Who I am

I am a bilingual anthropologist (Italian–English) and hold a Masters’ degree from Ca’ Foscari University of Venice, specialized in cultural, environmental, and visual anthropology.

 

My work is grounded in a multidisciplinary and cross-cutting approach, combining ethnographic methods, critical GIS, participatory mapping, and visual storytelling to explore the relationships between people, animals, and environments.

 

My interests span across different fields: from human-non human interactions, broad social issues (migration, inequality, overtourism, sustainability), rewilding practices, slow tourism, mountaineering sports, documentary cinema and photography, and forms of citizen science.

 

I conducted ethnographic fieldwork in Swedish Lapland, exploring human–nature relations and local perceptions of climate change, through the intimate bond between a mushers family and their sled-dogs. I have produced a ethnographic documentary –Una boccata d’aria (2022)- presented at ethnographic film festivals, and have other projects in the works. 

 

I am currently expanding my expertise in territorial analysis and participatory GIS to support conservation initiatives and environmental communication projects.

 

 

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What I Bring

VISION

I focus on multispecies coexistence, but my research extends to broader social and cultural transformations shaping contemporary life — including changing livelihoods and mobility, sustainable tourism, rewilding practices, and community mediation processes.

INNOVATION

I believe in an applied and collaborative anthropology, capable of bridging research, policy, and practice. I work with public institutions, NGOs, academic partners, and local communities to
co-create knowledge and develop practical strategies for coexistence and sustainability.

MISSION

My approach blends scientific rigor with narrative sensitivity: I use research as a storytelling practice that reveals ecological and social interdependencies, helping institutions and communities to see their territories — and their futures — from new perspectives.