Introduction
Knut G Nustad works with political and environmental anthropology and theory broadly defined, for the most part with a focus on South Africa. He has conducted research on informal political processes in urban settlements, development policy, state formation as well as land reform, conservation and protected areas. His latest project examines the politics of nature in rural KwaZulu-Natal through a focus on the processes that constitute and perform different versions of nature. Nustad is educated at the University of Oslo (BA) and at Cambrige University (M.Phil and PhD).
Expert
Knut G. Nustad is a Professor of Social Anthropology in the Department of Social Anthropology at the University of Oslo. His research interests cover two thematic fields, political anthropology and environmental anthropology. Nustad’s first fieldwork was conducted in Durban, South Africa, during the transition from apartheid to democracy, and examined one large planned urban development projects. Research focused on the complex and often contradictory relationship between local political processes and state attempts at reform. He described how the local political leadership was able to read the formal assumptions on which the developers based their interventions, and in turn transform these into informal political resources.
The relations between state actors and local political processes in Durban led to a more general interest in the state and how anthropology could be used in the study of state actors and state processes. This interest was strengthened when he after his PhD took up a position at the Norwegian Institute of International Affairs (NUPI). The differences between academic and policy-oriented knowledge production led to a focus on the various frames of reference within which knowledge is produced, specifically how knowledge is produced in state institutions, and an interest in state formation more generally. This led to the publication of State Formation: Anthropological Perspectives (Pluto 2005), co-edited with Christian Krohn-Hansen.
Nustad’s interest in environmental anthropology arose from a study of property relations and land rights in South Africa, with a focus on the complex set of relations underlying South Africa’s first UNESCO World Heritage Site. Through ethnographic research as well as archival studies, the project documented how shifting land uses have created radically different, yet closely connected, assemblages of people, non-humans and things. It has led to amongst other the publication of Creating Africas: struggles over nature, conservation and land (Hurst 2015), and, together with Penny Harvey and Christian Krohn-Hansen, the edited collection Anthropos and the Material (Duke, to be published in 2019)
In 2019 he will start up a three-year research project with Heather Swanson at Aarhus University, that will seek to combine the interest in environmental anthropology with global politics and colonial state formation. Global trout – investigating environmental change with more than human world systems is an interdisciplinary project that investigates how the humanities and social sciences can contribute to new modes of conservation and environmental management that are responsive to the complex histories and politics of species introductions. It does so by asking a methodological question about how to study 'global' environmental problems that unfold in highly diverse ways in different places.
Fields of expertise: Environmental policy / climate change, Social change / social transformations