Education & Awards
2009 - PhD in anthropology, Muséum national d’histoire naturelle (Paris), magna cum laude.
2016 - Marie Sklodowska-Curie individual fellowship
Research Projects
2016 – 2018 Post-doctoral research: "Niche construction on the move: how nomadic pastoralists navigate across fast-changing social-ecological systems" (NomadicN)
Mobile pastoral systems, despite being highly adaptive to harsh and unpredictable environments, are faced with increasing challenges worldwide, due – among other factors – to a fast extension of irrigated agriculture and a fragmentation of landscapes. Understanding how they react and adapt to these changes is a key contemporary issue, concerning almost every region in the world, including Europe. The aim of the NomadicN project is to increase our understanding of the complex processes at play when mobile pastoralists navigate across fast-changing densely-cultivated landscapes. For this, we will develop a new approach to the analysis of the pastoral movements, by integrating into a single framework data on ecological variations and data on the social interactions that are necessary to mediate access to privately-owned resources. The objectives of the project are a) to identify the key ecological and social processes that underlie the migration dynamic, b) to analyze how these two sets of drivers interact and influence the decision-making process along migration stages, and c) to study, at the landscape scale, how the intertwinement of these processes shapes – or not - the mobility patterns of transhumant groups and how it affects their resilience. We will do so through the analysis of the annual migration cycle of nomadic shepherds from the Rabari community, in the Kutch area (Gujarat, India).
Supervisor: Doyle McKey; Researcher: Matthieu Salpeteur
Funding: European Commission - Research Executive Agency. Marie Sklodowska-Curie Actions (H2020 MSCA-IEF 2015)
2011-2015 Post-doctoral research: "Simulating the past to understand human behaviour" (Simulpast)
Within this framework, my research focused on two aspects:
- Contribute to the development of agent-based models by providing an anthropological point of view on the formalization of social dimensions to be included in the models and by providing data coming from the anthropological literature
- Study from an ethnographic point of view the nomadic livelihood of contemporary pastoralists in Gujarat. The data was later used to inform the development of models and to analyze the dynamics of local ecological knowledge systems and adaptive strategies implemented by these pastoralists faced with a wide range of environmental changes.
Supervisor: Victoria Reyes-García (ICREA, ICTA - Universitat Autónoma de Barcelona)
Funding: Spanish Ministry for Science and Innovation (CONSOLIDER-INGENIO CSD2010-00034)







