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.

Jan 2026: InfraNorth Contributions to Forthcoming Book “Arctic Silk Roads”

InfraNorth researchers contribute two chapters to the forthcoming book Arctic Silk Roads: An Anthropology of the Unbuilt, edited by Natalia Magnani and Matthew Magnani. The volume will be published by Berghahn Books in January 2026 as part of the Studies in the Circumpolar North series. As climate change accelerates, the melting of sea ice is […]

Cover of the Polar Geography journal.

Dec 2025: Article by Katrin Schmid and Ria-Maria Adams in Polar Geography

The quarterly peer-reviewed academic journal Polar Geography has just released the article “No room in the North: housing scarcity as infrastructure’s failed relations in the Arctic” by InfraNorth researchers Katrin Schmid and Ria-Maria Adams. The article examines the entanglements of housing infrastructure, economic structures, and social relations in Arctic regions, focusing on Nunavut (Canada) and […]

National University of Ireland, Maynooth

Dec 2, 2025: Presentation by Ria-Maria Adams at Maynooth University, Ireland

InfraNorth researcher Ria-Maria Adams will deliver a lecture titled “For Whom Do the Sleigh Bells Toll? Social Media’s Role in Shaping Expectations of Arctic Tourism Destinations” on December 2, 2025, at 16:30 GMT, at the National University of Ireland, Maynooth, as part of its Anthropology Seminar Series. The talk will delve into how tourism infrastructures […]

Cover of the Polar Geography journal.

Dec 2025: Article by Elena Davydova and Olga Povoroznyuk in Polar Geography

The quarterly peer-reviewed academic journal Polar Geography has recently published the article “Temporality of Arctic Transport Infrastructure: Bridging Seasonal Supply in Egvekinot, Chukotka” by InfraNorth researchers Elena Davydova and Olga Povoroznyuk. The article explores local impacts of, and responses to, seasonal configurations of connectivity and disruptions in the functioning of transport infrastructure in the Russian […]

Budka, Philipp, and Giuseppe Amatulli, eds. Narratives and Temporalities of Infrastructure: The Canadian Experience. Special issue, Anthropologica, Vol. 67, No. 1 (2025).

Nov 2025: Special Issue of “Anthropologica” Co-edited by Giuseppe Amatulli and Philipp Budka

A new special issue of Anthropologica (Vol. 67, No. 1, 2025), the journal of the Canadian Anthropology Society, has just been published. Titled “Narratives and Temporalities of Infrastructure: The Canadian Experience,” the issue was co-edited by Giuseppe Amatulli (Carleton University) and InfraNorth researcher Philipp Budka and presents anthropological perspectives on water, energy and transport infrastructures […]

Nov 2025: Article by Julia Olsen, Alexandra Meyer, et al. in The Polar Journal

The Polar Journal, which publishes policy-relevant research on polar affairs from across the social sciences and humanities, has recently released the article ‘Building transdisciplinary bridges and learning from the Svalbard context’ by Julia Olsen, Alexandra Meyer, and Lisbeth Iversen, Ulrich Schildberg, Ragnhild Holmen Bjørnsen, Grete K. Hovelsrud, James Badu, Dina Brode-Roger, Adriana Craciun, Hanne H. […]