Sylvia Cifuentes

she/her/ella

  • Assistant Professor of Environmental and Social Equity and Justice
Sylvia Cifuentes

Sylvia Cifuentes is an interdisciplinary scholar who investigates the connections among Indigenous politics and global environmental challenges, including climate change, deforestation, and ‘Smart Earth’ technologies—with a geographical focus on Amazonia. She draws from critical geography, science and technology studies, and decolonial and Indigenous studies. Her teaching thus builds from global and intersectional perspectives in courses including Global Environmental Justice; Climate Humanities, Futures, and Activism; and Indigenous and Decolonial Ecologies.

Cifuentes’ first manuscript, Rethinking Global Climate Politics: Integral Territorial Ontologies, Ancestral Knowledges, and the Defense of Life in Amazonian Indigenous Climate Initiatives illustrates how Amazonian Indigenous organizations and climate initiatives incorporate ontological and territorial politics, ancestral knowledges, and the agency of more-than-human beings from local scales to global climate politics. Her fieldwork took place in four countries and involved collaborating with the Coordinator of Indigenous Organization of the Amazon Basin (COICA) and the School of Political Training of the Organization of Indigenous Peoples of the Colombian Amazon (Escuela OPIAC). Her research has been published in the Journal of Latin American Geography, Digital Geography and Society, Climatic Change, Perspectives on Global Development and Technology, among other venues.

Dr. Cifuentes is currently working on two research projects that focus on Indigenous climate futures in connection with gender, philosophies of wellbeing, technology and energy. Additionally, she is involved in collaborative research endeavors that analyze Multispecies Climate Justice and Climate Justice in Tropical Forests.

Cifuentes has previously taught at Pitzer College and Macalester College. Outside academia, she has worked in environmental and public health projects with several Indigenous and environmental organizations, including the United Nations Development Program, the Peace Corps, and Conservation International.

Areas of Expertise

Environmental and climate justice; Indigenous geographies; technology and society; global climate politics; environmental/climate humanities; alternatives to development; eco-territorial feminisms; Amazonia; Latin America. 

Education

  • PhD., University of California, Santa Barbara
  • MSc., London School of Economics and Political Science
  • BA., Universidad San Francisco de Quito

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Recent campus news

New Mount Holyoke faculty Sylvia Cifuentes has a special passion for feminist environmental studies and hopes to continue to collaborate with Indigenous women’s groups in their advocacy for climate justice initiatives.

Recent Publications

Osborne, T., Cifuentes, S., et. al. (2024). Climate justice, forests, and Indigenous Peoples: toward an alternative to REDD+ for the Amazon. Climatic Change, 177(8), 1-28.

Cifuentes, S. (2023). Co-producing autonomy? Forest monitoring programs, territorial ontologies, and Indigenous politics in Amazonia. Digital Geography and Society, 5, 100068.

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