Geography.uga.edu



CURRICULUM VITAE

ANDREW JOHN HEROD

Distinguished Research Professor

Department of Geography

Franklin College of Arts and Sciences

University of Georgia

Athens, GA 30602, USA

and

Adjunct Distinguished Research Professor

Department of International Affairs

School of Public and International Affairs

University of Georgia

Athens, GA 30602, USA

and

Adjunct Distinguished Research Professor

Department of Anthropology

Franklin College of Arts and Sciences

University of Georgia

Athens, GA 30602, USA

and

Director

UGA à Paris Study Abroad Program

(: + 1 706 542 2856 (main office); + 1 706 542 2366 (direct)

7: + 1 706 542 2388

(: aherod@uga.edu

(:

PERSONAL:

Birthdate: February 6, 1964 in Knutsford, Cheshire, England.

Dual Citizen: British Citizen (by birth); United States Citizen (naturalized February 19, 2003).

Languages:

➢ English (native speaker).

➢ French (near fluent reading, writing, speaking).

➢ Spanish (reasonable working knowledge reading, writing, speaking).

➢ Portuguese (mid-level reading comprehension).

➢ Other Romance languages (elementary reading comprehension).

EDUCATION:

RUTGERS UNIVERSITY 1988-1992, New Brunswick, NJ. Ph.D. in Geography (4.0 GPA). Dissertation title: “Towards a Labor Geography: The Production of Space and the Politics of Scale in the East Coast Longshore Industry, 1953-1990” (440 pages).

WEST VIRGINIA UNIVERSITY 1986-1988, Morgantown, WV. Master of Arts in Geography (4.0 GPA). Thesis title: “Industrial Reorganization and the Local Response to Plant Closures: A New Politics of Manufacturing Decline” (118 pages).

UNIVERSITY OF BRISTOL 1983-1986, Bristol, England. Bachelor of Social Science in Geography (First Class Honours); subsidiary subject Sociology (Distinction).

PROFESSIONAL EMPLOYMENT:

2011-present Distinguished Research Professor (with tenure), Department of Geography, University of Georgia, Athens, GA. Initially appointed 1/6/11 for the period July 1, 2011-June 30, 2016; renewed 1/22/16 for the period July 1, 2016-June 30, 2021.

2011-present Adjunct Distinguished Research Professor, Department of Anthropology, University of Georgia.

2011-present Adjunct Distinguished Research Professor, Department of International Affairs, University of Georgia.

2005-2011 Adjunct Professor, Department of Anthropology, University of Georgia.

2004-2011 Adjunct Professor, Department of International Affairs, University of Georgia.

2003-2011 Professor (with tenure), Department of Geography, University of Georgia, Athens, GA.

2003-present Director, UGA à Paris Study Abroad program, University of Georgia. Program operates for 6 weeks during summer session. Responsible for annual budget of approx. $250,000, 34 students, and 5 staff members.

1997-2003 Associate Professor (with tenure), Department of Geography, University of Georgia, Athens, GA.

1992-1997 Assistant Professor, Department of Geography, University of Georgia, Athens, GA.

1988-1992 Teaching Assistant, Department of Geography, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ.

1989 Office Associate, City of New York Department of Housing Preservation and Development, New York City, NY.

1987-1988 Research Assistant, National Science Foundation Grant “Regional Economic Development in the Southern United States,” Regional Research Institute, West Virginia University, Morgantown, WV.

1986-1987 Research Assistant, National Science Foundation Grant “Unemployment in the US Metropolitan System,” Regional Research Institute, West Virginia University, Morgantown, WV.

VISITING APPOINTMENTS:

2015 Visiting Professor, Hellenic Open University, Athens, Greece. Funded by the Fulbright Foreign Scholarship Board, Fulbright Specialist Program, Council for International Exchange of Scholars (CIES), Institute of International Education (IIE), United States Department of State Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs, Washington, DC (April 18-May 3).

2005 Visiting Distinguished Professor, Work and Organisational Studies, School of Business, Faculty of Economics and Business, University of Sydney, Australia (September 9-September 23).

2002 Hilary Term Scholar in Residence, UGA at Oxford Program, Keble College, Oxford, England (February 15-March 22).

OTHER ACADEMIC AFFILIATIONS:

2019 Lecturer, UGA in Australia Study Abroad program, University of Georgia (March 1-March 6).

2018 Director and lecturer, UGA à Paris Study Abroad program, University of Georgia (June 1-June 23).

2018 Lecturer, UGA in Australia Study Abroad program, University of Georgia (February 27-March 6).

2017 Director and lecturer, UGA à Paris Study Abroad program, University of Georgia (June 1-June 23).

2017 Lecturer, UGA in Australia Study Abroad program, University of Georgia (February 28-March 7).

2016 Director and lecturer, UGA à Paris Study Abroad program, University of Georgia (June 2-June 25).

2016 Lecturer, UGA in Australia Study Abroad program, University of Georgia (February 29-March 6).

2015 Director and lecturer, UGA à Paris Study Abroad program, University of Georgia (June 4-June 25).

2015 Lecturer, UGA in Australia Study Abroad program, University of Georgia (March 4-March 9).

2014-2015 Discover Abroad Study Abroad program (responsible for expanding Service Learning and Internship opportunities in Australia, New Zealand, Fiji, Bali, Antarctica, Tahiti, United Kingdom), University of Georgia.

2014 Lecturer, UGA in New Zealand Study Abroad program, University of Georgia (February 11-February 16).

2013 Director and lecturer, UGA à Paris Study Abroad program, University of Georgia (June 6-June 27).

2013 Lecturer, UGA in New Zealand Study Abroad program, University of Georgia (March 9-March 15).

2012 Director and lecturer, UGA à Paris Study Abroad program, University of Georgia (June 8-June 28).

2012 Lecturer, UGA in Australia Study Abroad program, University of Georgia (March 12-March 17).

2011 Director and lecturer, UGA à Paris Study Abroad program, University of Georgia (June 9-June 30).

2011 Lecturer, UGA in Australia Study Abroad program, University of Georgia (March 6-March 11).

2010 Director and lecturer, UGA à Paris Study Abroad program, University of Georgia (May 13-June 3).

2010 Lecturer, UGA in Australia Study Abroad program, University of Georgia (March 6-March 11).

2009 Director and lecturer, UGA à Paris Study Abroad program, University of Georgia (May 14-May 31).

2009 Lecturer, UGA in Australia Study Abroad program, University of Georgia (March 7-March 11).

2008 Director and lecturer, UGA à Paris Study Abroad program, University of Georgia (May 16-June 1).

2008 Lecturer, UGA in Australia Study Abroad program, University of Georgia (March 7-March 12).

2007 Director and lecturer, UGA à Paris Study Abroad program, University of Georgia (May 18-June 3).

2006 Director and lecturer, UGA à Paris Study Abroad program, University of Georgia (May 18-June 9).

2006 Lecturer, UGA in Australia Study Abroad program, University of Georgia (March 4-March 12).

2005 Director and lecturer, UGA à Paris Study Abroad program, University of Georgia (May 19-June 10).

2005 Lecturer, UGA in Australia Study Abroad program, University of Georgia (March 9-March 27).

2004 Director and lecturer, UGA à Paris Study Abroad program, University of Georgia (June 9-June 26).

2004 Lecturer, UGA in Tanzania Maymester Study Abroad program, African Studies Institute, University of Georgia (May 11-June 6).

2004 Lecturer, UGA in Australia Study Abroad program, University of Georgia (March 13-March 22).

2003 Co-director and lecturer, UGA in Avignon Summer Study Abroad program, University of Georgia (June 8-June 28).

2003 Co-director and lecturer, UGA in Tanzania Maymester Study Abroad program, African Studies Institute, University of Georgia (May 13-June 5).

2002 Co-director and lecturer, Public Service Learning Study Abroad in Croatia, Office of Public Service and Outreach, University of Georgia. This Study Abroad program involved UGA students working with University of Zagreb faculty and local government officials in Croatia on a hands-on sustainable development project on the Adriatic island of Krk and in Krašic, northwest Croatia. Project dates: July 9-30, 2002.

2002 Lecturer, UGA in Tanzania Maymester Study Abroad program, African Studies Institute, University of Georgia (May 13-June 5).

2002-present Affiliated Faculty Member, British and Irish Studies Program (BISP), University of Georgia.

2001-present Member, University of Georgia Teaching Academy. Selected to become a member by the Teaching Academy Executive Committee.

2001-present Core Faculty Member, African Studies Institute, University of Georgia.

1996-1999 Fellow, Institute for Behavioral Research (IBR), University of Georgia. Appointed by Institute Director and Executive Board.

1995-present Affiliated Faculty Member, Latin American and Caribbean Studies Institute (LACSI), University of Georgia.

1993-present Associate Faculty Member, Institute for Women’s Studies, University of Georgia.

1992-present Associate Fellow, Willson Center for Humanities and Arts, University of Georgia.

EDITORIAL BOARDS:

2017-present Member, Scientific Committee, Revista Pegada – The Journal of Labor Geography, published by the Centro de Estudos de Geografia do Trabalho (Center for the Study of the Geography of Work), Universidade Estadual Paulista “Júlio de Mesquita Filho” (UNESP), Presidente Prudente, São Paulo, Brazil.

2011-2013 Editorial Board Member, Geographies of Justice and Social Transformation Series, University of Georgia Press, Athens, GA.

2007-present Editorial Board Member, Human Geography.

2007-present Editorial Board Member, Global Labour.

2007-2010 Editorial Board Member, University of Georgia Press, Athens, GA. Appointed by the Provost.

2007-2011 Series Editor and Founder (with Nik Heynen and Melissa Wright) of Geographies of Justice and Social Transformation Series, University of Georgia Press, Athens, GA.

1999-2006 Editorial Board Member, Antipode: A Journal of Radical Geography.

AWARDS AND HONORS:

2017 Recognized by the UGA Career Center as having “contributed greatly to [the] career development and success” of a graduate of the University of Georgia’s Class of 2017, based upon a nomination from said student.

2017 Invited to present a Keynote Address to the 2017 Alumni Seminar on “A Sense of Place”, University of Georgia, February 17-18: “The Nature of Place in a Globalizing World.”

2015 Fulbright Specialist grantee, chosen by the Hellenic Open University, Athens, Greece, for a Short-term Visiting Appointment, April 18-May 3, 2015. Selection approved by the Fulbright Foreign Scholarship Board, Fulbright Specialist Program, Council for International Exchange of Scholars (CIES), Institute of International Education (IIE), United States Department of State Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs, Washington, DC.

2014 Selected as a Member of the Fulbright Specialist Roster, U.S. Department of State’s Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs (ECA) and the Institute of International Education’s Council for International Exchange of Scholars (CIES). Selected December 18, 2014.

2013 My article “Dockers and seafarers: What the politics of spatial embeddedness and geographical scale have meant for union organizing in the European maritime trades,” written with Leah Carmichael, that appeared in Labor Studies Journal (2012) 37.2: 203-227, was awarded “Best Article from Volume 37” by the Labor Studies Journal Editorial Board.

2012 Invited to present the Keynote Address to the 2012 Academic Affairs Faculty Symposium of the University of Georgia, Unicoi Conference Center, March 23-24: “The Teaching/Research Nexus: How Disciplinary Research Can Enhance the Quality of Teaching and Learning and How Teaching Can Motivate and Engage Research Faculty.”

2012 The 2012 Office of International Education Study Abroad Award for making “major contributions to the study abroad effort at the University of Georgia by working directly with a study abroad program and/or contributing to the infrastructure that advances UGA’s overall study abroad effort” through developing and directing the UGA à Paris Study Abroad program, helping “identify and work with bureaucratic hurdles faced by study abroad directors…serv[ing] on numerous OIE committees and…advis[ing] and mentor[ing] several UGA study abroad directors.”

2011 The Harold and Florence Mayer Lecturer, Department of Geography, University of Wisconsin – Milwaukee, WI: “Labor union organizing strategies in early 21st century USA” (October 7).

2011 Distinguished Research Professor, University of Georgia, Athens, GA (effective July 1, 2011-present).

Distinguished Research Professorships “are given to honor academicians whose work is recognized as being of the highest levels of creativity by national and international leaders in the discipline.” (Nominating guidelines)

2009 William A. Owens Creative Research Award.

Awarded by the University of Georgia Research Foundation in recognition of outstanding research in the social and behavioral sciences. One award is made per year.

“The William A. Owens Award is given to recognize an outstanding body of nationally and internationally recognized scholarly or creative activities in the social and behavioral sciences. Established 1985.” (Nominating guidelines)

2009 My article “Local political practice in response to a manufacturing plant closure: How geography complicates class analysis,” published in Antipode (1991; 23.4, 385-402), was listed by the journal’s publisher as one of the 40-most influential articles published in Antipode between 1969 and 2009.

2008 The 2008 Outstanding Research Honors Award, Southeastern Division of the Association of American Geographers.

Awarded by the 2008 Southeastern Division of the Association of American Geographers (SEDAAG) Honors Committee for exceptional research. One award is made per year.

“Nominees for this award should meet the following criteria: (1) A significant record of quality research and publication in scholarly journals, books, and other appropriate formats. This record may reflect the cumulative work of several years or the publication of important contributions in a shorter period of time: (2) Evidence of research leadership at both an institutional (college, university, industry) and organizational level (professional associations) where scholarly papers are presented and students and colleagues are advised.” (Nominating guidelines)

2001 American Association for Adult and Continuing Education (AAACE) Imogene Okes Research Award.

Awarded for the best article published during 2000 in the field of adult and continuing education [Ben Salt, Ron Cervero, and Andrew Herod (2000): “Workers’ education and neoliberal globalization: An adequate response to transnational corporations?” Adult Education Quarterly 51.1: 9-31.]

“AAACE’s Commission of Research sponsors the Imogene Okes Research Award to recognize persons whose research contributes significantly to the advancement of adult and continuing education. Begun in 1976 under the auspices of the AEA-USA, the award has been given [on a periodic basis] to…individuals on the basis of their published work.” (Commission of Professors of Adult Education guidelines).

2001 Creative Research Medal, University of Georgia Research Foundation.

“The Creative Research Medal is awarded by the University of Georgia Research Foundation as a recognition of outstanding accomplishment in research and creativity for a research project or creative activity with a single coherent theme. Faculty at the University of Georgia are nominated for the Creative Research Medal by their colleagues and chosen by a committee of distinguished faculty representing both the humanities and sciences. Each year individuals who have carried out a research project or creative endeavor of truly outstanding quality are honored this way. The award consists of a bronze medallion designed by the late William J. Thompson, a former Professor in the University of Georgia School of Art, and a monetary consideration” (Creative Research Medal guidelines, UGA Research Foundation).

2000 National Council for Geographic Education (NCGE) Journal of Geography Awards Task Force Best Content Award.

Awarded for the best article published during 1999 in Journal of Geography [Andrew Herod (1999) “Using industrial disputes to teach about economic geography.” Journal of Geography 98.5: 229-241.

1999 My book Organizing the Landscape: Geographical Perspectives on Labor Unionism (University of Minnesota Press: Minneapolis and London, 1998) was designated a “Breakthrough Book” by Lingua Franca May/ June 1999, p. 16-17 (Lingua Franca was the academic magazine about intellectual life which the New York Times [10/18/01] once called “a must-read for intellectuals”). The book was recognized for providing a “more nuanced understanding of how labor struggles and agreements contribute to the transformation of specific landscapes.”

1996 Royal Geographical Society/ Institute of British Geographers Young Research Worker. Invited address to the Economic Geography Study Group, Annual Conference of the Royal Geographical Society/ Institute of British Geographers, Glasgow, Scotland, January 3-6. (Award covered cost of attending conference.)

1994 J. Warren Nystrom Award for the best Ph.D. dissertation in Geography 1992-93, Association of American Geographers.

1993 The M.G. Michael Award, Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia. $2500 cash prize for excellence in research for proposal “Panopticons on the piers: The creation of a moral landscape on the New York-New Jersey Waterfront.” (One award made that year in competition open to all faculty ranks throughout the College.)

“The M.G. Michael Award was established in 1944 to stimulate new initiatives in scholarship in all areas of the Arts and Sciences. Its primary purpose is to encourage the development of a new (and perhaps adventurous) idea or project during the coming year. The Award implies faith in that purpose and in the ability of the faculty member selected to plan and conduct the proposed research; it is not given in recognition of previous research accomplishments. Nevertheless, it does require evidence that recipients have been proficient researchers” (Franklin College of Arts and Sciences award guidelines).

1993 Best Ph.D. Dissertation 1991-92, Industrial Geography Specialty Group of the Association of American Geographers.

1992 Best Graduate Student Paper, Political Geography Specialty Group, Annual Conference of the Association of American Geographers, San Diego, CA, April 18-22.

1991 Best Graduate Student Paper, Conference of the Middle States Division of the Association of American Geographers, State College, PA, October 4-6.

1988 Prize, Appalachian Studies Conference Student Essay Competition, Radford VA, March 18-20.

FELLOWSHIPS:

2004-2005 Research Fellowship, Center for the Humanities and Arts, University of Georgia. Fellowship consisted of a buy-out of two courses. (One of 10 fellows selected).

1995 Research Mentoring Program Fellow, Institute for Behavioral Research, University of Georgia. One course release and $3000 for research expenses. (One of 3 fellows selected in University-wide competition.)

1994-1996 Lilly Teaching Fellow, Office of Instructional Development, University of Georgia. One course release and $2000 for pedagogical project. (One of 8 fellows selected in University-wide competition.)

1991-1992 Rutgers University Fellowship. $7500 stipend. (Declined.)

1990-1991 Doctoral Fellow, Center for the Critical Analysis of Contemporary Culture, Rutgers University. $11,000 research stipend. (One of 8 fellows selected in University-wide competition.)

PUBLICATIONS:

Books – Authored:

2019 Andrew Herod: Landscapes of Labor in the Global South: Workers Negotiate the Geography of Capitalism. University of Georgia Press “Geographies of Justice and Social Transformation” series: Athens, GA (under contract).

2018 Andrew Herod: Labor. Polity Press “Geopolitics of Resources” series: Cambridge, UK (978-07456-6386-9 hbk/ ISBN 978-07456-6387-6 pbk). []

“In this bold and pithy text Herod reminds us that labor is a vital resource with a mind of its own. This book is an excellent introduction to the fast-changing world of work and why it matters so much.” Jane Wills, Queen Mary University of London, UK [back cover].

“Superbly explicated and assisted by well-chosen case studies, Andrew Herod’s analysis of the uniqueness of labor as a resource is both captivating and convincing. Wonderful work!” Jon Agnone, University of Washington, USA [back cover].

Reviewed in: Economic Geography 94.4: 457-458 (2018); Antipode ??.??: ??-??(2018); Social Forces 97.1: e2 (2018); Labor: Studies in Working Class History ??.??: ??-?? (2019).

2015 Stelios Gialis and Andrew Herod: Γεωγραφία της Eργασίας: Eργατική Δράση, Eυέλικτη Aπασχόληση Kαι Xωρικές Aνισότητες (Geografia tis Ergasias: Ergatiki Drasi, Evelikti Apasxolisi Kai Xorikes Anisotites – Labor Geography: Labor Agency, Flexible Employment and Spatial Inequalities). Kallipos publishing initiative, Hellenic Academic Libraries: Athens, Greece (454 pages, 11 figs., 31 pictures, 7 boxes). [] This e-book is the first Greek-language monograph within the thematic area of Labor Geography. It is used throughout the Greek higher education system.

2010 Andrew Herod: Scale. “Key Ideas in Geography” Series. Routledge: London. (9780415349079 hbk/ ISBN 9780415349086 pbk/ ebook 9780203641095: xvii plus 294 pages, 12 figs., 2 tables, 30 boxes). []

“Andrew Herod’s Scale offers an exhaustive and critical account of the theoretical importance and political centrality of spatial scale. With knife-edge precision he charts the theoretical controversies, explores different conceptualizations and excavates the relevance of thinking through scale for understanding real world process. This book is a must read for all those interested in understanding how the world works, why it does so and how to act in it.” Erik Swyngedouw, Department of Geography, University of Manchester, UK [back cover].

“With understanding of rare insight, Herod provides an exhaustive and thorough survey of the literature on geographic scale. The book sets a high standard. It fills a major gap in the literature and will be a standard reference for all those doing research on the topic.” Kevin Cox, Department of Geography, Ohio State University, USA [back cover].

Reviewed in: Geography 96.1: 50-51 (2011); Scottish Geographical Journal 127.4: 337-338 (2011); Geographical Education (Australian Geography Teachers’ Association) 24: 75-76 (2011); Annals of the Association of American Geographers 102.3: 726-728 (2012); Progress in Human Geography 36.3: 431-432 (2012); Localities: International Journal for Humanities and Locality Studies 3: 233-244 (2013).

2009 Andrew Herod: Geographies of Globalization: A Critical Introduction. Critical Introductions to Geography Series. Wiley-Blackwell: Chichester, UK. (ISBN 978-1-4051-1052-5 hbk/ ISBN 978-1-4051-1091-4 pbk: xv plus 278 pages, 26 figs., 16 tables). []

“An important introduction to the debates about the geography of globalization. Critical but never shrill, the book works unerringly to expose and render intelligible the intellectual and practical pressure points that are the result of the multiple processes of globalization. As good a starting point as any you’ll find.” Nigel Thrift, Vice Chancellor and Professor of Geography, University of Warwick, UK [back cover].

