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ISSUE 7.1

Jadaliyya Talks: Co-Editors Go In-Depth on the New Environment Page

Danya Al-Saleh, Huma Gupta, Brittany Cook, Owain Lawson

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Interviewed by Malihe Razazan
{{langos=='en'?('15/04/2020' | todate):('15/04/2020' | artodate)}}
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In this interview, Malihe Razazan speaks to four of the page's co-editors: Danya Al-Saleh, Brittany Cook, Huma Gupta, and Owain Lawson. They discuss critical approaches to covering the environment, what the new Jadaliyya page seeks to contribute to these conversations, and the need to decolonize our analysis of the environment, energy, and climate change.

[This interview is part of the new Environment Page launch. All accompanying launch posts can be found here.]



Guests

Danya Al-Saleh
Danya Al-Saleh

Danya Al-Saleh is a feminist economic geographer

Danya Al-Saleh is a PhD Candidate in the Department of Geography at the University of Wisconsin–Madison. She is a feminist economic geographer who works on the everyday politics of US universities in the Middle East and North Africa. Her dissertation research examines the relationship between US universities, engineering education, and the oil and gas industry in the Gulf, specifically in Qatar. Engaging debates in feminist political economy, critical university studies, and energy geographies, this project examines the role of US universities in reproducing socio-political formations that require the accelerated extraction of fossil fuels. She is also collaborating on a project which traces the nearly century-long role that the American University in Cairo (AUC) has played in Cairo’s uneven urbanization through knowledge production about desert development and the acquisition of suburban desert land.

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Huma Gupta
Huma Gupta

Scholar of environmental planning and the political economy of development

Huma Gupta is a scholar of environmental planning and the political economy of development. She is currently a Humanities Research Fellow at New York University - Abu Dhabi. Her book project “The Architecture of Dispossession: Migrant Sarifa Settlements and State-Building in Iraq” examines state-building through the architectural production of rural migrants in cities. She did her doctoral training at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), where she was a fellow in the Aga Khan Program for Islamic Architecture and the Social Science Research Council.

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Brittany Cook
Brittany Cook

Assistant Professor in Geography at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette

Brittany Cook is an Assistant Professor in Geography at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette. In 2018, she received her PhD in Geography with a graduate certificate in Gender and Women’s Studies from the University of Kentucky. Her research interests include organic agriculture and standardization, critical development studies, political ecology, feminist geopolitics, feminist methodologies, and the international political economy of rural development projects. She has worked in the field of Geographic Information Systems (GIS) and community mapping in the US and Palestine and conducted qualitative research in Cyprus, Palestine, and Jordan. Her work can be found in Annals of the American Association of Geographers (forthcoming), Journal of Rural Studies, Geoforum, and Space and Polity.

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Owain Lawson
Owain Lawson

PhD candidate at Columbia University and Senior Editor of the Arab Studies Journal

Owain Lawson is a PhD candidate in the Department of History at Columbia University and Senior Editor of the Arab Studies Journal. His dissertation-in-progress examines the history of the hydroelectric development of the Litani river as a means to explore intersections among technology, environment, finance, and society in twentieth-century Lebanon.

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