
Christian Jahoda is a senior researcher at the Institute for Social Anthropology (ISA) specialising in Tibetan societies. He is PI and director of the Austrian Science Fund (FWF)-sponsored research project “The Scientific Tibet Legacy of Peter Aufschnaiter”. He is the author of Socio-economic Organisation in a Border Area of Tibetan Culture: Tabo, Spiti Valley, Himachal Pradesh, India (2015) and with Tsering Gyalpo, Christiane Kalantari and Patrick Sutherland the author of Khorchag, a trilingual monograph on the history and cultural traditions at Khorchag (Purang) in Western Tibet (2012; revised edition, 2015). His most recent publications are Recent Research on Tibet: A Festschrift for Guntram Hazod on the Occasion of His 70th Birthday (co-edited with Per K. Sørensen, 2026), The Social and the Religious in the Making of Tibetan Societies (co-edited with Guntram Hazod and Mathias Fermer, 2022), Early West Tibetan Buddhist Monuments (co-edited with Christiane Kalantari, 2021), and “Peter Aufschnaiter (1899–1973): A fresh biographical sketch. With extracts from his unpublished diaries, manuscripts, papers, and letters (translated from German by Claudia Aufschnaiter)”, in Christoph Cüppers, Karl-Heinz Everding and Peter Schwieger (eds), 2022, A Life in Tibetan Studies: Festschrift for Dieter Schuh at the Occasion of his 80th Birthday. Lumbini: Lumbini International Research Institute, 355–420.
Since 2016 he is editor of the “Publications in Social Anthropology” Series of the Institute for Social Anthropology at the Austrian Academy of Sciences Press, Vienna.
https://www.oeaw.ac.at/en/isa/publications/social-anthropology-book-publications-with-the-aas-press
1. (2026) with Claudia C. Aufschnaiter and Tsering Drongshar) Peter Aufschnaiter, the making of a topographer of Tibet ‘on the way’, with notes on a lam yig from Western Tibet, 1944. In: Per K. Sørensen and Jahoda, Christian (eds) Recent Research on Tibet: A Festschrift for Guntram Hazod on the Occasion of His 70th Birthday. Vienna: Austrian Academy of Sciences Press, 301–338; https://doi.org/10.1553/978OEAW50671s301.
2. (2023) Peter Aufschnaiter (1899–1973): A fresh biographical sketch. With extracts from his unpublished diaries, manuscripts, papers, and letters (translated from German by Claudia Aufschnaiter). In: Cüppers, Christoph, Everding, Karl-Heinz and Schwieger, Peter (eds) A Life in Tibetan Studies: Festschrift for Dieter Schuh at the Occasion of his 80th Birthday. Lumbini: Lumbini International Research Institute, 355–420.
3. (2022) with Guntram Hazod & Mathias Fermer (eds) The Social and the Religious in the Making of Tibetan Societies: New Perspectives on Imperial Tibet. Vienna: Austrian Academy of Sciences Press, 1–6. https://austriaca.at/9008-0inhalt?frames=yes
4. (2021) with Kalantari, Christiane (eds) Early West Tibetan Buddhist Monuments: Architecture, Art, History and Texts. (Studies and Materials on Historical Western Tibet, Volume III). Vienna: Austrian Academy of Sciences Press, 441 pp. https://austriaca.at/8777-6inhalt?frames=yes
5. (2021) Public buildings and/as symbolic framing of urban-rural communal practice in Western Tibet. In: Hovden, Eirik, Kümmeler, Fabian and Judith Majorossy (eds) Practicing Community in Urban and Rural Eurasia: Comparative and Interdisciplinary Perspectives (1000–1600). Leiden: Brill, 115–148. https://brill.com/view/title/60086?language=en
6. (2021) Notes on foundations and endowments in Historical Western Tibet (late 10th–15th century). In: Hovden, Eirik, Kümmeler, Fabian and Judith Majorossy (eds) Practicing Community in Urban and Rural Eurasia (1000–1600): Comparative and Interdisciplinary Perspectives. Leiden: Brill, 355–377. https://brill.com/view/title/60086?language=en
7. (2019) Inscriptions in areas of Historical Western Tibet (mNga’ ris skor gsum) in their contexts: A brief overview with selected examples. In: Medieval Worlds, 10: 199–251; https://medievalworlds.net/medievalworlds_no10_2019
8. (2018) Notes on the performance and meaning of the Sherken and Namtong festivals in areas of Historical Western Tibet (mNga’ ris skor gsum). In: Hazod, Guntram and Shen Weirong (eds) Tibetan Genealogies: Studies in Memoriam of Guge Tsering Gyalpo (1961–2015). Beijing: China Tibetology Publishing House: 679–704. https://mp.weixin.qq.com/s/-MHWcq3O8iwd6pPOK8_sGQ?fbclid=IwAR2aNWSbzKcr2ejY0dpWf6jvHc5DqbC8skI-mdx51FqlOK5P2D3w5h9Ujq0
9. (2017) Towards a history of Spiti: Some comments on the question of clans from the perspective of social anthropology. In: Revue d’Etudes Tibétaines, 41 (Sept. 2017): 128–159; http://himalaya.socanth.cam.ac.uk/collections/journals/ret/pdf/ret_41_07.pdf
10. (2016) Imparting and (re-)confirming order to the world: authoritative speech traditions and socio-political assemblies in Spiti, Upper Kinnaur and Purang in the past and present. In: Oral Tradition, 30 (2): 319–344; http://journal.oraltradition.org/issues/30ii/jahoda
11. (2016) (with Christiane Kalantari) Kingship in Western Tibet in the 10th and 11th centuries. In: Cahiers d’Extrême Asie, 24 (2015): 77–103.
12. (2015) Socio-economic Organisation in a Border Area of Tibetan Culture: Tabo, Spiti Valley (Himachal Pradesh, India). Vienna: Austrian Academy of Sciences Press, 367 pp. https://austriaca.at/7816-3?frames=yes
13. (2012) with Tsering Gyalpo, Christiane Kalantari and Patrick Sutherland; with contributions by Eva Allinger, Hubert Feiglstorfer and Kurt Tropper ’Khor chags / Khorchag / Kuojia si wenshi daguan [Kuojia Monastery: An Overview of Its History and Culture]. lHa sa: Bod ljongs bod yig dpe rnying dpe skrun khang, 288 pp. [second, revised edition: Vienna, Austrian Academy of Sciences Press, 2015; https://austriaca.at/7668-8?frames=yes]