Profile picture of Kristin Yarris

Kristin Yarris

Associate Professor, Global Studies and Women's, Gender & Sexuality Studies
Department Head of Women's, Gender and Sexuality Studies
Disability Studies, Global Health Program, Global Studies, School of Global Studies and Languages, Women's Gender and Sexuality Studies
Phone: 541-346-1363
Office: Hendricks Hall 218A
Office Hours: Winter 2025: Wed 12-1pm in Teams (remote, drop in or by appointment*); Th 3:30-4:30pm atrium 1st floor Allen Hall (in person, drop in). <br /> *For an appointment in Teams, send a Teams chat message and indicate possible 1/2 hr. windows of time you are available to meet on Wednesdays 12-4pm.
Research Interests: transnational migration, immigrant rights, social movements, mental health, health equity, wellbeing & social care

Education

PhD Sociocultural Anthropology, UCLA 2011
MA Anthropology, UCLA 2008
MPH Community Health Sciences, UCLA 2004
MA Latin American Studies, UCLA 2004

Research

Scholarly Overview: My ongoing research engagements lie in two main areas: immigrant rights and health equity. In a recent co-edited volume (with Whitney Duncan, University of Northern Colorado), Accompaniment with Im/migrant Communities: Engaged Ethnography (University of Arizona Press, 2024), I outline an approach to engaged ethnography with im/migrant communities using the framework of accompaniment. I am also working on a book project examining social movements for immigrant inclusion, tentatively titled: State of Welcome: Contested Histories of a 'Sanctuary' State. My first ethnographic monograph, Care Across Generations: Solidarity and Sacrifice in Transnational Families (Stanford University Press, 2017), argues that intergenerational caregiving in transnational families is central to the ways in which Nicaraguan families face political-economic and gendered constraints by fostering solidarity across borders and over generations. My scholarly work has been published in academic journals, including The Journal of Refugee Studies, Migration and Society, Medical Anthropology, and the Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology (many of these publications can be found on my website). I am actively involved in professional service that aligns with my values for equity and inclusion, including serving on the UO Dreamers Working Group Steering Committee and on the Steering Committee for the Anthropologists Action Network for Immigrants and Refugees. I also hold appointed roles on the Oregon Health Authority Health Equity Committee and the Lane County Board of Health Public Health Advisory Committee. As a mentor, I seek to use the relationships I have with community and professional organizations to open opportunities for my students, many of whom go on to careers in non-profit organizations, immigration legal advocacy, and international health and development work. 

Areas of Interest: Transnational migration; Immigrant rights and justice; Social movements; Public health and health equity; Global mental health; medical & psychiatric anthropology; humanitarianism and solidarity; gender, care, and caregiving; Nicaragua, México, Latin America.

Teaching

GLBL 270 Global Political Economy; GLBL 340 Global Health & Development; GLBL 463/563 Population Displacement & Global Health; GLBL 465/565 Global Reproductive Health; GLBL 467/567 Global Mental Health; GLBL 410/510 Transnational Migration; GLBL 607 Graduate Research Design and Methods; WGSS 410/510 Abolition, Feminism, and Social Care; WGSS 451/551 Latin American Feminisms and Social Movements