Alessandro Rippa

Associate Professor - Department of Social Anthropology
Image of Alessandro Rippa
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Visiting address Moltke Moes vei 31 Eilert Sundts hus 9. etg. 0851 Oslo
Postal address Postboks 1091 Blindern 0317 Oslo
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Alessandro Rippa is Associate Professor at the Department of Social Anthropology. His research concerns infrastructure, global circulations, and the environment. He is the PI of the ERC Starting Grant project "Amber Worlds: A Geological Anthropology for the Anthropocene" (2023-2028).

ACADEMIC INTERESTS

Thematic: infrastructure, border studies, global circulations, environmental anthropology, geology, STS, amber

Regional: Western China, Myanmar, Italian Alps

ABOUT

Alessandro is interested in theoretical and empirical convergences of infrastructure development, human-environment relations, and social change in contemporary China, Southeast Asia, and Europe. His doctoral and post-doctoral research explored some of the unintended consequences of fast-paced infrastructure development, the boundaries of formal and informal in transnational exchanges, and the commodification and marginalisation of ethnic minorities at China's borderlands. He has also addressed the social and environmental components of Chinese infrastructure projects in Southeast Asia, particularly in the context of the Belt and Road Initiative and ongoing investments in extractive and agricultural industries across the region. Lastly, Alessandro has been working on conservation, hunting, and local responses to environmental change in the Italian Alps, his native region.

Alessandro's current project is funded by an ERC Starting Grant, and sets out to be the first global study of amber from an anthropological perspective. Amber is a fossil resin secreted by plants between 300 and 16 million years ago, mostly during phases of climate breakdown and ecological crises. Amber is today found and studied across the world for the prehistoric lifeforms it contains. Their study, geologists and palaeontologists believe, can help us answering key questions about the planet’s climatic history, and understanding how and why species adapted, or failed to adapt, during previous phases of mass extinction. Amber is also a well-known and sought-after gemstone, fuelling violent mining economies from Myanmar to Russia, Ukraine and Mexico, and constitutes a global market increasingly driven by Chinese demand. Amber thus offers a unique entry point to interrogate the current moment characterised by growing extractivism, trade, environmental crises, and conflict. Through amber, this project further aims to pay closer ethnographic attention to the geological, to what continues to be understood as inert, passive, lifeless -- and thus to address some of the key empirical and theoretical challenges posed by the Anthropocene. This project draws on Alessandro's long-term work among amber miners and traders at the China-Myanmar borderlands, as well as on more recent research in Mexico, the Baltic countries, and Germany, and aims to bridge scholarship in anthropology, STS, and political ecology.

BACKGROUND

Before joining SAI, Alessandro completed his PhD in Social Anthropology at the University of Aberdeen (2015). He subsequently held postdoctoral positions at LMU Munich (part of the ERC project Highland Asia) and at the University of Colorado Boulder (part of the China Made project). Between 2019 and 2022 he was Associate Professor of Chinese Studies at Tallinn University, and since 2020 he has been affiliated with the Rachel Carson Center for Environment and Society where he leads the project Environing Infrastructure, funded by the Volkswagen Foundation for the period 2020-2025.

Alessandro’s research has been funded by the European Research Council, the Volkswagen Foundation, the Estonian Research Council, and the ERA.Net RUS Plus programme. Since 2018, he is on the editorial collective of the journal ROADSIDES.

SELECTED PUBLICATIONS

Books

2020. Borderland Infrastructures: Trade, Development and Control in Western China. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press.

2015. Cuore dell’Eurasia: Il Xinjiang dalla Preistoria al 1949 [Heart of Eurasia: Xinjiang from Prehistory to 1949]. Milano: Mimesis Edizioni. ISBN: 978-88-5752-789-5.

Edited Volumes and Special Issues

2023. “Chinese Infrastructure: Techno-Politics, Materialities, Legacies” The China Quarterly, DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/S0305741023001005 (with Tim Oakes)

2021. “Archive.” Roadsides, Collection no. 005.

2020. “China’s Belt and Road Initiative: Views from the Ground.” Political Geography (edited with Gustavo Olivera, Galen Murton, Tyler Harlan and Yang Yang)

2019. “Under Construction: Visions of Chinese Infrastructure.” Made in China Journal 4(2) (edited with Tim Oakes)

2018. Routledge Handbook of Asian Borderlands. London and New York: Routledge (edited with Alexander Horstmann and Martin Saxer)

Peer-reviewed Journal Articles

2023. “Infrastructure and the Environment in Anthropology.” Social Science Information, DOI: 10.1177/05390184231189126. 

