Dr. Martina Angela Caretta is a feminist geographer researching human-environment interactions, specifically investigating the human dimensions of water. She is interested in waterscapes and how they are modified, reified and used by people and in turn, how local and indigenous communities, adapt their norms and customs in the face of climate change. She has also researched that role that migration and conflict play in (mal)adapting to water insecurity. I have conducted research in Kenya, Tanzania, Ecuador, Venezuela and Appalachia in the USA.
Her work is based on participatory and decolonizing research methodologies, which demand the sharing of research results with participating communities. She has disseminated my research in different formats e.g. workshops with research participants and booklets in local languages.