Zehra Hashmi is a Research Fellow at CERP. Dr Zehra is a postdoctoral research associate at the Watson Institute at Brown University. Dr Zehra is an anthropologist and historian who works on identification technologies in South Asia. Her research explores the everyday workings of securitization and surveillance in Pakistan through the intersection of identification, migration, kinship, and post-colonial and colonial governance. Dr Zehra’s current book project is a historical ethnography of Pakistan’s national identification regime. She examines how this identification system uses data as a kin-making substance to redefine who counts as kin and, by extension, a Pakistani citizen. She argues that interrogating such a reliance on kinship and genealogical relations reconfigures our understanding of modern identification practices, as individual identity is produced and tracked through relatedness, not unique bodily characteristics or biometrics alone. In turn, she analyses how and why a governance technology comes to disproportionately impact Pashtun migrants in Islamabad who experience the direct effects of both new and residual forms of militarization. By situating a state-run security infrastructure within the legacies of colonial rule and the experiences of those who encounter it, her work brings an anthro-historical understanding to bear on debates concerning a central feature of modern life today: digital identification. This research has been supported by the National Science Foundation, the Social Science Research Council, the Wenner-Gren Organization, and the Charlotte Newcombe Doctoral Dissertation Fellowship. Her interest in identification technology has led her to pursue future research on the role of tracking technologies in the domain of public health. Her next project analyses how technologies that track pandemic networks and polio vaccination in Pakistan intersect with questions of public health surveillance, epidemiology and the politics of empire. Dr Zehra received PhD from the Inter-departmental Program in Anthropology and History at the University of Michigan and BA from Columbia University.