Associate Professor of Native American Studies Office phone:
505 277-3917
Mobile phone:
928-699-4569
greyeyes@unm.edu
Wendy S. Greyeyes, Ph.D. (Diné) is an Associate Professor of Native American Studies at the University of New Mexico. Tódích’íinii nishłí, tódích’íinii báshshíshchíín, tł’ízíłani dashicheii, tó’ahání dashinálí. Tódínéeshzhee’ déé’ naashá. Dr. Greyeyes is a former Nits’áá dóó ídahwiil’aah “ We Are Learning From You” Fellows Program at Diné College, funded by the Mellon Foundation. Dr. Greyeyes formerly worked for the Arizona Governor as a Tribal Liaison for the Arizona Teacher Excellence Program and Homeland Security, a Grassroots Manager for the Indian Self Reliance Initiative in Arizona, a Statistician/Demographer for the Department of Diné Education, a Program Analyst/Chief Implementation Officer for the Bureau of Indian Education, and a research consultant with the Department of Diné Education. She currently is the former chair for the New Mexico Indian Education Advisory Council (IEAC), former President of the Diné Studies Conference, Inc., former President of the American Indian Studies Association (AISA), and faculty advisor for the Kiva Club. Dr. Greyeyes received her M.A. and Ph.D. in Sociology from the University of Chicago and B.A. in Native American Studies from Stanford University. Her research is focused on political sociology, organizational analysis, Indigenous education, tribal sovereignty, and Nation Building. Recent publications include her book titled A History of Navajo Education: Disentangling our Sovereign Body (2022) and The Yazzie Case: Building a Public Education System for Our Indigenous Future (2023), edited by Wendy S. Greyeyes, Lloyd L. Lee and Glenabah Michelle Martinez.