Dr. AnaÃs Delilah Roque Antonetty (she/her/ella) is an environmental social scientist and disaster anthropologist that studies resource insecurity and health in the Anthropocene. Currently, her research agenda is interested in looking at how households and communities experience, prepare for and respond to food, energy, and water insecurity in the wake of a hazard (e.g., geophysical, climatological) or disaster. Dr. Roque is also interested in the health outcomes of such experiences and the extent that strategies to address insecurity shape pathways to better or worse health. Trained as a mixed methods scholar, Dr. Roque has used interviews, survey, photovoice, social network, secondary data, participatory mapping, amongst others in her research.
Inspired by scholarship that embraces diverse epistemological approaches, Dr. Roque is part of several interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary teams that advance research at the intersections of environmental behaviors, community resilience, social vulnerability, climate equity and justice, and community-based collaboration. She conducts research in Puerto Rico, Phoenix, and the U.S./Mexico Borderlands.
School Division
Environmental Social SystemsRecent Publications
- Field Methods 36, no. 4 ( ): 348 - 354
- Progress in Energy 6, no. 3 ( ):
- Water Security 21, ( ):
- Field Methods 36, no. 1 ( ): 80 - 90
- Society and Natural Resources 37, no. 3 ( ): 365 - 383