“Writing for an upper-level undergraduate readership, Andrew Herod has produced a challenging critical interpretation of geographies of globalization that is both historically informed and geographically sensitive.” Peter Dicken, Department of Geography, University of Manchester, UK [back cover].

Reviewed in: CHOICE, Current Reviews for Academic Libraries 47.2 (October 2009); Economic Geography 86.1: 107-108 (2010); Growth and Change 41.1: 136-138 (2010); Professional Geographer 62.2: 6-7 (2010); Progress in Human Geography 34.6: 855-857 (2010); Area 43.2: 235-236 (2011); Tijdschrift voor Economische en Sociale Geografie 102.5: 615-621 (2011) – part of an article reviewing several books on globalization.

2001 Andrew Herod: Labor Geographies: Workers and the Landscapes of Capitalism. Guilford Press: New York (“Perspectives on Economic Change” Series). (ISBN 1-57230-685-8 pbk: xvi plus 352 pages, 5 figs., 2 tables, 12 photos).

“A first-rate introduction to the exciting new interdisciplinary field of labor geography by one of its leading and most influential scholars...I highly recommend this book as a text for senior undergraduate and graduate courses in economic geography, labor studies, labor history, and industrial relations, and as a source of original research for scholars in these fields.” John Holmes, Department of Geography, Queen’s University, Canada [back cover].

“If, as economic geographers say, all aspects of social existence are necessarily spatial, then what does this mean for understanding what is happening to labor today? Herod provides answers to this question in a compelling and refreshing treatment of space, scale, and labor activism. I cannot recommend this book highly enough...In setting out the core concepts of labor geography, Herod communicates complex ideas clearly and achieves that rarest of feats in leaving his readers with new ways of looking at the world and labor’s place in it.” Bradon Ellem, Department of Work and Organisational Studies, University of Sydney, Australia [back cover].

“Labor Geographies helps break down traditional academic barriers between cultural and economic geography and labor studies. It also compels labor unions to rethink their strategies in geographic terms. In the process, Andrew Herod is contributing to the influence of geography on the development of a new working-class studies.” John Russo & Sherry Linkon, Center for Working-Class Studies, Youngstown State University, USA [back cover].

Reviewed in: American Journal of Sociology 107.6: 1606-1608 (May 2002); CHOICE, Current Reviews for Academic Libraries 39.8 (April 2002); Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 20.4: 503-504 (2002); International Labor and Working-Class History 62: 230-232 (2002); Political Studies 50.3: 651-652 (2002) – awarded 5-star rating on scale of 1-5; Tijdschrift voor Economische en Sociale Geografie 93.5: 583-585 (2002); Work, Employment and Society 16.4: 766-769 (2002); Annals of the Association of American Geographers 93.2: 518-522 (2003); Antipode 35.4: 832-838 (2003); The Journal of Industrial Relations (Industrial Relations Society of Australia) 45.1: 111-113 (2003); Labour/ Le Travail 51: 333-335 (Spring, 2003); Political Geography 22: 805-807 (2003); Geografiska Annaler Series B: Human Geography 86.3: 217 (2004); International Journal of Urban and Regional Research 28.1: 243-244 (2004); Labor Studies Journal 29.2: 119-121 (Summer 2004); Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers New Series 30: 130-132 (2005).

Books – Edited:

2020 Andrew Herod (editor): Handbook of Labour Geography. Edward Elgar: Cheltenham, UK (under contract).

2016 Rob Lambert and Andrew Herod (editors): Neoliberal Capitalism and Precarious Work: Ethnographies of Accommodation and Resistance. Edward Elgar: Cheltenham, UK. (ISBN 978 1 78195 494 2 hbk/ eISBN: 978 1 78195 495 9: xi plus 336 pages, 4 figs., 5 tables). []

“Precarious work is on the rise in the Global South and North alike. This important volume provides interesting examples about the hardship of long working hours, poverty wages and dangerous employment conditions. And yet, workers are not only victims but also agents with possibilities of resistance. The book points to the potential of a cross-border movement of the dispossessed based on a re-imagined role of the labour movement. A must read for everyone interested in resistance to capitalist exploitation.” Andreas Bieler, Professor of Political Economy and Fellow of the Centre for the Study of Social and Global Justice, School of Politics and International Relations, University of Nottingham, UK [back cover].

“As the world becomes increasingly global, labor’s response must be as well. As ‘standard’ employment declines, and workers come to see ‘flexibility’ as a four-letter word, the future of the labor movement hinges on the ability to develop creative responses to precarious labor. Anyone interested in stimulating examples of what is happening to employment and ways to challenge precarious work needs to read Neoliberal Capitalism and Precarious Work.” Dan Clawson, Professor, Social and Demographic Research Institute and Department of Sociology, University of Massachusetts Amherst, USA [back cover].

Chapters by: Andrew Herod and Rob Lambert (Introduction and Part One section introduction); Katherine Joynt and Edward Webster; Sébastien Chauvin; Dilek Hattatoğlu and Jane Tate; Pun Ngai and Lu Huilin; Jacklyn Cock and Rob Lambert; Brian Garvey and Maria Joseli Barreto; Andrew Herod and Rob Lambert (Part Two section introduction); Aelim Yun; Michael Gillan and Rob Lambert; Luis L.M. Aguiar; Mark Thomas; and Rob Lambert and Andrew Herod (Conclusion).

Reviewed in: British Journal of Industrial Relations 55.2: 457-459 (2017); Journal of Industrial Relations 59.2: 225-227 (2017); WSQ: Women’s Studies Quarterly 45.3 & 4: 263-267 (2017); International Social Science Review 94.1: Article 12 (2018); Work Employment & Society 32.5: 967-970 (2018); Labour/ Le Travail 81: 312-315 (2018); Geographical Research (Institute of Australian Geographers) 56.1: 113-114 (2018).

2010 Susan McGrath-Champ, Andrew Herod, and Al Rainnie (editors): Handbook of Employment and Society: Working Space. Edward Elgar: Cheltenham, UK. (ISBN 978 1 84720 054 9 hbk/ 978 0 85793 583 0 pbk/ eISBN: 978 1 84980 630 5: x plus 507 pages, 26 figs., 14 tables, 2 boxes). []

“This volume provides a comprehensive overview of the analytical interactions between geography, space, work and employment. Space is not simply a banal backdrop against which work and employment processes and relations operate. Rather, the specific geographical context both colours, and is coloured by, the modes and nature of work and employment taking place in that context. Moreover, these issues are magnified by the tensions between processes operating at the local and global scales. The volume is particularly timely in the light of the recent credit crisis.” Philip McCann, University of Groningen Endowed Chair of Economic Geography, The Netherlands [back cover].

“This Handbook represents a major milestone in the revitalization of scholarship on work and employment. It demonstrates that human geography can – indeed, must – be integrated into labor studies and industrial relations. Our present era may be characterised as global capitalism, but ‘working space’ is a social (and often highly contested) construct and people live and work in a particular place. To drive these points home, the editors weave together contributions highlighting the experience of workers in a wide variety of locations. The result is a volume rich in conceptual and practical insights; it deserves a wide audience.” Charles J. Whalen, School of Industrial and Labor Relations, Cornell University, USA, and former associate economics editor at BusinessWeek [back cover].

Chapters by: Andrew Herod, Susan McGrath-Champ, and Al Rainnie; Bob Jessop; Peter Turnbull; Al Rainnie, Susan McGrath-Champ, and Andrew Herod; Jamie Peck and Nik Theodore; John Pickles and Adrian Smith; Matthew Zook and Michael Samers; Robina Mohammad; Philip Kelly; Kathryn Oberdeck; Alison Stenning; Chris Baldry; Ngai Pun and Chris Smith; Al Rainnie, Andrew Herod, and Susan McGrath-Champ; Ronaldo Munck and Peter Waterman; Christian Berndt; Ian Fitzgerald and John Stirling; Enrique de la Garza Toledo; Bradon Ellem; Andries Bezuidenhout and Edward Webster; Jeremy Anderson, Paula Hamilton, and Jane Wills; Rob Lambert and Michael Gillan; Eric Lee; Phil Taylor and Peter Bain; and Noel Castree.

Reviewed in: (“We Review the Best of the Latest Books”), Issue # 135 (July 2010); Journal of Industrial Relations 53.2: 259-262 (2011); Labor Studies Journal 36.1: 176-177 (2011); Industrial Relations Journal 42.6: 596-602 (2011).

2006 Luis L.M. Aguiar and Andrew Herod (editors): The Dirty Work of Neoliberalism: Cleaners in the Global Economy. Blackwell: Oxford. (ISBN 1-4051-5636-8 hbk/ ISBN 13 978-1-4051-5636-8 pbk: vi plus 263 pages, 4 figs., 6 tables). [] [Issue published simultaneously as a special issue of Antipode, 38.3: 425-666.]

“Subcontracted cleaners are on the front line of contemporary capitalism. This important collection celebrates their labour, their humanity and their resistance.” Jane Wills, Department of Geography, Queen Mary, University of London, UK [back cover].

“In this excellent collection Aguiar and Herod capture the global dimension of a mundane type of work that until recently was invisible to most observers but which has recently emerged as a key node of new organizing. As the articles in this volume demonstrate, all the classic issues that have sparked labor protest throughout the history of capitalism are present in the work of cleaners – wages, working conditions, health and safety, and perhaps most important, human dignity.” Ruth Milkman, Department of Sociology, University of California, Los Angeles [back cover].

Chapters by: Andrew Herod and Luis L.M. Aguiar (Introduction + 3 section overviews); Luis L.M. Aguiar; Andries Bezuidenhout and Khayaat Fakier; Shaun Ryan and Andrew Herod; Patricia Tomic, Ricardo Trumper, and Rodrigo Hidalgo Dattwyler; Alyson Brody; Ana María Seifert and Karen Messing; Karen Søgaard, Anne Katrine Blangsted, Andrew Herod, and Lotte Finsen; Sheila Rowbotham; Marcy Cohen; and Lydia Savage.

Reviewed in: Annals of the Association of American Geographers 98.4: 955-957 (2008); Geographical Journal 174.3: 288 (2008); Work and Occupations 35.1: 121-123 (2008); Work, Employment and Society 22.3: 559-560 (2008); Capital & Class 98: 159-161 (2009); Relations Industrielles/ Industrial Relations 65.1: 156-157 (2010).

2002 Andrew Herod and Melissa W. Wright (editors): Geographies of Power: Placing Scale. Blackwell: Oxford. (ISBN 0-631-22557-9 hbk/ ISBN 0-631-22558-7 pbk/ ebook ISBN: 978-0-470-77520-2: xii plus 303 pages, 9 figs., 2 photos). []

“This exciting book levers open a space for a politics that regards space as a living thing rather than a dead backdrop. In doing so, it challenges a whole series of preconceptions about what politics is or might be, and begins to formulate means of eating away at the foundations of concepts like globalization that so often are used by the powerful to peddle one world fits all solutions.” Nigel Thrift, Department of Geography, University of Bristol, UK [back cover].

Chapters by: Andrew Herod and Melissa W. Wright (Introduction + 3 section overviews); J.K. Gibson-Graham; Eugene McCann; Kevin Cox; Alan Latham; Ken Hillis, Michael Petit, and Altha Cravey; Andrew Kirby; Susan Mains; Jeff Crump; Hilda Kurtz; Helga Leitner, Claire Pavlik, and Eric Sheppard.

Reviewed in: Environment and Planning A 35.10: 1898-1899 (2003); The Canadian Geographer/ Le Géographe canadien 48.2: 246-248 (2004); Annals of the Association of American Geographers 95.1: 230-232 (2005); American Journal of Sociology 111.1: 290-292 (2005); Progress in Human Geography 29.5: 671-673 (2005); Geographische Revue – Zeitschrift für Literatur und Diskussion 1/2006 72-75 (in German) (2006).

1998 Andrew Herod (editor): Organizing the Landscape: Geographical Perspectives on Labor Unionism. University of Minnesota Press: Minneapolis and London. (ISBN 0-8166-2970-6 hbk/ 0-8166-2971-4 pbk: xix plus 372 pages, 9 figs., 7 tables).

“Organizing the Landscape is a landmark contribution to labor geography, and an important corrective to the ‘spaceless’ perspectives so often found in labor process and industrial relations studies. The rich and diverse set of essays collected here persuasively demonstrates how place, space, and geographic unevenness really matter in labor union struggles, structures, and strategies.” Jamie Peck, International Centre for Labour Studies and Department of Geography, University of Manchester, UK [back cover].

Chapters by: Richard Walker (Foreword); Andrew Herod (2 chapters + 4 section introductions); Altha Cravey; Robert Hanham and Shawn Banasick; Jane Wills; Don Mitchell; Lee Lucas Berman; Lydia Savage; Brian Page; Meghan Cope; and Andrew Jonas.

• Designated a “Breakthrough Book,” Lingua Franca May/ June 1999, p. 16-17.

Reviewed in: Hudson Valley Regional Review 15.2: 104-107 (1998); Annals of the Association of American Geographers 89.3: 556-557 (1999); Geographical Review 89.3: 457-460 (1999); Antipode 32.1: 107-109 (2000); Economic Geography 76.1: 99-101 (2000); Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 18.5: 657-659 (2000); Labor Studies Journal 25.2: 121-123 (Summer 2000); Progress in Human Geography 24.1: 148-149 (2000); Urban Geography 21.7: 654-656 (2000); Work, Employment & Society 14.2: 385-393 (2000) – part of an article reviewing several books on unions.

1998 Andrew Herod, Gearóid Ó Tuathail, and Susan Roberts (editors): An Unruly World? Globalization, Governance and Geography. Routledge: London and New York. (ISBN 0-415-16931-3 hbk/ 0-415-16932-1 pbk: xiii plus 372 pages, 10 figs., 4 tables). [An-Unruly-World-Globalization-Governance-and-Geography/Herod-Tuathail-Roberts/p/book/9780415169325]

“An Unruly World engages critically with a number of crucial issues concerning the current thinking on globalization and will make a major contribution to continuing discussion on geography and globalization.” Eleonore Kofman, Department of International Studies, Nottingham Trent University, UK [back cover].

Chapters by: Gearóid Ó Tuathail, Andrew Herod, and Susan Roberts; Nigel Thrift; Timothy Luke and Gearóid Ó Tuathail; Jamie Peck; Susan Roberts; Michael Webber; Andrew Herod; Michael Samers; and Gavin Bridge.

Reviewed in: Environment and Planning C: Government and Policy 16: 769-770 (1998); Progress in Human Geography 23.2: 312-313 (1999); Regional Studies 33.3: 289-290 (1999); Millennium: Journal of International Studies 28.3: 716-718 (1999); The Canadian Geographer/ Le Géographe canadien 44.1: 89-90 (2000); International Journal of Urban and Regional Research 24.4: 939-941 (2000); Antipode 33.1: 138-140 (2001).

• Mentioned by Barbara Wallraff in “Word Court,” The Atlantic Monthly, September 2003, 292.2: 172.

Special Issues of Journals Edited:

2012 Lisa Fine and Andrew Herod, Special issue on “Working Space: An Interdisciplinary Conversation about Geographical Consciousness in Labor and Working-Class Scholarship,” Labor History, 53.3: 329-434.

Issue contains 5 papers and editors’ introduction (Lisa Fine and Andrew Herod; Andrew Herod; Bradon Ellem and Susan McGrath-Champ; Sherry Lee Linkon and John Russo; Laurie Mercer; and Lisa Fine).

2006 Luis L.M. Aguiar and Andrew Herod, Special issue on “The Dirty Work of Neoliberalism: Cleaners in the Global Economy,” Antipode, 38.3: 425-666.

Issue published simultaneously as Luis L.M. Aguiar and Andrew Herod (eds.) The Dirty Work of Neoliberalism: Cleaners in the Global Economy. Blackwell: Oxford.

Issue contains 10 papers, editors’ introduction, and three section introductions by editors (Luis L.M. Aguiar; Andries Bezuidenhout and Khayaat Fakier; Shawn Ryan and Andrew Herod; Patricia Tomic, Ricardo Trumper, and Rodrigo Hidalgo Dattwyler; Alyson Brody; Ana María Seifert and Karen Messing; Karen Søgaard, Anne Katrine Blangsted, Andrew Herod, and Lotte Finsen; Sheila Rowbotham; Marcy Cohen; Lydia Savage).

2001 Andrew Herod and Melissa W. Wright, Special issue on “Theorizing Space and Time,” Environment and Planning A, 33.12: 2089-2093.

Issue contains 7 papers and editors’ introduction (Simon Lewis; David Hamers; Trevor Barnes, Roger Hayter, and Elizabeth Hay; Gavin Bridge; Melissa Wright; Andreas Dafinger; Jean La Marche)

Refereed Journal Articles:

2019 Andrew Herod: “A munka földrajzától a munkaföldrajzig. A munka térbeli kiigazításai és a kapitalizmus földrajza.” Eszmélet: Társadalomkritikai és kulturális folyóirat (Consciousness: A Quarterly Journal for Social Critique and Culture) 119: 169-199.

Hungarian translation of a paper originally appearing as “From a geography of labor to a labor geography: Labor’s spatial fix and the geography of capitalism,” Antipode 29.1 (1997), 1-31.

2019 Andrew Herod, Konstantinos Gourzis, and Stelios Gialis: “Inter-regional precarity, underemployment and the industrial reserve army within crisis-hit countries: findings on a contemporary Greek drama.” Invited piece, under review, Review of Radical Political Economics.

2019 Caleb Goods, Andrew Herod, and Bradon Ellem: “Warring Brothers: Constructing Komatsu’s and Caterpillar’s Global Presence.” Revise and resubmit, Studies in Comparative International Development.

2019 Konstantinos Gourzis, Andrew Herod, and Stelios Gialis: “Linking gentrification and labour market precarity in the contemporary city: A framework for analysis.” Slightly revise and resubmit, Antipode.

2017 Andrew Herod: “Workers as geographical actors.” Revista Pegada – The Journal of Labor Geography (Brazil) 18.2: 4-30.

Note: this is a somewhat reworked version of a paper originally published in the journal Labor History 53.3: 335-353 (2012).

2016 Andrew Herod: “Labor’s spatial praxis and the economic geography of the Greek crisis.” ΓΕΩΓΡΑΦΙΕΣ: ΕΞAMHNIAIA EKΔOΣH EΠIΣTHMΩN TOY XΩPOY (GEOGRAPHIES: A BIANNUAL REVIEW OF SPATIAL ISSUES) 28: 12-23. [Special issue on “Greece, Southern Europe and the Crisis.”]

2015 Susan McGrath-Champ, Al Rainnie, Graham Pickren, and Andrew Herod: “Global Destruction Networks, the labour process and employment relations.” Journal of Industrial Relations 57.4: 624-640. [Special issue on “Supply Chains, HRM and Labour Standards.”]

2014 Stelios Gialis and Andrew Herod: “Of steel and strawberries: Greek workers struggle against informal and flexible working arrangements during the crisis.” Geoforum 57: 138-149.

2014 Stelios Gialis, Andrew Herod, and Myron Myridis: “Flexicurity, informality and immigration: The insufficiency of the Southern EU framework, as illustrated through the case of Preveza, Greece.” Journal of Modern Greek Studies 32.1: 25-54. [The Journal of Modern Greek Studies is the official publication of the Modern Greek Studies Association.]

2014 Andrew Herod: “O conhecimento geográfico sobre os trabalhadores: Reflexões sobre as pesquisas nos Estados Unidos e Brasil.” [“Geographical scholarship on workers: Reflections on the field in the United States and Brazil”]. Revista Pagada Vol. 15 – Número Especial, Mai 2014, page 5-47. Online version available at: . [Published simultaneously in Portuguese and in English.]

2014 Andrew Herod, Graham Pickren, Al Rainnie, and Susan McGrath-Champ: “Global Destruction Networks, labour, and waste.” Journal of Economic Geography 14.2: 421-441.

2013 Andrew Herod: “Gewerkschaften globalisieren?” [“Trade union globalization?”] LuXemburg: Gesellschaftsanalyse und linke Praxis [LuXemburg: Critical Social Analysis and Left Praxis] 3.4: 108-115. [In German.]

2013 Andrew Herod, Graham Pickren, Al Rainnie, and Susan McGrath-Champ: “Waste, commodity fetishism and the ongoingness of economic life.” Area 45.3: 376-382.

2013 Stelios Gialis and Andrew Herod: “Resisting austerity: The case of Greece’s powerworkers and steelworkers.” Human Geography 6.2: 98-115.

2013 Al Rainnie, Andrew Herod, and Susan McGrath-Champ: “Global production networks, labour and small firms.” Capital and Class 37.2: 177-195.

2012 Lisa Fine and Andrew Herod: “Working space: An interdisciplinary conversation about geographical consciousness in labor and working-class scholarship.” Labor History 53.3: 329-333.

Introduction to special issue on “Working Space: An Interdisciplinary Conversation about Geographical Consciousness in Labor and Working-Class Scholarship,” Lisa Fine and Andrew Herod, guest editors. Issue contains editors’ introduction and 5 papers (Andrew Herod; Susan McGrath-Champ and Bradon Ellem; Sherry Lee Linkon and John Russo, Lisa Fine, and Laurie Mercer).

