Photo of Annikki Herranen-Tabibi

Annikki Herranen-Tabibi, PhD

Research Fellow in Global Health and Social Medicine

Annikki Herranen-Tabibi (she/her) is a medical and environmental anthropologist of the Circumpolar Arctic. She is engaged in long-term ethnographic research in Sápmi, the transborder homeland of the Indigenous Sámi people. Her scholarly work defines a space for research and collaborative action at the intersections of global health with medical and environmental humanities and social sciences. Across these arenas, her work is grounded in questions of care – interpersonal, intergenerational, and ecological. 

As Burke Climate and Health Fellow, Annikki will conduct research on the health effects of climate-induced disruptions to webs of Arctic subsistence livelihoods, and diverse responses to those effects, in Sápmi. With a focus on cryosphere collapse – i.e., the accelerating retreat of frozen water across the Earth system – in the permafrost peatlands of Sápmi, she will examine individual and collective practices of caring for land and land-based knowledge amidst climate-induced transformations.  

Annikki holds a doctorate in Social Anthropology from Harvard (Ph.D., 2022). Her dissertation, Resurgent Ecologies of Care: An Ethnography from Deanuleahki, Sápmi, examined transformations in kin-based caregiving practices and relationships in Sápmi amidst Nordic welfare state development since the Second World War.  It was based on 28 months (2014-2018) of ethnographic research in Deanuleahki, a river valley along the northernmost reaches of the Finnish-Norwegian state border. 
In addition to her doctorate, Annikki holds a BA and MA in International Relations from the London School of Economics and Political Science and Yale University, respectively, and is a United World College of the Atlantic alumna. 

Land, Life, and Health in a Thawing Arctic: Ecosocial Futures from Sámi Peatlands 

This study examines the health effects of climate-induced disruptions to webs of Arctic subsistence livelihoods in the permafrost peatlands of Sápmi, and local responses to these disruptions – including community-driven practices of care, adaptation, and protection. It foregrounds not only the adverse health effects of accelerating climate change, but also the intergenerational striving to sustain Indigenous well-being and sovereignty in its midst. Through the co-generation of knowledge, it foregrounds Arctic Indigenous lived experience of climate change’s health dimensions, while advancing dialogue with national governments and the global health and scientific communities on major challenges of policy and practice. 

It seeks to produce novel, experientially grounded insights about the emerging mental and physical health effects of drastic environmental transformation – including the psychosocial impacts of the precarity or loss of culturally significant species and livelihood practices, rising concerns about contamination amidst permafrost thaw, and the physical health effects of climate-induced dietary changes. In so doing, it focuses on Sámi-led responses to climate-induced health disruptions, including community-driven practices of care, adaptation, and protection. It asks: How are the health effects of permafrost thaw in peatland ecosystems locally understood in Sápmi? What responses and solutions emerge from the encounters of local, Indigenous, and traditional ecological knowledge with research scientists (including biologists and epidemiologists) examining such transformations?