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Margaret Cheesman

Dr

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    Personal profile

    Biographical details

    Dr Margie Cheesman is a Lecturer in Digital Economy at the Department of Digital Humanities.

    Margie’s work examines digitalisation projects in humanitarian aid, asylum, and welfare, as a way of understanding the contested horizons of global governance. She uses ethnographic methods to engage with elite and marginalised groups, from aid organisations to asylum seekers and refugees. Her latest studies have investigated the social and political implications of web3 tech, including digital identity and currency experiments.

    Margie is currently working on a book about the digital transformation of financial aid, which is based on fieldwork with refugee women, blockchain developers, and United Nations agencies in Jordan. Her new research project, Shadows of the Digital Economy, is about the informal and subversive ways in which people (especially non-citizens) maintain their livelihoods. She is a Co-Investigator on the Identity and Migration project, an investigation into emerging models of digital identity in migration governance funded by the Robert Bosch Foundation.

    Margie completed her PhD at the Oxford Internet Institute in 2022. She has worked as Assistant Editor of the journal Big Data & Society and is a Research Affiliate at the University of Cambridge’s Minderoo Centre for Technology and Democracy. She is a member of research collectives such as the European Association of Anthropologists (EASA) Digital Anthropology and Anthropology of Economy networks, the Surveillance Studies Network (SSN), and STS-MigTec. Margie also works with the grassroots organisations Swansea Asylum Support and West London Welcome.

    Research interests

    Research Interests and PhD supervision

    • Digital Anthropology
    • Economic Anthropology
    • Science and Technology Studies
    • Humanitarianism/Development Studies
    • Migration Studies
    • Critical Border Studies

    Research interests (short)

     

    Teaching

    Margie’s teaching bridges macro and micro approaches to digital economies and cultures. She brings geopolitical concerns into dialogue with everyday lived experiences. Margie particularly welcomes dissertation students interested in exploring the connections between digital technologies and any of the following: ethnographic and co-produced research approaches, finance, infrastructure, identification, borders, humanitarian and development aid, racial capitalism, web3 and other alternative models of innovation.

     

    During office hours, students can pre-book a time in advance.

     

    Selected publications

    Cheesman, M. 2024. Conjuring a Blockchain Pilot: Ignorance and Innovation in Humanitarian Aid. Geopolitics, 1-28. DOI:10.1080/14650045.2024.2389284.

    Cheesman, M. 2024. ‘Digital Humanitarianism: Interfaces, Infrastructures, and Countercurrents’, London Review of International Law, DOI:10.1093/lril/lrae003.

    Mahmoudi, M. and M. Cheesman. 2024. ‘Chapter 23: On Donkeys and Blockchains’, in M. Aizeki, M. Mahmoudi, and C. Schupfer (eds), Resisting Borders and Technologies of Violence. Chicago: Haymarket Books, 161-169.

    Cheesman, M. 2022. ‘Blockchain, Sovereignty, and Humanitarian Payments’, Geopolitics 28(3), 1362-1397, DOI: 10.1080/14650045.2022.2047468.

    Weitzberg, K., M. Cheesman, A. Martin, E. Schoemaker. 2021. ‘Between surveillance and recognition: Rethinking digital identity in aid’, Big Data & Society 8(1), DOI: 10.1177/20539517211006744.

    Cheesman, M. 2020. ‘Self-sovereignty for refugees? The contested horizons of digital identity’, Geopolitics 27(1), 134-159, DOI: 10.1080/14650045.2020.1823836.

    Gillespie, M., Osseiran, S. and Cheesman, M. 2018. ‘Syrian Refugees and the Digital Passage to Europe: Smartphone Infrastructures and Affordances’, Social Media + Society 4(1), DOI: 10.1177/2056305118764440.

     

    Expertise related to UN Sustainable Development Goals

    In 2015, UN member states agreed to 17 global Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) to end poverty, protect the planet and ensure prosperity for all. This person’s work contributes towards the following SDG(s):

    • SDG 1 - No Poverty
    • SDG 16 - Peace, Justice and Strong Institutions

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