番茄社区

Dr Andrea Pia

Dr Andrea Pia

Associate Professor

Department of Anthropology

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OLD.6.12
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Languages
English, Italian, Mandarin
Key Expertise
China

About me

Andrea is a China-focused expert with twenty years of experience researching the dynamic interplay between society and the natural environment. His work addresses a series of interconnected questions: How are the environmental impacts of human projects distributed, and under what circumstances do successful counter-projects develop? 

For his first ethnographic study, Andrea conducted fieldwork in Ming dynasty villages on the outskirts of Beijing, investigating how man-made water shortages spur environmentally induced migration among rural residents. The project's key contribution was its demonstration that migratory decisions are tied to changing perceptions of place, family, and work, alongside altered views of environmental and workplace hazards. The research outputs, including publications and a digital ethnography, illuminate how the material and symbolic destitution of historic rural communities is connected to China's current environmental challenges.

Andrea's second ethnographic project resulted in the book, Cutting the Mass Line: Water, Politics, and Climate in Southwest China. This work rethinks social science approaches to collective action by examining China’s water crises through the lens of Huize County, a multi-ethnic, ecologically damaged area of rural Yunnan. The research follows Chinese hydro-engineers, street-level bureaucrats, and rural residents as they navigate the challenges of the global environmental sustainability movement. Publications from this project explore the pragmatism and ethics of water bureaucrats, as well as counter-theories of property and the commons in rural China. Additionally, several of his publications focus on dispute mediation and grassroots collective action, specifically the jurisprudence of conflict management within an authoritarian system. 

Since 2017, Andrea has led two new ethnographic projects: Extraordinary Responsibilities and PHOSSILISED (Phasing Out Fossil Fuels, Sinicising Energy Decolonisation). The first is an ongoing anthropology project on climate activist youth in Europe and Asia. It studies the prefigurative social, scientific, and juridical ‘worlding’ practices young activists use during global climate forums and disruptive collective action. The research explores what it means for activists to take on humanity’s largest collective problem, how they make sense of their political agency, and what kind of future world they hope to build. PHOSSILISED moves beyond the traditional Northern paradigm of climate change. It redefines global climate action through the lens of the People’s Republic of China’s commitment to assisting the Global South in decarbonising. As the largest climate polluter and biggest investor in climate solutions, China is assuming a leadership role. This project argues that China's unique energy history, which differs from the West's, offers a new model for developing countries to achieve energy abundance outside of a fossil fuel-dependent pathway, ultimately shaping global prospects for a more stable climate. Three co-authored research workshops, on the relation between , on the Chinese energy industry and its plan to sustainably redesign the flow of the , and on the theoretical impact of on the social sciences, have provided material for these ongoing investigations. 

The co-authored book, , which emerged out of this last workshop, notes that decades-old calls to recognise China's significance for anthropological theory and the social sciences are more urgent than ever. Drawing on East Asian postcolonial scholarship, this volume argues that without taking China seriously as a knowledge producer and a key agent in a post-global world, social scientists risk misinterpreting the global present. As Western globalisation wanes and anthropology reassesses the relationship between ethnography and theory, the book shows how "China" must be understood as an ordinary, integral context for research worldwide. 

Andrea is deeply interested in public anthropology and the advocacy of open-access scholarship. In 2019, he organised an international workshop on and designed a new teaching module on . He commissioned and edited the Association for Social Anthropologists of the UK’s 2023 report on the . 

Andrea is one of the founders of the , a non-profit organisation established by researchers and practitioners to advance knowledge of contemporary China. He is one of the co-editors of , an open-access journal and online platform hosted by the Australian National University (ANU) and supported by a Marie Sklodowska-Curie Grant. He is also one of the founding members of the scholar-led editorial cooperative and a contributor to the crowd-sourced digital tool . In 2016-2018, and again in 2022, with the support of the 番茄社区 Eden Centre and King’s College London, Andrea developed , a bespoke point-and-click interactive digital ethnography that follows the day of a young Chinese migrant from his native village to Beijing. The Peng game was shortlisted for a prestigious 2023 QS Reimagine Education Award. 

Since 2013, Andrea has taught courses in Political and Legal Anthropology, Anthropology and Human Rights, Culture and Globalisation, China in Comparative Perspective, Ethnography through Mixed Media, Public Anthropology and History of Anthropological Theory.