2012 Andrew Herod: “Workers as geographical actors.” Labor History 53.3: 335-353.

Reprinted in slightly different form in the Brazilian journal Revista Pegada – The Journal of Labor Geography 18.2: 4-30 (2017).

2012 Leah Carmichael and Andrew Herod: “Dockers and seafarers: What the politics of spatial embeddedness and geographical scale have meant for union organizing in the European maritime trades.” Labor Studies Journal 37.2: 203-227.

Awarded “Best Article from Volume 37” by the Labor Studies Journal Editorial Board.

2012 Andrew Herod: “On the transparency and opacity of the economic landscape.” Labor History 53.2: 283-288. Part of a Symposium on the book Grounding Globalization: Labour in the Age of Insecurity by Andries Bezuidenhout, Edward Webster, and Rob Lambert (2008, Wiley-Blackwell), Labor History 53.2: 279-284.

2011 Andrew Herod: “What does the 2011 Japanese tsunami tell us about the nature of the global economy?” Social & Cultural Geography 12.8: 829-837.

2011 Al Rainnie, Andrew Herod, and Susan McGrath-Champ: “Review and positions: Global production networks and labour.” Competition and Change 15.2: 155-169.

2011 Nik Heynen, Peter Hossler, and Andrew Herod: “Surviving uneven development: Social reproduction and the persistence of capitalism.” New Political Economy 16.2: 239-245.

2007 Andrew Herod, Al Rainnie, and Susan McGrath-Champ: “Working space: Why incorporating the geographical is central to theorizing work and employment practices.” Work, Employment and Society 21.2: 247-264.

Reprinted in Marian Baird, Rae Cooper, Bradon Ellem, and Russell Lansbury (eds.) (2011), Industrial Relations: Major Works – Volume I, Theories and Approaches, pp. 301-318. Sage: London.

2007 Al Rainnie, Andrew Herod, and Susan McGrath-Champ: “Spatialising industrial relations.” Industrial Relations Journal (Britain) 38.2: 102-118.

2006 Andrew Herod and Luis L.M. Aguiar: “Cleaners and the dirty work of neoliberalism.” Antipode 38.3: 425-434.

Introduction to special issue on “The Dirty Work of Neoliberalism: Cleaners in the Global Economy,” Luis L.M. Aguiar and Andrew Herod, guest editors. Issue contains editors’ introduction, three section introductions by editors, and 10 papers (Luis L.M. Aguiar; Andries Bezuidenhout and Khayaat Fakier; Shawn Ryan and Andrew Herod; Patricia Tomic, Ricardo Trumper, and Rodrigo Hidalgo Dattwyler; Alyson Brody; Ana María Seifert and Karen Messing; Karen Søgaard, Anne Katrine Blangsted, Andrew Herod, and Lotte Finsen; Sheila Rowbotham; Marcy Cohen; Lydia Savage), pages 425-666.

Published simultaneously in Luis L.M. Aguiar and Andrew Herod (eds.), The Dirty Work of Neoliberalism: Cleaners in the Global Economy, pp. 1-10. Blackwell: Oxford.

2006 Andrew Herod and Luis L.M. Aguiar: “Section I Introduction: Geographies of neoliberalism.” Antipode 38.3: 435-439.

Published simultaneously in Luis L.M. Aguiar and Andrew Herod (eds.), The Dirty Work of Neoliberalism: Cleaners in the Global Economy, pp. 11-15. Blackwell: Oxford.

2006 Shaun Ryan and Andrew Herod: “Restructuring the architecture of state regulation in the Australian and Aotearoa/ New Zealand cleaning industries and the growth of precarious employment.” Antipode 38.3: 486-507.

Published simultaneously in Luis L.M. Aguiar and Andrew Herod (eds.), The Dirty Work of Neoliberalism: Cleaners in the Global Economy, pp. 60-80. Blackwell: Oxford.

2006 Andrew Herod and Luis L.M. Aguiar: “Section II Introduction: Ethnographies of the cleaning body.” Antipode 38.3: 530-533.

Published simultaneously in Luis L.M. Aguiar and Andrew Herod (eds.), The Dirty Work of Neoliberalism: Cleaners in the Global Economy, pp. 102-105. Blackwell: Oxford.

2006 Karen Søgaard, Anne Katrine Blangsted, Andrew Herod, and Lotte Finsen: “Work design and the labouring body: Examining the impacts of work organisation on Danish cleaners’ health.” Antipode 38.3: 579-602.

Published simultaneously in Luis L.M. Aguiar and Andrew Herod (eds.), The Dirty Work of Neoliberalism: Cleaners in the Global Economy, pp. 150-171. Blackwell: Oxford.

2006 Andrew Herod and Luis L.M. Aguiar: “Section III Introduction: Cleaners’ agency.” Antipode 38.3: 603-607.

Published simultaneously in Luis L.M. Aguiar and Andrew Herod (eds.), The Dirty Work of Neoliberalism: Cleaners in the Global Economy, pp. 172-176. Blackwell: Oxford.

2006 Andrew Herod: “Labour, space and capitalist restructuring.” Labor History 47.1: 102-108. Part of a Symposium on the book Global Restructuring and the Power of Labour by Bill Dunn (2004, Macmillan), Labor History 47.1: 95-126.

2004 Andrew Herod: “The impact of containerization on work on the New York-New Jersey waterfront.” Social Science Docket, 4.1 (Winter-Spring): 5-7. [Special issue on “Work and Workers in New Jersey and New York.”]

Reprinted in William G. Moseley, David A. Lanegran, and Kavita Pandit (eds.) (2007), The Introductory Reader in Human Geography: Contemporary Debates and Classic Writings, pp. 306-309. Blackwell: Oxford.

2003 Andrew Herod: “Geographies of labor internationalism.” Social Science History, 27.4: 501-523. [Special issue on “Labor Internationalism.”].

2003 Andrew Herod: “Workers, space, and labor geography.” International Labor and Working-Class History, no. 64 (Fall): 112-138. [Special issue on “Workers, Suburbs, and Labor Geography.”]

2002 Andrew Herod: “Towards a more productive engagement: Industrial relations and economic geography meet.” Labour and Industry: A Journal of the Social and Economic Relations of Work, 13.2: 5-17. [Special issue on “Industrial Relations Meets Human Geography: Spatialising the Social Relations of Work.”]

2001 Andrew Herod and Melissa W. Wright: “Theorizing space and time.” Environment and Planning A 33.12: 2089-2093.

Introduction to special issue on “Theorizing Space and Time,” Andrew Herod and Melissa W. Wright, guest editors. Issue contains editors’ introduction and 7 papers (Simon Lewis; David Hamers; Trevor Barnes, Roger Hayter, and Elizabeth Hay; Gavin Bridge; Melissa Wright; Andreas Dafinger; Jean La Marche), pages 2089-2218.

2001 Andrew Herod: “Labor internationalism and the contradictions of globalization: Or, why the local is sometimes still important in a global economy.” Antipode 33.3: 407-426. [Special issue on “Place, Space and the New Labour Internationalisms.”]

Published simultaneously in Jane Wills and Peter Waterman (eds.), Place, Space and the New Labour Internationalisms, pp. 103-122. Blackwell: Oxford.

2000 Andrew Herod: “Workers and workplaces in a neoliberal global economy.” Environment and Planning A 32.10: 1781-1790.

2000 Andrew Herod: “Implications of Just-in-Time production for union strategy: Lessons from the 1998 General Motors-United Auto Workers dispute.” Annals of the Association of American Geographers 90.3: 521-547. [Publisher’s erratum for figures published in Annals of the Association of American Geographers 91.1 (2001): 200-202.]

2000 Ben Salt, Ron Cervero, and Andrew Herod: “Workers’ education and neoliberal globalization: An adequate response to transnational corporations?” Adult Education Quarterly 51.1: 9-31.

Awarded 2001 American Association for Adult and Continuing Education “Imogene Okes Award” for the best article published in the field of adult and continuing education during 2000.

1999 Andrew Herod: “Using industrial disputes to teach about economic geography.” Journal of Geography 98.5: 229-241.

Awarded 2000 National Council for Geographic Education (NCGE) “Journal of Geography Awards Task Force Best Content Award” for the best article published during 1999 in Journal of Geography.

1999 Andrew Herod: “Reflections on interviewing foreign elites: Praxis, positionality, validity, and the cult of the insider.” Geoforum 30.4: 313-327. [Special issue on “Networks, Cultures and Elite Research: The Economic Geographer as Situated Researcher.”]

1998 Andrew Herod: “Discourse on the docks: Containerization and inter-union work disputes in US ports, 1955-1985.” Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, New Series 23.2: 177-191.

1997 Andrew Herod: “Reinterpreting organized labor’s experience in the Southeast: 1947 to present.” Southeastern Geographer 37.2: 214-237. [Special issue on “The Changing South, 1947-1997.”]

1997 Andrew Herod: “Labor’s spatial praxis and the geography of contract bargaining in the US east coast longshore industry, 1953-89.” Political Geography 16.2: 145-169. [Special issue on “The political geography of scale.”]

1997 Andrew Herod: “From a geography of labor to a labor geography: Labor’s spatial fix and the geography of capitalism.” Antipode 29.1: 1-31.

A shortened and edited version was reprinted in John Bryson, Nick Henry, David Keeble, and Ron Martin (eds.) (1999) The Economic Geography Reader: Producing and Consuming Global Capitalism, pp. 380-387. John Wiley and Sons: Chichester, UK.

A version in German was reprinted as “Die Geographie der Arbeiter/innen: Der spatial fix der Arbeitskräfte und die Geographie des Kapitalismus” in Bernd Belina and Boris Michel (eds.) (2007) Raumproduktionen, pp. 173-204. Westfälisches Dampfboot: Münster.

A version in Hungarian was reprinted as “A munka földrajzától a munkaföldrajzig. A munka térbeli kiigazításai és a kapitalizmus földrajza” in Eszmélet: Társadalomkritikai és kulturális folyóirat (Consciousness: A Quarterly Journal for Social Critique and Culture) (2019) 119: 169-199.

1995 Andrew Herod: “The practice of international labor solidarity and the geography of the global economy.” Economic Geography 71.4: 341-363.

1994 Andrew Herod: “On workers’ theoretical (in)visibility in the writing of critical urban geography: A comradely critique.” Urban Geography 15.7: 681-693. [Special issue on “Social (In)justice and the City: Twenty Years On.”]

1994 Andrew Herod: “Further reflections on organized labor and deindustrialization in the United States.” Antipode 26.1: 77-95.

1993 Andrew Herod: “Gender issues in the use of interviewing as a research method.” The Professional Geographer 45.3: 305-317.

1991 Andrew Herod: “Local political practice in response to a manufacturing plant closure: How geography complicates class analysis.” Antipode 23.4: 385-402.

Listed by the journal’s publisher (January, 2009) as one of the 40-most influential articles published in Antipode between 1969 and 2009.

1991 Andrew Herod: “From rag trade to real estate in New York’s Garment Center: Remaking the labor landscape in a global city.” Urban Geography 12.4: 324-338.

1991 Andrew Herod: “Homework and the fragmentation of space: Challenges for the labor movement.” Geoforum 22.2: 173-183. [Special issue on “Changing Gender Relations in Urban Space.”]

1991 Andrew Herod: “The production of scale in United States labour relations.” Area 23.1: 82-88.

Chapters in Books:

2020 Andrew Herod: “Questions of time and space in political economy.” In Bill Dunn (ed.), Research Agenda for Critical Political Economy, pp. ???-???. Edward Elgar: Cheltenham, UK.

2017 Andrew Herod, Graham Pickren, Al Rainnie, and Susan McGrath-Champ: “Innovation, development and global destruction networks.” In Harald Bathelt, Patrick Cohendet, Sebastian Henn, and Laurent Simon (eds.), The Elgar Companion to Innovation and Knowledge Creation, pp. 752-770. Edward Elgar: Cheltenham, UK.

2017 Andrew Herod: “From workers in the city to workers’ cities.” In Miriam Greenberg and Penny Lewis (eds.), The City is the Factory: New Solidarities and Spatial Strategies in an Urban Age, pp. 197-219. Cornell University Press: Ithaca, NY.

2015 Andrew Herod: “Die Geographie globaler Productionsnetzwerke und die Handlungsmacht von Lohnabhängigen” [“The geography of Global Production Networks and worker agency.”] In Sarah Bormann, Jenny Jungehülsing, Shuwen Bian, Martina Hartung, and Florian Schubert (eds.), Last Call for Solidarity: Perspektiven grenzüberschreitenden Handelns von Gewerkschaften [Last Call for Solidarity: Perspectives on Cross-border Action by Trade Unions], pp. 85-104. VSA Verlag: Hamburg.

2015 Al Rainnie, Andrew Herod, Susan McGrath-Champ, and Graham Pickren: “Wasted commodities, wasted labour?: Global Production and Destruction Networks and the nature of contemporary capitalism.” In Kirsty Newsome, Phil Taylor, Jennifer Bair, and Al Rainnie, Putting Labour in its Place: Labour Process Analysis and Global Value Chains, pp. 249-265. Palgrave Macmillan: Basingstoke, UK.

2014 Andrew Herod: “The rational city: Paris.” In Paul Knox (ed.), Atlas of Cities, pp. 88-105. Princeton University Press: Princeton. [This book was awarded the 2014 Association of American Geographers’ “Globe Book Award for Public Understanding of Geography.”]

2014 Andrew Herod: “Ports as places of stickiness in a world of global flows.” In Alexander Reid Ross (ed.), Grabbing Back: Essays Against the Global Land Grab, pp. 267-280. AK Press: Oakland, CA.

2014 Andrew Herod: “Globalisation: An overview.” In Vandana Desai and Robert B. Potter (eds.), Companion to Development Studies, 3rd Edition, pp. 161-166. Hodder Routledge: Abingdon, UK.

2012 Andrew Herod: “Placing labor.” In Daniel Katz and Richard A. Greenwald (eds.), Labor Rising: The Past and Future of Working People in America, pp. 83-99. New Press: New York.

2011 Andrew Herod: “Class.” In John A. Agnew and James S. Duncan (eds.), The Wiley-Blackwell Companion To Human Geography, pp. 415-425. Wiley-Blackwell: Chichester, UK.

2011 Andrew Herod, Al Rainnie, and Susan McGrath-Champ: “Working space: Why incorporating the geographical is central to theorizing work and employment practices.” In Marian Baird, Rae Cooper, Bradon Ellem, and Russell Lansbury (eds.), Industrial Relations: Major Works – Volume I, Theories and Approaches, pp. 301-318. Sage: London.

Reprinted version of a paper originally appearing as Andrew Herod, Al Rainnie, and Susan McGrath-Champ: “Working space: Why incorporating the geographical is central to theorizing work and employment practices,” Work, Employment and Society 21.2 (2007), 247-264.

2011 Andrew Herod: “Social engineering through spatial engineering: Company towns and the geographical imagination.” In Oliver J. Dinius and Angela Vergara (eds.), Company Towns in the Americas: Landscape, Power, and Working-Class Communities, pp. 21-44. University of Georgia Press Geographies of Justice and Social Transformation Series: Athens.

2010 Andrew Herod: “Labor and local and regional development.” In Andy Pike, Andrés Rodríguez-Pose, and John Tomaney (eds.), Handbook of Local and Regional Development, pp. 119-127. Routledge: London and New York.

2010 Andrew Herod: “Labour geography: Where have we been, where should we go?” In Ann Cecilie Bergene, Sylvi B. Endresen, and Hege Merete Knutsen (eds.), Missing Links in Labour Geography, pp. 15-28. Ashgate: Farnham, UK.

2010 Andrew Herod and Kathleen C. Parker: “Operational decisions.” In Basil Gomez and John Paul Jones III (eds.), Research Methods in Geography: A Critical Introduction, pp. 60-76. Wiley-Blackwell: Chichester, UK.

2010 Andrew Herod, Susan McGrath-Champ, and Al Rainnie: “Foundations.” In Susan McGrath-Champ, Andrew Herod, and Al Rainnie (eds.), Handbook of Employment and Society: Working Space, pp. 1-16. Edward Elgar: Cheltenham, UK.

2010 Al Rainnie, Susan McGrath-Champ, and Andrew Herod: “Working spaces.” In Susan McGrath-Champ, Andrew Herod, and Al Rainnie (eds.), Handbook of Employment and Society: Working Space, pp. 61-83. Edward Elgar: Cheltenham, UK.

2010 Al Rainnie, Andrew Herod, and Susan McGrath-Champ: “Workers in space.” In Susan McGrath-Champ, Andrew Herod, and Al Rainnie (eds.), Handbook of Employment and Society: Working Space, pp. 249-272. Edward Elgar: Cheltenham, UK.

2010 Al Rainnie, Susan McGrath-Champ, and Andrew Herod: “Making space for geography in labour process theory.” In Paul Thompson and Chris Smith (eds.), Working Life: Renewing Labour Process Analysis, pp. 297-315. Palgrave Macmillan: Basingstoke, UK.

2008 Andrew Herod: “Scale: The local and the global.” In Sarah Holloway, Stephen Rice, Gill Valentine, and Nick Clifford (eds.), Key Concepts in Geography, 2nd Edition, pp. 217-235. Sage: London.

Updated and rewritten version of chapter that appeared in the first edition of Sarah Holloway, Stephen Rice, and Gill Valentine (eds.) (2003), Key Concepts in Geography, pp. 229-247. Sage: London.

2008 Noel Castree, David Featherstone, and Andrew Herod: “Contrapuntal geographies: The politics of organizing across sociospatial difference.” In Kevin R. Cox, Murray Low, and Jennifer Robinson (eds.), The Sage Handbook of Political Geography, pp. 305-321. Sage: Los Angeles.

2007 Andrew Herod: “The agency of labour in global change: Reimagining the spaces and scales of trade union praxis within a global economy.” In John M. Hobson and Leonard Seabrooke (eds.), Everyday Politics of the World Economy, pp. 27-44. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

2007 Andrew Herod: “Von der Geographie der Arbeit zur Arbeitsgeographie: Der spatial fix der Arbeit und die Geographie des Kapitalismus.” In Bernd Belina and Boris Michel (eds.), Raumproduktionen: Beiträge der Radical Geography – Eine Zwischenbilanz, pp. 173-204. Westfälisches Dampfboot: Münster.

German translation of a paper originally appearing as “From a geography of labor to a labor geography: Labor’s spatial fix and the geography of capitalism,” Antipode 29.1 (1997), 1-31.

2007 Andrew Herod: “The impact of containerization on work on the New York-New Jersey waterfront.” In William G. Moseley, David A. Lanegran, and Kavita Pandit (eds.), The Introductory Reader in Human Geography: Contemporary Debates and Classic Writings, pp. 306-309. Blackwell: Oxford.

Shortened, edited, and reprinted version of a paper originally appearing as “The impact of containerization on work on the New York-New Jersey waterfront,” Social Science Docket, 4.1 (Winter-Spring): 5-7.

2007 Andrew Herod: “Labour organizing in the New Economy: Examples from the USA and beyond.” In Peter Daniels, Andrew Leyshon, Mike Bradshaw, and Jonathan Beaverstock (eds.), Geographies of the New Economy: Critical Reflections, pp. 132-150. Routledge: London.

2006 Andrew Herod and Luis L.M. Aguiar: “Cleaners and the dirty work of neoliberalism” In Luis L.M. Aguiar and Andrew Herod (eds.), The Dirty Work of Neoliberalism: Cleaners in the Global Economy, pp. 1-10. Blackwell: Oxford.

Published simultaneously in Antipode 38.3: 425-434 as part of special issue on “The Dirty Work of Neoliberalism: Cleaners in the Global Economy,” Luis L.M. Aguiar and Andrew Herod (eds.).

2006 Andrew Herod and Luis L.M. Aguiar: “Section I Introduction: Geographies of neoliberalism” In Luis L.M. Aguiar and Andrew Herod (eds.), The Dirty Work of Neoliberalism: Cleaners in the Global Economy, pp. 11-15. Blackwell: Oxford.

Published simultaneously in Antipode 38.3: 435-439 as part of special issue on “The Dirty Work of Neoliberalism: Cleaners in the Global Economy,” Luis L.M. Aguiar and Andrew Herod (eds.).

2006 Shaun Ryan and Andrew Herod: “Restructuring the architecture of state regulation in the Australian and Aotearoa/ New Zealand cleaning industries and the growth of precarious employment.” In Luis L.M. Aguiar and Andrew Herod (eds.), The Dirty Work of Neoliberalism: Cleaners in the Global Economy, pp. 60-80. Blackwell: Oxford.

Published simultaneously in Antipode 38.3: 486-507 as part of special issue on “The Dirty Work of Neoliberalism: Cleaners in the Global Economy,” Luis L.M. Aguiar and Andrew Herod (eds.).

2006 Andrew Herod and Luis L.M. Aguiar: “Section II Introduction: Ethnographies of the cleaning body” In Luis L.M. Aguiar and Andrew Herod (eds.), The Dirty Work of Neoliberalism: Cleaners in the Global Economy, pp. 102-105. Blackwell: Oxford.

Published simultaneously in Antipode 38.3: 530-533 as part of special issue on “The Dirty Work of Neoliberalism: Cleaners in the Global Economy,” Luis L.M. Aguiar and Andrew Herod (eds.).

