Department of Sociology
April 29, 2026

Michael Levien

Colloquia

Bio

(From https://mlevien.org/)

 

Michael LevienMichael is an associate professor in the Department of Sociology at Johns Hopkins University, where he has been since receiving his PhD from the University of California-Berkeley in 2013. The common theme of his research is using ethnographic methods to advance our theories of large political economic forces, whether climate change, energy transition or large-scale land grabbing.

His current research is focused on developing a comparative sociology of energy transition. He is particularly interested in the challenge of decarbonizing fossil-fuel producing regions of the United States. To this end, he has done ethnographic and interview-based fieldwork in West Virginia and Louisiana. His current book project examines the social consequences of carbon capture and storage (CCS), a controversial approach to climate mitigation that is moving ahead rapidly since passage of the Inflation Reduction Act. The book is based on one year of ethnographic research in Louisiana—the epicenter of the CCS boom—focused on communities slated for CCS injection wells, pipelines and “clean fuels” plants. He has also been studying the political economy of offshore wind development in the Gulf of Mexico.

For fifteen years his research focused on land dispossession in India. This work sought to advance a comparative sociology of dispossession, a social relation that was largely neglected by sociology. This research culminated in his book Dispossession without Development (2018), which won multiple book awards from the American Sociological Association and the International Studies Association. He has also undertaken research on broader themes of agrarian transformations in the Global South and on the global politics of neoliberalism.