The Department of Cultural and Social Studies houses eight academic programs: Criminal Justice, Cultural Anthropology, Global Health Equity, Health Administration and Policy, Justice and Society, Medical Anthropology, Public Health, Social Work and Sociology. Students, faculty and staff in these programs strive to achieve the unique goals and objectives for each program’s areas of study while also recognizing the synergy among them and reflecting the Creighton's Jesuit Catholic mission in their teaching/learning, research, and service. The programs’ special contribution to student learning is increasing their awareness of society and culture as contexts that shape the quality of life. All of the programs aim to mentor students to become agents of social change and prepare them for a wide range of careers.
Our Social Science Data Lab (SSDL) is a teaching and outreach space to connect with the local community and provide consulting. The Biological Anthropology Lab (BIOL) is a research space for analyzing human remains to better understand health, disease, diet, and social class differences.
The Department of Cultural and Social Studies' faculty and students acknowledge our presence on the ancestral territory of the Umóⁿhoⁿ/Omaha Tribe of Nebraska, the Báxoje/Iowa Tribe of Kansas and Nebraska, the Jiwere-Ñút'achi/Otoe-Missouria Tribe, and the P’ᾴ’c’a/Ponca Tribe of Nebraska who have been stewarding this land from the beginning and who continue to do so. We pay respects to their tribal members, elders, and ancestors as well as to those of the Isanti Dakota Oyate/Santee Sioux, the Ho Chunk/Winnebago, and the Sauk and Ne ma ha ha ki/Sac and Fox Nation of Missouri in Kansas and Nebraska, who have endured settlement, forced displacement, dispossession, and cycles of violence as they developed roots in Nebraska, and those of the other Tribes and Nations with historic connections to these lands.1 This acknowledgment asks us to act upon the obligations that we have to past, present, and future generations of Native Nations who have and continue to inhabit, learn, and live on this land, and to identify these obligations in relationship with the Omaha Tribe on whose ancestral territory Creighton University is situated.
1 History Nebraska created a list of Native Nations with documented historical connections to what is today Nebraska (expand to view listing):