Neel Ahuja
Professor, The Harriet Tubman Department of Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies
Affiliate Professor, American Studies
3121 Susquehanna Hall
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Research Expertise
Asian American Studies
Critical Race Theory
Cultural Studies
Decolonial Feminisms
Diaspora
Disability
Feminist Science Studies
Medical Humanities
Migration
Postcolonial Feminisms
Neel Ahuja is Professor in the Harriet Tubman Department of Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies at the University of Maryland, College Park, where he is Director of Undergraduate Studies. Neel teaches a variety of courses in critical race and ethnic studies, feminist science studies, disability studies, and environmental humanities. His research explores the relationship of the body to the geopolitical, environmental, and public health contexts of colonial governance, warfare, and security. Neel is the author of two books, Bioinsecurities: Disease Interventions, Empire, and the Government of Species (2016) and Planetary Specters: Race, Migration, and Climate Change in the Twenty-First Century (2021).
For more information about Dr. Ahuja and to check out his blog, visit https://blog.umd.edu/ahuja/
Publications
Planetary Specters: Race, Migration, and Climate Change in the Twenty-First Century
Dr. Ahuja's 2021 book explores the interconnectedness of climate change, migration, and racism
Neel Ahuja tracks the figure of the climate refugee in public media and policy over the past decade, arguing that journalists, security experts, politicians, and nongovernmental organizations have often oversimplified climate change and obfuscated the processes that drive mass migration. To understand the systemic reasons for displacement, Ahuja argues, it is necessary to reframe climate disaster as interlinked with the history of capitalism and the global politics of race, wherein racist presumptions about agrarian underdevelopment and Indigenous knowledge mask how financial, development, migration, and climate adaptation policies reproduce growing inequalities.
Drawing on the work of Cedric Robinson and theories of racial capitalism, Ahuja considers how the oil industry transformed the economic and geopolitical processes that lead to displacement. From South Asia to the Persian Gulf, Europe, and North America, Ahuja studies how Asian trade, finance, and labor connections have changed the nature of race, borders, warfare, and capitalism since the 1970s. Ultimately, Ahuja argues that only by reckoning with how climate change emerges out of longer histories of race, colonialism, and capitalism can we begin to build a sustainable and just future for those most affected by environmental change.
The Analogy of Race and Species in Animal Studies
Dr. Ahuja's article appears in the March 2021 issue of Prism: Theory and Modern Chinese Litereature from Duke University Press
The emerging field of animal studies builds on ethical insights from the animal rights philosophies that involve an analogy between racism and speciesism, or discrimination based on species. Analyzing recent works addressing human-animal relation ships in Black studies, this essay con tends that it has been necessary for emerging scholarship on race to transcend this analogy in order to con front the persistence of anti-Black racism and contemporary environmental crisis.
Weather as War: Race, Disability, and Environmental Determinism in the Syrian Climate War Thesis
Dr. Ahuja's 2020 article in Critical Ethnic Studies examines the Syrian climate wars thesis
Published in Critical Ethnic Studies in Vol 6, No 1 (Spring 2020), this article examines the Syrian Climate War Thesis
Bioinsecurities: Disease Interventions, Empire, and the Government of Species
Dr. Ahuja examines how US imperial expansion has shaped government control of species interaction in this 2016 book from Duke University Press
In Bioinsecurities Neel Ahuja argues that U.S. imperial expansion has been shaped by the attempts of health and military officials to control the interactions of humans, animals, viruses, and bacteria at the borders of U.S. influence, a phenomenon called the government of species. The book explores efforts to control the spread of Hansen's disease, venereal disease, polio, smallpox, and HIV through interventions linking the continental United States to Hawai'i, Panamá, Puerto Rico, Cuba, Congo, Iraq, and India in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. Ahuja argues that racial fears of contagion helped to produce public optimism concerning state uses of pharmaceuticals, medical experimentation, military intervention, and incarceration to regulate the immune capacities of the body. In the process, the security state made the biological structures of human and animal populations into sites of struggle in the politics of empire, unleashing new patient activisms and forms of resistance to medical and military authority across the increasingly global sphere of U.S. influence.