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Faculty
Jocelyn Brown

Jocelyn Brown

Assistant Professor
African American Studies

Education

  • Ph.D. in Gerontology from the University of Maryland Baltimore
  • M.A. in Applied Sociology from the University of Maryland Baltimore County
  • M.S. in Applied Psychology from the University of Baltimore
  • B.A. in Psychology from Shepherd University

Courses Taught

  • AAS 1060 – Introduction to African American Studies
  • AAS 4693 – Legal Policy and Disparities in the American Health Care System
  • HLTH – Long Term Care Administration
  • AAS 3460 – Black Men and Masculinities
  • AAS – The Black Woman

Biography

Dr. Jocelyn Brown is an Assistant Professor of African American Studies at Ohio University with training in gerontology, applied sociology, and applied psychology. Originally from West Virginia, her scholarship centers Black Appalachian life across the life course. She has a particular focus on health disparities, structural racism, and the political-economic conditions shaping Black communities in Appalachia, the wider U.S., and the African diaspora.

Research Interests

Dr. Brown’s research bridges qualitative and community-engaged methods to document Black experiences often flattened or ignored in policy and institutional decision-making. Her current work includes an interview-based project examining Black alumni, staff, and faculty experiences of belonging, institutional betrayal, and legacy amid contemporary rollbacks of diversity initiatives in higher education. She also supports the recovery and analysis of community archives and oral history initiatives documenting African American presence in the Ohio River Valley and Appalachia. In addition, she is developing an interdisciplinary undergraduate Certificate in Health Disparities that equips students to analyze inequity across race, class, gender, geography, and policy.

Alongside academic work, Dr. Brown is writing a book-in-progress, Sourdough and Slavery, which explores bread, labor, race, and power through Black feminist analysis and Appalachian foodways. She is also the editor of Miscarriages for Black Girls, a diasporic collection centering Black girls’, women’s, and birthing people’s narratives of pregnancy loss through essays, poetry, and testimony.

Publications