Susan Hirsch

She is a professor of conflict resolution and anthropology at George Mason University, where she holds the Vernon M. and Minnie I. Lynch Chair in the Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter School for Peace and Conflict Resolution.

[3] Hirsch's first book, Pronouncing and Persevering, focused on men's and women's language in coastal Kenyan courts.

She uses detailed language analysis to show this, drawing on linguistic anthropology.

[4] Her second book In Moment of Greatest Calamity, uses linguistic anthropological analysis but also first-person experience to describe her experience as the widow of a victim of 1998 United States embassy bombings in Tanzania—and as a participant and observer of the subsequent trial of the suspected bombers.

[5] It won the 2007 Herbert Jacobs Book Prize of the Law & Society Association.