Cite As:
Adams, James, and Maggie Woodruff. 2018. “UCI Anthro Alumni.” In UCI Anthro STS, edited by James Adams and Maggie Woodruff. In STS Across Borders Digital Exhibit, edited by Aalok Khandekar and Kim Fortun. Society for Social Studies of Science. August http://stsinfrastructures.org/content/uci-anthro-alumni/essay.
This PECE essay helps to answer the STS Across Borders analytic question: “What people, projects, and products exemplify how this STS formation has developed over time?”
This essay is part of a broader exhibit on UCI Anthro STS.
STS Across Borders is a special exhibit organized by the Society for Social Studies of Science (4S) to showcase how the field of Science and Technology Studies (STS) has developed in different times, places...Read more
In this interview, four UCI Anthropology alumni--Emily Brooks, Taylor Nelms, Stephen C. Rea, and Elizabeth Reddy--discuss the enduring legacies of the history of UCI's School of Social Sciences and the Department of Anthropology.
This essay helps to answer the following ...Read more
Emily Brooks received her PhD in Anthropology from the University of California, Irvine in 2017. Dr. Brooks is an envoronmental anthropologist who studies the intersection of environment, science and technology, and governance in the Western United States. Her research explores...Read more
Dr. Stephen C. Rea is a cultural anthropologist who works on digitally mediated socialities. His most recent project examined South Korean digital gaming culture. He has also published on digital financial inclusion and mobile money professionals.
This PECE essay helps to answer the...Read more
Elizabeth Reddy received her PhD in Anthropology from the University of California, Irvine in 2016. Dr. Reddy studies the sociotechnical work that engineers and scientists (mostly in Mexico and the United States) do when they take on risk mitigation projects. Informed by the insights of...Read more
Taylor Nelms received his PhD in Anthropology from UCI in 2015. Dr. Nelms studies how people make and maintain alternative or experimental economies. His current book project, After Neoliberalism: Solidarity Economies in Quito, Ecuador, examines—from policy to practice—efforts to...Read more
Nick Seaver is an alumnus of UCI’s Department of Anthropology, receiving his PhD in 2015. His research looks at the cultural theories of software developers and how their ideas about taste and attention shape the way they make subjectively attuned technical objects. Dr. Seaver is currently an...Read more