Jessica Robbins (fs2544)

University information

Title: Associate Professor
Unit: Institute of Gerontology
Department: Research

Contact information

226 Knapp
Institute of Gerontology
Detroit, 48202

College of Liberal Arts and Sciences

Department:

Anthropology

Title: Associate Professor, Cultural Anthropology
Office:

F/AB 3034
234 Knapp Building

Curriculum Vitae: https://people.wayne.edu/profile/fs2544/1578/robbins-panko_cv_-_complete_-_9_23.pdf 316865 1695686146 file
Social Media: https://twitter.com/jess_ro_
Research interest(s)/area of expertise:

Topical: medical anthropology, aging and the life course, kinship and personhood, memory, postsocialist studies, political economy, morality, population studies, palliative and hospice care, gardens, urban environments

Geographical: Poland, Central/East Europe, European Union, U.S.

Research:

Dr. Robbins-Panko's research is motivated by a concern for how some older people become valued and socially included, while others are devalued and socially excluded. As an anthropologist, she seeks explanations for these moral processes in the links between personal experience, personal and discursive imaginations, and transformations in political economy. In her first ethnographic project she sought to answer these questions through ethnographic research in Poland, a place where radical sociocultural and political-economic transformations have occurred in the lifetime of the oldest generations. Current ethnographic research investigates related issues of social inclusion and exclusion among older adults in the post-industrial urban United States.

Dr. Robbins-Panko's first book, "Aging Nationally in Contemporary Poland: Memory, Kinship, and Personhood" was published in 2021 with Rutgers University Press. In Poland, active aging programs both take on meanings associated with the country’s transition from socialism to capitalism, and exceed such narratives of progress by resonating with older forms of activity in late life. Through intimate portrayals of a wide range of experiences of aging, "Aging Nationally in Contemporary Poland" shows how everyday practices and shared imaginaries of the Polish nation offer possibilities for living a valued, meaningful life in old age. This study draws on almost two years of fieldwork in diverse institutional sites in Wrocław and Poznań, Poland. The book draws on theoretical perspectives from studies of kinship, postsocialism, and memory to create explanatory links across temporal and geographic scales.

In her new line of ethnographic research, Dr. Robbins-Panko explores the social relational elements of reminiscence in order to provide new understandings of memory and sociocultural formations of inequality in late life. Grounded in the anthropology of kinship and social relations, this project explores how reminiscence practices among older adults in the Detroit metro area may shape the limits and possibilities for social inclusion and exclusion in late life. Past studies in the US include an ethnographic study of wellbeing and gardening among older Black residents of Detroit, and an ethnographic exploration of older adults' experiences of the Flint Water Crisis. 

Dr. Robbins-Panko has an ongoing research project on the (pre)/(post)socialist histories of the sciences of aging in Poland, in which she seeks to understand how the fields of gerontology, geriatrics, andragogika and pedagogy, and social work were shaped by sociocultural and political-economic transformations in central Europe. Other research interests include aging and memory in the Polish-American community in Michigan, and palliative and hospice care.

Dr. Robbins-Panko is currently the Digital Editor for the journal "Medical Anthropology Quarterly."

Dr. Robbins-Panko is actively recruiting M.A. and Ph.D. students in sociocultural and medical anthropology. Please contact the department for more information about our graduate programs, or email me directly before applying.

Education – Degrees, Licenses, Certifications: B.A. in Anthropology and Music, Williams College, 2001 M.A. in Anthropology, University of Michigan, 2006 Ph.D. in Anthropology, University of Michigan, 2013 Graduate Certificate in Russian and East European Studies, University of Michigan, 2013 Graduate Teacher Certificate, University of Michigan, 2013
Awards and grants:

2024, Outstanding Graduate Mentor (Social Sciences, Education, and Business), Wayne State University

