Contributing Editor
Dalton Price is an anthropology PhD candidate at the University of Oxford, where his research broadly focuses on the experiences of Venezuelans seeking refuge in Colombia’s borderlands. His research discards many Euro-American assumptions about what borders are and look like—highly regulated and securitized spaces, perhaps with walls, immigration police, and formal border crossings—and instead examines a “border” that is much more porous, fuzzy, and unpredictable. Planning a career in industry, Dalton plans to continue his work in humanitarian, development, human rights, and governmental spaces following his PhD.
Posts by This Author
The Governance and (Bio)Economization of Migrant Lives: An Interview with Dr. Marthe Achtnich
This post should be read alongside the Colloquy edited by Marthe Achtnich, in particular Marthe Achtnich's two articles “Mobile Livings: On the Bioeconomies of ... More
What Does It Mean to Teach Anthropology? An Invitation
What do we mean when we talk about teaching anthropology? More often than not, we refer specifically to university contexts, lecture halls, discussion sections,... More
Syllabus Archive: Diverse Approaches to Transnationalism
Transnationalism is broadly understood as the interconnection and movement of humans, objects, ideas, ideologies, and processes that “transcend” nation-state bo... More