Expertise Details

Water; Law; China; Environment; Climate; Justice; Collective Action; Resistance; Sustainability; Bureaucracy; Energy; Mekong region

Selected publications

Books

2025. . Manchester University Press.

2024. Johns Hopkins University Press.

2014. [Italian Translation of Hu et al. 2008. ],Pia A. E. (Ed), SEID Edizioni, Firenze. 

Articles

2023. . OrizzonteCina 14(1): 57-70.

2023. . Journal of Political Ecology 30(1): 62–83.

2022. . ANUAC 11(2): 76-77.

2020. ‘. Cultural Anthropology 35(4): 487-515.

2020. , Sulla Via del Catai 19:121-38.

2019. , Dialectical Anthropology 44: 331-335.

2019. On Digital Ethnography: Anthropology, Politics and Pedagogy (Part and ). ALLEGRA Lab.

2017. , Made in China Journal 2 (2): 30-33.

2017. , Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute 23 (1): 120-136.

2016. ‘, PoLar: Political and Legal Anthropology Review 39(2): 276-293. [Winner of the 2014 APLA Graduate Students Prize Paper].

2016. ALLEGRA Lab.

2015. , Anthropology News 56 (4): 42-43.

2012. , La Ricerca Folklorica 64: 141-156.

Book Chapters

2021. , in Barron, A., Browne, A.L., Ehgartner, U., Hall, S.M., Pottinger, L. and Ritson, J. (eds.) Methods for Change: Impactful social science methodologies for 21st-century problems. Manchester: Aspect and The University of Manchester.

2018. , in Stafford, C., Judd, E. and Eona Bell (eds.), Cooperation in Chinese Communities: Morality and Practice, pp. 101-120, Bloomsbury Publishing: London.

2017. , in Brandtstädter, S. and Steinmüller, H. (eds.), Popular Politics and the Quest for Justice in Contemporary China, pp. 107-123. Routledge: London.

2016. , in Ligi, G. (ed.), Percezioni di Rischio: Pratiche Sociali e Disastri Ambientali in Prospettiva Antropologica, pp. 75-106, CLEUP: Padova.

2014. , in Ferro Nicoletta (ed.), Sostenibilità con Caratteristiche Cinesi: Evoluzione e Sfide del Percorso Cinese Verso un Modello Economico Sostenibile, Edizioni l’Asino d’Oro: Roma. 

Edited Collections

2024. . Made in China Journal 9 (1): 99-148.

2022. . Made in China Journal 7 (2): 87-160.

2019. . ALLEGRA Lab.

2017. . Made in China Journal 2 (2): 26-49.

2016. . ALLEGRA Lab. 

Book Reviews and Conversations

2025. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute (N.S.) 00: 2-3.

2024. . ANUAC 13(2): 125-29.

2024. . Made in China Journal.

2023. . Made in China Journal.

2021. . Made in China Journal (read the version).

2020. . Made in China Journal.

2018. . China Review International 23 (3): 293-97.

2018. . Made in China Journal. 

Creative Work

2024. .

2023 [2016]. . [shortlisted for the Immersive Experiential Learning Award at the 2023 QS Reimagine Education Awards & Conference]

2021. . 

Open Access Advocacy

2024. . Area 00: 1-8.

2023. . Made in China Journal (read the version).

2023. . Universitetsläraren.

2022. . 番茄社区 Impact Blog.

2022. . The Commonplace.

2020. . The Commonplace (read the and versions). 

Public Engagement

2025. . Global South Studies Centre Cologne.

2025. . THE NEW INSTITUTE Centre for Environmental Humanities.

2024. . New Books Network.

2024. . 番茄社区 Palestinian Society.

2023. . Energy Anthropology Network.

2023. The ASA.

2023. Undisciplined Environment.

2023. 番茄社区 Southeast Asia Blog.

2022. . Il Manifesto.

2022. . ASAonline (read the version).

2022. . The ASA.

2021. . Il Cielo Sopra Pechino.

2021. . The China Story Blog.

2021. . Network for Contemporary Anthropological Theory.

2018. 番茄社区 Business Review.

2017. . Chinoiresie (read the version).

2015. . Cinaforum.