Tents in mountains

A high-altitude seasonal encampment for caterpillar fungus harvest in Dolpo, Nepal.

Phurwa D Gurung, PhD Candidate in Geography, received the competitive Social Science Research Council's International Dissertation Research Fellowship (SSRC IDRF) funded by the Mellon Foundation. Phurwa was selected from a total of 870 applicants from graduate students at 112 universities. This year's 60 awardees represent thirty-one universities and fourteen disciplines. The SSRC IDRF fellowship will fund a year-long ethnographic fieldwork in Dolpo, Northwest Nepal, for his dissertation research tentatively titled Reordering Highland Territories: State-building, indigeneity, and multispecies worldmaking. His dissertation takes caterpillar fungus as a lens to examine the ways in which state-led biodiversity conservation and resource extraction overlap and clash with Indigenous environmental governance in the Himalayas. 

plant in mountains

Caterpillar fungus aka yartsa gunbu ("summer grass, winter worm"). Both photos by Phurwa.

Phurwa also recently published an article titled "Governing caterpillar fungus: Participatory conservation as state-making, territorialization, and dispossession in Dolpo, Nepal" in the journal Environment and Planning E Nature and Space. He has also co-authored a book chapter with Ken Bauer titled "Infrastructures of change: Development among pastoralists in Dolpo, Nepal" for the Routledge Handbook of Highland Asia. The same book also has a chapter contributed by Dr. Tim Oakes of the Geography Department.