Fatimah Jackson is an African American scientist who is a biologist and anthropologist. She studies African plants that have have uses as medicines and food. In her career as a scientist, she is often found in Africa doing her studies. She studies common African foods, such as cassava, which helps prevent outbreaks of Malaria, a deadly disease. She takes small portions of these foods and plants back to her lab to investigate and see how they work. She specifically studies anthropology, in other words she studies the origin of mankind, the customs and beliefs, and many more. She is also a biologist which focuses on the uses of African plants. Ms. Jackson has achieved many things and won several awards. In 2009 she was awarded the Nick Norgan Award for having the best article published in annals of human biology. She was also recognized three years later in 2012 for winning the Ernest E. Just prize in public and medical help. She has helped our society by teaching at many universities in The United States, such as Cornell University, Berkeley University, University of Maryland, University of …show more content…
But she herself comes from different cultures and ways of life. She is African American, Native American, and a bit European. When she was a graduate student, Fatimah converted to the Muslim religion, and she and her six children and her husband, Robert Jackson. Dr. Jackson takes her work very seriously. She says it’s directed towards “improving the way my fellow humans look at variation.” She feels she has a strong responsibility towards helping creatures on the planet, and she wants to create an appreciation for diversity among humans, she really hopes that her work will help people “get along better and appreciate the variation that exists and get to know each other better, and see this variation as part of our collective wealth, rather than our collective burden.” Those were her exact words of what she wants to