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Welcome!

You are welcome at the UW Bothell and Cascadia College Campus Library. I am one of the Research & Instruction Librarians here, and I currently act as subject liaison for Engineering and Computer Science.

I am so glad you're checking out this information and trying to contact me. If you have an urgent question or issue, you can seek real-time support with our "Ask a Question" services.

For more information on the Campus Library's current operations, check out our Operations Updates page.

How I Can Help You

Students, here are a few ways I can support you and your work:

  • respond to your questions via e-mail or Zoom

  • consult one-on-one to develop strategies and seek sources for your research projects

    • brainstorm research ideas, questions, and keywords or phrases

    • support your developing a research process that works for you

    • develop citations for integrating your sources into your projects

  • connect you with services and resources available through the Campus Library and beyond

  • for more, please check out our Student Guide


Faculty, here are a few ways I can support you and your work:

Librarian

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Je Salvador
ey/em, they/them, he/him, she/her
Contact:
e-mail: jsalv@uw.edu
phone: 425-352-5241
Website

More Help

Land & Waters Acknowledgment

The UWB & CC Campus Library occupies Land that has been inhabited by Indigenous peoples-- specifically, Sammamish people and their relations-- Since Time Immemorial. This campus is located on property arbitrated in the 1855 Treaty of Point Elliott, by which settler colonists coerced Coast Salish-speaking people to reservations and tribal leaders preserved their peoples’ fishing, gathering, and hunting rights. "There are many creative ways to take restorative measures and even to give [L]and back, such as by returning U.S. national parks to the appropriate tribes" (Sobo, Lambert, & Lambert; 2021). Today, descendants of the Sammamish people are members of several thriving Indigenous communities along the Salish Sea. I honor these communities, their elders, the Land itself, and the shared Waters it touches.


Sobo, E., Lambert, M., & Lambert, V. (2021, October 7). Land acknowledgments meant to honor Indigenous people too often do the opposite – erasing American Indians and sanitizing history instead. The Conversation. https://theconversation.com/land-acknowledgments-meant-to-honor-indigenous-people-too-often-do-the-opposite-erasing-american-indians-and-sanitizing-history-instead-163787