Sandra Morgen

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Sandra Morgen
Born (1950-03-31)March 31, 1950
Nationality American
Fields Feminist anthropology
Institutions University of Oregon
Alma mater University of North Carolina, University of Texas

Sandra Morgen (born March 31, 1950[1]) is an American feminist anthropologist. She is a professor of anthropology at the University of Oregon, and previously served as vice provost for graduate studies and associate dean of the Graduate School, and director of the University of Oregon Center for the Study of Women in Society.[2]

She is both known for her work on women's role in academic anthropology and pedagogy,[3][4] and as an academic anthropologist. Her research on women's relation to the state, both in terms of tax reform and the women's health movement, has had an impact on the directions taken by feminist activists on issues such as welfare and reproductive rights.[5]

Education

File:Sandra Morgen.jpg
Sandra Morgen (left) pictured with friend after receiving the University of Oregon Research Faculty Excellence Award for Outstanding Research Career

Morgen received her PhD from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 1982, where she wrote her dissertation on a group of smaller Women's Health clinics that served women of color and poor and working class women. While at UNC Chapel Hill, she was an active member of a socialist feminist group.[6]

Work

Morgen's work includes two books, Stretched Thin: Poor Families, Welfare Work and Welfare Reform, and Into Our Own Hands: The Women's Health Movement in the United States, 1969-1990. Stretched Thin, co-authored with Joan Acker and Jill Weigt in 2009, discusses the impact of welfare reform on poor families in Oregon. Morgen, Acker and Weight argue that neoliberal welfare reform, particularly the doctrine of "personal responsibility", has challenged the economic survival of poor families in the state.[7] In a review of the book in Contemporary Sociology: A Journal of Reviews, Judith Lorber writes that "Stretched Thin not only provides a powerful feminist critique of neoliberalism and conservative understandings of "family values," but importantly reminds us of the multiple perspectives in welfare reform from social workers and administrators to recipients of them."[8]

Into Our Own Hands discusses the Women's health movement in the United States, particularly the evolution of what Morgen posits was initially a movement composed of white middle class women into a movement championed by working-class women, lesbians and women of colour. This, she argues, left female physicians in a precarious position: they did not want to betray the medical profession which had only recently admitted women to its ranks, while also not wanting to betray other women by providing or allowing substandard care.[9] Writing in the National Women's Studies Association Journal, Tanfr Emin-Tunc states that "[b]y placing the women's health movement in its proper historical and sociological contexts, this work ... sheds a ray of light on the current problems in women's health care, such as the continuing racism, homophobia, and classism fostered by a system that does not provide universal coverage".[9]

Awards

Morgen received the Career Award for Outstanding Contributions to the Field of Anthropology of the U.S. from the Society for the Anthropology of North America in 2003,[10] and the University of Oregon Research Faculty Excellence Award for Outstanding Research Career in 2015.[11] She was recognized for her activist and political work on gender and racial inclusivity in the American Anthropological Association, receiving the Squeaky Wheel award from the Committee on the Status of Women in Anthropology and the Committee on Gender Equity in Anthropology in 2006. Her book Into Our Own Hands: The Women's Health Movement in the United States, 1969-1990, which was based on her dissertation, received the Eileen Basker Memorial Prize for a significant contribution to scholarship on gender and health from the Society for Medical Anthropology.[12]

Bibliography

Books

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References

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