Ph.D., Yale University (Sociology)
J.D., Yale Law School
B.A., University of Chicago (Sociology)
Michael W. Yarbrough is an Associate Professor in the Political Science Department at John Jay College of Criminal Justice (CUNY), where his teaching focuses on the Law & Society major. He is also a member of the doctoral faculty in sociology at the CUNY Graduate Center. Yarbrough's research examines how law shapes the ways we understand marriage and other interpersonal relationships in our everyday lives. He is currently writing a book on South Africa, where the law recognizes a broader range of marriages than anywhere in the world but actual marriage rates have dramatically declined. The book uses historical and ethnographic lenses to explore this paradox, tracing how marriage has functioned in southern Africa as a site for constructing and contesting different forms of normativity and legal authority. This project has received multiple awards, including the Law & Society Association Article Prize. Yarbrough also co-edited the After Marriage Equality series (2018), three volumes that examine how queer families, activism, and political priorities are changing after same-sex marriage. Another collection he recently co-edited, the Research Handbook on Law, Movements, and Social Change, will be published by Edward Elgar Press in 2023.
Yarbrough places a high priority on working with undergraduates, and he has received awards from John Jay for both teaching and service to students. In 2020, his Law & Society capstone students published COVID-19 at CUNY, a web archive exploring how their families and communities experienced the first months of the COVID-19 pandemic. With his Law & Society faculty colleagues, Yarbrough also helps facilitate the Legal Disruption Project, a student-led participatory action research project that examines how law disrupts the lives of students and their communities. In 2019, Yarbrough was recognized by the CUNY Academy for the Humanities and Sciences as one of CUNY’s outstanding Assistant Professors. He holds a BA in sociology from the University of Chicago and a JD and a PhD in sociology from Yale. For more about Prof. Yarbrough’s work, please visit his website at michaelyarbrough.net.
LWS 200: Introduction to Law & Society
LWS 225: Introduction to Research in Law & Society
LWS 330: Law in Everyday Life
LWS 380: Legal Tools of White Supremacy
LWS 385: Legal Disruption Project
LWS 425: Colloquium for Research in Law & Society [senior research capstone]
Former Board Member, CLAGS: Center for LGBTQ Studies
Member, Law & Society Association
2018. Michael W. Yarbrough, Angela Jones, and Joseph Nicholas DeFilippis, eds. Queer Families and Relationships After Marriage Equality. Routledge. 2018. Angela Jones, Joseph Nicholas DeFilippis, and Michael W. Yarbrough, eds. The Unfinished Queer Agenda After Marriage Equality. Routledge. 2018. Joseph Nicholas DeFilippis, Michael W. Yarbrough, and Angela Jones, eds. Queer Activism After Marriage Equality. Routledge. Articles & Essays Click [preprint] links to access pre-publication manuscript versions for free.
2021. “Queering Legal Pluralism?” [review essay] PoLAR: Political and Legal Anthropology Review. doi:10.1111/plar.12425. Available at https://polarjournal.org/2021/05/01/queering-legal-pluralism/. 2020. “A New Twist on the ‘un-African’ Script: Representing Lesbian and Gay African Weddings in Democratic South Africa.” Africa Today 67(1): 48-70. doi:10.2979/africatoday.67.1.04. [preprint] 2018. “For Better or for Worse? Relational Landscapes in the Time of Same-Sex Marriage.” In Michael W. Yarbrough, Angela Jones, and Joseph Nicholas DeFilippis, eds. Queer Families and Relationships After Marriage Equality. Routledge. [preprint] 2018. “Something Old, Something New: Same-Sex Marriage and Ongoing Struggles over African Marriage in South Africa.” Sexualities 21(7): 1092-1108. doi:10.1177/1363460717718507. [preprint] 2018. “Very Long Engagements: The Persistent Authority of Bridewealth in a Post-Apartheid South African Community.” Law & Social Inquiry 43(3): 647-77. doi:10.1111/lsi.12275. [Law & Society Association Article Prize, 2019] [preprint]
Law & Society Association Article Prize, 2019
Henry Wasser Award for Outstanding CUNY Assistant Professors, CUNY Academy of Humanities & Sciences, 2019
Distinguished Faculty Service to Students Award, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, 2019
Distinguished Teaching Prize, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, 2015
Marvin B. Sussman Dissertation Prize, Yale Sociology Department, 2014