2006 Karen Søgaard, Anne Katrine Blangsted, Andrew Herod, and Lotte Finsen: “Work design and the labouring body: Examining the impacts of work organisation on Danish cleaners’ health.” In Luis L.M. Aguiar and Andrew Herod (eds.), The Dirty Work of Neoliberalism: Cleaners in the Global Economy, pp. 150-171. Blackwell: Oxford.

Published simultaneously in Antipode 38.3: 579-602 as part of special issue on “The Dirty Work of Neoliberalism: Cleaners in the Global Economy,” Luis L.M. Aguiar and Andrew Herod (eds.).

2006 Andrew Herod and Luis L.M. Aguiar: “Section III Introduction: Cleaners’ agency” In Luis L.M. Aguiar and Andrew Herod (eds.), The Dirty Work of Neoliberalism: Cleaners in the Global Economy, pp. 172-176. Blackwell: Oxford.

Published simultaneously in Antipode 38.3: 603-607 as part of special issue on “The Dirty Work of Neoliberalism: Cleaners in the Global Economy,” Luis L.M. Aguiar and Andrew Herod (eds.).

2006 Andrew Herod: “Trotsky’s omission: Labour’s role in combined and uneven development.” In Bill Dunn and Hugo Radice (eds.), 100 Years of Permanent Revolution: Results and Prospects, pp. 152-165. Pluto: London.

2004 Andrew Herod: “Impacts of the transition on unions in Eastern Europe.” In Berthold Unfried and Marcel van der Linden (eds.), Labour and New Social Movements in a Globalising World/ Arbeit, Arbeiterbewegung und neue soziale Bewegungen im globalisierten Weltsystem, pp. 139-154. Internationale Tagung der Historikerinnen und Historiker der Arbeiter und anderer Sozialer Bewegungen, Tagungsberichte 38: Leipzig.

2003 Scott Salmon and Andrew Herod: “Socialist geography.” In Gary L. Gaile and Cort J. Willmott (eds.), Geography in America at the Dawn of the 21st Century, pp. 209-220. Oxford University Press: Oxford.

2003 Andrew Herod: “Scale: The local and the global.” In Sarah Holloway, Stephen Rice, and Gill Valentine (eds.), Key Concepts in Geography, pp. 229-247. Sage: London.

2003 Andrew Herod, Jamie Peck, and Jane Wills: “Geography and industrial relations.” In Peter Ackers and Adrian Wilkinson (eds.), Understanding Work and Employment: Industrial Relations in Transition, pp. 176-192. Oxford University Press: Oxford.

2002 Andrew Herod: “Global change in the world of organized labor.” In Ron J. Johnston, Peter J. Taylor, and Michael J. Watts (eds.), Geographies of Global Change: Remapping the World (2nd Edition), pp. 78-87. Blackwell: Oxford.

2002 Andrew Herod and Melissa W. Wright: “Placing scale: An introduction.” In Andrew Herod and Melissa W. Wright (eds.), Geographies of Power: Placing Scale, pp. 1-14. Blackwell: Oxford.

2002 Andrew Herod and Melissa W. Wright: “Introduction: Theorizing scale.” In Andrew Herod and Melissa W. Wright (eds.), Geographies of Power: Placing Scale, pp. 17-24. Blackwell: Oxford.

2002 Andrew Herod and Melissa W. Wright: “Introduction: Rhetorics of scale.” In Andrew Herod and Melissa W. Wright (eds.), Geographies of Power: Placing Scale, pp. 147-153. Blackwell: Oxford.

2002 Andrew Herod and Melissa W. Wright: “Introduction: Scales of praxis.” In Andrew Herod and Melissa W. Wright (eds.), Geographies of Power: Placing Scale, pp. 217-223. Blackwell: Oxford.

2002 Andrew Herod: “Organizing globally, organizing locally: Union spatial strategy in a global economy.” In Jeffery Harrod and Robert O’Brien (eds.), Global Unions?: Theory and Strategies of Organized Labour in the Global Political Economy, pp. 83-99. Routledge: London (Review of International Political Economy Series in Global Political Economy).

2001 Andrew Herod: “Labor internationalism and the contradictions of globalization: Or, why the local is sometimes still important in a global economy.” In Jane Wills and Peter Waterman (eds.), Place, Space and the New Labour Internationalisms, pp. 103-122. Blackwell: Oxford.

Published simultaneously in Antipode 33.3: 407-426 as part of special issue on “Place, Space and the New Labour Internationalisms,” Jane Wills and Peter Waterman (eds.).

2000 Andrew Herod: “Labor unions and economic geography.” In Eric Sheppard and Trevor Barnes (eds.), A Companion to Economic Geography, pp. 341-358. Blackwell: Oxford.

1999 Andrew Herod: “From a geography of labor to a labor geography: Labor’s spatial fix and the geography of capitalism.” In John Bryson, Nick Henry, David Keeble, and Ron Martin (eds.), The Economic Geography Reader: Producing and Consuming Global Capitalism, pp. 380-387. John Wiley and Sons: Chichester, UK.

Shortened, edited, and reprinted version of a paper originally appearing as “From a geography of labor to a labor geography: Labor’s spatial fix and the geography of capitalism,” Antipode 29.1 (1997), 1-31.

1998 Andrew Herod: “The spatiality of labor unionism: A review essay.” In Andrew Herod (ed.), Organizing the Landscape: Geographical Perspectives on Labor Unionism, pp. 1-36. University of Minnesota Press: Minneapolis and London.

1998 Andrew Herod: “Increasing the scale of things: Labor’s transnational spatial strategies and the geography of capitalism.” In Andrew Herod (ed.), Organizing the Landscape: Geographical Perspectives on Labor Unionism, pp. 39-44. University of Minnesota Press: Minneapolis and London.

1998 Andrew Herod: “The geostrategics of labor in post-Cold War Eastern Europe: An examination of the activities of the International Metalworkers’ Federation.” In Andrew Herod (ed.), Organizing the Landscape: Geographical Perspectives on Labor Unionism, pp. 45-74. University of Minnesota Press: Minneapolis and London.

1998 Andrew Herod: “Geographic mobility, place, and cultures of labor unionism.” In Andrew Herod (ed.), Organizing the Landscape: Geographical Perspectives on Labor Unionism, pp. 123-128. University of Minnesota Press: Minneapolis and London.

1998 Andrew Herod: “Political geographies of labor union organizing.” In Andrew Herod (ed.), Organizing the Landscape: Geographical Perspectives on Labor Unionism, pp. 197-201. University of Minnesota Press: Minneapolis and London.

1998 Andrew Herod: “Labor unions and the making of economic geographies.” In Andrew Herod (ed.), Organizing the Landscape: Geographical Perspectives on Labor Unionism, pp. 255-262. University of Minnesota Press: Minneapolis and London.

1998 Andrew Herod: “Theorising trade unions in transition.” In John Pickles and Adrian Smith (eds.), Theorising Transition: The Political Economy of Post-Communist Transformations, pp. 197-217. Routledge: London and New York.

1998 Gearóid Ó Tuathail, Andrew Herod, and Susan Roberts: “Negotiating unruly problematics.” In Andrew Herod, Gearóid Ó Tuathail, and Susan Roberts (eds.), An Unruly World? Globalization, Governance and Geography, pp. 1-24. Routledge: London and New York.

1998 Andrew Herod: “Of blocs, flows and networks: The end of the Cold War, cyberspace, and the geo-economics of organized labor at the fin de millénaire.” In Andrew Herod, Gearóid Ó Tuathail, and Susan Roberts (eds.), An Unruly World? Globalization, Governance and Geography, pp. 162-195. Routledge: London and New York.

1997 Andrew Herod: “Notes on a spatialized labour politics: Scale and the political geography of dual unionism in the US longshore industry.” In Roger Lee and Jane Wills (eds.), Geographies of Economies, pp. 186-196. Edward Arnold: London, New York, Sydney, and Auckland.

1997 Andrew Herod: “Back to the future in labor relations: From the New Deal to Newt’s Deal.” In Lynn Staeheli, Janet Kodras, and Colin Flint (eds.), State Devolution in America: Implications for a Diverse Society, pp. 161-180. Sage (Urban Affairs Annual Reviews No. 48): Thousand Oaks, CA, London, and New Delhi.

1997 Andrew Herod: “Labor as an agent of globalization and as a global agent.” In Kevin R. Cox (ed.), Spaces of Globalization: Reasserting the Power of the Local, pp. 167-200. Guilford: New York and London.

On-Line Resources:

2014 Andrew Herod: “Geography of Labor.” In Barney Warf, (ed.), Oxford Bibliographies in Geography (online resource available at: [DOI: ]). Oxford University Press: New York.

Encyclopædia Entries:

2020 Andrew Herod: “Labor unionism.” In Audrey Kobayashi (ed.), International Encyclopedia of Human Geography, 2nd Edition, pp. ??-??. Elsevier: Oxford.

2019 Andrew Herod: “The spatial fix.” In Anthony Orum (ed.), The Wiley Blackwell Encyclopedia of Urban and Regional Studies, pp. ???-???. Wiley-Blackwell: Chichester, UK. (In press.)

2017 Andrew Herod: “Labor geographies and the corporation.” In Noel Castree, Michael Goodchild, Weidong Liu, Audrey Kobayashi, Richard Marston, and Douglas Richardson (editor in chief ) (eds.), The International Encyclopedia of Geography: People, the Earth, Environment, and Technology, pp. 3895-3900. Wiley-Blackwell: Chichester, UK.

2012 Andrew Herod: “Labor, geography of.” In Larry J. Griffin and Peggy G. Hargis (eds.), The New Encyclopedia of Southern Culture (Volume 20: Social Class), Second Edition, pp. 146-152. University of Mississippi Press: Oxford, MS.

2012 Andrew Herod: “Scales of globalization.” In George Ritzer (ed.), The Wiley-Blackwell Encyclopedia of Globalization, 1825-1826. Wiley-Blackwell: Chichester, UK.

2012 Andrew Herod: “Geography of globalization.” In George Ritzer (ed.), The Wiley-Blackwell Encyclopedia of Globalization, pp. 797-800. Wiley-Blackwell: Chichester, UK.

2012 Andrew Herod: “Division of labor.” In George Ritzer (ed.), The Wiley-Blackwell Encyclopedia of Globalization, pp. 453-455. Wiley-Blackwell: Chichester, UK.

2009 Andrew Herod: “Labor unionism.” In Rob Kitchin and Nigel Thrift (eds.), International Encyclopedia of Human Geography, Volume 6, pp. 91-96. Elsevier: Oxford.

2006 Andrew Herod: “Class.” In Barney Warf (ed.), Encyclopedia of Human Geography, pp. 42-43. Sage: Thousand Oaks, CA.

2006 Andrew Herod: “Class war.” In Barney Warf (ed.), Encyclopedia of Human Geography, pp. 43-44. Sage: Thousand Oaks, CA.

2006 Andrew Herod: “Domestic sphere.” In Barney Warf (ed.), Encyclopedia of Human Geography, pp. 114-116. Sage: Thousand Oaks, CA.

2006 Andrew Herod: “Labor, geography of.” In Barney Warf (ed.), Encyclopedia of Human Geography, pp. 267-268. Sage: Thousand Oaks, CA.

2006 Andrew Herod: “Marxism, geography and.” In Barney Warf (ed.), Encyclopedia of Human Geography, pp. 293-296. Sage: Thousand Oaks, CA.

2005 Andrew Herod: “Tonga.” In C. Neal Tate (editor in chief), Governments of the World: A Global Guide to Citizens’ Rights and Responsibilities – Volume 4: Popular Sovereignty to Zimbabwe, pp. 187-188. Thompson Gale: Farmington Hills, MI.

Book Reviews:

2020 Rules without Rights: Land, Labor, and Private Authority in the Global Economy by Tim Bartley (2018) [Oxford University Press: Oxford] in Journal of Industrial Relations (Australian Labour and Employment Relations Association) ?.?: ?.?.

2019 Political Economy of Labor Repression in the United States by Andrew Kolin (2017) [Lexington Books: Lanham, MD] in International Journal of Comparative Sociology ?.?: ?-?.

2019 Review essay of Marx, Capital, and the Madness of Economic Reason by David Harvey (2018) [Oxford University Press: Oxford] and The Ways of the World by David Harvey (2016) [Oxford University Press: Oxford] in AAG Review of Books ?.?: ??-??

2019 Work: The Last 1,000 Years by Andrea Komlosy (2018) [Verso: London] in LABOR: Studies In Working-Class History ?.?: ?-?.

2016 Introducing Globalization: Ties, Tensions, and Uneven Integration by Matthew Sparke (2013) [Wiley-Blackwell: Chichester, UK] in AAG Review of Books 4.3: 145-147.

2011 Labour, Globalization and the State: Workers, Women and Migrants Confront Neoliberalism by Debdas Banerjee and Michael Goldfield (eds.) (2007) [Routledge Contemporary South Asia: London] in Labor History 52.3: 356-358.

2011 Working Bodies: Interactive Service Employment and Workplace Identities by Linda McDowell (2009) [Wiley-Blackwell: Chichester, UK] in Social & Cultural Geography 12.2: 204-205.

2011 Getting the Goods: Ports, Labor, and the Logistics Revolution by Edna Bonacich and Jake B. Wilson (2008) [Cornell University Press: Ithaca, NY] in Antipode 43.2: 599-600.

2010 Our Daily Bread: Wages, Workers and the Political Economy of the American West by Geoff Mann (2007) [University of North Carolina Press: Chapel Hill, NC] in Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 28.6: 1124-1126.

2008 Spaces of Global Capitalism: Towards A Theory of Uneven Geographical Development by David Harvey (2006) [Verso: London] in Labour/ Le Travail 61: 317-319.

2006 Globalization and Social Exclusion: A Transformation Perspective by Ronaldo Munck (2005) [Kumarian Press: Bloomfield, CT] in Labor History 47.4: 592-593.

2006 The American South in a Global World by James L. Peacock, Harry L. Watson, and Carrie R. Matthews (eds.) (2005) [University of North Carolina Press: Chapel Hill] in Southeastern Geographer 46.2: 342-344.

2005 American Empire: America’s Geographer and the Prelude to Globalization by Neil Smith (2003) [University of California Press: Berkeley] in Area 37.4: 457-458.

2005 Spaces of Work: Global Capitalism and Geographies of Labour by Noel Castree, Neil M. Coe, Kevin Ward, and Michael Samers (2004) [Sage: London] in Environment and Planning A 37.4: 751-752.

2004 Dialectical Urbanism: Social Struggles in the Capitalist City by Andrew Merrifield (2002) [Monthly Review Press: New York] in Labour/ Le Travail 53: 354-356.

2003 Pension Fund Capitalism by Gordon L. Clark (2000) [Oxford University Press: New York] in Annals of the Association of American Geographers 93.1: 252-255.

2002 Spaces of Hope by David Harvey (2000) [University of California Press: Berkeley] in Urban Geography 23.5: 495-496.

2001 California and the Fictions of Capital by George L. Henderson (1999) [Oxford University Press: New York] in Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 19.3, 372-374.

1999 Women and Work in Mexico’s Maquiladoras by Altha J. Cravey (1998) [Rowman and Littlefield: Lanham, MD] in Annals of the Association of American Geographers 89.4, 785-787.

1998 Union Retreat and the Regions: The Shrinking Landscape of Organised Labour by Ron Martin, Peter Sunley, and Jane Wills (1996) [Jessica Kingsley: London] in Economic Geography 74.1, 75-77.

1997 Work-Place: The Social Regulation of Labor Markets by Jamie Peck (1996) [Guilford: New York and London] in Annals of the Association of American Geographers 87.4, 746-748.

1996 Marxism in the Postmodern Age: Confronting the New World Order by Antonio Callari, Stephen Cullenberg, and Carole Biewener, editors, (1995) [Guilford: New York and London] in Growth and Change Winter, 125-129.

1995 Militancy, Market Dynamics, and Workplace Authority: The Struggle over Labor Process in the U.S. Automobile Industry, 1946 to 1973 by James R. Zetka, Jr., (1995) [State University of New York Press: Albany] in Social Science Quarterly 76.4, 922-924.

1994 The Restless Urban Landscape by Paul L. Knox, editor, (1993) [Prentice Hall: Englewood Cliffs, NJ] in The Professional Geographer 46.3, 395-396.

1994 Geographical Inquiry and American Historical Problems by Carville Earle (1992) [Stanford University Press: Stanford, CA] in Annals of the Association of American Geographers 84.2, 320-323.

1994 Retraining – Not Redundancy: Innovative Approaches to Industrial Restructuring in Germany and France by Gerhard Bosch (1992) [International Institute for Labour Studies: Geneva] in Progress in Human Geography 18.1, 102-103.

Papers in Refereed Conference Proceedings:

2015 Andrew Herod, Graham Pickren, Al Rainnie, and Susan McGrath-Champ: “Waste recycling as a source of raw materials for new products – Exploring the concept of Global Destruction Networks.” In Conference Proceedings of the ISSSM (International Symposium on Social Sciences and Management) and ICEEPS (International Conference on Education, Psychology and Society) Meeting. Tokyo, Japan, February 4-5 (pp. 535-552).

2010 Susan McGrath-Champ, Al Rainnie, and Andrew Herod: “Progressing work: How spatial approaches change our theories of work and labour.” In Alison Barnes, Nikola Balnave, and George Lafferty (eds.) Work in Progress: Crises, Choices and Continuity: Proceedings of the 24th Conference Association of Industrial Relations Academics of Australia and New Zealand. Sydney, Australia (12 pp.).

2001 Andrew Herod: “El internacionalismo obrero y las contradicciones de la globalización: O, ¿Por qué en ocasiones los asuntos locales resultan importantes en una economía global?” In Luis H. Serrano Perez (ed.) Memorias del 4 Taller Cientifico 1 de Mayo. Institutio de Historia de Cuba: Havana (12 pp.).

1995 “Trade unionism and the transition to the market economy in Eastern and Central Europe.” Proceedings of the Regional Conference of the International Geographical Union on “Latin America in the World: Environment, Society and Development.” Havana, Cuba (15 pp.).

1994 “International labor organizing in the post-Cold War era.” Proceedings of the Regional Conference of the International Geographical Union on “Environment and Quality of Life in Central Europe: Problems of Transition.” Prague, Czech Republic (15 pp.).

1991 “Restructuring the waterfront and the geographical practice of the International Longshoremen’s Association.” Proceedings of the Middle States Division of the Association of American Geographers, 1991, 51-57.

Forewords:

2015 Foreword for Ann El Khoury (2015) Globalization, Development, and Social Justice: A Propositional Political Approach, pp. xv-xvii. Routledge (Rethinking Globalizations Book Series): Abingdon, UK.

Commentaries on Book Jackets:

2015 Out of Sight: The Long and Disturbing Story of Corporations Outsourcing Catastrophe by Erik Loomis. The New Press: New York.

2005 Globalization and Cross-Border Labor Solidarity in the Americas: The Anti-Sweatshop Movement and the Struggle for Social Justice by Ralph Armbruster-Sandoval. Routledge: New York.

2002 On the Fault Line: Race, Class, and the American Patriot Movement by Carolyn Gallaher. Rowman and Littlefield: Lanham, MD.

Work in Progress:

Andrew Herod, Al Rainnie, Susan McGrath-Champ, Graham Pickren: The Circular Economy: Labor, Space, Place, and Networks book project.

Andrew Herod: “Learning from literary analysis: Metaphors of geographical scale and what understanding them means for union renewal.” For submission to Labor Studies Journal.

Andrew Herod: “Panopticons on the Piers: The Local State, Fighting the Mob, and Regulating Dockers on the New York/ New Jersey Waterfront.” For submission to Annals of the American Association of Geographers.

Andrew Herod: “Planning for Peace: Hendrik Christian Andersen, the World Center of Communication, and Utopian Thought in Early 20th Century Europe.” For submission to Annals of the American Association of Geographers.

Biographies/ Profiles/ Major News Articles about Andrew Herod:

2015 Interview with Dr. Juscelino Eudâmidas Bezerra (Departamento de Geografia da UNB e Professor Colaborador do Programa de Pós-graduação em Geografia da Universidade Estadual Ceará-UECE). Citation is: Bezerra, J.E. “Entrevista ao Professor Dr. Andrew Herod”, Revista GeoUECE: Programa de Pós-Graduação em Geografia da UECE Fortaleza/CE, vol. 4, no. 6, pp. 175-191, Jan./Jun. 2015. Available at: seer.uece.br/?journal=geouece&page=article&op=view&path[]=1245.

2010 Research and public service featured in the “Back Page” feature of the Georgia Magazine, September Issue (vol. 89, no. 4), p. 56 (published by the Office of Public Affairs, University of Georgia). Article available on-line at: .

2009 Research and public service featured in spread in UGA Research Magazine, October Issue, pp. 20-25 (published by the Office of the Vice President for Research, University of Georgia).

2008 Research on globalization (with photo spread) featured in Exploring Nationalism by Robert Gardner, Margaret Hoogeveen, Daniel McDevitt, and Angus Scully, p 269 (McGraw-Hill Ryerson: Toronto). Exploring Nationalism was created specifically for the Alberta Social Studies 20-1 Program of Study but is used across Canada in Grade 10 high school, including in a French-language version.

