UNT Faculty Profile: Jara Carrington
Dr. Jara M. Carrington is a Lecturer in the Department of Anthropology and is affiliated
faculty with the Women's and Gender Studies Program at the University of North Texas.
Jara is also a UNT alum; prior to earning her PhD in Anthropology at the University
of New Mexico, she completed her undergraduate education and a M.A. in Applied Anthropology
at UNT. Her teaching and research interests explore the multiple ways that intersecting
hierarchies of sexuality, gender, race, and class shape both the structural conditions
and lived experiences of citizenship and belonging in the United States--a relatively
broad interest that takes many forms. For example, Jara's doctoral research with binational
same sex couples sought to untangle the increasingly complex relationship amongst
social justice oriented non-governmental organizations (NGOs), their constituents,
and U.S. law and policy in neoliberal times. Jara's most recent project is focused
on collecting, archiving, and making public the histories of LGBTQ Latinx and Hispanic
persons living in Texas.
Since returning to north Texas, Jara has developed collaborative research and teaching
relationships with several Dallas-based NGOs, including the Perot Museum of Science
and Nature, The Dallas Way, and Arttitude. She is co-author of a chapter called "Centering
Intersectional Politics: Queer Migrations Activism 'After Marriage'" that was published
in a ground-breaking series of edited volumes focused on future directions for queer
activism in the United States. Jara also has a forthcoming article in Law & Policy
titled "Rethinking NGOs: Neoliberalism, Non-State Actors, and the Politics of Recognition
in the United States." This article draws on lessons from her doctoral research to
critically analyze the shifting role of NGOs in a neoliberal context. Jara also served
as a Contributing Editor for Cultural Anthropology, producing a podcast and a Teaching
Tools blog post about queer anthropology.
In her spare time, Jara serves as a board member with Dallas-based NGO Arttitude,
a non-profit organization dedicated to creating and supporting platforms for LGBTQ+
people to represent their multiple and diverse identities, histories, and communities
with the goal of inciting positive change and equality through the arts.
Education
2017, Ph.D. Anthropology, University of New Mexico
2007, M.A., Applied Anthropology, University of North Texas
2004, B.A., Psychology, University of North Texas
Faculty Mentor
Anthropology Student/Faculty Liaison
Undergraduate Anthropology Student Association (UASA)
Regularly Taught Courses
ANTH 2300 Culture and Society
ANTH 4210 Culture and Human Sexuality
ANTH 4300 Migrants and Refugees
ANTH 4550 Race, Ethnicity, and Identity
ANTH 4701 Sex, Gender, and Culture
WGST 4260 Introduction to LGBTQ Studies
ANTH 5050 Introduction to Practice and the Applied Thesis
ANTH 5031 Qualitative Methods