Status Audio Magazine

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ISSUE 11.2

Toxic Supply Chains of War in Iraq

Kali Rubaii

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Photo: A U.S. marine searches for roadside bombs in the vicinity of Fallujah, Iraq in 2004 (Hdtychse / WikiCommons).
Interviewed by Malihe Razazan
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Malihe Razazan spoke with Prof. Kali Rubaii about the toxic legacies of the US war in Iraq and the need to shift our understanding of modern warfare.

Guests

Kali Rubaii
Kali Rubaii

Assistant Professor in Anthropology at Purdue University.

Kali Rubaii is an assistant professor in the Department of Anthropology at Purdue University. Her research focuses on displacement, war-impacted ecologies, and environmental health justice. Through forensic ethnography, Dr. Rubaii’s work bears witness to the violent material impact of extractive industry and war on people’s lives. She is currently leading two interdisciplinary projects: She is working with a team of doctors, epidemiologists, and environmental activists to document the links between birth anomalies and military environmental damage in Fallujah, Iraq. She is also researching concrete production in post-invasion Iraq as it enforces global regimes of class and citizenship. For more details, visit kalirubaii.com.

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