Ronald Niezen

About
the Author

Ph.D Cambridge University

I am a Professor of Practice at the University of San Diego, where I teach in the departments of Sociology and Political Science / International Relations. I was formerly Distinguished James McGill Professor in Anthropology and an Associate Member of the Faculty of Law at McGill University, where I taught from 2004 to 2022.

An anthropologist by training and profession, I received a PhD at Cambridge University based on fieldwork in northern Mali, in the Gao region that is now marked by violent conflict and insecurity. I studied an Islamic reform movement that was a precursor of a violent jihadist insurrection in 2012-2013. After graduation, I moved to Montreal and took a job with the Cree Board of Health and Social Services of James Bay. This was the start of a decades-long involvement with Indigenous rights movements based in northern Canada, northern Europe, West Africa (Mali), and southern Africa (Botswana and Namibia). I pursued this topic through the 1990s, during my first academic appointment at Harvard University, in Anthropology and in the Committee on Degrees in Social Studies. After publishing The Origins of Indigenism, I began (encouraged by others) to see myself as a legal anthropologist, as someone interested in the variety of human legal experience, yes, but above all in how legal institutions shape new forms of human belonging. This shift in professional identity was given a boost by my appointment to the Katherine A. Pearson Chair in Civil Society and Public Policy from 2013 to 2020, following which I was appointed to my current position. I wrote #HumanRights during a year at Harvard as Visiting Professor in the Department of Anthropology and the Weatherhead Center for International Affairs, which gave me the freedom to write and explore the issues of digital security, surveillance, witnessing, and investigations that now make up our new information ecosystem and underpin the emerging forms of and prospects for human rights.

Work

New Books

“One of the year’s best historical thrillers.” 

- BestThrillers

Five Stars. “The historical novel The Memory Seeker is graphic in detailing the lasting, damaging effects of wars and falsehoods.”

- Foreword Reviews

“Well-researched and masterfully told, this powerful tale about war crimes pulls no punches.”

- Kirkus Reviews

“The Memory Seeker is a remarkable book. At its heart it is a detective novel of sorts, written in evocative and page-turning prose, with twists and turns all the way through. But it is more than that, raising important questions about the importance of holding perpetrators to account and the difficulties of doing so…”

- Tobias Kelly, School of Social and Political Science, University of Edinburgh

“Incredibly well-researched, Niezen’s The Memory Seeker tells a powerful tale that weaves the best of story-telling with an accuracy that reflects his deep immersion into the fields of online and offline investigations. Spanning Timbuktu to The Hague, The Memory Seeker is a must-read, especially for those who work in international law!”

- Alexa Koenig, Human Rights Center, University of California, Berkeley School of Law

“An astonishing debut novel that establishes Ronald Niezen as one of the most exciting new voices in historical fiction.”

- BestThrillers.com

Available Now on Open Access

Narratives of Mass Atrocity: Victims and Perpetrators in the Aftermath

eds. Sarah Federman & Ronald Niezen

Truth and Indignation

Canada’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission on Indian Residential Schools

#HumanRights

The Technologies and Politics
of Justice Claims
in Practice

The Origins of Indigenism

Human Rights and
the Politics of Identity

Palaces of Hope

The Anthropology
of Global Organizations
Edited by Ronald Niezen & Maria Sapignoli

Public Justice and
the anthropology of law
The Rediscovered Self

Indigenous Identity
and Cultural
Justice

Defending
the Land

Sovereignty and Forest Life
in James Bay Cree Society

A World Beyond
Difference

Cultural Identity
in the Age of Globalization

Spirit
Wars

Native North American Religions in the Age of Nation Building

Representative Publications

My published articles and chapters cover a range of topics. To help you find what you’re looking for, they’re arranged by subject area.

Areas of Interest

Human Rights and the United Nations

Media Studies 

Suicide and Mental Health

Indigenous Studies

Intellectual History

Collaborations With

Sarah Federman

Worldwide Contacts & Connections

Social Media

Follow
Ronald Niezen
I USE TWITTER MAINLY TO FOLLOW AND COMMENT ON WORLD EVENTS; RESEARCHGATE TO EXCHANGE SCHOLARSHIP AND IDEAS; FACEBOOK TO KEEP UP WITH FRIENDS AND COLLEAGUES; AND INSTAGRAM TO SHARE SOME THINGS I'VE SEEN WHILE OUT WALKING.
Get In Touch

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