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I’m an anthropologist fascinated by how human cultures develop within technological and planetary assemblages. I currently hold a Juan de la Cierva Postdoctoral Fellowship at the University of Barcelona (click here for a more detailed bio). My areas of research include urban and environmental anthropology, infrastructures, mobilities, and heritages.

Research

My research can be divided into three distinct projects.

Infrastructuring Sustainability

This project focuses on sustainable mobility projects in Cuenca, Ecuador. I explore how the implementation of new designs and infrastructures shape the lifeworlds of the city, and how the notion of sustainability thereby takes on cosmopolitical dimensions.

Material Populism

From my ethnography on mobility infrastructures in Cuenca, I started to reflect on the role infrastructures play in populist dynamics, in Ecuador and beyond. What I call “material populism” opens up a space for thinking about the materialities of political developments.

Heritage Ecologies

The most recent project focuses on the ways in which heritage-making produces (un)livable environments. Based on research in Ecuador and Spain, it looks into how people participate in the making of heritages as ecologies of value.

Sam Rumé

Social Anthropologist and Juan de la Cierva Fellow at the University of Barcelona

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