Research

A Vibrant Research Community

 

At the CSWS New Faculty Welcome, University of Oregon faculty affiliates speak about the impact CSWS has had on their careers and research over the years.

 

 

Faculty Research

CSWS affiliate Tien-Tien Yu investigates dark matter

Research by University of Oregon particle physicist and CSWS affiliate Tien-Tien Yu is featured in Oregon News this week. Yu is investigating the mysterious material known as dark matter. She co-founded an experiment called SENSEI, which uses highly sensitive detectors similar to those found in digital cameras to look for dark matter candidates and interactions.

Graduate Research

Malvya Chintakindi (center) interviews three of her participants on a recent trip to Hyderabad, India / photo provided by Chintakindi.

Dreams Deferred: Navigating Aspiration and Constraint in Urban India’s Margins

by Malvya Chintakindi, PhD Candidate, Department of Anthropology

At age 33, Renuka’s face carried the weathering of a life spent crossing multiple thresholds—between others’ homes and her own, between caste boundaries that marked her as both essential and polluting, between dreams of education and the harsh reality of survival.

Undergraduate Research

Students and faculty mentors invited to Feb 18 info session

CSWS is hosting an Information Session for students an faculty mentors interested in applying for our newest research initiative—the CSWS Undergraduate STEAM Summer Fellowship.

Over summer, undergraduate fellows collaborate with University of Oregon faculty mentors to develop interdisciplinary research and creative projects that engage with STEAM fields—science, technology, engineering, arts, and mathematics. Our STEAM fellows approach their inquiry with gender and intersectionality as an analytical framework. 

Spotlight

Panelists for the “Gender as Target” event were, from left, Anita Chari, Alison Gash, Kaito Campos de Novais, and Brennan Fitzgerald / photo by Cing Dim

Gender as Target: US 2024 Elections and Aftermath

On Feb. 28, 2025, CSWS hosted “Gender as Target: US 2024 Elections and Aftermath,” a teach-in featuring University of Oregon faculty and Graduate Teaching Fellows Federation (GTFF) representatives discussing how gender and race discourses informed the 2024 election cycle and ways we can collectively respond to the barrage of policies impacting immigrant and LGBTQ+ communities today.
Pictured is Stephanie Mastrostefano.

CSWS Spotlight:  Stephanie Mastrostefano

CSWS Director Sangita Gopal speaks to Dr. Stephanie Mastrostefano about her work at Oregon's LAIKA Studios as a Senior CG Animation Coordinator, how she made a career shift from academia to industry, and advice for anyone considering doing the same.

Pictured is Valerie Sahakian

CSWS Spotlight: Valerie Sahakian

CSWS director Sangita Gopal talks to Associate Professor Valerie Sahakian about her work in the Department of Earth Sciences at the University of Oregon, and as lead investigator at Cascadia Region Earthquake Science Center (CRESCENT). 

light bulb

CSWS Launches New Faculty Grants

For AY 2026-27, the Center for the Study of Women in Society (CSWS) is launching a new research fellowship that provides University of Oregon faculty with one course release for a term of reduced or no teaching to pursue work on any aspect of the study of women and/or gender.

CSWS Research Grant Fellows

The Necessity of Oppositional Care for Transnational Feminist Politics

by Rhiannon Lindgren, PhD Candidate, Department of Philosophy
When one defines an activity as a “labor of love,” we are often referring to an experience that combines feelings of joy, difficulty, fatigue, and gratitude. While the labor of love is a sacrifice, the prepositional qualifier of “love” indicates the motivation for such a sacrifice. One labors out of a sense of love that is both inspiration and reward for a tiresome endeavor.

Gender, Social Politics, and Media Sensationalism in 19th-Century American Murder Ballads

by Nat Ivy, Master’s Student, Folklore and Public Culture Program
Murder ballads have been around for centuries. A murder ballad is a narrative song that tells the story of murder. However, as with any vernacular tradition, there’s a lot more to them than that. American murder ballads are most associated with Appalachian folk music, emerging in the early 19th century as Scottish and Irish immigrants made new homes in North America. As the century progressed, these Appalachian songs blended with African musical traditions, producing blues ballads.

