Iván Sandoval-Cervantes
Associate Professor, Department of Anthropology
Expertise:
Migration, Human-Animal Relationships, Social Movements, Anthropology, Kinship, Globalization, Activism, Nationalism
Biography
Iván Sandoval-Cervantes is an expert on the anthropology of migration, gender, indigeneity, kinship, and care. He also focuses on multi-species ethnography, legal anthropology, and the anthropology of social movements, specifically the study of activism and animal rights in the Mexico-U.S. borderlands.
His research specialties include globalization, animal rights movements, and the relationship between indigeneity and nationalism in regards to the Mexican military.
Sandoval-Cervantes has been published in numerous academic publications including A Geography of Coexistence and Anthropology News.
Education
- Ph.D., Anthropology, University of Oregon
- M.Sc., Philosophy of Social Science, London School of Economics
- B.A., Anthropology, Universidad de las Americas-Puebla
Related Links
Iván Sandoval-Cervantes In The News
Public Good
Speaking with the street vendors standing at Las Vegas intersections and highway off ramps on Public Good — a podcast audio series about Southern Nevada's urban public spaces and the people who depend on them.
Articles Featuring Iván Sandoval-Cervantes
Arts and Culture
| December 30, 2020
51ԹϺ Newsmakers 2020: Social Justice
A sampling of university experts who sounded off on the year’s monumental movements surrounding race, ethnicity, and gender.