  • 2016-2017, Michigan Center for Urban African American Aging Research (MCUAAAR) Pilot Scholar, National Institutes of Health, P30 AG015281, Cultivating Life in a Revitalizing City: Understanding Social Relations and Health through an Ethnographic Study of Gardening among Older African Americans in Detroit
  • 2014, IREX Individual Advanced Research Opportunities (IARO) Fellowship, Growing Old in Postsocialist Poland: Health, Education, and Morality
  • 2013, East European Studies Research Grant, Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, Creating “Euro”Seniors through “Active Aging”: (Post-)Socialist Histories of the Sciences of Aging in Poland
  • 2013, Wenner-Gren Foundation, Engaged Anthropology Grant, Beyond “Active” Aging and Abandonment: Relations of Suffering, Care, and Hope in Postsocialist Poland
  • 2010, Elderhostel K. Patricia Cross Doctoral Research Grant, Elderhostel/Road Scholar: Adventures in Lifelong Learning
  • 2008-2010, National Science Foundation Doctoral Dissertation Improvement Grant, Making and Unmaking Polish Persons: Aging and Memory in Postsocialist Poland
  • 2008-2010, Wenner-Gren Foundation Dissertation Fieldwork Grant, Making and Unmaking Polish Persons: Aging and Memory in Postsocialist Poland
  • 2023 Tuition coverage for Graduate Certificate in Life Story Practice and Research, School of Nursing, University of Connecticut
  • Tenured Faculty Professional Development Award, Office of the Provost ($7,400)
  • 2023 Remembered Relations and Relations of Remembrance: Towards Inclusive Therapeutic Reminiscence for Persons with Dementia. Social Justice Funds Research Award, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences ($10,000)
  • 2021 Best Article Prize (annual), Polish Memory Studies Group, Memory Studies Association, for the 2019 article “Expanding Personhood beyond Remembered Selves: The Sociality of Memory at an Alzheimer’s Center in Poland.” Medical Anthropology Quarterly 33(4): 483-500. https://doi.org/10.1111/maq.12534
  • 2021 Aquila Polonica Prize (biannual), best article on any aspect of Polish studies, Polish Studies Association, for the 2019 article “Expanding Personhood beyond Remembered Selves: The Sociality of Memory at an Alzheimer’s Center in Poland.” Medical Anthropology Quarterly 33(4): 483-500. https://doi.org/10.1111/maq.12534
Selected publications:

Books

Articles

  • Linn, C., J. C. Robbins-Panko, T. Perry, and K.A. Seibel. 2023. Living with Lead: Water Governance as Necropolitics in Flint, Michigan. Human Organization 82(3): 261–273. doi.org/10.17730/1938-3525-82.3.261
  • Buch, E., and Robbins, J.C. 2020. Age, Isolation, and Inequality in the Time of COVID-19. Anthropology Now 12:3, 24-33. doi.org/10.1080/19428200.2020.1884485
  • Robbins, J.C. 2020. Commentary: Towards an Inclusive Anthropology of Aging. Łódzkie Studia Etnograficzne (Ethnographic Studies of Łódź) 59: 231-237. dx.doi.org/10.12775/LSE.2020.59.14
  • Robbins, J. C. 2020. Aging Societies, Civil Societies, and the Role of the Past: Active Aging beyond Demography in Contemporary Poland. East European Politics, Societies, and Cultures. 1-17. doi.org/10.1177/0888325419897750
  • Robbins, J.C., and Seibel, K.A. 2019. Temporal Aspects of Wellbeing in Later Life: Gardening among Older African Americans in Detroit. Ageing and Society 1-21. doi.org/10.1017/S0144686X19000813
  • Seaman, A., Robbins, J.C., and Buch, E. 2019. Beyond the Evaluative Lens: Contextual Unpredictabilities of Care. Journal of Aging Studies 1-9. doi.org/10.1016/j.jaging.2019.100799
  • Robbins, J.C. (2019). Expanding Personhood beyond Remembered Selves: The Sociality of Memory at an Alzheimer’s Center in Poland. Medical Anthropology Quarterly. doi.org/10.1111/maq.12534
  • Robbins-Ruszkowski, J.C. (2014). National Dimensions of Personhood among Older People in Poland. Etnografia Polska (Polish Ethnography) 58(1-2):159-174. oai:rcin.org.pl:59893
  • Robbins-Ruszkowski, J.C. (2014). Thinking with “Postsocialism” in an Ethnographic Study of Old Age in Poland. Cargo: Journal for Cultural/Social Anthropology 12(1-2):35-50. cargojournal.org/index.php/cargo/article/view/15
  • Robbins-Ruszkowski, J.C. (2013). Challenging Marginalization at the Universities of the Third Age in Poland. Anthropology & Aging Quarterly 34(2):157-169. doi.org/10.5195/aa.2013.18
  • Robbins, J.C. (2013). Understanding Aktywność in Ethnographic Contexts: Aging, Memory, and Personhood in Poland. Forum Oświatowe (Educational Forum) 1(48):87-101
  • Robbins, J.C. (2013). Aktywność i jej etnograficzne konteksty: starzenie się, pamięć i podmiotowość w Polsce. Translation of the above, by Patrycja Poniatowska. Forum Oświatowe. 1(48):103-119
  • Robbins, J.C. (2008). “Older Americans” and Alzheimer’s Disease: Citizenship and Subjectivities in Contested Time. Michigan Discussions in Anthropology. 17:14-43
  • Robbins, J.C. (2006). “Starsi Amerykanie” a choroba Alzheimera. Biopolityka, podmiotowość i obywatelstwo. (“Older Americans” and Alzheimer’s Disease: Biopolitics, Subjectivities, and Citizenship.) Translated by Ania M. Nowak. In Trzeci wiek drugiej płci: Starsze kobiety jako podmiot aktywności społecznej i kulturowej. (The Third Age of the Second Sex: Older Women as a Social and Cultural Entity.) Edyta Zierkiewicz and Alina Łysak, eds. Wrocław, Poland: MarMar Press. Pp. 223-241

