CV

Since 03/2025

Research Associate and Doctoral Researcher in the Innovation Team A6 – “Diversity in Socio-Ecological Transformations: Migration, Demographic Change & Environment” at the Just Transition Center (JTC), Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg

10/2024 – 03/2025

Student Research Assistant at the Chair of Human Geography, Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg

2021 – 2025

Master of Science (M.Sc.) in International Area Studies – Global Change Geography (IAS-GCG), Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg

Master’s thesis: “Assembling the Saale: Human–River Relationships in a More-Than-Human World”

2015 – 2022

Bachelor of Arts (B.A.) in Middle Eastern Studies and Political Science, Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg

Bachelor’s thesis: “A Bridge Over Troubled Water? On Identity, Identity Construction, and the Relationship between ‘East’ and ‘West’ in the Reception of the Levantinism Model of the Egyptian-Israeli Writer Jacqueline S. Kahanoff”

Projects

More-than-human geographies of transformation: Hydropolitical spaces of contamination in and around Bitterfeld-Wolfen (Eastern Germany)

This research project explores the profound entanglements of water, space, and politics—and the extent to which these entanglements exceed the boundaries of human agency. The Bitterfeld-Wolfen region embodies a long industrial history in which mining, chemical production, hydraulic engineering, and wastewater management have shaped groundwater and river systems to this day. The resulting dynamics of pollutants—particularly those associated with persistent Hexachlorocyclohexane (HCH)—generate not only ecological risks but also complex arenas of negotiation among nature conservation, remediation of contaminated sites, property relations, agricultural use, and regional transformation goals. In this project I seek to trace  the manifold ways in which people engage both with the ecological legacies of the past and with the agency of water, pollutants, and other more-than-human entities. I argue that the transformation of hydropolitical spaces should not simply be conceived as a purely technical or political process but as deeply relational. Thus, I see investigating these relations—their conflicts, materialities, temporalities, and histories— as crucial for understanding how hydropolitical spaces of contamination can be made inhabitable, transformed, and shaped in sustainable ways.

 

Contact

Julia Ostertag

Research Associate/ PhD Candidate

Institut für Geowissenschaften und Geographie
Von-Seckendorff-Platz 4
06120 Halle (Saale)

 

Mail julia.ostertag@geo.uni-halle.de
Room H4 2.35