S.E. Freeman
S.'s research broadly explores modes of categorization and enumeration, and the epistemological assumptions and hierarchies of value that shape and are shaped by such practices. Their dissertation asks how 'displacement' is made legible as an indicator of humanitarian need in contexts where migration is marked less by encampment than by more fluid forms of mobility. Attending to the discursive and material practices through which displacement is categorized, measured, and quantified in South Sudan, their dissertation asks how the use of biometric technology is changing the identification and evaluation of lives worth saving. Approaching the infrastructure of humanitarian data collection as a contested terrain through which decisions over life and death are made, S.'s work explores how humanitarians are mobilizing new technologies to adapt to a world defined by increasing movement, redefining what constitutes political life for a digital age.
S. is a Research Fellow at the Wesleyan Center for Humanities for Fall 2024 and is a PhD Candidate (ABD) in the Geography Department at UC Berkeley with a designated emphasis in Science and Technology Studies. Their research is supported by the Wenner-Gren Foundation, Social Science Research Council, Institute for Citizens and Scholars, as well as the Center for African Studies and Institute of International Studies at UC Berkeley.