fellow

Chakad Ojani

2025-2026
Home institution
Stockholm University
Country of origin (home institution)
Sweden
Discipline(s)
Anthropology and ethnology; Science and technology studies
Theme(s)
Other
Fellowship dates
Biography

Chakad Ojani received his PhD in Social Anthropology from the University of Manchester in 2021. He then worked as a postdoctoral researcher at Jagiellonian University (2021–2022) and Uppsala University (2022–2024). His thesis drew on twelve months of ethnographic research on fog-capture, informal urbanization, and human-environment relations in Lima and other parts of coastal Peru. This work received the Royal Anthropological Institute’s Radcliffe-Brown Sutasoma Award and its findings have been published in journals such as Cultural Anthropology, HAU: Journal of Ethnographic Theory, Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, and Social Analysis: The International Journal of Anthropology.

Ojani’s research interests lie at the intersection of the anthropology of infrastructure, environmental anthropology, and science and technology studies.

Research Project
Infrastructuring the Extra-terrestrial, Un-earthing Anthropology

As a Pro Futura Scientia Fellow, he will be working on the project “Infrastructuring the Extra-terrestrial, Un-earthing Anthropology.” Taking Sweden as its ethnographic focus, this study investigates the making and reshaping of (extra)planetary ecologies through various forms of infrastructural mediation. Specifically, Ojani will examine the discursive, material, and speculative practices whereby environments – both on and off Earth – are reimagined and modified amidst contemporary efforts to infrastructuring Earth’s orbital environment and beyond. Against this empirical backdrop, the project seeks to elucidate the possibilities and limitations of a geocentric politics of the environment and climate change.

Research Interests:

anthropology of infrastructure; environmental anthropology; science and technology studies; fog-capture; informal urbanization; human-environment relations; Lima; coastal Peru; geocentric politics; climate change