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For five decades CSWS has funded feminist scholarship at the University of Oregon. Our mission is simple: we create, fund, share, and support research that addresses the complicated nature of gender identities and inequalities.

Anita Hill
WATCH: Reflections on Anita Hill's 2024 Lorwin Lecture
Feminist Futures event
WATCH: Feminist Futures, an evening of song and dance by SOMD faculty
JSMA Feminist Futures exhibit
WATCH: Feminist Futures at the Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art
Tina Brown
WATCH: Reflections on Tina Brown, 2024 Johnston Lecture

Create

Our faculty and student affiliates generate wide-ranging research on the complexity of women’s lives and the intersecting nature of gender identities and inequalities. Discover what we are working on.

Fund

For five decades, we have funded feminist scholarship at the University of Oregon. Read about our present opportunities and past awards

Share

As a research center, we disseminate new knowledge on the complicated nature of gender identities and inequalities with other scholars and educators, the public, policymakers, and activists. Keep in touch with the latest news, publications, and media.

Support

Through event programming and special initiatives, we foster networking, collaboration, and mentorship within our vibrant community of feminist scholars.  Learn more about how to get involved.

Upcoming Events

CSWS Noon Talk: Margaryta Golovchenko

"Rosa Bonheur’s Multimodal Menagerie" — The celebrated animal painter Rosa Bonheur (1822-1899) was a prolific artist. Her paintings and sketches capture an array of animals that she encountered in a variety of settings, including on the grounds of her chateau in Thomery, France. Bonheur’s dynamic yet intimate portrayals of her animal subjects capture their individuality and speak to a deeper level of care for the animals being depicted.

Feb 19 - 12:00pm
Hendricks 330 (CSWS Jane Grant Room)

CSWS Noon Talk: Alisa Freedman

"Telling the Stories of Vietnamese Women Educators and Their New Fields" This new project tells the personal stories of female educators who are advancing gender equality in Vietnam by establishing academic fields based on cross-cultural knowledge, such as gender studies. Vietnam is witnessing the rise of a remarkable generation of female professors, who were born in the 1980s, grew up during national growth, and earned graduate degrees in the 2010s. They have increased knowledge production in Vietnam and improved women’s roles in the workforce.

Feb 26 - 12:00pm
Hendricks 330 (CSWS Jane Grant Room)

Gender as Target: US 2024 Elections and Aftermath

CSWS hosts a teach-in on gender and politics in the 2024 election cycle and how the new political landscape is shaping up for important feminist issues. Panelists: Professor Alison Gash, Political Science; Associate Professor Anita Chari, Political Science; Kaito Campos de Novais, Anthropology; Brennan Fitzgerald, Chemistry and Biochemistry. 

Free and open to the public. Please register here (and get free food during the event)! 

Feb 28 - 4:00pm

News

Feb. 28 teach-in to address post-election politics impacting minority groups

On Feb. 28, the Center for the Study of Women in Society (CSWS) presents “Gender as Target: US 2024 Elections and Aftermath,” a teach-in featuring University of Oregon faculty and GTFF representatives discussing how gender and race discourses informed the recent election cycle and ways we can collectively respond to the barrage of policies impacting immigrant and LGBTQ+ communities today. 

Feb. 12 info session for new CSWS undergraduate fellowship

An info session will be held 3 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 12, in 330 Hendricks (CSWS Jane Grant Room) for students and advisors interested in applying to the 2025 CSWS Undergraduate STEAM Summer Fellowship.

Launching this year with funding from our 50th anniversary Duckfunder campaign, the new fellowship is intended to create opportunities for cross disciplinary collaborations among science, technology, engineering, arts, and mathematics (STEAM) faculty and students on campus and to enhance pathways for underrepresented students in STEAM to succeed.

Julie Weise receives NEH grant

CSWS research fellow Julie Weise, associate professor of history, has been awarded a National Endowment for the Humanities grant. Her project "Guest Worker: Lives across Borders in an Age of Prosperity, 1919-75" examines the experiences of guest workers in the middle of the twentieth century, focused on three cases—Mexicans in the U.S., Spaniards in France, and Malawians in South Africa. 

Videos

CSWS Alumni Testimonials | Barbara Pope
CSWS Alumni Testimonials | Barbara Sutton
CSWS Alumni Testimonials | Cecilia Enjuto Rangel

History of CSWS

For 50 years CSWS has funded feminist scholarship at the University of Oregon. Our mission is simple: we create, fund, and share research that addresses the complicated nature of gender identities and inequalities.

Our ability to do this resulted from an incredible act of generosity. In 1983, the hard work and vision of faculty members working in what was then called the Center for the Sociological Study of Women attracted the attention of Fortune magazine editor William Harris. His endowment, the largest single gift ever given to the university at that time, was given in memory of his wife, Jane Grant, an early feminist and co-founder of The New Yorker.

historical photo, group shot