Apr 16, 2025: Presentation by Philipp Budka at the Manitoba Museum

Public presentation by Philipp Budka at the Manitoba Museum in Winnipeg, Canada, on April 16 from 12:00 to 1:00 PM (GMT-5)

InfraNorth team member Philipp Budka will deliver a public presentation of his research titled “Infrastructural Sovereignty and the Social Life of Transport: Ethnographic Insights from Northern Manitoba, Canada” on Wednesday, April 16, from 12:00 to 1:00 PM (GMT-5) at the Manitoba Museum Auditorium in Winnipeg, Canada.

Churchill, Manitoba—a remote Subarctic town of approximately 870 residents—offers a compelling site for examining the sociopolitical entanglements and affordances of transport infrastructure, community futures, and northern governance. Dependent on the Hudson Bay Railway, the Port of Churchill, and a regional airport, the town exemplifies how mobility systems are embedded within processes of Arctic sovereignty, environmental transformation, and livelihood strategies. The 2017 railway washout, which severed overland access for 18 months, catalyzed a shift from external corporate control to a community-based ownership model. Through the Arctic Gateway Group and the community-led OneNorth consortium, Churchill reconfigured its infrastructural governance and asserted greater control over material and political trajectories. Ethnographic fieldwork—including 43 interviews, a questionnaire survey, and archival/media analysis—highlights how residents understand and navigate the layered significance of infrastructure. Transport systems are not only technical assemblages but also socially and culturally meaningful, affording and constraining specific forms of economic activity, mobility choices, and senses of place. Future scenario workshops invited residents and stakeholders to co-imagine and discuss possible futures, from extractive expansion to ecological preservation. Participants largely advocated for a middle path: emphasizing tourism, environmental stewardship, and locally grounded planning. While climate and geopolitical crises, market fluctuations, and policy shifts continue to affect Churchill’s infrastructural landscape, the town’s experience underscores how northern communities articulate autonomy and sustainability through collective infrastructural engagement. In Churchill, infrastructure operates as both a practical necessity and a lens into broader questions of governance, identity, and future-making in the North.

Admission is free. For more details, please visit the Manitoba Museum website.

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 […]

Journal of Contemporary Ethnography

Dec 2025: Forthcoming Special Issue of the Journal of Contemporary Ethnography

The forthcoming special issue “Ethnographies of Infrastructure” of the Journal of Contemporary Ethnography, guest edited by Philipp Budka, Peter Schweitzer, and Olga Povoroznyuk, is progressively being made available online ahead of the print edition, which will appear in February 2026. The introduction, authored by Schweitzer, Povoroznyuk, and Budka, is now available open-access. It presents the […]

Journal of Contemporary Ethnography

Dec 2025: Article by Peter Schweitzer, et al. in the Journal of Contemporary Ethnography

The Journal of Contemporary Ethnography has recently published the article “Scenarios and Ethnography: Infrastructural Futures as Windows into the Present” by Peter Schweitzer, Olga Povoroznyuk, Philipp Budka, Alexandra Meyer, Katrin Schmid, and Nikita Strelkovskii. This article reflects on two scenario workshops conducted in 2023 in Kirkenes, Norway, and Churchill, Canada, as part of the ERC […]

Journal of Contemporary Ethnography

Dec 2025: Article by Katrin Schmid in the Journal of Contemporary Ethnography

The Journal of Contemporary Ethnography has published the article “Amazon in the Arctic: E-Commerce, Infrastructure, and Alimentary Assemblages in Nunavut, Canada” by InfraNorth researcher Katrin Schmid. Since establishing a delivery hub in Iqaluit, Nunavut in 2020, Amazon.com, Inc. has become an essential resource for many Nunavut residents, providing affordable access to goods otherwise constrained by […]

Journal of Contemporary Ethnography

Dec 2025: Article by Olga Povoroznyuk in the Journal of Contemporary Ethnography

The Journal of Contemporary Ethnography recently published the article “Toward a Comparative Ethnography of Arctic Seaports Projects: Local Impacts of Expanding Maritime Infrastructure in Alaska, Norway, and Russia” by InfraNorth researcher Olga Povoroznyuk. In this article, the author’s comparative ethnography focuses on suspended seaport expansion projects in three Arctic coastal communities: Nome (USA), Kirkenes (Norway), […]