Book chapters

  • Robbins-Ruszkowski, J. C. (2017). Aspiring to Activity: Universities of the Third Age, Gardening, and Other Forms of Living in Postsocialist Poland. In Successful Aging: The Anthropology of a 21st Century Obsession. Sarah Lamb, ed. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press. Pp. 112-125
  • Robbins-Ruszkowski, J.C. (2017). Responsibilities of the Third Age and the Intimate Politics of Sociality in Poland. In Competing Responsibilities: The Ethics and Politics of Responsibility in Contemporary Life. Susanna Trnka and Catherine Trundle, eds. Durham, NC: Duke University Press. Pp. 193-212
  • Lamb, S., Robbins-Ruszkowski, J.C., Corwin, A. (2017). Introduction. In Successful Aging: A 21st Century Obsession. Sarah Lamb, ed. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press. Pp. 1-23
  • Robbins-Ruszkowski, J.C. (2015). “Active” Aging as Citizenship in Poland. In Generations: Rethinking Age and Citizenship. Richard Marback, ed. Detroit, MI: Wayne State University Press. Pp. 270-286
  • Robbins, J.C. (2013). Shifting Moral Ideals of Aging in Poland: Suffering, Self-Actualization, and the Nation. In Transitions and Transformations: Cultural Perspectives on Aging and the Life Course. Caitrin Lynch and Jason Danely, eds. New York: Berghahn Books. Pp. 79-91

Non-refereed

  • Robbins-Panko, J.C., J. Kowalski, and E. Buch. (2023). “Care as Practice, Care as Analysis.” In “A Sign of Our times: Caring in an Unsettling World,” edited by Magdalena Zegarra Chiappori and Salwa Tareen, American Ethnologist website, 3 August 2023
  • Robbins-Ruszkowski, J.C. (2018). Aging. In International Encyclopedia of Anthropology. Wiley-Blackwell. Hilary Callan, ed
  • Robbins-Ruszkowski, J.C. (2016). Exploring the “Shadow Side” of Ethnographic Research on Aging in Poland. Invited essay for centennial issue of Lud (journal of the Polish Ethnological Society). 100:143-152
  • Robbins-Ruszkowski, J.C. (2016). “Little Sisters’ Home for the Aged Poor.” Digital story created with Katie Korth, as part of Ethnic Layers of Detroit. Digital humanities project, Dr. Krysta Ryzewski, PI
  • Robbins-Ruszkowski, J.C. and Marback, R. (2015). Conclusion. In Generations: Rethinking Age and Citizenship. Richard Marback, ed. Detroit, MI: Wayne State University Press. Pp. 313-322
  • Červinková, H., Robbins-Ruszkowski, J.C., and Uherek, Z. (2014). Editorial. Cargo: Journal for Cultural/Social Anthropology 12(1-2):1-3
  • Robbins, J.C. (2013) Blog post for Wenner-Gren Foundation summarizing conference funded by Engaged Anthropology Grant. July 19, blog.wennergren.org/2013/07/engaged-anthropology-grant-jessica-robbins-and-beyond-active-aging-and-abandonment
  • Robbins, J.C. (2009). Aging, Memory and Personhood in Poland. Anthropology News. 50(8):15-16
Citation index:
Jessica Robbins

