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CSDE Research Affiliate

Matthew Alexander Randolph

Assistant Professor of African American Studies, Department of American Ethnic Studies
University of Washington

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CSDE Research Areas:

  • Environments and Populations
  • Migration and Settlement


    Matthew (Matt) Alexander Randolph is an Assistant Professor of African American Studies in the Department of American Ethnic Studies at the University of Washington in Seattle. After graduating with a BA in History and Spanish at Amherst College, Matt received MA and PhD degrees in History from Stanford University, where he served as a graduate fellow for the Department of African & African American Studies and traveled to France as an exchange student at the École Normale Supérieure in Paris.   Building on his dissertation (Harboring Freedom: African American Migration and Imperial Rivalries in Samaná Bay, 1822-1871), Matt is writing his first book on the transplantation and transformation of Black identity that took place as part of nineteenth-century Haitian emigration initiatives. In the pursuit of citizenship and prosperity otherwise unimaginable in the antebellum United States, African American migrants relocated to Haiti and (re)created a sense of home as stewards of the land and water of the Samaná peninsula (in what is now the Dominican Republic). This research engages with and contributes to several fields and discourses, including Black Geographies/Ecologies, Caribbean Studies, Pan-Africanism, Black Internationalism, and Afrofuturism.   In addition, Matt has ongoing interests in the crossroads of race and nation during Parisian world’s fairs; the U.S. Civil Rights and Black Power movements; human rights history; and the global travels of Frederick Douglass. Matt’s scholarship has been supported by a 2022 Fulbright grant for the Dominican Republic, which complemented travel to archives across the United States, France, and Spain. He has presented his research beyond the United States at conferences in several countries, including the Dominican Republic, Martinique, and Senegal. In 2025, he received the Du Bois-Wells Graduate Student Paper Prize from AAIHS (African American Intellectual History Society) for his conference paper, “Migrating Mariners: African American Emigration, Maritime Poetics, and the Afterlives of Slavery on Caribbean Shores.”