2004 “Andrew Herod: Questions of class and geographies of labour.” A biography written by Ruth Panelli in Social Geographies: From Difference to Action, pp. 220-222 (Sage: London).

2002 Profiled as one of 10 community residents engaged in community service in article entitled “Local citizens exhibit the spirit of community.” Athens Banner-Herald newspaper, November 24. Article available on-line at .

Working Papers, Non-Refereed Publications, and Reports:

2012 “The teaching/research nexus: how disciplinary research can enhance the quality of teaching and learning and how teaching can motivate and engage research faculty.” Keynote Address to the 2012 Academic Affairs Faculty Symposium of the University of Georgia, Unicoi Conference Center, March 23-24. Available at .

2004 Course workbook for Independent Study course Economic Geography (GEOG 3620), University System of Georgia Independent and Distance Learning, Georgia Center for Continuing Education (55 pages).

2003 “Labour Geography.” Column for “Cutting Edge Research” section, Newsletter of the Research Committee (RC44) on Labour Movements of the International Sociological Association, November, vol 2.3: 6-7

2003 Family Structure and Poverty in Athens-Clarke County. Report submitted May 2003 to Athens Living Wage Coalition.

2002 Evaluation of National Geography Standards (1994) and Georgia Quality Core Curriculum (QCC) Standards (1999) for Social Studies World Geography. Part of a report submitted by GSTEP (Georgia Systemic Teacher Education Program) to Linda C. Schrenko, State Superintendent of Schools, Georgia Department of Education, Atlanta, GA.

2000 Just in Time: The Geography of Workers’ Power. Pamphlet published by the People’s Geography Project ().

1991 Neil Smith and Andrew Herod: Gentrification: A Comprehensive Bibliography. Discussion Papers, New Series Number 1, Department of Geography, Rutgers University, 92pp.

1989 Andrew Herod and Rebecca Johns: A Curriculum to Teach Working People About the World Economy. Department of Labor Education, Rutgers University, 31pp.

1989 Andrew Herod: The Local State and the Defense of Community. West Virginia University Research Monographs in Geography and Regional Development, Number 1, 61pp.

1987 Andrew Herod and William Mallett: Structural Change in the West Virginia Economy Since 1945. Working Paper, Department of Geography, West Virginia University, 33pp.

GRANTS:

2018 Willson Center for Humanities and Arts, University of Georgia. $750 to aid in covering costs of producing diagrams for my book Landscapes of Labor in the Global South: Workers Negotiate the Geography of Capitalism.

2017 Faculty Travel Grant, Department of Geography, University of Georgia. $450 for travel to the University of Wollongong, New South Wales, Australia: March 2017.

2015 President’s Venture Fund, Office of the President, University of Georgia. $5,000 for translation into Greek of an e-book Γεωγραφία της Eργασίας: Eργατική Δράση, Eυέλικτη Aπασχόληση Kαι Xωρικές Aνισότητες (Geografia tis Ergasias: Ergatiki Drasi, Evelikti Apasxolisi Kai Xorikes Anisotites – Labour Geography: Labour Agency, Flexible Employment and Uneven Spatial Development) that is used throughout the Greek higher education system.

2015 Department of Geography, Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia. $300 for translation into Greek of an e-book Γεωγραφία της Eργασίας: Eργατική Δράση, Eυέλικτη Aπασχόληση Kαι Xωρικές Aνισότητες (Geografia tis Ergasias: Ergatiki Drasi, Evelikti Apasxolisi Kai Xorikes Anisotites – Labour Geography: Labour Agency, Flexible Employment and Uneven Spatial Development) that is used throughout the Greek higher education system.

2014 Faculty Travel Grant, Office of the Provost, University of Georgia. $1,240.00 for travel to the XVIII ISA World Congress on “Facing an Unequal World: Challenges for Global Sociology.” Yokohama, Japan: July 13-19. Awarded competitively within the University. Due to illness, I had to withdraw from the ISA World Congress.

2014 Office of the Franklin College of Arts and Sciences Dean, University of Georgia. $1,000 for travel to the XVIII ISA World Congress on “Facing an Unequal World: Challenges for Global Sociology.” Yokohama, Japan: July 13-19. Awarded competitively within the University. Due to illness, I had to withdraw from the ISA World Congress.

2014 Faculty Travel Grant, University of Georgia Research Foundation. $2,550.00 for travel to the XVIII ISA World Congress on “Facing an Unequal World: Challenges for Global Sociology.” Yokohama, Japan: July 13-19. Awarded competitively within the University. Due to illness, I had to withdraw from the ISA World Congress.

2014 Travel Grant, Office of the Vice President for Research, University of Georgia. $1,260 for travel to visit potential UGA and Unified Government of Athens-Clarke County economic development partners in Geelong, Victoria, Australia: February 16-18, 2014.

2013 Faculty Travel Grant, Office of the Franklin College of Arts and Sciences Dean, University of Georgia. $695 for travel to the North American Labor History Conference. Detroit, MI: October 24-26, 2013. Awarded competitively within the University.

2013-2017 “Engineering Service Work, Global Production Networks and Employment Relations in Australian Mining.” Grant of A$254,844.00 (approx. US$233,000) awarded to: Rob Lambert; Al Rainnie; Patricia Todd; Bradon Ellem; Andrew Herod; and Glenn Thompson by the Australian Research Council.

Project Summary: “Leading segments of Australian mining have embraced automated mining. This project will focus on the world’s two leading engineering companies – Komatsu and Caterpillar – which are providing and maintaining this equipment. This restructuring is grounded in global production network theory and labour skill issues at the centre of this technological transition.”

2012 Faculty Travel Grant, Office of the Provost and Office of the Franklin College of Arts and Sciences Dean, University of Georgia. $2,357 for travel to the Annual Meeting of the Association of the American Anthropological Association. San Francisco, CA: November 14-18, 2012. Awarded competitively within the University.

2011 Faculty Travel Grant, Office of the Provost and Office of the Franklin College of Arts and Sciences Dean, University of Georgia. $1,190 for travel to the International Confederation of Associations for Pluralism in Economics (ICAPE) Conference, Amherst, MA, November 11-13. Awarded competitively within the University.

2011-2016 Faculty Research Grant, $25,000 ($5,000 per year for five years) as part of being made a Distinguished Research Professor. University of Georgia Research Foundation.

2009 Faculty Travel Grant, University of Georgia Research Foundation. $1,952.99 for travel to the 15th World Congress of the International Industrial Relations Association, Sydney, Australia, August 24-27. Awarded competitively within the University.

2008 Faculty Travel Grant, University of Georgia Research Foundation. $688.85 for travel to the Canadian Industrial Relations Association Annual Meeting and the Inter-University Research Centre on Globalization and Work/ le Centre de recherche interuniversitaire sur la mondialisation et le travail (CRIMT) workshop, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, June 4-7. Awarded competitively within the University.

2007 Office of the Vice President for Finance and Administration, University of Georgia. $3,000 for “Global Security Exchange with Tanzania Program.” This program involves facilitating an exchange between police and security officers from Tanzania and the State of Georgia (specifically, the University of Georgia Police Department and the Athens-Clarke County Police Department) and is related to the UGA Study Abroad Program in Tanzania.

2007 International Academic Program Development Fund, Office of the Associate Provost, International Affairs, University of Georgia. $3,000 for “Global Security Exchange with Tanzania Program.” This program involves facilitating an exchange between police and security officers from Tanzania and the State of Georgia (specifically, the University of Georgia Police Department and the Athens-Clarke County Police Department) and is related to the UGA Study Abroad Program in Tanzania.

2007 Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia. $1,500 for “Global Security Exchange with Tanzania Program.” This program involves facilitating an exchange between police and security officers from Tanzania and the State of Georgia (specifically, the University of Georgia Police Department and the Athens-Clarke County Police Department) and is related to the UGA Study Abroad Program in Tanzania.

2007 The Coca-Cola Company, Office of Strategic Security, Atlanta. $2,500 for “Global Security Exchange with Tanzania Program.” This program involves facilitating an exchange between police and security officers from Tanzania and the State of Georgia (specifically, the University of Georgia Police Department and the Athens-Clarke County Police Department) and is related to the UGA Study Abroad Program in Tanzania.

2005 International Academic Program Development Fund, Office of the Associate Provost, International Affairs, University of Georgia. $3,000 for “Global Security Exchange with Tanzania Program.” This program involves facilitating an exchange between police and security officers from Tanzania and the State of Georgia (specifically, the University of Georgia Police Department and the Athens-Clarke County Police Department) and is related to the UGA Study Abroad Program in Tanzania.

2005 Center for Humanities and Arts, University of Georgia. $300 book subvention grant awarded in competition to support purchase of reproduction rights for illustrations for my book Geographies of Globalization: A Critical Introduction.

2004 Office of the Associate Provost, International Affairs, University of Georgia. $5,000 for “A Proposed Security Enhancement Program for UGA’s African Studies Institute Study Abroad Programs.” Awarded to Lioba Moshi, Director of African Studies, and Andrew Herod. The program brought two of the most senior law enforcement officials from Tanzania (Deputy Commissioner of Police Rashid Hemedi and Regional Police Commander, Kilimanjaro Region, Mohamed Chico) to the University of Georgia to learn more about law enforcement techniques in the United States, particularly as they relate to issues of terrorism and law enforcement involving students. Program involved working with members of: Athens-Clarke County Police Department; ACC Sheriff’s Office; Georgia State Patrol; Georgia Bureau of Investigation; University of Georgia Police Department; State of Georgia Police Academy.

2003 International Academic Program Development Fund, Office of the Associate Provost, International Affairs, University of Georgia. $1,540 for “Establishment of ‘UGA à Paris’ Study Abroad Program.”

2002 Center for Undergraduate Research Opportunities (CURO) 2002 Summer Research Fellowship. $2,000 for research project on “Tourism as a means of economic development in Croatia,” Andrew Herod (PI) and Jenna Lee (undergraduate student). Awarded by the Office of the Senior Vice President for Academic Affairs and Provost, University of Georgia.

2001 International Academic Program Development Fund, Office of the Associate Provost, International Affairs, University of Georgia. $700 for “Exploring possibilities for research collaboration between UGA, the University of Havana’s Center for US Studies, and the Central de Trabajadores de Cuba.” Awarded competitively within the University.

2001 Faculty Travel Grant, University of Georgia Research Foundation. $1,064 for travel to the “4th International Scholar Conference on May Day, Commemorating the 130th Anniversary of the Paris Commune,” Instituto de Historia de Cuba, Havana, Cuba, April 25-27. Awarded competitively within the University.

2001 Awarded a Teaching Replacement Unit, College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia. Provided support for teaching release from one course for academic year 2001-02. Awarded competitively within the College (one of 33 awarded).

1999 Travel Grant, International Studies Association. $400 for travel as an “Invited non-ISA member” to participate in “Industrial Relations meets International Relations – IR2 Workshop.” International Studies Association Meeting. Washington, DC: February 16-20.

1998 Institute for Behavioral Research, University of Georgia. $500 research stipend.

1998 Faculty Travel Grant, University of Georgia Research Foundation. $818 for travel to the Annual Conference of the Royal Geographical Society/ Institute of British Geographers, University of Surrey, Guildford, England, January 5-8. Awarded competitively within the University.

1997 Institute for Behavioral Research, University of Georgia. $2,000 research stipend.

1997 Annual Meeting Enrichment Funds, Association of American Geographers. As organizer of the Industrial Geography Specialty Group’s Plenary Session on “After-NAFTA: a roundtable discussion on the impacts of the North American Free Trade Agreement” for the Annual Conference of the Association of American Geographers, Fort Worth, TX, April 1-5, I wrote a grant that secured $770 to cover the attendance expenses of Michael Conroy from the Ford Foundation’s Mexico City office.

1996 Faculty Research Grant, Americas Council of the University System of Georgia. $2,500 for “Housing the workers and forestalling revolution: An examination of the American Institute for Free Labor Development’s housing programs in Latin America and the Caribbean during the 1960s.” (One of 8 proposals funded out of 25 submitted).

1996 Institute for Behavioral Research, University of Georgia. $2,000 research stipend.

1996 Travel Grant, American Council of Learned Societies. $500 for travel to the Council of the International Association for the Economics of Participation “Conference on Economic Participation and the Transition,” Prague, Czech Republic, August 22-24 (30% award rate).

1996 Travel Grant, National Research Council, Commission on Geosciences, Environment, and Resources, Washington, DC. $1,500 for travel to the Congress of the International Geographical Union, The Hague, The Netherlands, August 5-10 (declined).

1996 Faculty Research Grant, University of Georgia Research Foundation. $6,673 for “An Examination of Recent Developments in the Czech and Slovak Trade Union Movements.” (One of 53 proposals funded out of 75 submitted.)

1996 Faculty Travel Grant, University of Georgia Research Foundation. $1,158 for travel to the Annual Conference of the Royal Geographical Society/ Institute of British Geographers, University of Strathclyde, Glasgow, Scotland, January 3-6. Awarded competitively within the University.

1995 Faculty Research Grant, University of Georgia Research Foundation. $5,000 for “Implications of the transition to a market economy for trade unionism in Eastern and Central Europe.” (One of 48 proposals funded out of 83 submitted.)

1994 Grant proposal “Implications of the transition to a market economy for trade unionism in Eastern and Central Europe” was chosen by a University of Georgia committee for submission to the National Endowment for the Humanities Summer Stipends Program (each University is allowed to submit only one application).

1994 Travel Grant, National Research Council, Commission on Geosciences, Environment, and Resources, Washington, DC. $1,500 for travel to the Regional Conference of the International Geographical Union, Prague, Czech Republic, August 22-26.

1994 Grants for Visiting Speakers, Humanities Center, University of Georgia. In my capacity as Colloquium Organizer for the Department of Geography, I wrote grant proposals which secured $700 for bringing visiting speakers to the University.

1993 Faculty Research Grant, University of Georgia Research Foundation. $5,260 for “Panopticons on the piers: The creation of a moral landscape on the New York-New Jersey Waterfront.” (One of 43 proposals funded out of 71 submitted.)

1992 Pilot Program Grant For Travel to Research Collections, Humanities Center, University of Georgia. $995 for “Panopticons on the piers: The creation of a moral landscape on the New York-New Jersey Waterfront.”

1992 Dissertation Development Grant. $200 from The Graduate School, Rutgers University.

1991 Dissertation Development Grant. $200 from The Graduate School, Rutgers University.

1990 Research Grant, Center for the Critical Analysis of Contemporary Culture, Rutgers University. $1,000 for “The production of space on the New York waterfront.”

1990 Dissertation Development Grant. $200 from The Graduate School, Rutgers University.

INVITED COLLOQUIA/ LECTURES:

2019 Michigan Traditional Arts Program (Michigan State University Museum) and the Labor Education Program (Michigan State University School of Human Resources and Labor Relations) “Our Daily Work/ Our Daily Lives” speaker series. “Hammering against the Reds: How the AFL-CIO fought Communism in Latin America through urban planning” (April 5).

2018 Issues in Information Seminar, University of Georgia Libraries, University of Georgia, Athens, GA. “The Changing U.S. Economy and the Rise of Gig Work.” (October 22).

2017 School of Geography & Sustainable Communities, University of Wollongong, Wollongong, New South Wales, Australia. “Labor in 21st century America” (March 1).

2017 Keynote Speaker, Alumni Seminar on “A Sense of Place”, University of Georgia: “The Nature of Place in a Globalizing World” (February 17-18).

2015 Department of Geography, University of the Aegean, Mytilene, Lesvos, Greece. “Labor organizing in a time of precarity: Examples from the USA” (April 22).

2013 Department of Geography, Syracuse University, Syracuse, NY. “Labor in early 21st century America” (November 8).

2013 Centro de Estudos de Geografia do Trabalho, Departamento de Geografia da FCT (Faculdade de Ciências e Tecnologia), São Paulo State University/ Universidade Estadual Paulista “Júlio de Mesquita Filho”, Presidente Prudente, São Paulo State, Brazil. Part of the symposium “Questões do Trabalho, Ambientais e da Saúde do Trabalhador” (“Questions of work, nature, and worker health”). “Thoughts about the linkages between Labor Geography, Environmental Geography, and Health Geography as they pertain to the creation of a research agenda for the future” (May 17).

2013 Centro de Estudos de Geografia do Trabalho, Departamento de Geografia da FCT (Faculdade de Ciências e Tecnologia), São Paulo State University/ Universidade Estadual Paulista “Júlio de Mesquita Filho”, Presidente Prudente, São Paulo State, Brazil. Part of the symposium “Questões do Trabalho, Ambientais e da Saúde do Trabalhador” (“Questions of work, nature, and worker health”). “Thinking about workers & space: The emergence of Labor Geography as a discipline in the United States” (May 15).

2013 Centro de Estudos de Geografia do Trabalho, Departamento de Geografia da FCT (Faculdade de Ciências e Tecnologia), São Paulo State University/ Universidade Estadual Paulista “Júlio de Mesquita Filho”, Presidente Prudente, São Paulo State, Brazil. Part of the symposium “Questões do Trabalho, Ambientais e da Saúde do Trabalhador” (“Questions of work, nature, and worker health”). “Recent changes in the US economy and implications for workers” (May 15).

2013 Department of Management and Organisations, Business School, University of Western Australia, Crawley, Western Australia, Australia. “Issues in labour geography” (March 18).

2013 “On the geographic life of commodities: Globalization and automobile production.” Presentation to the University of Georgia Foundation Fellows (January 23).

2012 Keynote Speaker, Annual Academic Affairs Faculty Symposium, University of Georgia, Unicoi State Park, Georgia. “The teaching/research nexus: How disciplinary research can enhance the quality of teaching and learning and how teaching can motivate and engage research faculty” (March 23-24).

2012 Graduate School of Business, Curtin University, Perth, Western Australia, Australia and the Department of Management and Organisations, Business School, University of Western Australia, Crawley, Western Australia, Australia. “Labor union organizing strategies in early 21st century USA” (March 19).

2011 The Harold and Florence Mayer Lecturer, Department of Geography, University of Wisconsin – Milwaukee, WI. “Labor union organizing strategies in early 21st century USA” (October 7).

2010 Division of Student Affairs, University of Georgia, Athens, GA. “Interacting with your professors.” Roundtable discussion with approximately 30 first-year undergraduate students (October 14).

2010 Department of Geography, University of Georgia, Athens, GA. “Writing for Geography: Practical tools for scholarly productivity.” Graduate Student Professional Development Seminar (August 27).

2009 Department of Geography, University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC. “Fighting Communism through urban planning: The AFL-CIO’s housing programs in Latin America and the Caribbean during the 1960s.” (November 6).

2009 Work and Organisational Studies, School of Business, Faculty of Economics and Business, University of Sydney, Australia. “Theorizing Globalization” (March 12).

2009 Institut für Humangeographie, Universität Frankfurt am Main (Universität Johann Wolfgang Goethe), Frankfurt, Germany, “Making Globalisation Work” lecture series. “Working space: Labour, geography, and globalization” (January 13).

2008 Work and Organisational Studies, School of Business, Faculty of Economics and Business, University of Sydney, Australia. “Unions and spatial praxis” (March 13).

2007 Department of Geographical and Earth Sciences, University of Glasgow and Department of Human Resource Management, University of Strathclyde, Glasgow, Scotland. “Fighting Communism through urban planning: The AFL-CIO’s housing programs in Latin America and the Caribbean during the 1960s.” (November 16).

2007 Croft Institute for International Studies, University of Mississippi, Oxford, MS. “Fighting Communism through urban planning: The AFL-CIO’s housing programs in Latin America and the Caribbean during the 1960s.” (October 23).

2007 Croft Institute for International Studies, University of Mississippi, Oxford, MS. “Space, scale, and capitalism.” (October 23).

2007 Department of Geography, University of Georgia, Athens, GA. “Creating, and working to expand, your Curriculum Vitae.” Graduate Student Professional Development Seminar (October 5).

2006 Department of International Affairs, University of Georgia, Athens, GA. “Labor organizing, space, and the contradictions of globalization” (November 1).

2006 The Institute on Globalization, the Department of Political Science, and the Department of Labour Studies, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON, Canada. “Building anti-Communism in Latin America: The US labor movement, the Cold War, and urban space” (September 20).

2006 The Institute on Globalization, the Department of Political Science, and the Department of Labour Studies, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON, Canada. “Geographies of globalization” (September 19).

2006 School of Management, Curtin Business School, Curtin University of Technology, Perth, Western Australia, Australia. “Labor organizing in the global economy: Transnationalism and the local” (March 15).

2006 Department of Organisational and Labour Studies, Business School, School of Economics and Commerce, University of Western Australia, Crawley, Western Australia, Australia. “Globalisation and you” (presentation to select group of trade union officials, Perth, Western Australia) (March 14).

2006 Department of Organisational and Labour Studies, Business School, School of Economics and Commerce, University of Western Australia, Crawley, Western Australia, Australia. “Labor organizing in the global economy: Transnationalism and the local” (March 14).

2005 Department of Anthropology, University of Georgia, Athens, GA. “Labor, space, and the global.” (November 4).

2005 Work and Organisational Studies, School of Business, Faculty of Economics and Business, University of Sydney, Australia. “Working space: A research roundtable” (September 20).

