhibitions, most notably “Fly to Freedom: The Paper Art of the Golden Venture Refugees” at the Museum of Chinese in America, in New York, as well as on its national tour.
In his Fulbright-Nehru fellowship, Dr. Westerman is affiliated with the Department of Cultural and Creative Studies at North-Eastern Hill University in Shillong, Meghalaya. As a part of his project, he is delivering lectures on folklore and the sociology of culture and on the practical application of folkloristics in social work. Besides, he is mentoring folklore students in their master’s and doctoral programs. He is also undertaking collaborative ethnographic research with native scholars, particularly in the areas of indigenous museums, oral literatures, folklore curriculum, and language preservation.