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Jean E. Jackson received her B.A. from Wellesley College in Sociology/Anthropology
in 1965, and her M.A. (1966) and Ph.D. (1972) from Stanford University.
She began teaching at MIT in the fall of 1972. She carried out fieldwork
in Mexico, Guatemala and, from 1968 to present, in Colombia, mostly in the Vaupés
region in southeastern Colombia, also known as the Central Northwest
Amazon. Her earlier Latin American research interests included small-scale societies, kinship and marriage, gender, and anthropological linguistics; The Fish People:
Linguistic Exogamy and Tukanoan Identity in Northwest Amazonia was published in 1983. During the past 20 years she has examined indigenous mobilizing in Colombia. In 2002 she and co-editor Kay B. Warren published Indigenous
Movements, Self-Representation and the State in Latin America. Recent essays include "Indigenous movements in Latin America, 1992-2004: Controversies, ironies, new directions" co-authored with Kay B. Warren (2005 Annual Review of Anthropology).
She has also published various pieces on the Colombian conflict. "Colombia's indigenous peoples confront the armed conflict" came out in 2005 (in Cristina Rojas, Judy Meltzer, eds., Elusive Peace: International, National, and Local Dimensions of Conflict in Colombia), as well as "Update on the Colombian Crisis" for the American Anthropological Association Committee for Human Rights (2005).
Another research area is medical anthropology. In 1986 she conducted ethnographic research in an inpatient chronic pain center in New England. Seven book chapters and articles on this research have been published, as well as "Camp Pain": Conversations with Chronic Pain Patients (2000, U Penn). In September 2006 she gave a paper on "'Extreme Behaviors' Resulting from Integrated Body/Mind Disciplines: The Cross-Cultural Evidence," at a conference on Longevity and Optimal Health, which is being published by the New York Academy of Sciences.
She is currently conducting archival research on how Colombia's indigenous communities have been represented in the two national newspapers, 1988-present.
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