2023. “Infrastructural thinking in China: A research agenda” The China Quarterly, DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/S0305741023001005 (with Tim Oakes)

2023. “’We don’t eat those bananas’: Chinese plantation expansion and bordering on Northern Myanmar’s Kachin borderlands.” Eurasian Geography and Economics, DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/15387216.2023.2215802 (with Jasnea Sarma and Karin Dean)

2022. “Infrastructures and B/Ordering: How Chinese projects are ordering China-Myanmar border spaces.” Territory, Politics, Governance, DOI: 10.1080/21622671.2022.2108892. (with Karin Dean and Jasnea Sarma)

2022. “From guest traders to live streamers: Hospitality and technology in Yunnan’s gemstone market.” Social Analysis 66(1): 44-63.

2022. “Imagined Borderlands: Terrain, Technology and Trade in the making and managing of the China-Myanmar border.” Singapore Journal of Tropical Geography, DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/sjtg.12429.

2021. “Hunting, Rewilding, and Multispecies Entanglements in the Alps.” Ethnos: Journal of Anthropology, DOI: 10.1080/00141844.2021.1939398.

2021. “Archive: An Introduction.” Roadsides 5: 1-5. DOI: https:// doi.org/10.26034/roadsides-202100501

2020. “China’s Belt and Road Initiative: Views from the ground.” Political Geography (with Gustavo Olivera, Galen Murton, Tyler Harlan and Yang Yang)

2020. “Mapping the Margins of China’s Global Ambition: Economic Corridors, Silk Roads, and the End of Proximity in the Borderlands.” Eurasian Geography and Economics 61(1): 55-76.

2020. “Building Highland Asian in the 21st Century.” Verge: Studies in Global Asias 6(2) (with Galen Murton and Matthäus Rest)

2019. “Road Animism: Reflections on the life of infrastructures.” HAU: Journal of Ethnographic Theory 9(2): 373-389 (with Matthaüs Rest)

2019. “Zomia 2.0: Branding Remoteness and Neoliberal Connectivity in the Golden Triangle Special Economic Zone, Laos.” Social Anthropology/Anthropologie sociale 27(2): 253-269.

2019. “Development for all? State schemes, security and marginalisation in 21st-century Kashgar.” Critical Asian Studies, 51(2): 274-295 (with Rune Steenberg)

2018. “Cross-Border Trade and “the Market” between Xinjiang (China) and Pakistan.” Journal of Contemporary Asia,49(2): 254-271.

2017. “The Amber Road: Cross-border trade and the regulation of the Burmite market in Tengchong, Yunnan.” TRaNS: Trans –Regional and –National Studies of Southeast Asia 5(2): 243-267 (with Yi Yang)

2017. “Centralising Peripheries: The Belt and Road Initiative and its role in the Development of the Chinese Borderlands.” International Journal of Business Anthropology 7(1): 1-21.

2016. “Oltre il Khunjerab: Violenza, Confini e rappresentazioni dello Stato tra Xinjiang (Cina) e Pakistan [Across the Khunjerab: Violence, Borders, and Representations of the State between Xinjiang (China) and Pakistan.” Quaderni Asiatici113: 83-108.

2014. “Re-Writing Mythology in Xinjiang: The Case of the Queen Mother of the West, King Mu, and the Kunlun.” The China Journal 71: 43-64.

Book Chapters and Encyclopaedia Entries

Rippa, A. 2023. “Infrastructure Development in Xinjiang.” In: Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Asian History. New York: Oxford University Press: https://doi.org/10.1093/acrefore/9780190277727.013.729.

2021. “Environing the Tourism Frontier: Infrastructure, Nature and the State in China’s Dulong Valley.” In: M. Mostafanezhad, C. Azcarate, and R. Norum (eds.), Tourism Geopolitics: Assemblages of Power, Mobility and the State. Tucson, AZ: University of Arizona Press (with Roger Norum)

2021. “From Boom to Bust – to Boom Again? Infrastructural promises and the politics of suspension at the China-Laos borderlands.” In: M. Chettri and M. Eilenberg (edited by), Development Zones in Asian Borderlands. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 231-251.

2018. “Old Routes, New Roads: Proximity across the China-Pakistan Border.” In: Horstmann, A., Saxer, M.,Rippa, A. (eds) Routledge Handbook of Asian Borderlands. London and New York: Routledge, 114-126.

2018. “Asian Borderlands in a Global Perspective.” In: Horstmann, A., Saxer, M., Rippa, A. (eds) Routledge Handbook of Asian Borderlands. London and New York: Routledge, 1-13 (with Martin Saxer and Alexander Horstmann)

 

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Published Jan. 6, 2023 9:51 AM - Last modified Nov. 16, 2023 11:57 PM

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