
Breanna Lameman, MPH
Diné
Pronouns: she/her/hers
Position(s):
2nd year PhD student in Health Behaviors Health Promotion and Indigenous Food, Water, and Energy program with the Mel and Enid Zuckerman College of Public Health and Graduate Interdisciplinary Program; Indigenous Data Sovereignty Doctoral Scholar, Collaboratory for Data Governance, and Graduate Research Associate.
Breanna Lameman is Diné from Shiprock, Navajo Nation. She is a second-year PhD student at the University of Arizona in the health behaviors health promotion program with a focus in Indigenous food, water, & energy systems (FEWS). Her life’s work and passion are grounded in the land, Diné cultural teachings, the Diné language, and lived experience. Her research focus is on Indigenous food sovereignty, food security, hydroponics, environmental justice, and the nexus of Indigenous FEWS.
Current Project(s):
Nurturing Plants- Hydroponics enhancing food security and Indigenous food sovereignty
Artificial Intelligence in Agriculture- assisted in policy brief based on tribal leader meet up
Scoping review- assisting in Caleigh’s scoping review on IDSov in Indigenous perspectives on biobanking, specimen storage, and data governance.
Email: blameman@arizona.edu
