Emma Shaw Crane
Assistant Professor of Anthropology
Bio
Emma Shaw Crane is an urban and environmental anthropologist. Her research and teaching focus on war, environment, and racialization in the urban Americas.
Her current book project, Counterinsurgent Suburb, is a study of the environmental and spatial arrangements that sustain U.S. empire on the peripheries of Miami, Florida. It draws on ethnographic fieldwork across a military base, a detention camp for migrant children, a nuclear power plant, and industrial plantations sustained by Indigenous Maya migrant workers. The project engages war as a transnational racial project that is routinized and reproduced in the American suburb.
A second project examines aftermaths of war in Bogotá and draws on long-term fieldwork with former guerrilla combatants in Colombia’s civil war. It examines how peripheral neighborhoods become the targets of municipal, humanitarian, and insurgent efforts to repair past atrocity, often in ways that seek to remake urban built environments.
Crane’s work is grounded in the principles and practices of research justice. She currently co-directs a project investigating exposure to unbreathable air as a form of collective punishment at a county jail and federal migrant detention center in Glades County, Florida.
Academic Appointments
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Assistant Professor, Anthropology
Professional Education
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PhD, New York University, American Studies (2021)
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BA, University of California, Berkeley, Interdisciplinary Studies (2009)
All Publications
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Lush aftermath: Race, labor, and landscape in the suburb
ENVIRONMENT AND PLANNING D-SOCIETY & SPACE
2023; 41 (2): 210-230
View details for DOI 10.1177/02637758231172202
View details for Web of Science ID 000976628000001
- The Poisoned Periphery: Research Methods for Cities Edge Duke University Press. Public Culture. 2022 359–364
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Cities, Racialized Poverty, and Infrastructures of Possibility
ANTIPODE
2020; 52 (2)
View details for DOI 10.1111/anti.12600
View details for Web of Science ID 000507995200001
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"The Anti-Poverty Hoax": Development, pacification, and the making of community in the global 1960s
CITIES
2015; 44: 139-145
View details for DOI 10.1016/j.cities.2014.07.005
View details for Web of Science ID 000353091600016
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Territories of Poverty: Rethinking North and South
TERRITORIES OF POVERTY: RETHINKING NORTH AND SOUTH
2015; 24: 1-374
View details for Web of Science ID 000374261200025