Periodic Reporting for period 1 - MOTOBOOM (The Current Impact of Motorcycle Motorisation on Amazonian Indigenous Peoples)
Période du rapport: 2023-02-01 au 2025-01-31
Therefore, the MOTOBOOM project seeks to conduct a groundbreaking interdisciplinary analysis of motorcycle dissemination among indigenous communities in the Bolivian Amazon, offering both academic and practical contributions. Academically, it will provide an ethnographic examination of indigenous motorcycle appropriation, mechanical knowledge, and the social, economic, environmental, health, symbolic, and gender-related repercussions of motorcycle use. Practically, it aims to inform public policy and local community initiatives on road safety and accident prevention in marginalized contexts.
By undertaking this research program at my host institution, Ca’ Foscari University Venice (UNIVE), the project will fill a crucial gap in anthropological studies on indigenous modernity, societal transformation, and technological change. Additionally, it will strengthen my expertise as a professor and researcher in environmental anthropology, gender studies, science and technology studies, and digital humanities.
In early 2024, I attended academic seminars and organized the international workshop "The Age of Motorcycles…". During mid-2024, I spent three months in Paris as a visiting scholar at CREDA, focusing on Digital Humanities and co-organizing a workshop on ethnographies of repair practices. During the last months of 2024, I completed further fieldwork in Bolivia and wrapped up the year preparing the dissemination and outreach plan, continuing publication and dissemination, and preparing a final workshop for January 2025. Throughout the year, I also attended seminars, published research articles, supervised students, peer-reviewed papers for academic journals and presented papers at international conferences.
International workshops in Italy, France, and Bolivia established a comparative framework, linking indigenous motorcycle dissemination with global studies on mechanization, extractivism, repair culture, and environmental challenges across Europe, the Americas, Asia, and Africa. Workshops with communal authorities, local officials, and indigenous leaders explored road safety, technology’s impact, and environmental issues in regions facing deforestation, climate change, and urbanization.
Educational initiatives strengthened MA and PhD training in Italy, France, Argentina, and Bolivia. Seminars at institutions such as Ca’ Foscari University, Université Sorbonne Nouvelle, and Universidad Católica fostered an international network of emerging scholars in anthropology, STS, and environmental sciences, providing hands-on experience with advanced methodologies. Media outreach further extended the project’s reach. As an MSCA Ambassador, the project also promoted mobility opportunities between Latin America and Europe, engaging academic and indigenous communities. The project’s outreach strategy built lasting institutional collaborations between Italy, France, Bolivia, and Argentina, facilitating interdisciplinary knowledge exchange.