Carolyn B. Fluehr-Lobban (/ˈflʌr ˈloʊbən/;[1] née Fluehr; born January 6, 1945)[2] is an American anthropologist,[3] beekeeper, and a co-founder and past president of the Sudan Studies Association.
[7] Fluehr-Lobban is also a lecturer at the Naval War College, in Newport, Rhode Island.
She is married to the archaeologist Richard Lobban, whom she met in Temple University's Department of Anthropology.
[16][17] Together, they established the Dr. Richard A. Lobban Jr. and Dr. Carolyn B. Fluehr-Lobban Pre-Dissertation Research Award in Anthropology at Temple University.
[18] Fluehr-Lobban and her husband Richard Lobban have helped place 170 acres in permanent watershed protection for Newfound Lake.