Miia Halme-Tuomisaari
What – a bio in max 50 words?! It’s not enough! Let’s try: Miia Halme-Tuomisaari is Allegra’s co-founder. She was Director of Things between 2013-2018. She is also the chair of Allegra Lab Hki. Creative Scholar, Professional Intellectual, All-Round Planner, Eternal Utopian Thinker – and an anthropologist of international law specializing in the analysis of the past, present and future of contemporary human rights phenomena.
Ninnu Koskenalho
Ninnu has been Allegra’s very first Managing Editor (2013-2015). A WordPress wizzard and creative mind, she is now the Editor-in-Chief of AnthroBlogi, Allegra Lab’s Finnish sister. She also holds a Master degree in Anthropology.
Andrea Klein
Andrea is Allegra’s former Managing Editor of Things and Stuff (2015-2019). She would like to be a professional hiker because she’s happiest with a pack on her back. She holds an MA in Japanese Studies, spent over a decade working in the ‘real’ world before she met Julie and Miia who made her realise that she should have studied anthropology. Well, it’s never too late… (Photo by Michel Brumat).
Antonio De Lauri
Antonio is Allegra’s former Director of Festivities (2014-2018) and one of Allegra’s most popular authors. Check his post on “Bourgeois Knowledge“, one of our most read posts so far! Antonio is now the Editor-in-Chief of Public Anthropologist.
Luigi Achilli
Luigi is Allegra’s former Just Director (2015-2017) and our most regular author on issues related to Palestine, forced displacement, smuggling and migration. He is the author of ‘Palestinian Refugees and Identity: Nationalism, Politics and the Everyday’ (I.B. Tauris, April 2015).
Minke Nouwens
Minke has been Allegra’s Master of Collection between 2017 and 2018. She is a visual artist with a deep fascination for the narrative properties of things. She is interested in how digital technologies and material objects tell stories through colours, textures, movements, and sounds. Minke pursued a BSc and MRes degree in Cultural Anthropology and is now a Research Fellow at the Center of Applied Research for Art, Design and Technology in the Netherlands. Watch her beautiful website here.
Shruthi James
Shruthi is a Masters student in International Relations & Political Science. She is interested in asking questions surrounding power structures in the everyday. Her current research work is on the (forced) internal migration backed by public-private extractive industries in Chhattisgarh and Jharkhand.
Saheli Chatterjee
Saheli is currently a Master’s student in International History at the Graduate Institute in Geneva. She is excited to be part of the editorial team in charge of Book Reviews. As an aspiring historian, she is certain it will help her broaden her understanding of the world and the role social scientists have to play in it.
Greg Feldman
Greg joined the Allegra editorial team in 2019. On the one hand, his work investigates questions of migration, citizenship, and action. On the other, it is really about dis/empowerment in today’s world. When he is not working on that, he remains fascinated by a global fear of the word “intellectual”, by power hierarchies in academic disciplines (it can’t all be blamed on university administration), and by the politics (and economics) of knowledge production.
Jastinder Kaur
Dr Jastinder Kaur is a postdoctoral researcher at SOAS University of London and Fellow of the Global Research Network on Parliaments and People. Her research explores the dynamic interplay of identity, culture, conflict, and conviviality in post-colonial multi-ethnic societies over time – including in the context of coup d’etats in Fiji. She is currently involved in the ERC-funded project ‘A global comparative ethnography of parliaments, politicians, and people: representation, relationships, and ruptures’.
Emilie Thévenoz
Emilie is a Masters in Development Studies (Graduate Institute of Geneva) / Bachelor in Anthropology with a minor in Middle Eastern studies (University of Sussex). She is interested in the vulgarisation of accademic knowledge, visual anthropology, photography and arts, race and ethnicity, decoloniality, museography, and climate justice.
Felix Girke
Felix is an anthropologist working at the HTWG Konstanz. His current book project focuses on the politics of cultural heritage in Myanmar. He is also the author of The Wheel of Autonomy. Ethnicity and Rhetoric in the Omo Valley (2018). Find him on twitter: @felixgirke. Gurro ukabba.