Perry Maddox is a socio-cultural anthropologist working at the intersections of environmental change, governance, and millenarian religiosity in Latin America and the Caribbean. He is currently a PhD candidate in the Department of Anthropology at Johns Hopkins University, and holds degrees in music performance, environmental studies, and anthropology from the University of Michigan and McGill University. His research examines how climate change is experienced and known, moving between Ngäbe communities indigenous to Panama and the UN climate process. More broadly, his work contributes to an understanding of how temporalities of prophecy sit alongside anthropogenic climate change and colonial aftermaths. Perry is also a musician and experimental performer, with collaborations in Chicago, Ann Arbor, and Baltimore.