Andrew Ashley

Mr. Andrew Ashley, a medical anthropologist and PhD candidate at New York University, studies how people live with diabetes and other chronic health concerns in India and among the Indian diaspora in the United States. In particular, Mr. Ashley is interested in the intersection of health, science, agriculture, and technology to see how scientists manipulate seeds themselves to provide better healthcare. Mr. Ashley’s work also provides a comparative look at living with Type II diabetes in India and in the United States. Previously, Mr. Ashley has conducted research on the possibilities and limits of multicultural governance strategies in a former mill town in northern England; the evolving cultural landscape of suburban North Carolina; and the complications and anxieties of life on student and temporary work visa for IT migrants from India to the United States. Mr. Ashley has conducted fieldwork on South Asian diasporas in northern England; The “Research Triangle” of North Carolina; Chicagoland; and New York and New Jersey metro area. He holds a bachelor’s degree in Comparative Literature and Cultural Studies from the University of North Carolina; a master’s degree in Geography from the University of Kentucky; and master’s degrees with a focus on Anthropology from the University of Chicago and NYU. Mr. Ashley is also a filmmaker and a recipient of the Culture and Media certificate from NYU. His most recent film Sehnsucht (2021) looks at the shifting landscape of the Lower East Side of Manhattan and the effect these layers have on him. Mr. Ashley also plans to make a film during his Fulbright-Nehru Fellowship, around his research.

Mr. Ashley aims to conduct his dissertation research on living with diabetes in Hyderabad. He aims to conduct ethnographic fieldwork with people diagnosed with Type I or Type II diabetes, their family members and caregivers, and doctors and other medical health professionals and researchers. Mr. Ashley seeks to also conduct ethnographic fieldwork with crop scientists and medical researchers who are working to create new forms of low Glycemic Index rice. In particular, Mr. Ashley hopes to understand how this focus on rice echoes and also shifts previous Indian agricultural development projects since Independence; and what role crop scientists feel they have in combating this diabetes epidemic.