ÐÓ°ÉÂÛ̳

Dr Austin  Zeiderman

Dr Austin Zeiderman

Associate Professor of Geography

Department of Geography and Environment

Room No
CKK 3.10
Office Hours
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Languages
English, Spanish
Key Expertise
Cities, Environment, Security, Race, Capitalism, Latin America

About me

Austin Zeiderman is Associate Professor in the Department of Geography and Environment at the London School of Economics. He is an interdisciplinary scholar who specializes in the social and political dimensions of urbanization and the environment in Latin America and the Caribbean, with a focus on Colombia. Austin holds a PhD in Anthropology from Stanford University as well as a Master of Environmental Science degree from Yale University and a BA in Economics from Colgate University.

Austin’s scholarship is engaged with current debates across geography, anthropology, sociology, politics, and history. He is also active in the regional and thematic fields of Latin American and Caribbean studies, urban studies, environmental studies, science and technology studies, security studies, and Black studies. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork in Colombia over nearly two decades, he seeks to advance debates from these diverse scholarly traditions while pushing them to engage with the major social and environmental challenges of the present.

Austin has recently completed his second monograph,  (Duke 2025), which uncovers the historical and contemporary role of the waterway in the expansion of colonial and racial capitalism in the Americas. In so doing, Artery expands the understanding of present and future environmental crises by showing how unsustainable relations between humans and the planet are underpinned by unequal relations in human society. The account foregrounds the plan to create a logistics corridor along the river through a series of hydromodification works. Examining this infrastructure megaproject reveals the centrality of racialization to contemporary ecological predicaments as well as the conditions of possibility for change.

Austin’s first book, (Duke 2016), examines the political imperative to protect life against future threats by focusing an ethnographic lens on the governance of environmental hazards (landslides, floods, and earthquakes) in the self-built settlements of the urban periphery. Based on eighteen months of fieldwork, Endangered City argues that logics of security and risk increasingly define political life, especially for those at the urban margins. The book theorizes the global condition of “endangerment”—that is, forms of collectivity and entitlement predicated on degrees of vulnerability and victimhood.

Austin’s research has appeared in a range of scholarly and public outlets, such as Antipode, Public Culture, Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, American Ethnologist, openDemocracy, and the Guardian. He has received fellowships and awards from the Fulbright Program, the Wenner-Gren Foundation, the National Science Foundation, and the Mellon Foundation. From 2012 to 2014, Austin coordinated the  at ÐÓ°ÉÂÛ̳ Cities, where he remains a Research Associate. Raised in Philadelphia, he has previously worked on urban and environmental issues in Baltimore and San Francisco.

Get to know Austin a little more through our Spotlight series or by listening to him speaking about his experience aboard a commercial riverboat on the Magdalena River in this .

Countries and regions

Colombia; Latin America; Caribbean; United States; the Americas

Projects

Social Life of Climate Change: global hub for critical thinking about climate change and the environment with a cross-disciplinary network of collaborators around the world.

: research collective bringing together scholars, writers, artists, and activists committed to thinking the underside of surveillance.

Traffic in the Americas: a three-year international research collaboration on security, mobility, and infrastructure involving partners from the United States, Canada, and Latin America.

Research areas

  • Cities and urbanism
  • Infrastructure
  • Climate change and environment
  • Race and racism
  • Capitalism and logistics
  • Politics, governance, and the state
  • Security, risk, and violence
  • Rights, citizenship, and democracy
  • Colonial and postcolonial history
  • Ethnographic and archival methods
  • Science and technology
  • Urban and social theory

Selected publications

  • (2025, Duke University Press)
  • “” (2022, CITY: Analysis of Urban Change, Theory, Action)
  • “” (2021, Environment and Planning D: Society and Space)
  • " (2020, Anthropological Quarterly)
  • “” (2020, Futureproof: Security Aesthetics and the Management of Life)
  • “” (2019, Infrastructure, Environment, and Life in the Anthropocene)
  • “” (2018, International Journal of Urban and Regional Research)
  • “” (2017, SAGE Handbook of the 21st Century City)
  • “” (2016, Antipode)
  •  (2016, Duke University Press)
  • “” (2016, Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute)
  • “” (2016, Public Culture)
  • “” (2015, Public Culture)
  • “” (2015, Modes of Uncertainty: Anthropological Cases)
  • “” (2013, American Ethnologist)
  • “” (2012, Environment and Planning A)

Teaching and supervising

Austin’s undergraduate and postgraduate teaching aims to engage students in the central challenges of the contemporary moment—from the politics of climate change to racialized violence and dispossession to the securitization of cities and nature. He is also keen to supervise postgraduate research on a wide range of topics and from a variety of analytical standpoints, though priority is given to projects with geographical, thematic, and methodological affinities (see above). Prospective students are welcome to get in touch to discuss the possibility of working together.

Courses currently taught at ÐÓ°ÉÂÛ̳ include:

GY403 Contemporary Debates in Human Geography
GY452 Urban Research Methods
GY503 Writing the World

My research

Article

Author(s) Austin Zeiderman

Article

Author(s) Austin Zeiderman

Article

Author(s) Austin Zeiderman

Report and Working Papers

Author(s) Austin Zeiderman