My research explores what policy means in practice, or more specifically, how people
(organized, for example, as neighborhoods, diasporic communities, students, tenants)
respond to the failures and violence of policy. I find ethnographic inspiration in
the ways groups forge notions of solidarity, community, and home amid precarious conditions.
Research fieldsites have ranged from the urbanizing periphery of Kathmandu Valley,
Nepal, to resettled refugees buying houses in Texan suburbs, and global migrants negotiating
the bottlenecks of Latin American transit migration.
My current research on housing justice in north Texas has two aims. One is to make
the eviction court process more transparent for tenants and housing advocates. The
second is to privilege a tenant's perspective in reconceptualizing the value of housing
beyond current market-dominant notions. More broadly, I seek to combine research with
writing and teaching pursuits that contribute to applied anthropology. For instance,
how ethnography-journalism collaborations might contribute to public anthropology,
and project-based teaching/mentoring might strengthen local advocacy and activism
efforts.
Education
2013, Ph.D. Anthropology, University of Virginia
2004, M.A. Anthropology of Media, University of London, School of Oriental and African
Studies
2000, B.A. Anthropology, Grinnell College
Selected Consulting Projects
2020-2021. Advised student-led project on student housing insecurity for UNT Dean
of Students, and Colorado Housing and Finance Authority.
2019-2020. Project on gas station safety for the Non-Resident Nepali Association-Global
Health & Hygiene Committee.
2019. Advised student-led project on student debt for the policy institute, New America.
2017. Advised student-led project on affordable housing for national non-profit organization,
National Housing Conference.
2014, 2016. Lead ethnographer for the National HIV Behavioral Survey for Texas Department
of Health and Human Services.
Recent Publications
Books
2022. Curran, Rob and Andrew Nelson. Journey without End: Migration from the Global South through the Americas. Vanderbilt University Press.
Edited Volumes
2019. Nelson, Andrew, Alexander Rödlach & Roos Willems, eds. The Crux of Refugee Resettlement: Rebuilding Social Networks. Lanham, Maryland: Lexington Books.
Articles/Chapters
2022. Nelson, Andrew. "Seeking Samaj: Refugee Resettlement Beyond Self-Sufficiency
and Dispersal." In Refugee Resettlement in the United States: Loss, Transition, and Resilience in a Pose-9/11
World, edited by Marnie Watson and Pritha Gopalan, pp. 138-152. Routledge Books.
2021. Nelson, Andrew. "The Free Trade Zone and the Ethnic Restaurant: South Asian
Emergent Space in a Chilean City of Labor Migrants." In Emergent Spaces: Change and Innovation in Small Urban Spaces, edited by Petra Kuppinger, pp. 85-104. Cham, Switzerland: Palgrave Macmillan.
2021. Nelson, Andrew and Kathryn Stam. "Bhutanese or Nepali? The Politics of Ethnonym Ambiguity." South Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies 44(4): 772-789.
2021. Nelson, Andrew. "From Romance to Tragedy: House Ownership and Relocation in the Resettlement Narratives
of Nepali Bhutanese Refugees." Journal of Refugee Studies 34(4): 4053-4071
2019. Nelson, Andrew. "Architectural Tradition and Modernity as Crypto-Colonial Ways
of Seeing: A Comparison of Kathmandu's 1934 and 2015 Post-Quake Reconstructions."
History Compass 17(8), https://doi.org/10.1111/hic3.12587.
Regularly Taught Courses
ANTH 1150: World Cultures through Film
ANTH 3700: Peoples and Cultures of South Asia
ANTH 4760/5760: Inequality, Social Justice & the City
ANTH 5021: Theory & Praxis II
ANTH 5031: Ethnographic & Qualitative Methods
ANTH 5300: Migrants & Refugees