Lois E. Nettleship is a retired professor of United States history at Fullerton College, a former Woodrow Wilson Fellow, and the recipient of an Innovator of the Year Award for creating ties between local communities and students through historical research and writing projects. She is a former member of the Kansas Committee for the Humanities and a former president of the Kansas History Teachers Association.
""A compelling and insightful history of religious pluralism in American universities. Nettleship offers a fresh take on how Protestants, Catholics, and Jews learned to get along at campuses across the country, with big implications for religious and racial inclusion in the United States and beyond."" - Gene Zubovich, author of Before the Religious Right: Liberal Protestants, Human Rights, and the Polarization of the United States ""Interfaith Inclusion is an important addition to studies of civic education. Using a wealth of primary sources, it documents the largely unknown story of efforts in higher education to promote multi-faith understanding and to educate young people away from religious discrimination."" - Margaret A. Nash, co-author of Mad River, Marjorie Rowland, and the Quest for LGBTQ Teachers' Rights ""This richly detailed case study shows how a small group of liberal, 'mainline' Protestants based at UCLA spread the gospel of 'human brotherhood' to dozens of college and high school campuses, combating anti-Jewish and anti-Catholic prejudice. Lois Nettleship's exhaustive archival research makes Interfaith Inclusion a distinctive contribution to our understanding of mid-20th century American religious history."" - David A. Hollinger, author of Christianity's American Fate: How Religion Became More Conservative and Society More Secular