Ali Nobil Ahmad is an independent researcher, journalist, and curator. His interests encompass political ecology, migration, and the media in Pakistan and its diaspora. He has authored and edited a range of publications on these subjects, having held academic positions in Pakistan, the US, and Germany. Hewas curator of anthropoSCENE, a festival of screenings and talks at Berlin's Kino Moviemento (2017); co-curator of Between the Sacred
and the Profane, a retrospective on Jamil Dehlavi at the British Film Institute (2018), and Winds of Change, a programme on cinema and the Arab Spring at the Institute of Contemporary Arts in London (2011). Hisdocumentary films on climate justice in Pakistan, Waseb and Lok Sath, have been widely screened at conferences, festivals,
and galleries.
Ali Khan is Associate Professor of Anthropology at the Department of Humanities and Social Sciences at LUMS. His research interests vary from labour issues to popular culture in Pakistan focusing particularly on cinema and sports. Khan's book Representing Children: Power, Policy and the Discourse on Child Labour in the Football Manufacturing Industry of Pakistan was published in 2007 by Oxford University Press. He is also the General Editor for a series of seven books
on Sociology and Anthropology in Pakistan. His last two projects have resulted in co-authored and edited books on cricket — Cricket Cauldron (London: I. B. Tauris, 2013) and Cinema and Society: Film and Social Change in Pakistan (Karachi: Oxford University Press, 2016). He has an MPhil and a PhD in Social Anthropology from
the University of Cambridge in England.