
Dr Amy Penfield
PhD, BSc
Expertise
Current positions
Senior Lecturer in Social Anthropology
Department of Anthropology and Archaeology
Contact
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Research interests
I am an economic anthropologist with a particular interest in emerging economic subjectivities in the rapidly changing rainforests of lowland South America. I have conducted long-term research with a Yanomami language group (Sanema) in the Venezuelan Amazon, where I investigated the complexities of their encounters with outside forces, whether raiders, neighbouring groups, non-indigenous people, or the state. The book emerging from this research – Predatory Economies – dwells on these complexities through the idioms of predation that Sanema people deploy. In this context, urban bustling streets, rumours of non-indigenous criminals, state administration, quotas of petrol, and the global desire for gold all coexist in a mosaic of new economies that the Sanema integrate into existing schemas of trickery, seduction and extraction.
My recent research has taken these interests in new directions, from migration of Quechua-speaking highlanders towards lowland riches, to energy access among caboclo forest dwellers, to deforestation and clandestine gold mining. During an EU-funded Marie Curie fellowship entitled ‘Wildcat Economics’, I investigated the intersection of formal and informal economic spheres in Amazon prospector gold mining sites in Peru. I also manage a British Academy-funded project that explores ‘Energy Resilience’ in Brazilian Amazonia with an interdisciplinary team (anthropology, engineering, law, and history) based in both the UK and Brazil. The main objective of these new research initiatives is to develop a broad approach to frontier economies from the perspective of the actors involved.
I am currently PI on an ERC selected (UKRI funded) project on the emergence and endurance of frontier ‘incursion economies’ – specifically land grabbing, illegal logging, and prospector mining – taking place in the Amazon Forest. Drawing on empirical data collected in Peru, Bolivia and Brazil, the project offers a comparative study of the clandestine economic activities that invade the global margins and result in environmental degradation. The project, entitled INFRACURSIONS, forges a novel approach to ‘incursion infrastructures’ that explores the social, technical, economic and legal structures that incursion actors build to make their extractive activities possible across a wide and unwieldy landscape.
The project asks:
- What historical factors have led to incursions and what are the environmental impacts?
- What are the motivations and experiences that underpin incursion economies?
- How can GIS data inform ground-level findings and vice versa?
- What social and technical arrangements facilitate the existence of incursions?
- How do incursion economies intersect?
My broader research interests include:
Capitalism
Deforestation/conservation
Energy
Frontiers
Illegality/informal economies
Infrastructure
Morality
Oil economies
Predation
Resource extraction/mining
Projects and supervisions
Research projects
INFRACURSIONS: Deregulated Infrastructures of Extraction in Rainforest Frontiers
Principal Investigator
Description
The Infracursions project at the University of Bristol investigates what we call 'incursion economies' in the Amazon. These are clandestine small-scale extractive activities such as informal mining, land grabbing and…Managing organisational unit
Department of Anthropology and ArchaeologyDates
30/11/2024 to 29/11/2028
MR/Y018125/1 Infrastructures of Incursions: Deregulated Extraction in Rainforest Frontiers
Principal Investigator
Managing organisational unit
Department of Anthropology and ArchaeologyDates
30/11/2024 to 29/11/2028
UKRI (ERC Starting Grant): Deregulated Infrastructures of Extraction in Rainforest Frontiers (EP/Y036174/1)
Principal Investigator
Managing organisational unit
Department of Anthropology and ArchaeologyDates
01/01/2024 to 31/12/2028
Knowledge Frontiers: International Interdisciplinary Research 2020
Principal Investigator
Managing organisational unit
Department of Anthropology and ArchaeologyDates
01/04/2020 to 01/02/2024
Wildcat Economics: Informal Mining and Gold from the Global Margins in Contemporary Latin America
Principal Investigator
Description
This project is an ethnographic study of small-scale gold mining in South America, otherwise known as ‘wildcat mining’, and aims to explore the interconnection between formal and informal economic spheres…Managing organisational unit
Department of Anthropology and ArchaeologyDates
18/08/2016 to 31/12/2018
Publications
Selected publications
18/04/2023Predatory Economies
Predatory Economies
The wild inside out
Social Anthropology
Dodged Debts and the Submissive Predator
Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute
Recent publications
12/12/2024Child, Pet, and Prey
The Lowland South American World
Review of Ruiz-Serna, Daniel. 2023
Journal of Anthropological Research
Amazon energy cultures and the transition to sustainability
Amazon 2030 – Sustainability Issues in the World's Largest Rainforest Region
Predatory Economies
Predatory Economies
Introduction: Resource Engagements: Experiencing Extraction in Latin America.
Bulletin of Latin American Research