Toma Peiu is a filmmaker, visual artist, and scholar-educator with an ethnographic practice in documentary, fiction and installation. His work has been presented, published or exhibited in over 150 venues on five continents, from multiplex cinemas to churches, and from congress halls to television stations, teahouses and community centers; from film festivals to art galleries and academic conferences; and from peer-reviewed journals to neighborhood bulletin boards. He holds degrees from the National University of Drama and Film in Bucharest and The New School in New York. Peiu's research looks at people and events on the fringes of society: human migration, forced relocation, state and corporate surveillance, alternate lifestyles on the edge of capitalism and their relation to liminal place-making in new lands. His dissertation in Critical Media Practices looks at post-socialist imaginaries of migration from Central Eurasia, between former Soviet diasporas in New York and Qaraqalpaq-Qazaq home/bordelands. Peiu's teaching portfolio includes coursework in film, media studies, expanded documentary arts and cultural anthropology. Peiu is affiliated with the Melikian Center for Russian, East European and Eurasian Studies at Arizona State University, and the Mimesis Center for Documentary and Ethnographic Media at the University of Colorado Boulder. He is a co-founder of production company Root Films in Bucharest, with Luiza Parvu; and a founding member of the Entangled Films Collective in Munich, with fellow researchers at the Rachel Carson Center for Environment and Society.