Institute of Gerontology

Bio Sketch:

Jessica Robbins-Panko is an Associate Professor at the Institute of Gerontology and Department of Anthropology at Wayne State University. As a medical and sociocultural anthropologist, she studies how individuals' experiences of aging--especially of health and illness--are part of broader social, cultural, political, economic, and historical processes.  

Dr. Robbins-Panko received her PhD in Anthropology from the University of Michigan in 2013. Her research has been funded by a grant from the National Institutes of Health, P30 AG015281, and the Michigan Center for Urban African American Aging Research, the National Science Foundation, the Wenner-Gren Foundation, the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars (through a grant from the US Department of State Title VIII), the International Research Exchange Board (through a grant from the US Department of State Title VIII), Elderhostel/Road Scholar, and several units at the University of Michigan and Wayne State University.

Curriculum Vitae: https://people.wayne.edu/profile/fs2544/1696/robbins-panko_cv_-_complete_-_9_23.pdf 316865 1695686205 file
Title: Associate Professor
Education:

Ph.D., Anthropology, University of Michigan (2013)
M.A., Anthropology, University of Michigan (2006)
B.A., Anthropology and Music, Williams College (2001)

Research Focus:

Dr. Robbins-Panko's research is motivated by a concern for how some older people become valued and socially included, while others are devalued and socially excluded. As an anthropologist, she seeks explanations for these moral processes in the links between personal experience, personal and discursive imaginations, and transformations in political economy. In her first ethnographic project she sought to answer these questions through ethnographic research in Poland, a place where radical sociocultural and political-economic transformations have occurred in the lifetime of the oldest generations. Current ethnographic research investigates related issues of social inclusion and exclusion among older adults in the post-industrial urban United States.

Dr. Robbins-Panko's first book, Aging Nationally in Contemporary Poland: Memory, Kinship, and Personhood was published in 2021 with Rutgers University Press. In Poland, active aging programs both take on meanings associated with the country’s transition from socialism to capitalism, and exceed such narratives of progress by resonating with older forms of activity in late life. Through intimate portrayals of a wide range of experiences of aging, Aging Nationally in Contemporary Poland shows how everyday practices and shared imaginaries of the Polish nation offer possibilities for living a valued, meaningful life in old age. This study draws on almost two years of fieldwork in diverse institutional sites in Wrocław and Poznań, Poland. The book draws on theoretical perspectives from studies of kinship, post-socialism, and memory to create explanatory links across temporal and geographic scales. 

In her new line of ethnographic research, Dr. Robbins-Panko explores the social relational elements of reminiscence in order to provide new understandings of memory and sociocultural formations of inequality in late life. Grounded in the anthropology of kinship and social relations, this project explores how reminiscence practices among older adults in the Detroit metro area may shape the limits and possibilities for social inclusion and exclusion in late life. Past studies in the US include an ethnographic study of wellbeing and gardening among older Black residents of Detroit, and an ethnographic exploration of older adults' experiences of the Flint Water Crisis.

Dr. Robbins-Panko has an ongoing research project on the (pre)/(post)socialist histories of the sciences of aging in Poland, in which she seeks to understand how the fields of gerontology, geriatrics, andragogika and pedagogy, and social work were shaped by sociocultural and political-economic transformations in central Europe. Other research interests include aging and memory in the Polish-American community in Michigan, and memory and palliative and hospice care.

Office Location: 234 Knapp Building
Areas of Expertise:

Topical: medical anthropology, aging and the life course, kinship and personhood, memory, post-socialist studies, political economy, morality, population studies, palliative and hospice care, gardens.

Geographical: Poland, Central/East Europe, European Union, US.