2005 Work and Organisational Studies, School of Business, Faculty of Economics and Business, University of Sydney, Australia. “Labour organising, space, and the contradictions of globalisation” (September 16).

2005 Work and Organisational Studies, School of Business, Faculty of Economics and Business, University of Sydney, Australia. “Anti-Communism in the U.S. labour movement” (September 15).

2005 Work and Organisational Studies, School of Business, Faculty of Economics and Business, University of Sydney, Australia. “Theorising globalisation” (September 14).

2005 Institute for Behavioral Research, University of Georgia, Athens, GA. “Labor organizing, space, and the contradictions of globalization” (April 12).

2005 Department of Collective Bargaining, Labor Law, and Labor History, School of Industrial and Labor Relations, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York. “The difference that spaces makes in labor organizing.” (April 5).

2005 Department of Anthropology, University of Georgia, Athens, GA. “Theorizing geographical scale” (February 14).

2004 Center for Humanities and Arts “Lunch-in-Theory” Series, University of Georgia, Athens, GA. “Labor organizing, space, and the contradictions of globalization” (September 15).

2003 Emory Center for Myth and Ritual in American Life (MARIAL), Emory University, Atlanta, GA. “Labor organizing and the contradictions of globalization” (October 8).

2003 Department of Geology and Geography, Georgia Southern University, Statesboro, GA. “Labor organizing and the contradictions of globalization” (September 25).

2003 Department of Geography, Miami University, Oxford, OH. “Labor organizing in a global economy – why knowing something about geography is important” (April 4).

2002 Department of Geography, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand. “Geographies of labour organizing in a global economy” (November 27).

2002 Plenary Speaker at the Economic and Social Research Council “Geographies of the New Economy” half-day seminar held at the University of Loughborough, Loughborough, England. “Geographies of labour organizing in the new economy” (October 16).

2002 Department of Geography, East Carolina University, Greenville, NC. “Geographies of labor organizing: Going global, going local in a global economy” (April 19).

2001 Center for Working-Class Studies, Youngstown State University, Youngstown, OH. “Organizing locally in the global economy: Geographical lessons from the 1998 General Motors-United Auto Workers dispute” (April 18).

2001 Department of Geography, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN. “Organizing globally, organizing locally: Contradictions of globalization and their implications for labor union strategy” (February 23).

2000 Department of Geography, Miami University, Oxford, OH. “Organizing the scales of organizing: Union spatial strategy in a global economy and the continued significance of place.” Paper presented as part of the “Producing place(s): Economy, governance and resistance in the new global context” Research Symposium (May 12-13, 2000).

2000 College of Education, University of Georgia, Athens, GA. “Issues of globalization.” Presentation to the Cyril O. Houle Scholars in Adult and Continuing Education Program (March 14).

1999 Institute for Behavioral Research, University of Georgia, Athens, GA. “Trade union housing cooperatives and U.S. foreign policy in Latin America and the Caribbean during the 1960s” (March 22).

1998 Department of Geography, University of Georgia, Athens, GA. “The geopolitics of labor: The AFL-CIO, the Cold War, and worker housing in Latin America” (November 13).

1998 École de Management, Université de Lyon, France. “Globalization and its uses.” Invited presentation at the “Globalization and Management: A College of Experts” meeting of the G8 Management Forum (October 19).

1998 College of Education, University of Georgia, Athens, GA. “The consequences and contradictions of globalization.” Presentation to the Cyril O. Houle Scholars in Adult and Continuing Education Program (March 16).

1998 Department of Geography, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA. “The geopolitics of labor: Trade union housing cooperatives and U.S. foreign policy in Latin America and the Caribbean.” Glenda Laws Memorial Lecture Series (March 2).

1998 Plenary Speaker, Phi Beta Delta International Honor Society, University of Georgia, Athens, GA. “Trade union housing programs in Honduras and Guyana” (January 20).

1997 Department of Geography, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ. “Trade union housing cooperatives and U.S. foreign policy in Latin America and the Caribbean” (October 3).

1997 Plenary address on “Making sense of globalization: Workers in the global economy of the 21st century” to the New Directions for News Conference on “Skills Required: The Idea Worker.” New York City, NY (September 9-11).

1996 Institute for Behavioral Research, University of Georgia, Athens, GA. “Recent developments in the trade unions in the Czech and Slovak Republics” (November 11).

1996 Department of Geography, Syracuse University, Syracuse, NY. “The geopolitics of labor: Trade unions in the international arena” (March 18).

1996 Department of Geography, Ohio State University, Columbus, OH. “Labor and the production of space” (February 20).

1996 Department of Geography, University of Durham, Durham, England. “Labor, space, and scale: Issues in economic geography” (January 8).

1995 Department of Anthropology, University of Georgia, Athens, GA. “Space and power: Confronting technological innovation through geographical praxis in the U.S. longshoring industry” (May 19).

1995 Department of Geography, West Virginia University, Morgantown, WV. “Musings on geographical scale” (March 31).

1992 Department of Geography, University of California, Los Angeles, CA. “The production of space in the East Coast longshoring industry” (April 22).

1992 Department of Geography, McGill University, Montreal, QC, Canada. “The production of space in the East Coast longshoring industry” (January 22).

1991 Center for the Critical Analysis of Contemporary Culture, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ. “Contested landscapes: The production of space and the politics of scale on the New York-New Jersey waterfront” (May 1).

CONFERENCE PARTICIPATION:

Panels and Conferences Organized:

2010 Co-Organizer (with Lisa Fine) and Commentator, Labor and Working Class History Association Session: “Working Space: A Conversation Between Labor Historians and Labor Geographers.” Organization of American Historians Annual Meeting. Washington, DC: April 7-10.

2009 Co-Organizer (with Susan McGrath-Champ and Al Rainnie), Co-Chair, and Commentator: “Spatial dimensions of work, organisations and employment” session. 15th International Industrial Relations Association World Congress. Sydney, Australia: August 24-28.

2009 Member, Steering Committee, 2nd Antipode Summer Institute for the Geographies of Justice, University of Manchester, England, May 18-May 22.

2007 Co-Organizer (with Nik Heynen), 1st Antipode Summer Institute for the Geographies of Justice, University of Georgia, Athens, GA, May 28-June 1.

2006 Organizer of Session 10: “The Changing Geography of Power.” International Sociological Association (ISA) Research Committee on Labour Movements (RC 44) ISA XVI World Congress on “The Quality of Social Existence in a Globalising World.” Durban, South Africa, July 23-29.

2001 Organizer (with Noel Castree) of three sessions on “Scales of In/justice.” Annual Conference of the Association of American Geographers. New York, NY: February 27-March 3.

2000 Organizer (with Christian Berndt) and Chair of session on “Labor’s spatial strategies.” Annual Conference of the Association of American Geographers. Pittsburgh, PA: April 4-8.

1999 Co-Organizer (with Melissa Wright and Paul Plummer), Conference on “Theorizing Space and Time at the End of the Millennium.” Athens, GA: April 9-11.

1998 Organizer and Chair of session on “A space for labor in economic geography.” Annual Conference of the Association of American Geographers. Boston, MA: March 25-29.

1997 Organizer, Industrial Geography Specialty Group Plenary Session on “After-NAFTA: A roundtable discussion on the impacts of the North American Free Trade Agreement.” Annual Conference of the Association of American Geographers. Fort Worth, TX: April 1-5.

1996 Principal organizer, Conference on “Crises of Global Regulation and Governance.” Athens, GA: April 6-8.

1995 Organizer and Chair of four sessions on “Trade Unions and Geography” (I Unions and the politics of local economic development; II Working-class consciousness and cultures of trade unionism; III International perspectives on the politics of trade unionism; IV Space and the politics of trade union organizing). Annual Conference of the Association of American Geographers. Chicago, IL: March 14-18.

1992 Member of Organizing Committee, Conference on “Science, Technology and Culture.” Center for the Critical Analysis of Contemporary Culture, Rutgers University. New Brunswick, NJ: February 16-17.

1990 Member of Organizing Committee, Conference on “Popular Culture.” Center for the Critical Analysis of Contemporary Culture, Rutgers University. New Brunswick, NJ: December 1-2.

Papers Presented: († = invited presentation)

2018 Commentor for session on “Bombs, panels, and exposés: Institutional attempts to reform agricultural labor practices and the responses to them,” Southern Labor Studies Association Biennial Meeting. Athens, GA: May 17-19.†

2018 “Imagining global-local relations: Implications of how we think about geographic scale for conflicts over resources.” Keynote address, “Global Change – Local Conflicts? (GLOCON)” conference, Freie Universität, Berlin. Berlin, Germany: February 8-9.†

2017 “Global Production Networks, platform capitalism and the future of work.” Al Rainnie, Andrew Herod, and Susan McGrath-Champ (paper presented by Al Rainnie). Conference on Global Production. National University of Singapore, Singapore: December 6-8.

2015 “Labor’s spatial praxis and the uneven development of capitalism: Why we must examine more than just capital to understand the geography of the crisis.” Plenary address to the “Geographies of Work and Uneven Development in Europe During the Crisis” workshop/ one-day conference. Athens, Greece: April 30.†

2015 “Strawberry pickers, precarious labour and Labour Geography: Studying the agency of immigrant workers against informal working arrangements in Greece.” Stelios Gialis, Andrew Herod, and Lila Leontidou (paper presented by Stelios Gialis). International Labour Process Conference. Athens, Greece: April 13-15.

2015 “Waste recycling as a source of raw materials for new products – exploring the concept of Global Destruction Networks.” Andrew Herod, Graham Pickren, Al Rainnie, Susan McGrath-Champ (paper presented by Andrew Herod). International Symposium on Social Sciences and Management. Tokyo, Japan: February 3-5.

2014 “What role for labour in Global Production Networks and the Circular Economy?” Susan McGrath-Champ, Graham Pickren, Al Rainnie, and Andrew Herod (paper presented by Susan McGrath-Champ). Institute of Australian Geographers/New Zealand Institute of Geographers Annual Conference. Melbourne, Australia: June 30-July 2.

2014 “Thinking through worker responses to globalisation – What’s geography got to go with it?” International Sociological Association (ISA) Research Committee on Economy and Society (RC02) session on “Resistance and Revolution in Global Historical Perspective” at the XVIII ISA World Congress on “Facing an Unequal World: Challenges for Global Sociology.” Yokohama, Japan: July 13-19.† Due to illness, I had to withdraw from the ISA World Congress.

2014 “Mapping networks: Labor, space, and globalization.” Hans Böckler Foundation Graduate Conference on “International Solidarity Reloaded: Trade Unions and other Social Movements – Between the Challenges and Opportunities of Globalisation.” Göttingen, Germany: April 1-4.†

2014 “Space, class, and worker praxis.” Hans Böckler Foundation Graduate Conference on “International Solidarity Reloaded: Trade Unions and other Social Movements – Between the Challenges and Opportunities of Globalisation.” Göttingen, Germany: April 1-4.†

2014 “Wasted labour? Global Production Networks and Global Destruction Networks.” Al Rainnie, Andrew Herod, Graham Pickren, and Susan McGrath-Champ (paper presented by Susan McGrath-Champ). Journal of Industrial Relations symposium on “Supply Chains, HRM Practices and Labour Standards.” Sydney, Australia: February 10.

2013 “Economic restructuring and the growth of precarious work in the United States.” Workshop on “Labour, Geography and Alternatives to Crisis.” Held at the Institute of Advanced Studies, University of Western Australia, Crawley, Western Australia, Australia: November 21-22.†

2013 “Wasted labour? Global production and destruction networks.” Al Rainnie, Andrew Herod, Graham Pickren, and Susan McGrath-Champ (paper presented by Al Rainnie). Workshop on “Labour, Geography and Alternatives to Crisis.” Held at the Institute of Advanced Studies, University of Western Australia, Crawley, Western Australia, Australia: November 21-22.†

2013 “Geographies of labor: Theory & methods” plenary address to North American Labor History Conference (“Geographies of Labor” theme). Detroit, MI: October 24-26.†

2013 Chair and commentator for “Critical geographic approaches to labor history and political struggle.” North American Labor History Conference (“Geographies of Labor” theme). Detroit, MI: October 24-26.†

2013 Chair and commentator for “Subversive mobility and labor’s struggles.” North American Labor History Conference (“Geographies of Labor” theme). Detroit, MI: October 24-26.†

2013 “Atypical and informal employment in Southern European Union regions: Agency and ‘anti-recession’ measures.” Stelios Gialis, Lila Leontidou, and Andrew Herod (paper presented by Stelios Gialis). North American Labor History Conference (“Geographies of Labor” theme). Detroit, MI: October 24-26.

2013 “Atypical employment and crisis in Southern EU member states and the Greek regions: Critical theoretical arguments and empirical data on who bears the burden of devaluation.” Stelios Gialis, Lila Leontidou, and Andrew Herod (paper presented by Stelios Gialis). Annual Conference of the Association of American Geographers. Los Angeles, CA: April 9-13.

2013 “Global Destruction Networks, labour, and waste.” Andrew Herod, Graham Pickren, Al Rainnie, and Susan McGrath-Champ (paper presented by Al Rainnie). 31st International Labour Process Conference (“The Missing Link: Integrating Labour with Global Value Chains” Stream). New Brunswick, NJ: March 18-20, 2013.

2012 “Leadership in the public sector: The perspective of an elected official in the United States.” “Research Development of Leadership: Theory and Application” Conference. Shanghai Administration Institute, Shanghai, China: October 19-21, 2012.†

2012 “Small firms, labour and global production networks.” Al Rainnie, Susan McGrath-Champ, and Andrew Herod (paper presented by Susan McGrath-Champ). 16th World Congress of the International Labour and Employment Relations Association on “Beyond Borders: Governance of Work in a Global Economy.” Philadelphia, PA: July 2-5, 2012.

2012 “Global production networks, labour, and small firms.” Al Rainnie, Andrew Herod, and Susan McGrath-Champ (paper presented by Al Rainnie). 30th International Labour Process Conference on “Work Matters” (Stream 2: “Putting Labour in its Place: Global Value Chains and Labour Process Analysis”). Stockholm, Sweden: March 27-29, 2012.

2011 “Labor Geography: The difference that space makes.” “Labor Studies Across the Disciplines” session, International Confederation of Associations for Pluralism in Economics (ICAPE) Conference. Amherst, MA: November 11-13.†

2011 “Spaces of flexicurity in the European south: Struggles against flexible working arrangements in Greece.” Stelios Gialis and Andrew Herod (paper presented by Stelios Gialis). 8th Annual Historical Materialism Conference on “Spaces of Capital, Moments of Struggle.” London, UK: November 10-13.

2011 “Global production networks, labour and small firms.” Al Rainnie, Andrew Herod, and Susan McGrath-Champ (paper presented by Al Rainnie). 25th Association of Industrial Relations Academics of Australia and New Zealand (AIRAANZ) Conference. Auckland, New Zealand: February 2-4.

2010 “Global production networks and labour: A critical analysis.” Al Rainnie, Andrew Herod, and Susan McGrath-Champ (paper presented by Al Rainnie). British Sociological Association/ Work, Employment and Society Conference. Brighton, UK: September 7-9.

2010 “Space and geography in organisational studies of the labour process.” Al Rainnie, Susan McGrath-Champ, and Andrew Herod (paper presented by Al Rainnie and Susan McGrath-Champ). 26th European Group on Organisational Studies (EGOS) Conference on “Waves of Globalization” (Sub-theme 24: “Marxist Studies on Organization”). Lisbon, Portugal: June 28-July 3.

2010 Commentator for session on “Immigration and ideology: Racializing labor,” Business History Conference. Athens, GA: March 25-28th.†

2010 “Progressing work: How spatial approaches change our theories of work and labour.” Andrew Herod, Susan McGrath-Champ, and Al Rainnie (paper presented by Susan McGrath-Champ). 24th Association of Industrial Relations Academics of Australia and New Zealand (AIRAANZ) Conference. Sydney, Australia: February 3-5.

2009 Commentor for session on “Migration and geo-politics,” 16th Annual Mini-Conference on Critical Geography. Athens, GA: October 23-24.†

2009 “Learning from literary analysis: Metaphors of geographical scale and what understanding them means for union renewal.” “Theorising and Assessing Union Renewal in a Comparative Perspective” session, 15th International Industrial Relations Association World Congress. Sydney, Australia: August 24-28.†

2009 “Workers and the making of capitalism’s landscapes.” Magog IV full-team meeting for the Roundtable organized by the Inter-University Research Centre on Globalization and Work/ le Centre de recherche interuniversitaire sur la mondialisation et le travail, Major Collaborative Research Initiative (CRIMT MCRI-II) research program. Magog, Québec, Canada: May 6-8.†

2008 “The geographies of union renewal: Do spatial approaches change our theories of union praxis?/ Les géographies du renouveau syndical: Les approches spatiales – modifient-elles nos théories de la praxis syndicale?.” Roundtable organized by the Inter-University Research Centre on Globalization and Work/ le Centre de recherche interuniversitaire sur la mondialisation et le travail (CRIMT). Vancouver, British Columbia: June 7.†

2008 “The geographies of union renewal: Do spatial approaches change our theories of union praxis?/ Les géographies du renouveau syndical: Les approches spatiales – modifient-elles nos théories de la praxis syndicale?” Annual Meeting of the Canadian Industrial Relations Association/ L’Association canadienne des relations industrielles. Vancouver, British Columbia: June 4-6.†

2008 “Labor Geography: Where have we been, where should we go?” Keynote address, Theoretical Approaches in Labour Geography conference, sponsored by the Department of Sociology and Human Geography, University of Oslo, and the International Geographical Union Commission on the Dynamics of Economic Spaces. Oslo, Norway: May 13-15.†

2008 “Making space in labour process theory.” Al Rainnie, Andrew Herod, and Susan McGrath-Champ (paper presented by Al Rainnie). “Work Matters” session, 26th International Labour Process Conference. Dublin, Ireland: March 18-20.

2007 “Global labour.” Critical Labour Studies 4th Symposium, session on “The Political Economy of Space, Geography and Labour,” held at the Scottish Trades Union Congress (STUC). Glasgow, Scotland: November 17.†

2007 “Containers, contracts, and geography: Responding to technological innovation through remaking the labor landscape.” Center for the Study of Work, Labor and Democracy, Interdisciplinary Humanities Center, University of California, Santa Barbara. “The Traveling Box: Containers as the Global Icon of Our Era” Conference. Santa Barbara, CA: November 8-9.†

2007 “Why incorporating the geographical is central to theorising work and employment practices.” Andrew Herod, Al Rainnie, and Susan McGrath-Champ (paper presented by Al Rainnie). “The Labour Process Debate/ Impact and Nature of IT” session, 25th International Labour Process Conference. Amsterdam, The Netherlands: April 2-4.

2006 “Industrial relations and space: New global frontiers.” Al Rainnie, Andrew Herod, and Susan McGrath-Champ (paper presented by Susan McGrath-Champ). “Spatial Dimensions of Globalised Industrial Relations” session, 14th World Congress of the International Industrial Relations Association (IIRA) on “Social Actors, World Organization and New Technologies in the 21st Century.” Universidad de Lima, Lima, Peru: September 11-14.†

2006 “Here come the space cadets: Industrial relations and space.” Al Rainnie, Andrew Herod, and Susan McGrath-Champ (paper presented by Susan McGrath-Champ). Session 10: “The Changing Geography of Power.” International Sociological Association (ISA) Research Committee on Labour Movements (RC 44) ISA XVI World Congress on “The Quality of Social Existence in a Globalising World.” Durban, South Africa: July 23-29.†

2005 “Strategies for funding study abroad programs: A report from the UGA Study Abroad Task Force.” UGA Study Abroad Conference, Office of International Education and the Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia, Athens, GA: February 4.†

2003 “Impacts of the transition on unions in Eastern Europe.” “Labour and New Social Movements in a Globalizing World”: 39th Linz International Conference of Labour and Social History, Kammer für Arbeiter und Angestellte Oberösterreichs. Linz, Austria: September 11-14.†

2001 “The power of the local in a global economy: Learning from the 1998 General Motors/ United Auto Workers dispute.” Annual Conference of the Social Science History Association. Chicago, IL: November 15-18.†

2001 “Just-in-time production, worker power, and the geography of the 1998 General Motors/ United Auto Workers dispute.” Fourth May 1st Scientific Workshop, Instituto de Historia de Cuba. Havana, Cuba: April 25-27.

2000 Panelist, “Labor relations and regional development: New insights and future directions for research” session. Annual Conference of the Association of Collegiate Schools of Planning. Atlanta, GA: November 2-5.†

2000 “Rethinking the geographic scale of labor disputes: Auto labor and lean production.” Annual Meeting of the American Studies Association. Detroit, MI: October 12-15.†

2000 “Organizing the scales of organizing: Union spatial strategy in a global economy and the continued significance of place.” Paper presented as part of the “Producing place(s): Economy, governance and resistance in the new global context” Research Symposium, Miami University, Oxford, OH: May 12-13, 2000.†

2000 “Labor union organizing under just-in-time production: Strategic workers, spatial strategy, and the geography of the 1998 General Motors/ United Auto Workers dispute.” Annual Conference of the Association of American Geographers. Pittsburgh, PA: April 4-8.

1999 “Examining the geography of the 1998 General Motors/ United Auto Workers dispute.” Southern Labor Studies Biannual Meeting. Atlanta, GA: September 30-October 2.

