Janell Rothenberg received her Ph.D. in sociocultural anthropology from UCLA in 2015. Her dissertation, The Social Life of Logistics on the Moroccan Mediterranean Coast, received the 2016 Dissertation Award from the Association of Middle East Anthropologists. This research was supported by the American Institute for Maghrib Studies, the National Science Foundation Program in Science, Technology, and Society, the Fulbright-Hays Fellowship, and Department of Anthropology and Graduate Division at UCLA. From 2015-2016, she was Postdoctoral Fellow in Middle East Studies at George Washington University. Most recently, she was Visiting Assistant Professor of Anthropology and Core Faculty in Middle East Studies at Carleton College in Northfield, Minnesota.
Dr. Rothenberg is completing revisions for her book manuscript, Everyday Logistics: Making Morocco's Mega-Port, an ethnography of infrastructure, globalization, and work in North Africa. Under contract with Indiana University Press, this study is based on two years of field research in the logistics and transportation industry in Tangier, Morocco. She will also be preparing articles on subsequent research in Morocco on engineering ethics, the responsibilities of green logistics, and an urban movement for energy equality.