基本信息
浏览量:0
职业迁徙
个人简介
Olga Ulturgasheva (PhD; Cambridge) has carried out ethnographic research on childhood and adolescence, narrative and memory, animist and nomadic cosmologies, reindeer herding and hunting, climate change and the latest envrionmental transformations in Siberia and Alaska. Since 2006 she has been engaged in a number of international projects exploring human and non-human personhood, youth resilience, climate change and adaptation patterns in Siberia, American Arctic and Amazonia. She is an author of Narrating the Future in Siberia: Childhood, Adolescence and Autobiography among the Eveny (Berghahn Books 2012) and co-editor of Animism in Rainforest and Tundra: Personhood, Animals, Plants and Things in Contemporary Amazonia and Siberia (Berghahn 2012).
She serves as a Principial Investigator for two large international, collaborative research projects funded by the US National Science Foundation (NSF) and the European Research Council (ERC). The NSF-funded project is a comparative, collaborative study of adaptation strategies and resilience patterns among Alaskan Yup’ik and Siberian Eveny. The study aims to provide new insights on human capacity to navigate through the latest environmental threats induced by climate change and environmental degradation in the Arctic (2015-2022). The ERC-funded project examines how climate change is managed at the ethnic borderlands of China and Russia while mobilising expertise of anthropologists, historians and philosophers of science and ethics, religious studies experts, indigenous leaders and environmental scientists (2020-2026).
She serves as a Principial Investigator for two large international, collaborative research projects funded by the US National Science Foundation (NSF) and the European Research Council (ERC). The NSF-funded project is a comparative, collaborative study of adaptation strategies and resilience patterns among Alaskan Yup’ik and Siberian Eveny. The study aims to provide new insights on human capacity to navigate through the latest environmental threats induced by climate change and environmental degradation in the Arctic (2015-2022). The ERC-funded project examines how climate change is managed at the ethnic borderlands of China and Russia while mobilising expertise of anthropologists, historians and philosophers of science and ethics, religious studies experts, indigenous leaders and environmental scientists (2020-2026).
研究兴趣
论文共 39 篇作者统计合作学者相似作者
按年份排序按引用量排序主题筛选期刊级别筛选合作者筛选合作机构筛选
时间
引用量
主题
期刊级别
合作者
合作机构
Olga Ulturgasheva, Mally Stelmaszyk
JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL ANTHROPOLOGICAL INSTITUTE (2024)
CAMBRIDGE HANDBOOK FOR THE ANTHROPOLOGY OF GENDER AND SEXUALITYpp.370-394, (2023)
SLAVIC REVIEWno. 1 (2023): 254-256
引用0浏览0引用
0
0
Animism in Rainforest and Tundrapp.1-28, (2022)
Animism in Rainforest and Tundrapp.48-68, (2022)
Berghahn Books (2022)
引用22浏览0引用
22
0
Risky Futurespp.58-88, (2022)
Risky Futurespp.26-57, (2022)
加载更多
作者统计
#Papers: 39
#Citation: 369
H-Index: 13
G-Index: 19
Sociability: 4
Diversity: 0
Activity: 1
合作学者
合作机构
D-Core
- 合作者
- 学生
- 导师
数据免责声明
页面数据均来自互联网公开来源、合作出版商和通过AI技术自动分析结果,我们不对页面数据的有效性、准确性、正确性、可靠性、完整性和及时性做出任何承诺和保证。若有疑问,可以通过电子邮件方式联系我们:report@aminer.cn