1999 “Unwrapping the geography of the 1998 General Motors/ United Auto Workers dispute: Implications for labor organizing.” Conference on “Theorizing Space and Time at the End of the Millennium.” Athens, GA: April 9-11.

1999 “Socialist geography: Radical geography in the New World Order.” Scott Salmon and Andrew Herod (presented by Scott Salmon). Annual Conference of the Association of American Geographers. Honolulu, HI: March 23-27.

1999 “What a geographical perspective can add: Lessons from the 1998 General Motors – UAW dispute.” International Studies Association Meeting. Washington, DC: February 16-20.†

1998 “The geopolitics of labor: The Cold War and trade union-run housing cooperatives in Honduras and Guyana.” Annual Conference of the Association of American Geographers. Boston, MA: March 25-29.

1998 Panelist, “Radical Geography – 30 Years on (part 10): Prospects for the next 30 years” session. Annual Conference of the Association of American Geographers. Boston, MA: March 25-29.†

1998 Chair of session on “New Labour.” Annual Conference of the Royal Geographical Society/ Institute of British Geographers. Kingston-Upon-Thames, England: January 5-8.†

1998 “Housing labour: Trade union housing cooperatives and U.S. foreign policy in Honduras and Guyana.” Annual Conference of the Royal Geographical Society/ Institute of British Geographers. Kingston-Upon-Thames, England: January 5-8.

1997 “Housing the workers and forestalling revolution: An examination of the American Institute for Free Labor Development’s housing programs in Latin America and the Caribbean during the 1960s.” Conference of the Americas Council of Georgia. Savannah, GA: May 24.†

1996 “Consequences of the transition to the market economy for trade unions in Eastern and Central Europe: The case of the Czech Metalworkers’ Federation (OS Kovo).” Council of the International Association for the Economics of Participation “Conference on Economic Participation and the Transition,” Prague, Czech Republic: August 22-24.

1996 “Consequences of the transition to the market economy for trade unions in Eastern and Central Europe: The case of the Czech Metalworkers’ Federation (OS Kovo).” Annual Conference of the Association of American Geographers. Charlotte, NC: April 9-13.

1996 Discussant, “Geography and scale” session. Annual Conference of the Association of American Geographers. Charlotte, NC: April 9-13.†

1996 Panelist, “State restructuring and devolution in the United States” session. Annual Conference of the Association of American Geographers. Charlotte, NC: April 9-13.

1996 “Towards a new international labor politics? Eastern Europe and the restructuring of the World Federation of Trade Unions.” Conference on “Crises of Global Regulation and Governance.” Athens, GA: April 6-8.

1996 “On the outside looking in: Issues in interviewing foreign elites.” Annual Conference of the Royal Geographical Society/ Institute of British Geographers. Glasgow, Scotland: January 3-6. (Invited by the Economic Geography Study Group as a Young Research Worker).†

1995 “Trade unionism and the transition to the market economy in Eastern and Central Europe.” Regional Conference of the International Geographical Union on “Latin America in the World: Environment, Society and Development.” Havana, Cuba: July 31-August 5.

1995 “East meets West: An analysis of the response of the International Metalworkers’ Federation to political and economic restructuring in Central and Eastern Europe.” Annual Conference of the Association of American Geographers. Chicago, IL: March 14-18.

1994 Chair and Panelist, “Urban landscapes and networks of power: Explorations of the new cultural geography” session. Annual Conference of the Social Science History Association. Atlanta, GA: October 13-16.†

1994 “International labor organizing in the post-Cold War era.” Regional Conference of the International Geographical Union on “Environment and Quality of Life in Central Europe: Problems of Transition.” Prague, Czech Republic: August 22-26.

1994 Panelist, “The global and the local: Critical reassessments I” session. Annual Conference of the Association of American Geographers. San Francisco, CA: March 29-April 2.†

1994 “Workers as geographers: The production of space in the East Coast longshore industry since 1955.” J. Warren Nystrom Dissertation Competition Session, Annual Conference of the Association of American Geographers. San Francisco, CA: March 29-April 2.†

1994 Chair, “Engendering work, working gender” session. 1st Annual Women’s Studies Student Symposium, University of Georgia. Athens, GA: January 10.†

1993 “Forging international labor links in a global economy.” Annual Conference of the Association of American Geographers. Atlanta, GA: April 6-10.

1993 Panelist, “Social (in)justice and the city: Theory and practice after two decades” session. Annual Conference of the Association of American Geographers. Atlanta, GA: April 6-10.†

1992 Panelist, “Surviving the first years: Issues for new women faculty” session. Conference of the Southeastern Division of the Association of American Geographers. Louisville, KY: November 22-23.†

1992 Paper discussant, “Industrial restructuring” session. Conference of the Southeastern Division of the Association of American Geographers. Louisville, KY: November 22-23.†

1992 “Towards a labor geography.” International Sociological Association (Research Committee 21) Conference on “A New Urban and Regional Hierarchy? Impacts of Modernization, Restructuring and the End of Bipolarity.” Los Angeles, CA: April 23-25.

1992 “The geography of collective bargaining in the East Coast longshore industry.” Annual Conference of the Association of American Geographers. San Diego, CA: April 18-22.

1991 “Restructuring the waterfront and the geographical practice of the International Longshoremen’s Association.” Conference of the Middle States Division of the Association of American Geographers. State College, PA: October 4-6.

1991 “A historical geography of unionism on the New Jersey waterfront.” Annual Conference of the Association of American Geographers. Miami, FL: April 13-16.

1990 “The production of scale in US labor relations.” Conference of the Middle States Division of the Association of American Geographers. Norwich, CT: October 12-14.

1990 “From rag trade to real estate: Land use conflicts in New York’s Garment Center.” Annual Conference of the Association of American Geographers. Toronto, Canada: April 19-22.

1990 “Stitching up the Big Apple: Remaking the urban landscape in a global city.” Graduate Student Conference, Department of Geography, Clark University. Worcester, MA: February 16-18.

1989 “Defending community through new forms of local political practice.” Annual Conference of the Association of American Geographers. Baltimore, MD: March 19-22.

1989 “Plant closures and local political practice.” Graduate Student Conference, Department of Geography, Rutgers University. New Brunswick, NJ: February 17-19.

1988 “State grants for local economic development: New forms of corporate accumulation in Appalachia?” Appalachian Studies Conference. Radford, VA: March 18-20.

OVERSEAS FIELDWORK, TEACHING, PUBLIC SERVICE, AND/ OR TRAVEL EXPERIENCE:

2019 Australia (Sydney; Adelaide).

2018 Germany (Berlin): Australia (Sydney); France (Paris; Normandy; Brittany).

2017 Australia (Sydney; Wollongong); France (Paris; Loire Valley).

2016 Australia (Sydney); France (Paris; Normandy; Brittany); Scotland (Edinburgh; Inverness, Skye).

2015 Japan (Tokyo; Kyoto; Hiroshima); Australia (Sydney); Greece (Athens; Mytilene; Mycenae; Delphi; Poros; Hydra); France (Paris; Bordeaux).

2014 New Zealand (Wellington); Australia (Geelong, Victoria); Germany (Göttingen).

2013 New Zealand (Deep Cove; Queenstown); Australia (Perth x 2); Brazil (São Paulo; Presidente Prudente; Rio de Janeiro); France (Paris; Loire Valley); Mexico (Yucatan).

2012 Australia (Noosa, Queensland; Perth); France (Paris; Normandy); People’s Republic of China (Shanghai; Xi’an; Beijing).

2011 Australia (Brisbane); Morocco (Rabat; Meknes; Volubulis; Fes; Marrakech; Essaouira); France (Paris, Loire Valley).

2010 Australia (Brisbane); France (Paris; Loire Valley).

2009 Germany (Frankfurt); Australia (Brisbane; Sydney); France (Paris; Normandy).

2008 Australia (Brisbane; Sydney); Cambodia (Phnom Penh; Siem Reap); Norway (Oslo); France (Paris; Normandy); United Kingdom (London).

2007 France (Paris; Loire Valley); Tanzania (Moshi/ Kilimanjaro; Dar es Salaam; Lake Manyara; Serengeti; Oldupai; Ngorongoro; Arusha; Dodoma; Morogoro); Egypt (Cairo; Aswan; Luxor); United Kingdom (Glasgow).

2006 Australia (Brisbane; Perth); France (Paris; Normandy).

2005 Australia (Brisbane; Cairns; Port Douglas; Ayers Rock/ Uluru; Sydney); France (Paris; Loire Valley); Australia (Sydney).

2004 Australia (Brisbane; Lamington National Park); Tanzania (Moshi/ Kilimanjaro; Lushoto; Tanga; Pangani; Lake Manyara; Amani; Serengeti; Oldupai; Ngorongoro; Arusha); France (Paris; Normandy).

2003 Tanzania (Moshi/ Kilimanjaro; Lushoto; Tanga; Pangani; Lake Manyara; Amani; Dar es Salaam; Serengeti; Oldupai; Ngorongoro; Arusha); France (Avignon).

2002 United Kingdom (Keble College, Oxford University); Tanzania (Moshi/ Kilimanjaro; Lushoto; Tanga; Pangani; Zanzibar; Mwanza; Serengeti; Oldupai; Ngorongoro; Arusha); Croatia (Krk; Krašic; Zagreb; Omišalj; Cres; Opatija; Rijeka; Medven Čunkova; Medven Draga).

2001 Cuba (Havana)

2000 Ghana (Accra; Cape Coast); Nigeria (Lagos; Ibadan); Tanzania (Dar es Salaam; Morogoro); Kenya (Nairobi); Trinidad (Port of Spain); Jamaica (Kingston).

1997 Guyana (Georgetown); Honduras (San Pedro Sula).

1996 Czech Republic (Prague); Slovak Republic (Bratislava).

1995 Cuba (Havana); Czech Republic (Prague); Germany (Berlin); Switzerland (Geneva).

1994 Czech Republic (Prague); Switzerland (Geneva).

Prior to 1994: Andorra; Belgium; Canada; Denmark; East Germany; Finland; France; Netherlands; Norway; Poland; Sweden; United States; USSR; West Germany.

UNIVERSITY TEACHING:

University of Georgia

Graduate:

• Urban and Regional Development (GEOG 6660)

Taught as part of a Public Service learning study abroad course in Croatia. Course dealt with various aspects of urban and regional development in a transition economy.

• Geography of Europe (GEOG 6750)

Taught as part of a Public Service learning study abroad course in Croatia. Course dealt with various aspects of European economics and politics, specifically impacts of globalization and the transition in Eastern Europe.

• Special Problems in Area Analysis (GEOG 6920)

A course tailored to a specific student’s research needs, with the course being conducted on an independent study basis.

• Labor, Class, and Politics (INTL/ GEOG 8355)

Comparative and historical analysis of labor movements, social class, and politics in developed and developing countries. Emphasis on labor and globalization, the changing structure of work, and democratic politics.

• Seminar in Economic Geography (GEOG 8620)

Topics include: different approaches to economic geography (neo-classical, Marxist, feminist, post-structuralist, institutional); methodological debates in economic geography; understanding the political economy of capitalist development; globalization and uneven development; Fordism and post-Fordism; and the political economy of labor under capitalism.

• Seminar in Regional Development (GEOG 8660)

Topics on regional development and effects of globalization on regional economies of industrialized countries. Specific topics vary.

• Directed Problems in Human Geography (GEOG 8690)

A course tailored to each student’s specific research needs, with the course being conducted on an independent study basis.

• Seminar in Geographic Thought and Methods (GEOG 8910)

Seminar taken by all graduate students in the department. Seminar examines different epistemologies of science, the social production of knowledge, and the history of geographic thought.

• Seminar in Social Theory in Geography (Various topics) (GEOG 8920)

Topics vary by year, but have included: Marxism and social thought; readings in political economy; nature and society; theorizing globalization.

Undergraduate:

• Introduction to Global Issues (INTL 1100)

Taught as part of the UGA à Paris Study Abroad Program. Course explored issues of identity within the context of an integrating Europe.

• Human Geography: Peoples, Places, and Cultures (GEOG 1101)

Course is designed to get students thinking about contemporary global issues from a geographical perspective. Topics include: what does it mean to think geographically?; the politics of using maps to represent the Earth; issues of contemporary demographic change; and the legacy of colonialism for understanding the contemporary global economy (with a particular focus on Africa).

• Cultural Geography of the United States (GEOG 2130 Honors)

Honors course dealing with issues of the cultural geography of the United States. Topics included: cultural landscapes as social products; race as a biological or social category; mythologies and mythologizing; African-American migration within the United States; and the politics of political boundary designation and political redistricting.

• Introduction to Comparative Politics (INTL 3300)

Taught as part of the UGA à Paris Study Abroad Program. Course focused upon the politics and economics of globalization, cultural identity, and the state, with a special focus upon France.

• Economic Geography (GEOG 3620)

Course focuses upon understanding the making of the global economy. Topics include: understanding economies as geographical entities; the implications of living in a shrinking globe; debates over what we understand globalization to be; understanding the impacts of colonialism for contemporary patterns of global development; and the impact of transnational corporations on the international division of labor.

• Africa in the Global Economy (GEOG 3650 – Cross-listed with African Studies)

Course is a Study Abroad course I developed and taught in Tanzania. It examined contemporary issues affecting Africa, including: the legacy of colonialism; post-colonial politics; trading relationships; issues of migrant labor; urban development; and agriculture and food security.

• Studies in European History (HIST 4300)

Taught as part of UGA à Paris Study Abroad Program. Course dealt with various aspects of globalization, French imperialism in the 19th century, and the legacy thereof.

• Globalization and Work (INTL 4560)

Taught as part of the UGA à Paris Study Abroad Program. Course focused upon the impact of globalization on work, jobs, and careers in different countries. Taught with a special focus upon France.

• Population, Immigration, and Politics (INTL 4630)

Taught as part of the UGA à Paris Study Abroad Program. Course focused upon the migration of people, especially workers, across national borders and their impacts upon identity formation in Europe.

• Paris and Modernity: Power, Politics, and Identity in the City (GEOG/ INTL/ HIST 4634)

Taught as part of the UGA à Paris Study Abroad Program. Course focuses upon issues of urban design, architecture, toponymy, and the politics of control and resistance in Paris, from the mid-18th century to the mid-20th century.

• Population Geography (GEOG 4640)

Taught as part of the Australia Study Abroad program. Course deals with various aspects of demographic theory and change, with special reference to Australasian case studies.

• European Union (INTL 4640)

Team-taught as part of the UGA à Paris Study Abroad Program. Course focused on the historical origins, development, and current challenges of the European Union, especially concerning issues of national sovereignty, external relations, and internal democracy.

• Urban and Regional Development (GEOG 4660)

Taught as part of a Public Service learning study abroad course in Croatia. Course dealt with various aspects of urban and regional development in a transition economy.

• Gender and Geography (GEOG 4680)

Taught as part of study abroad course in Tanzania. Course involved independent research by students concerning gender issues in East Africa.

• Advanced Topics in Political Geography (GEOG 4690)

Taught as part of the UGA à Paris Study Abroad Program. Course dealt with various aspects of globalization and French imperialism, especially regarding the inmigration of peoples from the Empire and what that means for contemporary issues of cultural identity and politics.

• Geography of Europe (GEOG 4750)

Taught as part of a Public Service learning study abroad course in Croatia. Also taught as part of UGA à Paris Study Abroad Program. Course deals with various aspects of European economics and politics.

• Special Problems in Area Analysis (GEOG 4920)

A course in which undergraduates conduct independent research, supervised by a faculty member.

• Directed Readings and/or Projects (Honors) (INTL 4960H)

Individual study, reading, or projects under the supervision of a project director.

DISSERTATION/ THESIS ADVISING AND COMMITTEE WORK:

Supervisor to the Following Fulbright Visiting Student Researchers:

Neethi Padmanabhan (August 15, 2011-May 14, 2012), Centre for Development Studies, Trivandrum, Kerala, India (under the auspices of Jawaharlal Nehru University).

Konstantinos Gourzis (December 4, 2018-May 15, 2019), Department of Geography, University of the Aegean, Lesvos, Greece.

Supervisor to the Following Post-Doctoral Researchers:

Stelios Gialis (October 13, 2012 to May 2014), Hellenic Open University, Greece, for ‘‘The ‘Southern Flexicurity’ project: Flexicurity and spatial divisions of atypical employment in local labour markets of the Southern European Union.” Funded by the 2012-2015 post-doc scholarship program of the General Research Committee of the Hellenic Ministry of Education, co-funded by the European Union and the Greek government (Funding Decision: 11409/ 31-8-2012). Presently Assistant Professor in the Department of Geography, University of the Aegean, Greece.

Adviser to the Following Doctoral Students:

Chris Strother (2014-2016), Department of Geography, Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia: “GIS and anarchism.” [Switched advisers when dissertation topic changed.]

Michael Husebo (2011-2016), Department of Geography, Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia: “ Labor, migration, and activism in the poultry complex of North Georgia.” [Withdrew from program due to health issues.]

Awarded: Best Paper in the 2012 student paper competition for the AAG Economic Geography Specialty Group for his paper titled “Labor activism beyond the union: Contesting capital in the sphere of social reproduction”.

Mitch Chapura (2007-2012), Department of Geography, Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia: “At the limits of governmentality? Exploring tensions in the science and policy of contemporary U.S. agrochemical regulations.” [Withdrew from program as ABD; took a non-academic job.]

Joni Prillaman (2007-2011), Department of Social Science Education, College of Education, University of Georgia. [Withdrew from program; switched programs.]

David Doran (2006-2007), Department of Geography, Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia. [Withdrew from program; switched universities.]

Rita Matthew (2006-2009), Department of Geography, Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia. [Withdrew from program for personal reasons.]

Georgeta Stoian Connor (2004-2010), Department of Geography, Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia: “The rural dimension of Romania’s integration into the European Union: The impact of the EU enlargement on Romanian agriculture and rural areas.” [Employed as Instructor of Geography, Gainesville State College (GA) (2010-2012); Assistant Professor of Geography, Georgia Gwinnett College (GA) (2012-present).]

Awarded: the 2006 Franklin College of Arts and Sciences: Mini-Grant for Travel; the 2006 Graduate School Dean’s Award – Social Science ($1000 for research assistance); Franklin College Fee Allocation Committee research award (2007; $500); the 2007 George and Viola Hoffman Award, Association of American Geographers ($500); the 2007 Graduate School Dean’s Award – Social Science ($1000 for research assistance); 2nd prize ($150) in the 2007 Association of American Geographers Russian, Central Eurasian, and East European Specialty Group dissertation enhancement competition; Short-term research grant, East European Studies program, Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, Washington, DC (2007; $3000 – one month fellowship); American Council of Learned Societies Committee on Southeast European Studies 2008 travel grant ($1000).

Carolyn Coffay (1999-2000), Department of Geography, Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia. [Withdrew from program; switched universities.]

Jason Henderson (1998-2002), Department of Geography, Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia: “Contesting the spaces of the automobile: The politics of mobility and the sprawl debate in Atlanta, Georgia.” [Employed as Assistant, Associate, and Full Professor, Department of Geography and Environmental Studies, San Francisco State University (2003-present).]

Thomas Henkel (1997-1998), Department of Geography, Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia. [Withdrew from program due to work commitments.]

Johnathan Walker (1995-2003), Department of Geography, Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia: “The State, Labor Import/Export, and Economic Restructuring in Taiwan.” [Employed as Assistant Professor (non-tenure track), Department of Anthropology, University of Illinois at Chicago (2000-2002); Assistant Professor (non-tenure track), Department of Geography, University of New Hampshire (2002-2003); Assistant Professor (tenure track), Integrated Science and Technology Department/ Department of Interdisciplinary Liberal Studies, James Madison University (2003-present).]

Derek Alderman (1993-1998), Department of Geography, Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia: “Creating a new geography of memory in the South: The politics of (re)naming streets after Martin Luther King, Jr.” [Employed as Temporary Assistant Professor (non-tenure track), Department of Geology and Geography, Georgia Southern University (1995-1996); Assistant Professor (tenure track), Department of History and Geography, Georgia College and State University (1998-2000); Assistant Professor, Associate Professor, and Professor, Department of Geography, East Carolina University (2000-2012); Professor and Department Head, University of Tennessee, Knoxville (2012-present).]

Vice-President, American Association of Geographers (2016-2017)

President, American Association of Geographers (2017-2018).

Dissertation was awarded the J. Warren Nystrom Award for the best dissertation in Geography 1998-2000, Association of American Geographers.

Member of the Following Doctoral Committees:

Efstratia Emmanouil (2018-present), Department of Geography, University of the Aegean, Lesvos (Greece): “Regional unevenness and NEETs in the Mediterranean European South: Critical assessment of relevant employment policies with a focus on flexible forms of work.”

Aidan Hysjulien (2017-present), Department of Geography, Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia: “(Im)possibilities of critical utopian praxis: A study of worker-owned cooperatives in Cleveland, Ohio.”

Konstantinos Gourzis (2017-present), Department of Geography, University of the Aegean, Lesvos, Greece: “Flexible and atypical labor in shifting urban terrains: How gentrification stimulates labor changes and how shifts relate to the regional level in Athens and other (southern) European cities.”