Migrant Memories: Community and Identity Building in a New Territory

By Liesl Cohn De León, PhD Student, Department of Anthropology

The Guatemalan migrant population in the United States has been growing in the last few decades. Although Guatemalans started coming to the US in the 1980s during the Guatemalan Civil War (1960–1996), between 2010 and 2020 the Guatemalan population increased by about 60%.1 According to the 2020 Census, about 1,683,093 Guatemalans live in the United States. However, there are estimates2 of at least 3,256,047 people from Guatemala living in the US.

CSWS Faculty Affiliate Research

Cover of "American Philosophies: From Wounded Knee to the Present, 2nd Ed."

American Philosophies: From Wounded Knee to the Present, 2nd Ed.

American Philosophies offers the first historically framed introduction to the tradition of American philosophy and its contemporary engagement with the world. Born out of the social and political turmoil of the Civil War, American philosophy was a means of dealing with conflict and change. In the turbulence of the 21st century, this remains as relevant as ever. Placing the work of present-day American philosophers in the context of a history of resistance, through a philosophical tradition marked by a commitment to pluralism, fallibilism, and liberation, this book tells the story of philosophies shaped by major events and illustrates the ways in which philosophy is relevant to lived experience."
Author
Erin McKenna
Scott Pratt
Publication
2025
Cover of "The Persistence of Masks: Surrealism and the Ethnography of the Subject"

The Persistence of Masks: Surrealism and the Ethnography of the Subject

"In interwar Paris, the encounter between surrealism and the nascent discipline of ethnology led to an intellectual project now known as ‘ethnographic surrealism.’ In The Persistence of Masks, Joyce Suechun Cheng considers the ethnographic dimension of the surrealist movement in its formative years through a close look at the reviews Documents (1929–30) and Minotaure (1933–39) as well as the surrealist writer-turned-ethnographer Michel Leiris’s ethnography of possession."
Author
Joyce Suechun Cheng
Publication
2025
Cover of "Blacks Against Brown: The Intra-racial Struggle over Segregated Schools in Topeka, Kansas"

Blacks Against Brown: The Intra-racial Struggle over Segregated Schools in Topeka, Kansas

"Blacks Against Brown documents the intra-racial conflict among Black Topekans over the city’s segregated schools. Black resistance to school integration challenges conventional narratives about Brown by highlighting community concerns about economic and educational opportunities for Black educators and students and Black residents’ pride in all-Black schools. This history of the local story behind Brown v. Board contributes to a literature that provides a fuller and more complex perspective on African Americans and their relationship to Black education and segregated schools during the Jim Crow era."
Author
Charise L. Cheney
Publication
2024
Cover of "Emergency in Transit: Witnessing Migration in the Colonial Present"

Emergency in Transit: Witnessing Migration in the Colonial Present

Emergency in Transit responds to the crisis framings that dominate migration debates in the global north. This capacious, interdisciplinary study reformulates Europe’s so-called ‘migrant crisis’ from a sudden disaster to a site of contested witnessing, where competing narratives threaten, uphold, or reimagine migrant rights. Focusing on Italy, a crucial port of arrival, Eleanor Paynter draws together testimonials from ethnographic research—alongside literature, film, and visual art—to interrogate the colonial, racial logics that inform emergency responses to migration."
Author
Eleanor Paynter
Publication
2024

CSWS Guest Speaker Interviews

Interview with Literary Agent, Anjali Singh, and Comic Artist, Shay Mirk

CSWS interviews Literary Agent, Anjali Singh, and Comic Artist, Shay Mirk on feminism in the publishing industry, and the power of comics and creativity. These interviews were recorded on Thursday Nov 2, 2023 as part of CSWS's 50th anniversary event series.

Interview with Arlene Stein

An interview with Dr. Arlene Stein, author of "The Stranger Next Door," on the occasion of her talk "The Right's Gender Wars & the Assault on Democracy" delivered at the University of Oregon on March 13, 2023. The talk was presented by the Center for the Study of Women in Society and the Wayne Morse Center.