In this essay, I examine the practice of ethnographic knowledge-production through my fieldwork encounter with Álvaro, a political leader of fishers in Mexico’s oil-producing state, Tabasco. Exercising ethnographic reflexivity, I analyze how my relations with Álvaro and his family in a context of conflict between fishers and the oil industry shaped my analytical lens on the politics of resource access. The essay focuses on ambiguity as an overriding characteristic of the research encounter, and suggests that paralleling ambiguities in my analysing of Álvaro during fieldwork and in my own, gendered and racialized positionality within the family were formative for my perspective on fisher – oil industry politics. Furthermore, the analysis sho...
Through ethnographic research based primarily in Prince Rupert, British Columbia, this dissertation...
Peru’s Amazon region is one of the newest fronts in a growing national and international interest in...
Artisanal fishing communities are often in conflict with the interests of the oil extraction industr...
In this essay, I examine the practice of ethnographic knowledge-production through my fieldwork enco...
In this essay, I examine the practice of ethnographic knowledge-production through my fieldwork enco...
In Tabasco, in the Mexican Gulf of Mexico, many small-scale fishers follow their catch to prohibited...
My thesis examines the everyday life of my Ecuadorian, Kichwa host family in an attempt to better un...
Marine extraction accounts for one third of the world's hydrocarbon production. Several analyses sug...
Governing oil has been key to the emergence of particular sociotechnical realities throughout the la...
An ethnographic analysis of precarity as experienced by migrant Mexican oil workers in permanently i...
This article is a commentary on the experiences that motivated my decision to become a human ecologi...
For 14 weeks, from May 8th to August 15th of 2015, I lived and conducted research in Peerless Trout ...
The Ecuadorian Amazon has been the site of intensive oil operations for the past 40 years, resulting...
Two disparate views emerge as rural people living along Timor-Leste’s south coast are confronted by ...
The article examines the ‘contradiction’ between indigenous Amazonian people's opposition to hydroca...
Through ethnographic research based primarily in Prince Rupert, British Columbia, this dissertation...
Peru’s Amazon region is one of the newest fronts in a growing national and international interest in...
Artisanal fishing communities are often in conflict with the interests of the oil extraction industr...
In this essay, I examine the practice of ethnographic knowledge-production through my fieldwork enco...
In this essay, I examine the practice of ethnographic knowledge-production through my fieldwork enco...
In Tabasco, in the Mexican Gulf of Mexico, many small-scale fishers follow their catch to prohibited...
My thesis examines the everyday life of my Ecuadorian, Kichwa host family in an attempt to better un...
Marine extraction accounts for one third of the world's hydrocarbon production. Several analyses sug...
Governing oil has been key to the emergence of particular sociotechnical realities throughout the la...
An ethnographic analysis of precarity as experienced by migrant Mexican oil workers in permanently i...
This article is a commentary on the experiences that motivated my decision to become a human ecologi...
For 14 weeks, from May 8th to August 15th of 2015, I lived and conducted research in Peerless Trout ...
The Ecuadorian Amazon has been the site of intensive oil operations for the past 40 years, resulting...
Two disparate views emerge as rural people living along Timor-Leste’s south coast are confronted by ...
The article examines the ‘contradiction’ between indigenous Amazonian people's opposition to hydroca...
Through ethnographic research based primarily in Prince Rupert, British Columbia, this dissertation...
Peru’s Amazon region is one of the newest fronts in a growing national and international interest in...
Artisanal fishing communities are often in conflict with the interests of the oil extraction industr...