
About
Dominic Boyer is a writer, media maker and anthropologist, whose work focuses on the energy and environmental challenges of our era, particularly the need to decarbonize society and to break the ecocidal trajectory of global capitalism.
Research topics
- Computer Science
- Sociology
- Political Science
- Social Science
- Data Mining
- History
- Artificial Intelligence
- Linguistics
- Data science
- Cognitive science
- Philosophy
- Geography
- Psychology
- Media studies
- Law
- Public relations
- Environmental ethics
Selected publications
Cuadernos LIRICO · 2025-01-01
articleOpen accessSenior authorTracking extinct glaciers in GLIMS
Annals of Glaciology · 2025-01-01 · 2 citations
articleOpen accessAbstract Global Land Ice Measurements from Space (GLIMS), an initiative to build and distribute a database of global glacier data, has recently begun to track glaciers that have recently disappeared. GLIMS provides a definition of “extinct” glaciers for our community, and the final determination of extinction is left to local experts. There are currently 181 glaciers in the GLIMS Glacier Database that are marked as “extinct”, though we recognize that there have been many more reported in the literature. GLIMS welcomes more submissions to make the list more complete.
Communication efforts to educate the public about vanishing glaciers, 1958–2025
Annals of Glaciology · 2025-01-01
articleOpen access1st authorCorrespondingAbstract This letter reviews public communication efforts addressing glacial loss from 1958 to 2025, tracing a trajectory from early educational films to contemporary ritual performances. It examines how documentaries, visual media, fiction and immersive technologies have sought to translate cryospheric decline into emotionally resonant narratives that inform and inspire climate action. Particular attention is given to the recent rise of performative and ritual practices, including glacier funerals and the Global Glacier Casualty List, which commemorate disappearing glaciers while fostering affective engagement and ethical reflection. The authors argue that interdisciplinary collaborations among scientists, artists and communities remain vital for amplifying public awareness and catalyzing environmental response.
Afterword: Less is the New More
DOAJ (DOAJ: Directory of Open Access Journals) · 2025-04-01
articleOpen access1st authorCorrespondingThis afterword to the special issue discusses the author’s affective experiences with energy transition. The particular focus is the affective promise of electrification as a means to rupture the ecological emergency generated by today’s petroculture.
Cascades of Un/Becoming: How Blackouts Impact Transitional Electropolitics
Science Technology & Human Values · 2025-09-18
articleOpen accessSenior authorBlackouts, though typically dismissed as momentary disruptions, can catalyze sweeping shifts in energy governance and public consciousness. In examining the 2016-2017 blackout in South Australia and the 2021 Texas Freeze, we introduce transitional electropolitics to capture how these infrastructural crises reveal both the fragility of incumbent fossil-fuel regimes and the potential for rapid transitions. We show how blackouts, as “cascades of un/becoming,” illuminate divergent trajectories. One event in South Australia galvanized new policy commitments and grid-scale batteries, accelerating a more resilient, renewables-based system; the other in Texas laid bare deep structural risks while reinforcing entrenched carbopolitical interests. Drawing on in-depth analyses of engineering reports, social media debates, and community experiences, we highlight how storms themselves become key actants in energopolitics, eliciting new forms of public engagement and political maneuvering. Rather than isolated failures, blackouts operate as charged inflection points, revealing the contradictions of a climate-challenged world and offering surprising opportunities for transformative change.
Urban Flood Prevention Through Community-Centered Green Stormwater Infrastructure Planning
Disaster risk reduction · 2025-01-01
book-chapterSocial impacts of glacier loss
Science · 2025-05-29 · 2 citations
letterSenior authorMore than three-quarters of global glacier mass is projected to disappear under present-day policies.
Hurricane Milton: Flooded industrial sites and toxic chemical releases are a silent, growing threat
2024-09-30 · 1 citations
articleThe Great EV Road Trip Journal
Journal of Architectural Education · 2024-07-02
article1st authorCorrespondingInfrastructural citizenship and geosolidarity
American Ethnologist · 2024-06-19 · 4 citations
article1st authorCorrespondingAbstract In northeast Houston, a community organization is experimenting with building green infrastructure, beginning with rain gardens. In doing so, the project's participants are engaging in what might be called “infrastructural citizenship.” This form of citizenship uses “civil power” to defy white‐supremacist legacies of technopolitical flood control, which have made northeast Houston one of the most heavily flooded parts of the city. Yet infrastructural citizenship also expresses commitments beyond stormwater management, taking aim at inherited infrastructural logics and traditions associated with other norms of US petroculture (e.g., spatialized and racialized environmental toxicity, translocal supply chains). In contrast to the default petrosolidarity that ensnares the Global North (and much of the Global South), initiatives like the rain garden project evince a growing geosolidarity with the land and its capacities. Such a politics can challenge both a racist petrostate and the conditions of ecological emergency that it perpetrates.
Frequent coauthors
- 182 shared
Jonathan Stray
- 182 shared
Aaron M. Williams
Vanderbilt University Medical Center
- 182 shared
Caelainn Barr
King's College London
- 169 shared
Ximena S. Villagrán
São Paulo Museum of Art
- 169 shared
Pınar Dağ
- 169 shared
Aika Rey
University of California, Berkeley
- 169 shared
María Isabel Magaña
- 169 shared
Raúl Alejandro Luna Sánchez
Universidad Veracruzana
Education
- 2009
Ph.D., Anthropology
University of California, Los Angeles
- 2004
M.A., Anthropology
University of California, Los Angeles
- 2002
B.A., Anthropology
University of California, Los Angeles
Awards & honors
- Finalist for a 2020 Beazley Design of the Year Award by the…
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