Cristobal holds a PhD from the University of Edinburgh, and he has been trained at the intersections of clinical psychology, social anthropology and Science and Technology Studies (STS). WOL builds on Cristobal’s 10 years research trajectory of focusing on how social and material realities transform when co-existing projects, technologies, and people meet. His scholarship has demonstrated the usefulness of analysing social and material controversies stemming from the collision and mutual interaction of different fields of action.
Moreover, WOL builds upon Cristobal’s previous ‘Invisible Waters’ research supported by the Marie Skłodowska-Curie EU programme.
His ‘Invisible Waters’ Marie Curie project on groundwater practices in the Atacama Desert in northern Chile, the driest desert in the world, showed the urgency to ecologically study and rethink what decarbonisation strategies entail.
Bonelli, C. 2019. Spectral forces, time and excess in Southern Chile. Chapter within the book The World Multiple Everyday Politics of Knowing and Generating Entangled Worlds, edited by Omura, K, Otsuki, G., Satsuka, S, Morita, A. New York. Routledge Advances in Sociology.
Bonelli, C. and Gonzalez, M. 2018. The roads of immanence: Infrastructural change in Southern Chile. Mobilities. 13:4, 441-454.
Bonelli, C., & Vicherat Mattar, D. 2017.
Towards a Sociology of Equivocal Connections. Sociology, 51(1), 60-75.
Bonelli, C. 2015. To see what cannot be seen: Ontological differences and public health policies in Southern Chile. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute. 21, (4). 872-891.
Bonelli, C. 2012. Ontological disorders: Nightmares, psychotropic drugs and evil spirits in southern Chile. Anthropological Theory. 12 (4).
Cristobal holds a PhD from the University of Edinburgh, and he has been trained at the intersections of clinical psychology, social anthropology and Science and Technology Studies (STS). WOL builds on Cristobal’s 10 years research trajectory of focusing on how social and material realities transform when co-existing projects, technologies, and people meet. His scholarship has demonstrated the usefulness of analysing social and material controversies stemming from the collision and mutual interaction of different fields of action.
Moreover, WOL builds upon Cristobal’s previous ‘Invisible Waters’ research supported by the Marie Skłodowska-Curie EU programme.
His ‘Invisible Waters’ Marie Curie project on groundwater practices in the Atacama Desert in northern Chile, the driest desert in the world, showed the urgency to ecologically study and rethink what decarbonisation strategies entail.
Bonelli, C. 2019. Spectral forces, time and excess in Southern Chile. Chapter within the book The World Multiple Everyday Politics of Knowing and Generating Entangled Worlds, edited by Omura, K, Otsuki, G., Satsuka, S, Morita, A. New York. Routledge Advances in Sociology.
Bonelli, C. and Gonzalez, M. 2018. The roads of immanence: Infrastructural change in Southern Chile. Mobilities. 13:4, 441-454.
Bonelli, C., & Vicherat Mattar, D. 2017.
Towards a Sociology of Equivocal Connections. Sociology, 51(1), 60-75.
Bonelli, C. 2015. To see what cannot be seen: Ontological differences and public health policies in Southern Chile. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute. 21, (4). 872-891.
Bonelli, C. 2012. Ontological disorders: Nightmares, psychotropic drugs and evil spirits in southern Chile. Anthropological Theory. 12 (4).
Cristobal holds a PhD from the University of Edinburgh, and he has been trained at the intersections of clinical psychology, social anthropology and Science and Technology Studies (STS). WOL builds on Cristobal’s 10 years research trajectory of focusing on how social and material realities transform when co-existing projects, technologies, and people meet. His scholarship has demonstrated the usefulness of analysing social and material controversies stemming from the collision and mutual interaction of different fields of action.
Moreover, WOL builds upon Cristobal’s previous ‘Invisible Waters’ research supported by the Marie Skłodowska-Curie EU programme.
His ‘Invisible Waters’ Marie Curie project on groundwater practices in the Atacama Desert in northern Chile, the driest desert in the world, showed the urgency to ecologically study and rethink what decarbonisation strategies entail.