Natasha Raheja/Provided
In Jodhpur, India, computer typists offer services to migrants from stalls at the kutchery, an administrative maze housing hundreds of private vendors and dozens of government offices, pictured here in October 2019.
In India, computer typists embody ‘fuzzy’ nature of state borders
Anthropology
By |
Kate Blackwood
,
Cornell Chronicle
12/15/2023
More News from A&S
Tomer Texler/Unsplash
History
10/9/2025
A&S Communications
Jingming Pan/Unsplash
Economics
10/9/2025
A&S Communications
Physics
10/9/2025
Cornell Chronicle
SXS Lensing/Simulating eXtreme Spacetimes Collaboration
A visualization from a computer simulation of two black holes
Astrophysics
10/8/2025
A&S Communications
View all news
Natasha Raheja/Provided
In Jodhpur, India, computer typists offer services to migrants from stalls at the kutchery, an administrative maze housing hundreds of private vendors and dozens of government offices, pictured here in October 2019.
Related articles
Natasha Raheja/Provided
Migrant passports and immigration stamps.
Natasha Raheja/Provided
A Pakistani migrant woman, at right, meets with Indian Ministry of Home Affairs officials in Jodhpur, India, in July 2016.
Antropology
10/6/2022
Cornell Chronicle
Provided
Anthropology Collections curator Frederic Gleach held an open house during the Northeast Conference on Andean and Amazonian Archaeology and Ethnohistory that highlighted materials from the Andes, including the items pictured here: Andean textiles and ceramics, with a Sican gold mask
Provided
Anthropology Collections curator Frederic Gleach held an open house during the Northeast Conference on Andean and Amazonian Archaeology and Ethnohistory that highlighted materials from the Andes, including the items pictured here: Andean textiles and ceramics, with a Sican gold mask
Anthropology
11/22/2023
A&S Communications
Provided
St. Hovhannes Church of Chahuk (built in the 12th or 13th century and renovated in the 17th and 19th centuries) was destroyed between 1997 and 2009, as documented in a new report from Caucasus Heritage Watch.
Provided
St. Hovhannes Church of Chahuk (built in the 12th or 13th century and renovated in the 17th and 19th centuries) was destroyed between 1997 and 2009, as documented in a new report from Caucasus Heritage Watch.
Cultural heritage
9/21/2023
A&S Communications
Related department or program
Related people
Anthropology, Performing and Media Arts