Book Talk - Artery: Racial Ecologies on Colombia’s Magdalena River

Austin Zeiderman, Professor of Geography in the Department of Geography and Environment at the London School of Economics will discuss his new book on Monday 23 March 2026 3p-4pm in Teaching Room 2 in the Geography and Planning Building.

UI Book talk:  Artery: Racial Ecologies on Colombia’s Magdalena River

Link to the book

The Magdalena River, linking Colombia’s Andean interior and Caribbean coast, has long served as a conduit for the expansion of colonial and racial capitalism in the Americas. Now a state-backed megaproject seeks to transform the waterway into a logistics corridor. In Artery, Austin Zeiderman relates the Magdalena’s fraught past and uncertain future to global entanglements of race, nature, and capital. Refusing disciplinary parochialism, Zeiderman engages with debates across the social sciences and humanities to examine how racial orders shape ecologies and infrastructures, thereby upholding exploitative relations not only among human populations, but also between people and the planet. Alert to ethnographic specificity and broad relevance, Zeiderman positions the Magdalena River within regimes of extractivism and inequality that continue to afflict the modern world.

Bio: Austin Zeiderman is an interdisciplinary scholar who specializes in the social and political dimensions of urbanization and the environment in Latin America and the Caribbean, with a focus on Colombia. Austin holds a PhD in Anthropology from Stanford University as well as a Master of Environmental Science degree from Yale University and a BA in Economics from Colgate University.

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