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Doctoral Candidate Wins Grant for Research on Infrastructure, Violence and Resistance in Pakistan

Bramsh Khan, a Ph.D. candidate in in the , has been awarded a prestigious . The Wenner-Gren Foundation, established in 1941, is dedicated to advancing anthropological knowledge throughout the world; its highly competitive Dissertation Fieldwork Grant supports research that is innovative, field-based and globally relevant. With this award, Khan joins a distinguished lineage of anthropologists whose work is rooted in advocacy and community engagement.

Khan鈥檚 research examines how state-led infrastructural development in Balochistan, Pakistan, impacts the lives and livelihoods of Baloch people, who are both historically marginalized and actively persecuted. Khan, herself Baloch and from the region she studies, grounds her project in ethnographic fieldwork focusing specifically on the stories of Baloch women. It is a perspective that centers voices from, as she describes it, 鈥渢he periphery of the periphery.鈥

Through these narratives, Khan reveals the layered consequences of the development of megaprojects鈥攑articularly a $62 billion China Pakistan Economic Corridor and its M-8 motorway project, funded by China and Pakistan, that now cuts through land both sacred to the Baloch people and essential to their seasonal migration patterns. Shepherds, farmers and fishermen鈥攚hose livelihoods are closely tied to the land and sea鈥攈ave been displaced and their way of life profoundly disrupted. Khan鈥檚 work exposes how the rhetoric of development and modernity can obscure violence and destruction. 鈥淭hese communities that are negatively impacted are not 鈥榰ndeveloped,鈥欌 Khan says. 鈥淭hey have been living sustainably with their environment for many generations.鈥

Khan鈥檚 research interrogates the rhetoric of development and modernity, asking: Who defines 鈥渄evelopment鈥? Who is served by it, and who pays the price? Her work highlights how infrastructure designed to 鈥渃onnect鈥 can in fact isolate and disrupt. Roads, checkpoints and security zones have introduced both environmental degradation and increased militarization鈥攂ringing with them direct forms of violence, including disappearances and gender-based harm, as well as the more indirect forms inherent in cultural and economic precarity.

A young person wearing a colorful orange and navy blue headscarf smiles at the camera, with palm fronds and decorative elements visible in the background.
Bramsh Khan

Yet even as she documents this violence, Khan also emphasizes the community鈥檚 resilience鈥攑articularly apparent in how women are adapting and resisting. One example she shares is a grassroots initiative in which women from farming communities teach embroidery and craftwork to displaced shepherd women, helping them reclaim autonomy and sustain their families. 鈥淣ation-state building seeks to prioritize a national identity over ethnic, or ethno-national, identities, which means cultural erasure,鈥 Khan says. 鈥淪o, teaching one another, sharing cultural knowledge鈥攖his is resistance.鈥

Khan, already the recipient of a 2021 Fulbright Scholarship, intends to use the Wenner-Gren grant to deepen and expand her dissertation through multimodal storytelling. In collaboration with emerging Baloch filmmakers, she is developing a film project to document both the direct and indirect violence faced by Baloch women, as well as their strategies of endurance and resistance. 鈥淲riting is powerful, but involving the other senses鈥攙isual, auditory鈥攚ill allow us to convey these women鈥檚 experiences and what they are living through in a much more visceral way,鈥 Khan says.

Khan first became aware of the Wenner-Gren grant after she sought out Dan Olson-Bang, director of professional and career development in the Graduate School, for help in finding and applying for a fellowship to support her dissertation fieldwork. 鈥淭he Wenner-Gren is a great fit for Bramsh, and she has done a great job of refining her work and creating a project that is powerful and relevant,” Olson-Bang says. “I tremendously enjoyed working with her to craft her proposal. These types of opportunities for external funding are integral to the success of graduate students like her.鈥

Story by Sarah H. Griffin