Courses Taught:

ANT 2100 (Introduction to Anthropology)

ANT 3100 (World Cultures)

ANT 5400 (Anthropology of Health and Illness)

ANT 5450/7450 (Kinship and Social Relations)

ANT 7020/7010 (Anthropological Theory II/Proseminar II)

ANT 7680 (Medical Anthropology)

 

Professional Associations:

American Anthropological Association
American Ethnological Society
Association for Anthropology and Gerontology
Gerontological Society of America
Polish Studies Association
Society for the Anthropology of Europe
Society for Medical Anthropology
Soyuz: The Research Network for Post-socialist Cultural Studies

 

Honors and Awards:

2021 Aquila Polonica Prize (biannual), best article on any aspect of Polish studies, Polish Studies Association, for the 2019 article “Expanding Personhood beyond Remembered Selves: The Sociality of Memory at an Alzheimer’s Center in Poland.” Medical Anthropology Quarterly 33(4): 483-500. 

2021 Best Article Prize (annual), Polish Memory Studies Group, Memory Studies Association, for the 2019 article “Expanding Personhood beyond Remembered Selves: The Sociality of Memory at an Alzheimer’s Center in Poland.” Medical Anthropology Quarterly 33(4): 483-500. 
 

Publications:

REFEREED

Books

2021 Robbins, J.C. Aging Nationally in Contemporary Poland: Memory, Kinship, and Personhood. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press. https://www.rutgersuniversitypress.org/aging-nationally-in-contemporary-poland/9781978813960

Articles 

Linn, C., J. C. Robbins-Panko, T. Perry, and K.A. Seibel. (2023). Living with Lead: Water Governance as Necropolitics in Flint, Michigan. Human Organization 82(3): 261–273. https://doi.org/10.17730/1938-3525-82.3.261

Buch, E., and Robbins, J.C. (2020.) Age, Isolation, and Inequality in the Time of COVID-19. Anthropology Now.

Robbins, J.C. (2020.) Commentary: Towards an Inclusive Anthropology of Aging. Łódzkie Studia Etnograficzne (Ethnographic Studies of Łódź) 59: 231-237.  http://dx.doi.org/10.12775/LSE.2020.59.14

Robbins, J.C. (2020.) Aging Societies, Civil Societies, and the Role of the Past: Active Aging beyond Demography in Contemporary Poland. East European Politics, Societies & Cultures. 1-17. https://doi.org/10.1177/0888325419897750

Robbins, J.C. (2019). Expanding Personhood beyond Remembered Selves: The Sociality of Memory at an Alzheimer’s Center in Poland. Medical Anthropology Quarterly. https://doi.org/10.1111/maq.12534

Robbins, J.C., and Seibel, K.A. (2019). Temporal Aspects of Wellbeing in Later Life: Gardening among Older African Americans in Detroit. Ageing and Society 1-21. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0144686X19000813

Seaman, A., Robbins, J.C., and Buch, E. (2019). Beyond the Evaluative Lens: Contextual Unpredictabilities of Care. Journal of Aging Studies. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jaging.2019.100799

Robbins-Ruszkowski, J.C. (2014). National Dimensions of Personhood among Older People in Poland. Etnografia Polska (Polish Ethnography) 58(1-2):159-174. oai:rcin.org.pl:59893

Robbins-Ruszkowski, J.C. (2014). Thinking with “Post-socialism” in an Ethnographic Study of Old Age in Poland. Cargo: Journal for Cultural/Social Anthropology 12(1-2):35-50. http://cargojournal.org/index.php/cargo/article/view/15

Robbins-Ruszkowski, J.C. (2013). Challenging Marginalization at the Universities of the Third Age in Poland. Anthropology & Aging Quarterly 34(2):157-169. https://doi.org/10.5195/aa.2013.18

Robbins, J.C. (2013). Understanding Aktywność in Ethnographic Contexts: Aging, Memory, and Personhood in Poland. Forum Oświatowe (Educational Forum) 1(48):87-101.

Robbins, J.C. (2013). Aktywność i jej etnograficzne konteksty: starzenie się, pamięć i podmiotowość w Polsce. Translation of the above, by Patrycja Poniatowska. Forum Oświatowe. 1(48):103-119.

Robbins, J.C. (2008). “Older Americans” and Alzheimer’s Disease: Citizenship and Subjectivities in Contested Time. Michigan Discussions in Anthropology. 17:14-43.

