Terence Keel is a professor at the University of California, Los Angeles where he works in the Department of African American Studies and the UCLA Institute for Society and Genetics. His teaching, research, and community engagement are concerned with abolishing discrimination within our society. For the last decade, Terence has become an outspoken critic of how racism haunts science, public policy, art, and even our religious beliefs. He is the author of Divine Variations: How Christian Thought Became Racial Science (Stanford University Press), winner of the 2021 Iris Book Award, sponsored by the Center for Religion & the Human at Indiana University Bloomington, as well as the 2018 Choice Award for Outstanding Academic Title, sponsored by the American Library Association. Terence is the co-editor of the forthcoming book, Critical Approaches to Science and Religion.

In 2020, he founded the Lab for BioCritical Studies—an interdisciplinary space committed to studying how discrimination, inequality, and resilience are embodied in human and nonhuman life. Terence is also the Advisor for Structural Competency and Innovation for the UCLA Simulation Center at the David Geffen School of Medicine. His guidance helps healthcare providers, students and trainees understand how symptoms, clinical problems, diseases and attitudes towards patients and health systems are influenced by upstream social determinants of health, such as economic or social conditions affecting health status.

He has received several awards and honors including the 2018 Harold J. Plous Award for Distinguished Scholarship and Teaching at the University of California, Santa Barbara as well as named a Fellow of the International Society for Science and Religion.

Drawing on the collaborative work of his Lab for BioCritical Studies, Terence is writing a third book titled Society after Nihilism: The Medicolegal Erasure of Accountability at the End of American Life. In this book, he identifies troubling forms of discrimination that haunt public record laws, autopsy science, and unarmed death while under the custody of law enforcement.

Terence is an alum of Xavier of Louisiana, earned his Master of Theological Studies from Harvard Divinity School, and holds a PhD from Harvard University under the Committee on the Study of Religion, the Department of the History of Science, and the Department of African and African American Studies.

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Twitter: @TerenceKeel

Instagram: @terencedouglaskeel