About Marissa Smith

Follow this link to see all of Marissa’s posts on Mongolia Focus.

Marissa J. Smith is a social and cultural anthropologist with degrees in anthropology and Russian from Princeton University and Beloit College. Her research focuses on scientific expertise and corporate form, particularly at the intersections of postsocialist and Western communities of practice in rural spaces, and how these dynamics of intersection manifest both at the scales of domestic democratic processes and international relations of development, trade, and security.

Marissa has previously been a Research Associate at the Central Asian Working Group of the Institute for East Asian Studies, UC-Berkeley, and sat on the Board of Directors of the American Center for Mongolian Studies.

Her PhD dissertation focused on engineering as locally-oriented cosmopolitan inter- and intranational practices at the Erdenet Mining Corporation, established by the Mongolian People’s Republic and Soviet Union in the 1970s and since also involving a number of joint enterprises and other collaborations with Western mining companies. This research is based on over eighteen months of participant observation, i.e. residence among and working alongside, employees of the Erdenet Mining Corporation between 2006 and 2016, as well as analysis of primary and secondary textual sources in Mongolian and Russian. Marissa has blogged at Mongolia Focus on Erdenet’s position at the national and international scales since 2011.

In 2016, Marissa has also conducted research on international collaborative work among field researchers, particularly between Mongolian, American, and Australian archaeologists.

Marissa maintains a personal website with CV and research updates at https://marissajsmith.wordpress.com/ She is also active on twitter @marissa_j_smith and the Mongolian Studies group on facebook.