Program in Agrarian Studies: “Parties, Constituencies and their Doppelgängers: The Anti-Politics of Global Climate Governance”

Event time: 
Friday, March 30, 2018 - 11:00am
Location: 
Henry R. Luce Hall, Room 03 See map
34 Hillhouse Avenue
New Haven, CT 06520
Event description: 

The Program in Agrarian Studies presents:

Naveeda Khan, Associate Professor of Anthropology, Johns Hopkins University:  “Parties, Constituencies and their Doppelgängers: The Anti-Politics of Global Climate Governance.”

Naveeda Khan’s research is located at the intersections of the study of material environments, temporality, and the everyday. A focus on urban built forms, their symbolization and everyday use served as the springboard for transitioning from my dissertation and postdoctoral research to my first book, which explores how the Islamic tradition and the aspiration to strive together shape collective projects in Pakistan.

Her most recent research shifts location and focus to examine rural and riverine environments in Bangladesh as they intersect with multiple possible futures, including the temporalities of everyday life, those of material substances such as riverine flows and silt sedimentation, and the crisis-inflected future of climate change. Her further interest is in the technological imagination of material environments of the distant future, particularly its utopian and futurist dimensions, to be studied through desert reclamation projects in the Middle East but this is yet to be researched.

In all of these projects, she not only draw upon the methodologies of archival research and textual analysis from the humanities, fieldwork practice from anthropology, but also engage concepts and frameworks from the environmental sciences to produce multidisciplinary work that is attentive to the weave of enduring and emergent questions within the social.
 

Admission: 
Free
Open to: 
General Public