Alyssa Paredes is Assistant Professor of Anthropology at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. She carries out socially engaged research on plantation capitalism, environmental activism, and transnational supply chains between the Southern Philippines and Japan. She teaches courses on the culture concept, nature and environmentalism, the human and non-human relationship, and the production-consumption nexus. She holds a PhD from Yale University.
Posts by This Author

In Praise of the Oral Exam: Returning to Face-to-Face Conversation in the Age of AI
One of my favorite courses to teach is an upper-level anthropology seminar called “Animality and the Human Question.” Part multi-species ethnography, part criti... More

The Environmental Wayfarer Project: Problem Solving with an Eco-Anxious Generation
Many environmental problems in the twenty-first century seem practically unsolvable—pollution, corporate monopolies, climate change. Part of our responsibility,... More

The Political Statement: Thinking Beyond the End-of-Term Paper
This past Fall, while serving as faculty instructor (Alyssa) and graduate student instructor (Felipe) for an introductory course in socio-cultural anthropology,... More