Oct 2025: Presentation by Olga Povoroznyuk and Peter Schweitzer in Anchorage, Alaska
Olga Povoroznyuk presents findings from the InfraNorth project in Anchorage, Alaska.
Olga Povoroznyuk and Peter Schweitzer presented findings from the InfraNorth project at the ARCA co-creative community workshop “Biocultural Heritage and Climate Adaptation in Arctic Cities,” held on October 7–8, 2025, at The Nave in Anchorage, Alaska. Their presentation drew connections between their recent research conducted in Anchorage and other field sites in Alaska: on the one hand, examining whether and how existing and planned transport infrastructures sustain the living conditions of Arctic communities, and on the other, exploring how biocultural heritage embodied in Arctic urban green spaces and natural landscapes can serve as a resource for climate adaptation.
Peter Schweitzer presents findings from the InfraNorth project in Anchorage, Alaska.
The ARCA (Arctic Urban Green Spaces and Climate Adaptation) project is a Belmont Forum consortium bringing together social and natural scientists and artists from George Washington University (USA), the University of Vienna (Austria), the Nansen Environmental Research Center (Norway) and the International Arts and Science Institute (France). The workshop brought together researchers, museum professionals, and practitioners from education, urban planning, housing, transportation and the arts. It aimed to engage local and Indigenous communities in public discussions and collaborative art-making around the role of natural and cultural heritage (particularly urban green spaces and infrastructure) in climate adaptation.
Group picture at the ARCA co-creative community workshop in Anchorage, Alaska.
On November 5, 2025, at 5:00 pm CET, InfraNorth researcher Philipp Budka will deliver a lecture titled “Sovereignty by Design: Community Infrastructures and Relational Futures in Remote Canada,” as part of the Wednesday Seminars, the lecture series of the Department of Social and Cultural Anthropology at the University of Vienna. Budka’s talk examines infrastructural sovereignty—the […]
Olga Povoroznyuk and Peter Schweitzer presented findings from the InfraNorth project at the ARCA co-creative community workshop “Biocultural Heritage and Climate Adaptation in Arctic Cities,” held on October 7–8, 2025, at The Nave in Anchorage, Alaska. Their presentation drew connections between their recent research conducted in Anchorage and other field sites in Alaska: on the […]
A new book examining the rapid climate and geopolitical shifts in the Arctic, Unfrozen: The Fight for the Future of the Arctic, by Mia Bennett and Klaus Dodds, has been recently published by Yale University Press and launched in London. Mia Bennett is Associate Professor of Geography at the University of Washington, founder and editor […]
On October 1, 2025, InfraNorth researchers Philipp Budka, Elena Davydova, Katrin Schmid and Susanna Gartler will present at the 2025 conference of the German Association for Social and Cultural Anthropology (GASCA/DGKSA). This year’s edition will be held from September 29 to October 2, 2025, at the University of Köln, under the theme “Un/Commoning Anthropology.” Temporalities […]
At the EUGEO Congress 2025 in Vienna, held at the Austrian Academy of Sciences from September 8 to 11, Alexis Sancho Reinoso will present a paper co-authored with Timothy Heleniak: “Turning the Faroes Into One City. Demographic and Spatial Impacts of 60 Years of Transport Infrastructure Expansion.” The paper presents findings from their research in […]
InfraNorth researcher Philipp Budka presented the paper “Navigating Temporalities, Infrastructure, and Uncertain Futures: Scenario Workshops in Churchill, Canada” at the workshop “Past Tense, Future Imperfect: Temporalities as Mobilising Force.” The two-day event, held in hybrid format from July 23 to 24, 2025, was organized by the EASA networks NAoHH (Anthropology of History and Heritage) and […]