Nov 5, 2025: Presentation by Philipp Budka at the University of Vienna

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 practice of community control over the design, ownership, and governance of essential infrastructures—through two ethnographic case studies in northwestern Ontario and northern Manitoba. Drawing on long-term fieldwork, he explores how communities in remote regions have worked to shape and sustain digital and transport infrastructures in response to state and market neglect. The KO-KNET broadband network, owned and operated by First Nations, exemplifies digital self-determination, while the Arctic Gateway Group—a consortium of 41 Indigenous and northern communities—has reclaimed the Hudson Bay Railway to secure regional transport autonomy. Rather than treating infrastructure as a technical backdrop, Budka approaches it ethnographically as a relational and political formation shaped by colonial histories, practices of care, and aspirations for sustainable futures. By connecting these cases through the lens of infrastructural sovereignty, the talk contributes to anthropological debates on infrastructure, Indigenous and community sovereignty, and ethnographies of transformation, while engaging decolonial perspectives on technology, governance, and community-led futures in settler-colonial contexts.

The seminar will be held in a hybrid format, with in-person attendance at the Department of Social and Cultural Anthropology, University of Vienna (Universitätsstraße 7, 1010 Vienna, 4th floor, Übungsraum) and online via Zoom. Registration is not required. Further details about the lecture can be found here.

Svalbard Airport, Photo by Alexandra Meyer.

Mar 2026: Article by Alexandra Meyer in Polar Geography Special Issue

The quarterly peer-reviewed journal Polar Geography has published the article “Hyperconnected remoteness: the Svalbard airport and community transitions in Longyearbyen” by InfraNorth researcher Alexandra Meyer. The article examines the role of Svalbard Airport in shaping socio-economic transitions and everyday life in Longyearbyen, the largest settlement on the Svalbard archipelago. Drawing on long-term ethnographic fieldwork, complemented […]

InfraNorth researcher Timothy Heleniak presented “Is infrastructure enough? The case of decline in the Faroe Islands” at the European Committee of the Regions (CoR) in Brussels.

Mar 10, 2026: Presentation by Timothy Heleniak at the European Committee of the Regions

On March 10, 2026, InfraNorth researcher Timothy Heleniak presented “Is infrastructure enough? The case of decline in the Faroe Islands” at the concluding conference of the Horizon Europe-funded project PREMIUM_EU. The event was organized by Nordregio and hosted by the European Committee of the Regions in Brussels and live-streamed online. In this talk, Heleniak presented […]

Cover of the Polar Geography journal.

Feb 2026: Article by Susan Vanek in Polar Geography Special Issue

The quarterly peer-reviewed journal Polar Geography has published the article “2200 meters: infrastructure, the future, and the politics of belonging in Greenland and the Arctic” by InfraNorth associate researcher Susan Vanek. The article examines Greenland’s airport expansion project, following its approval in 2015 by Naalakkersuisut (the Government of Greenland) as the largest investment in transportation […]