Edible Activism Faculty and FIG Assistant

Professor Portrait

FIG College Connections Faculty: Lynn Stephen - Anthropology, College of Arts and Sciences

Lynn Stephen is Philip H. Knight Chair and Distinguished Professor of Arts and Sciences, a Professor of Anthropology, and a participating faculty member in Indigenous, Race, and Ethnic Studies, Latin American Studies, and Women’s and Gender Studies. She founded the Center for Latino/a and Latin American Studies (CLLAS, http://cllas.uoregon.edu/) and served as director for 9 years (2007-2016). She served as President Elect, President, and Past President of the 12,000 member Latin  American Studies Association from 2017-2020.

Her scholarly work centers on the impact of globalization, migration, nationalism and the politics of culture on indigenous communities in the Americas. She engages political-economy, ethnohistory, gender analysis, and ethnography to create a hemispheric lens on major challenges faced by indigenous peoples (out-migration, tourism, economic development, and low-intensity war) and their creative responses to these challenges. Her work engages the history of Latino communities spread across multiple borders through her concept of transborder communities and migrations. She has a strong commitment to collaborative research projects that produce findings accessible to the wider public and her work includes films such as Sad Happiness: Cinthya’s Transborder Journey (https://vimeo.com/154235511) and websites (see http://faceofoaxaca.uoregon.edu/introduction/) as well as scholarly publications. She recently finished a book titled Stories that Make History: Remembering Mexico through Elena Poniatowska’s Crónicas, that will be published by Duke University Press. With co-editor Shannon Speed, she is completing an edited book provisionally titled, Heightened States of (In)justice: Indigenous Women Seeking Gendered Justice,” to be published by University of Arizona Press.

Her current collaborative research explores the structural opportunities and challenges that facilitate and impede indigenous women’s access to gendered justice in Guatemala and the U.S. She explores this question through comparative research on two routes to gendered justice that some indigenous Guatemalan women have used: specialized courts for Crimes of Femicide and other Forms of Violence Against Women in Guatemala and gender-based asylum in U.S. immigration courts. Fieldwork is ongoing in several locations in Guatemala as well as in the states of Oregon and Washington in the U.S.  Stephen has authored or edited 14 books, three special journal issues and over 80 scholarly articles. She also works actively as a pro-bono expert witness, primarily for indigenous women and men seeking asylum to escape violence in Mexico and Central America. She has served as an expert witness on more than 80 asylum cases or the past six years.

Email: stephenl@uoregon.edu
 

Student Portrait

FIG Assistant: Mira Cross

Hello, all! My name is Mira, and I am so excited to be the FIG Assistant for “Edible Activism.” This is my second year at the University of Oregon, and I was a student in this FIG my freshman year (spoiler alert, I loved it so much I decided to apply to lead it!). I’m double majoring in economics and environmental studies, and am interested in sustainable agriculture and environmental justice. 

I grew up across the Pacific Northwest before moving to Eugene with my family in middle school. Over the past 8 years living here, I’ve gotten to know the area and am delighted to be able to show you around this fall! I love this city, and I love exploring the trails in the surrounding region even more!

As someone whose first year of college was interrupted by a pandemic, I know firsthand how stressful your first year of college can be. I am happy to answer any of your questions about the Edible Activism FIG, or about your transition to life here at the University! Go Ducks!

Email: mcross7@uoregon.edu