Robbins, J.C. (2006). “Starsi Amerykanie” a choroba Alzheimera. Biopolityka, podmiotowość i obywatelstwo. (“Older Americans” and Alzheimer’s Disease: Biopolitics, Subjectivities, and Citizenship.) Translated by Ania M. Nowak. In Trzeci wiek drugiej płci: Starsze kobiety jako podmiot aktywności społecznej i kulturowej. (The Third Age of the Second Sex: Older Women as a Social and Cultural Entity.) Edyta Zierkiewicz and Alina Łysak, eds. Wrocław, Poland: MarMar Press. Pp. 223-241.

Book chapters

Robbins-Ruszkowski, J. C. (2017). Aspiring to Activity: Universities of the Third Age, Gardening, and Other Forms of Living in Postsocialist Poland. In Successful Aging: The Anthropology of a 21st Century Obsession. Sarah Lamb, ed. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press. Pp. 112-125.

Robbins-Ruszkowski, J.C. (2017). Responsibilities of the Third Age and the Intimate Politics of Sociality in Poland. In Competing Responsibilities: The Ethics and Politics of Responsibility in Contemporary Life. Susanna Trnka and Catherine Trundle, eds. Durham, NC: Duke University Press. Pp. 193-212.

Lamb, S., Robbins-Ruszkowski, J.C., Corwin, A. (2017). Introduction. In Successful Aging: A 21st Century Obsession. Sarah Lamb, ed. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press. Pp. 1-23.

Robbins-Ruszkowski, J.C. (2015). “Active” Aging as Citizenship in Poland. In Generations: Rethinking Age and Citizenship. Richard Marback, ed. Detroit, MI: Wayne State University Press. Pp. 270-286.

Robbins, J.C. (2013). Shifting Moral Ideals of Aging in Poland: Suffering, Self-Actualization, and the Nation. In Transitions and Transformations: Cultural Perspectives on Aging and the Life Course. Caitrin Lynch and Jason Danely, eds. New York: Berghahn Books. Pp. 79-91.

NON-REFEREED

Robbins-Panko, J.C., J. Kowalski, and E. Buch. (2023). “Care as Practice, Care as Analysis”. In “A Sign of Our times: Caring in an Unsettling World,” edited by Magdalena Zegarra Chiappori and Salwa Tareen, American Ethnologist website, 3 August 2023. https://americanethnologist.org/online-content/collections/uncaring-world/care-as-practice-care-as-analysis-by-jessica-robbins-panko-julia-kowalski-and-elana-buch/


Robbins-Ruszkowski, J.C. (2018). Aging. In International Encyclopedia of Anthropology. Wiley-Blackwell. Hilary Callan, ed.

Robbins-Ruszkowski, J.C. (2016). Exploring the “Shadow Side” of Ethnographic Research on Aging in Poland. Invited essay for centennial issue of Lud (journal of the Polish Ethnological Society). 100:143-152.

Robbins-Ruszkowski, J.C. (2016). “Little Sisters’ Home for the Aged Poor.” Digital story created with Katie Korth, as part of Ethnic Layers of Detroit. Digital humanities project, Dr. Krysta Ryzewski, PI.

Robbins-Ruszkowski, J.C. and Marback, R. (2015). Conclusion. In Generations: Rethinking Age and Citizenship. Richard Marback, ed. Detroit, MI: Wayne State University Press. Pp. 313-322.

Červinková, H., Robbins-Ruszkowski, J.C., and Uherek, Z. (2014). Editorial. Cargo: Journal for Cultural/Social Anthropology 12(1-2):1-3.

Robbins, J.C. (2013) Blog post for Wenner-Gren Foundation summarizing conference funded by Engaged Anthropology Grant. July 19.
http://blog.wennergren.org/2013/07/engaged-anthropology-grant-jessica-robbins-and-beyond-active-aging-and-abandonment/

Robbins, J.C. (2009). Aging, Memory and Personhood in Poland. Anthropology News. 50(8):15-16.

 

Jessica Robbins

Courses taught by Jessica Robbins

Winter Term 2025 (future)

Fall Term 2024

Winter Term 2024

Fall Term 2023

Winter Term 2023

Winter Term 2022

Recent university news spotlights

Return to Search