Alexander Arroyo is a doctoral candidate in Geography at UC Berkeley, working on the technics and politics of American empire in the Pacific and Arctic oceans. Exploring a genealogy of "experimental environments" in the Aleutian archipelago, he will present work on the relation between oceanic modes of inscription and colonial conscription of bodies to overwrite–– or overcode–– fluid milieux in a speculative, geopolitical image.

Amita Baviskar is Professor of Sociology at the Institute of Economic Growth, New Delhi. An interdisciplinary sociologist, anthropologist and geographer, Baviskar is a key figure in agrarian and environmental studies, environmental politics, urban environments, and middle class cultural politics as seen from India. She has held appointments at Yale, Stanford and Berkeley (Ciriacy-Wantrup Fellow, 2002-4), and in addition to multiple monographs and edited books, her recent work includes First Garden of the Republic: Nature on the President's Estate.

Sharad Chari is an Associate Professor in the Geography Department at Berkeley, and is affiliated to the Project on the Oceanic Humanities in the Global South at the Wits Institute for Social and Economic Research (WiSER), Johannesburg. He has worked on agrarian and urban capitalism in South India, represented in Fraternal Capital, and on the remains of racial capitalism and struggle in the Indian Ocean city of Durban, in a manuscript called Apartheid Remains. His current work is at the intersection of post-national histories and geographies of capital, Black and subaltern radical traditions, and oceanic studies.

Seth Denizen is a researcher and design practitioner trained in landscape architecture and evolutionary biology. He is currently completing a PhD in geography at the University of California Berkeley, where his doctoral research investigates the vertical geopolitics of urban soil in Mexico City.

Ned Dostaler is a PhD student in the Department of Anthropology at UC Berkeley. He is currently in the process of developing a project that ethnographically follows the materiality of sand as it mediates life, labor, and capital in a fishing community in coastal Chennai.

Lenore Manderson is a Distinguished Professor of Public Health and Medical Anthropology in the School of Public Health at the University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa; she is also Visiting Distinguished Professor at the Institute for Environment and Society and Visiting Professor of Anthropology, Brown University; honorary professor at Khon Kaen University, Thailand; and adjunct professor at Monash University. Manderson has made major contributions to anthropology, social history, and public health, and to studies of gender and sexuality, infectious and chronic disease, disability and inequality. Most recently, Manderson curated a set of international art/science collaborations at Brown University and at the University of the Witwatersrand called 'Earth, itself.'

Andrea Marston is a PhD candidate in the geography department. Her work explores the cultural politics of the subsoil in Bolivia through ethnographic and historical work with geo-scientists and small-scale miners.

Jeff Martin is a PhD candidate in Geography currently writing up dissertation research on wolf-livestock conflict and coexistence efforts in Central Idaho. Their background is in political ecology and economic geography, but they are also deeply interested in more-than-human engagements, speculative fiction, and questions of world-building.

Geeta Patel is Professor, Women’s Gender and Sexuality Studies, and Middle Eastern and South Asian Languages and Cultures, University of Virginia. Apart from her foundational work on nationalism, gender, sexuality, and grief in twentieth-century Urdu poetic movements; she has made contributions to postcolonial, diaspora and subaltern literary history and theory; and has written and translated Sanskrit, Urdu, Hindi, Braj and Awadhi writing; and her recent work brings these currents in relation to histories of science, finance, labor movement and queer life.

Sumathi Ramaswamy is James B. Duke Professor of History and International Comparative Studies at Duke University. A cultural historian of South Asia and the British Empire, Ramaswamy has made important contributions on historical and geographical imaginations of gender, nation and postcolonial loss; visual studies in a colonial and postcolonial frame; and geographical pedagogy in an imperial world. Her key books include The Goddess and the Nation: Mapping Mother India (Duke 2010), Empires of Vision (co-edited with Martin Jay, Duke 2014), the digital networked archive of South Asian popular visual culture, Tasveerghar, The Lost Land of Lemuria (California, 2004) and Terrestrial Lessons: The Conquest of the World as Globe (University of Chicago Press, 2017.)

Alex Werth is a writer and DJ whose work cross-fades between the geographies of sound and the sound of geographies. As a doctoral candidate in the Geography Department at UC Berkeley, his research looks at the routine governance of music and dancescapes in Oakland, CA as arenas for the making of racialized dispositions and dispossessions.

Kath Weston is Professor of Anthropology at the University of Virginia and former recipient of the Guggenheim Fellowship (2011). A key thinker on kinship, gender and sexality, with research in North America, India, Japan, the United Kingdom and the Andaman and Nicobar Islands, Weston has been working more recently on the anthropology and political ecology of human-animal and human-environment issues. Her recent book is Animate Planet: Making Visceral Sense of Living in a Hi-Tech, Ecologically Damaged World. Weston is also engaged fundamntally with the art of writing, and is a member of the National Writers Union.