Current Editorial Team
Ann Xiaoxu Pei (she/her) is a PhD student in Comparative Literature at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. She works at the intersection of Memory Studies and Environmental Humanities, land and water, people, and the more-than-human.
Antonia Hodgson (she/her) is a PhD candidate in the Department of Geography, University College London. Her research examines how the links between weather and health are played out in everyday life, with a particular focus on how urban recreational runners respond to heat.
Florian Steig (he/him) is a PhD student in the School of Geography and the Environment at the University of Oxford. He is interested in power and authority in international climate politics. His PhD research engages with the global discourse on climate adaptation against sea-level rise.
Hina Walajahi (they/she) is a PhD candidate in the History, Anthropology, and STS (HASTS) Program at MIT. Their research explores the everyday experiences of heat among working-class residents and care workers in Miami, Florida.
Farah Benbouabdellah (she/her) is a PhD candidate in Archaeology conducting interdisciplinary research on the portrayal of tigers in media, drawing on Anthropology, Film Studies, Material Culture, and Art History, with the Department of Archaeology and the Department of Film, Theatre and Television at the University of Reading, UK.
Luisa Schoneweg (she/her) is a graduate student in the School of Anthropology & Museum Ethnography at the University of Oxford. She is particularly interested in social constructivist perspectives at the interface of sociology and social anthropology.
Mariel Kieval (she/her) holds a MSc in Agriculture and Forestry from the University of Helsinki, Finland. Her research, focused on the Arctic and Central Asia, draws from political ecology, critical agrarian studies, and energy geography.
Camellia Biswas (she/her) is a postdoctoral fellow in Geography at Royal Holloway, University of London. She earned her PhD in Environmental Anthropology in 2024. Her research work spans multitudes of climate disasters through the lens of climate (in)justice, political ecology, and more-than-human relations.