Chad Steacy (2012-present), Department of Geography, Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia: “An exhibition of difference: Detroit, urban decline, and the making of race through the ‘beautiful horror’ of Otherness.”

Loren Saxton (2011-2013), Department of Advertising & Public Relations, Grady College of Journalism & Mass Communication, University of Georgia: “Breaking down Wells: Analysis of Chicago’s Residents’ Journal and practices of contingent agency via community media forms.”

Patrick Huff (2011-2014), Department of Anthropology, Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia: “Anarchism’s value: An ethnography of autonomy and alienation in New Orleans’s anarchist milieu.”

Ann El Khoury (2011), Department of Environment and Geography, Faculty of Science, Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia: “Infraglobalisation: Towards a transformational globalisation praxis” (External examiner).

Neethi Padmanabhan (2009), Centre for Development Studies, Trivandrum, Kerala, India (run under the auspices of Jawaharlal Nehru University). External reviewer of Ph.D. research paper “Globalisation lived locally: New forms of control, conflict and response among labour in Kerala, examined through a labour geography lens” and Ph.D. dissertation prospectus “Globalisation lived locally: Looking at Kerala’s labour market through a labour geography framework.”

Peter Hossler (2006-2011), Department of Geography, Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia: “Urban health care safety nets: Catching people and profits in Milwaukee’s health care delivery system.”

Cora Ann (“Cori”) Jakubiak (2006-2011), Department of Language and Literacy Education, College of Education, University of Georgia: “Travelers, teacher, or altruists? A multi-sited ethnographic study of English-language voluntourism.”

Sanjeev Kumar (2006-2011), Department of Geography, Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia: “Transnationalism amongst Indian immigrants in the US.” [Withdrew from program.]

David Botelho (2005-2006), Department of Geography, Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia. [Withdrew from program.]

Carlos Tapia (2005), Department of Geography, Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia: “Eco-regional approaches to national park governance in northeastern Andean Colombia.”

Meredith Welch-Devine (2004-2008), Department of Anthropology, Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia: “From common property to co-management: Implementing Natura 2000 in Soule”; and École Doctorale des Sciences Sociales et Humanités, Université de Pau et des Pays de l’Adour, France: “Co-gestion des milieux naturels dans les Pyrénées: Natura 2000 et la gestion des propriétés collectives Basques (exemple du pays de Soule)” (Joint Ph.D. degree).

Christopher Smith (2003-2006), Department of Geography, Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia: “Defining the spatialities of globalization: Power, resistance and the construction of the anti-globalization movement.” [Withdrew from program.]

Catherine (Kate) Monaghan (2002-2004), Department of Adult Education, College of Education, University of Georgia: “Development of the adult learners’ management philosophy through critical management studies courses.” [Withdrew from committee.]

Jessica Walsh (2002), Faculty of Architecture, Building and Planning, University of Melbourne, Australia: “Organising the low-wage service sector: Community and urban politics in the United States” (External examiner).

Stephen Smith (2001-2007), Department of Adult Education, College of Education, University of Georgia: “Elites at the planning table: A case study of the politics of planning an international academic exchange program (USA, Mexico).” [Withdrew from committee.]

Elizabeth Harvey (2001-2003), Department of Anthropology, Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia: “Development, landscapes, and senses of place along the South Carolina seaboard islands.” [Withdrew from committee.]

Kurt Marshall (1998-2005), Department of Geography, Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia: “Moving to assisted living: A qualitative study of the relocation decision-making process.” [Withdrew from program.]

Scott Gissendanner (1998-2001), Department of Political Science, Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia: “Local government responses to economic change in federal systems.”

Ben Salt (1997-1999), Department of Adult Education, College of Education, University of Georgia: “Workers’ education and globalization.”

Liza Tonkin (1997), School of Earth Sciences, Faculty of Science, Macquarie University, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia: “Re-examining the geography of power: Generating multiple narratives of power and restructuring politics” (External examiner).

Shawn Banasick (1996-2001), Department of Geology and Geography, Eberly College of Arts & Sciences, West Virginia University: “Beyond the workplace: The uneven development of the Japanese space-economy and the role of labor, 1965-1994” (External member).

Christopher McDonald (1996-1998), Department of Political Science, Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia: “Societal actors and multi-level contexts: New dynamics in European integration.”

Jamie Strickland (1995-2004), Department of Geography, Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia. [Withdrew from program.]

Sunita George (1994-1999), Department of Geography, Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia: “Occupational mobility of urban migrants: A case study of migrants to Hyderabad, India.”

Eric Fournier (1993-1995), Department of Geography, Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia: “The renewal of River Street: A geographic examination of waterfront revitalization efforts in Savannah, Georgia.”

Wendy Shaw (1992-1994), Department of Geography, Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia: “A geographic analysis of poverty in the United States, 1980-1990.”

Adviser to the Following Masters Students:

Sheryl Ann Atkinson Baggett (2010-present), Department of Geography, Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia: “Globalization and unionism in the US airline industry.”

Mitch Chapura (2004-2007), Department of Geography, Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia: “Actor-networks, economic imperatives and the heterogeneous geography of the contemporary poultry industry.”

Maria Tucker (2003-2004), Department of Geography, Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia: “Geography in the living wage debate: A qualitative analysis of living wage discourse in Athens, Georgia.”

Matthew Reilly (1999-2000), Department of Geography, Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia: “The social costs of tourism development: Jineteros in Havana, Cuba – A view from the streets.” [Student changed advisers when topic changed.]

Talmadge Blevins (1997-1998), Department of Geography, Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia: “Internet connectivity and social equality: A case study of public libraries in the Atlanta Regional Commission planning region.”

David Sironen (1996-1999), Department of Geography, Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia: “A geographical study of Proposition 187 voting patterns in California in 1994.”

Greig Guthey (1995-1997), Department of Geography, Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia: “Foreign faces in rural industrial spaces: Workforce changes in the North Georgia poultry industry.”

Amy Morris (1994-1996), Department of Geography, Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia: “Tourism and place promotion in Jamaica.”

Jan Smith (1993-1994), Department of Geography, Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia: “Designing a network of Head Start facilities in Atlanta and Fulton County, Georgia: Perspectives on location.”

Jeff Underwood (1993-1994), Department of Geography, Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia: “The impacts of industry deregulation on bank ownership concentration: A case study of Georgia 1980 to 1990.”

Member of the Following Masters Committees:

Caroline Keegan (2014-2016), Department of Geography, Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia: “Uneven redevelopment and low-waged worker organizing in post-Katrina New Orleans.”

Kevin Terry (2009-2010), Department of International Affairs, School of Public & International Affairs, University of Georgia: “Belonging in monthly installments: Factors in the choice to send remittances among children of immigrants.”

Jay Bowen (2008-2010), Department of Geography, Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia: “Geographies of direct action and homelessness: The political ideologies and spatial practices of the Mad Housers and the homeless population of Athens.”

Ellen Kohl (2007-2009), Department of Geography, Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia: “Working the waters: The political ecologies of scale and Georgia’s 100-year drought.”

Seneca Holland (2006-2007), Department of Geography, Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia: “Framing the Commons: Commercial water bottling and local empowerment.”

Remi Myers (2005-2008), Department of Geography, Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia. [Withdrew from committee.]

Roger Hugh Dana (2005-2006), Department of Geography, Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia: “Japanese automobile transplants in the United States.” [Withdrew from program.]

Daniel Sparks (2004-2006), Department of Geography, Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia: “Water resource management and scale: The Tri-State Water War.”

Christopher Smith (2001-2002), Department of Geography, Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia: “Community gardens and gentrification in New York’s Lower East Side.”

Matthew Dombroski (2001-2002), Department of Geography, Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia: “Discourse analysis of migration policy creation: The European Parliament and the Amsterdam Treaty.”

Matthew Reilly (2000-2001), Department of Geography, Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia: “The social costs of tourism development: Jineteros in Havana, Cuba – A view from the streets.”

Kirsten Sziarto (2000-2001), Department of Geography, Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia: “Place promotion and work performances: Representations of gender in the tourism industry in a north Georgia town.”

Laura Chason (1999), Department of Geography, Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia. [Withdrew from program.]

Suparna Nag Robertson (1998), Department of Geography, Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia: “The structure of urban services in the national capital region, India, 1971-91.”

Mathew Kales (1997-1998), Department of Geography, Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia: “Sustainability of large-scale irrigated agriculture in Southwestern Morocco.”

Jason Henderson (1996-1997), Department of Geography, Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia: “Transport policy and social equity in Atlanta, Georgia.”

Shawn Banasick (1994-1995), Department of Geology and Geography, Eberly College of Arts & Sciences, West Virginia University: “Crisis and the uneven development of the Japanese space-economy” (External member).

William Antholine (1994), Department of Geography, Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia: “The application of ecotourism as a form of co-evolutionary development: A case study in the Indian Himalayas.”

Michael Renning (1993-1994), Department of Geography, Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia: “Managing water for sustainable development: Maquiladoras and contamination in Ambos Nogales.”

Alison Hanham (1992-1995), Department of Geography, West Virginia University: “Gender and the uneven development of capitalism in the United States: 1970-1990” (External member).

Adviser to the Following Undergraduate Honors Thesis/ Center for Undergraduate Research Opportunities (CURO)/ Undergraduate Honors Policy Scholar Students:

Sebastian Puerta (2017), Department of Economics, Terry College of Business, University of Georgia: “Transit Tools: Improving Transportation and Social Mobility in Atlanta.” Honors Policy Scholars Program student, Honors Program.

Catherine Bernard (2015-2016), Department of Geography, Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia: “Thinking geographically in regards to power dynamics of the social environment: Its effect on health.” Center for Undergraduate Research Opportunities (CURO) student.

Virginia McNally (2010-2011), Department of Political Science, School of Public & International Affairs, University of Georgia: “Politics and land-use in Zimbabwe.” Center for Undergraduate Research Opportunities (CURO) student.

Jenna Lee (2002-2003), Department of Geography, Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia: “Tourism as a means of economic development in Croatia.” Honors Program Thesis.

Mentor to the Following High School Seniors:

As part of UGA’s “Young Dawgs” Program, in which local High School Seniors are paired with faculty on campus so as to learn about research skills and other aspects of university life, I was a mentor to:

Nisha Vashisht (Fall 2009), a senior at Clarke Central High School.

Adam Wrigley (Fall 2014), a senior at North Oconee High School.

REVIEWER ACTIVITY:

Agencies: Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) Professorial Fellowship Scheme, United Kingdom (2005); Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) First Grants Scheme, United Kingdom (2006); Estonian Science Foundation Post-Doctoral Research Program (2012); National Science Foundation, Geography and Regional Science Program (Regular Submissions) (1995, 1997, 1999); National Science Foundation, Geography and Regional Science Program (Doctoral Dissertation Support) (1994, 1995 x2, 1996); National Science Foundation, Geography, Regional Science, Sociology, Human Capital Initiative (1995); National Science Foundation, Geography, Regional Science, Sociology, CAREER Award (2002); National Science Foundation, Political Science Program (Regular Submissions) (2003); Qatar National Research Fund (QNRF), National Priorities Research Program (NPRP) (2013 x2; 2014 x2; 2015 x2; 2018); Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (2016).

Book Manuscripts: Guilford (2006); John Wiley and Son (1993); McGraw-Hill Higher Education (2000; 2006); Oxford University Press (1998); Routledge (2004); Rowman and Littlefield (2002); Taylor and Francis (2006); University of California Press (1997).

Book Chapters: Cambridge University Press (2004); McGraw-Hill Higher Education (2006); Prentice Hall (2001, 2004); W. H. Freeman (2004).

Book Proposals: Arnold (1999); Blackwell (2002 x2; 2007); Cambridge University Press (2004); Polity Press (2014; 2015); Elsevier (2017); Prentice Hall (2001); Routledge (2003); Sage (1999, 2003, 2005); Temple University Press (2011); University of Georgia Press (2007 – multiple; 2008 – multiple; 2009 – multiple; 2010 – multiple); W. H. Freeman (2018).

Journals: African Journal of Political Science (2012); Annals of the Association of American Geographers (1997 x2, 1998, 2000 x2, 2001, 2003, 2005, 2008, 2013, 2015); Antipode (1995, 1997, 1999 x2, 2000 x3, 2001 x2, 2002 x2, 2003 x3, 2004 x2, 2005 x2, 2006 x 2, 2007, 2009 x2, 2010 x2, 2012 x2, 2013, 2014, 2016); Area (1997, 2005, 2008, 2013); British Journal of Industrial Relations (2008, 2011); Cambridge Journal of Regions, Economy and Society (2007); Canadian Journal of Urban Research (2010, 2012); Conflict, Security & Development (2018); Economic Geography (1995 x2, 1996 x3, 1997 x2, 1999, 2001, 2005, 2006, 2008, 2012, 2015); Environment and Planning A (1998 [reviewer of 8 articles for special issue on “The workplace at the millennium”], 1999, 2005, 2016, 2018 x2); Environment and Planning D – Society and Space (1995, 1996, 1999, 2000, 2002, 2003, 2004 x2, 2010, 2011); European Urban and Regional Studies (1999); Gender, Place, and Culture – A Journal of Feminist Geography (1995, 1999, 2000 x2, 2003); Geoforum (1999, 2002 x3, 2003 x2, 2007, 2008, 2014, 2016); Geographical Journal (2010); Geography Compass (2006 x 2, 2007 x 2, 2011 x 3, 2016); Geopolitics Journal (2002); Global Labour Journal (2008, 2010); Human Relations (2014); International Journal of Urban and Regional Research (1989, 2007, 2017); International Migration Review (2012); International Review of Social History (2009, 2016); Journal of Common Market Studies (2008); Journal of Economic Geography (2002, 2007, 2012, 2103 x2, 2015, 2017, 2018); Journal of Geography (1998, 1999, 2003 x2); Journal of Historical Geography (2004, 2016); Journal of Industrial Relations (Australian Labour and Employment Relations Association) (2012); Journal of Transport Geography (1995); Labour/Le travail (2016); Labor Studies Journal (2006, 2007, 2013); Labour and Industry (Australia) (2014); Material Culture: The Journal of the Pioneer America Society (2015, 2016); Mobilization (2001); New Global Studies (2014); Norwegian Journal of Geography (2009, 2010 x2); Political Geography (1996, 1998, 2011); Politics, Philosophy and Economics (2012); Professional Geographer (1994, 1997 x2, 1998 x2, 1999, 2000 x2, 2002 x2, 2010, 2013); Progress in Human Geography (1998, 1999, 2009, 2012, 2014, 2018); Qualitative Sociology (2006 [special issue on “Constructing Workers”]); Regional Studies (1999, 2010); Review for Social Problems (2012); Review of International Political Economy (2001, 2010, 2012 x2); Revista Pegada – The Journal of Labor Geography (Brazil) (2019); Scandinavian Journal of Management (2017, 2018); SIGNS: Journal of Women in Culture and Society (2003 x2); Social and Cultural Geography (2002, 2003, 2011 x3); Social Forces (2005); Social Science Quarterly (2003); Southeastern Geographer (1993, 2015); The Economic and Labour Relations Review (2015); Tijdschrift voor Economische en Sociale Geografie (2002); Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers (1996, 1999, 2000, 2002, 2016); Urban Affairs Review (2017); Urban Geography (1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2009); Worldwide Waste: Journal of Interdisciplinary Studies (2018).

PUBLIC POLICY-RELATED ACTIVITIES AS AN ELECTED AND/OR APPOINTED OFFICIAL:

2017-2020 Member, Complete Count Committee for the 2020 Census. Appointed by Executive Order of the Honorable Nathan Deal, 82nd Governor of the State of Georgia, November 7, to ensure an accurate enumeration of the population of Georgia in the census undertaken on April 1, 2020.

2016 “How local government works in the US, with special reference to Athens-Clarke County.” Presentation made to 6 visiting Chinese local government officials from Shanghai as part of a Carl Vinson Institute of Government (University of Georgia) program, Athens, GA: September 12, 2016.

2014 “Issues of leadership in local government.” Presentation on aspects of US local government and leadership to 5 local government officials from Shanghai as part of a Carl Vinson Institute of Government (University of Georgia) program, Athens, GA: September 24.

2013 “Issues of leadership in local government.” Presentation on aspects of US local government and leadership to 16 elected officials who are members of the Governors’ Association of Korea as part of a Carl Vinson Institute of Government (University of Georgia) program, Athens, GA: October 2.

2011 “Issues of leadership in local government.” Presentation on aspects of US local government and leadership to visiting faculty and staff members of the Shanghai Administrative Institute as part of a Carl Vinson Institute of Government (University of Georgia) program, Athens, GA: December 12.

2010 “Progressive leadership: Engaging your community with effective communications – Social networking & newsletters.” Presentation to the Association of County Commissioners of Georgia (ACCG) Newly Elected Commissioners Conference, Athens, GA: December 8.

2010 “Get my money right: What your tax dollars buy in Athens-Clarke County.” Presentation to Covenant Presbyterian Church, Athens-Clarke County, Athens, GA: November 9.

2010 “Get my money right: What your tax dollars buy in Athens-Clarke County.” Presentation to Athens-Clarke County Kiwanis Club, Athens, GA: July 20.

2009 “How local government works in the US, with special reference to Athens-Clarke County.” Presentation made to 5 visiting Chinese local government officials from Shanghai as part of a Carl Vinson Institute of Government (University of Georgia) program, Athens, GA: September 18, 2009.

2008 “How local government works in the US, with special reference to Athens-Clarke County.” Presentation made to 25 visiting Chinese local government officials as part of a Carl Vinson Institute of Government (University of Georgia) program, Athens, GA: November 19, 2008.

2007-present District 8 Commissioner, Unified Government of Athens-Clarke County. Elected in a Special Election to complete an unexpired term to represent the 8th District on the Athens-Clarke County Commission. Elected March 20, 2007; sworn in March 22, 2007; re-elected November 4, 2008 to a 4-year term; re-elected July 31, 2012 to a 4-year term; re-elected May 24, 2016 to a 4-year term. I represent approximately 13,000 constituents on Athens’s eastside.

Mayor Pro Tempore (January 4, 2011-January 3, 2012 and January 3, 2012-January 2, 2013): elected by the members of the Athens-Clarke County Commission – responsible for leading the Commission on budget hearings concerning the General Fund and several enterprise funds (total value of approx. $200 million) and for representing the government in the Mayor’s absence. I was reelected by the Commission as Mayor Pro Tempore on January 3, 2012, to serve a second term. This was the first time since the government was consolidated in 1991 that someone had been elected by the other Commissioners to serve two consecutive terms as Mayor Pro Tempore.

Commission Committee Assignments:

Legislative Review Committee (2007-2014); Rails to Trails Committee (2007-present; Chair 2009-present); Joint Solid Waste Coordinating Committee (2007-2008); Neighborhood Roundtable (2007-present); Audit Committee (2007-2014; Chair 2014); Chair, Workforce Housing Development Committee (2008-2010); Economic Development Foundation (ex officio as Mayor Pro Tem, 2011-2012 [Website Design Committee 2011-2012]); Land Bank Authority (Secretary) (2009-present); Industrial Development Authority (2009-present [Assistant Treasurer 2009; Treasurer 2010-present]); Economic Development Task Force Report evaluation committee (2012-present); Chair, Sister City Committee (2013-present – in February 2014 I signed a Memorandum of Understanding between Athens-Clarke County and Geelong, Victoria, Australia to further life sciences collaborations and other economic development opportunities); Chair, Retiree Health Benefits Evaluation Committee (2014); Chair, Lexington Road Corridor Study Group (2014-present); Government Operations Committee (2015-present; Chair 2015-present); appointed by the Mayor to the board of the Athens Housing Development Corporation (AHDC) for the purpose of liquidating the remaining assets in the corporation by conveyance to the Unified Government of Athens-Clarke County and dissolving the corporation (August 2015); appointed by the Mayor to Youth and Community Enrichment Facility Partnership Ad-hoc Advisory Committee for SPLOST 2011 (May 2018); EMS Oversight Committee (2018-present); appointed by the Mayor to the Upper Oconee Watershed Basin Authority (September 2018) (Member, Operations Committee); Solid Waste Citizens’ Advisory Board (2019-present).

Other Commission-Related Community Committees:

OneAthens Housing Team (2007); Firefly Regional Rails to Trails Committee (2007-present [Vice Chair 2010]); Athens Line Rail-Trail Advisory Team, Feasibility sub-Committee (2010).

Association County Commissioners of Georgia (ACCG) Training (Classes completed):

Financial Management I (2010)

County Government Law (2011)

Fundamentals of Property Appraisal & Taxation (2011)

Economic Development (2012)

Ethics (2012)

Public Works & Transportation (2012)

Human Relations (2017)

Upon completion of these classes, on March 2, 2017 I became a “Certified County Commissioner.”

2006-2007 Member, Planning Commission, Athens-Clarke County. Appointed December 6, 2006 by a vote of the Mayor and Commission, Athens-Clarke County. The Planning Commission reviews all applications for zoning changes, development, and Athens-Clarke County ordinances related to land use before they are considered by the Mayor and Commission. Term of appointment: December 6, 2006-June 30, 2010. Resigned March 22, 2007 upon taking up office as District 8 ACC Commissioner.

2006 Moderator, Federation of Neighborhoods and Community Associations candidate forum for: State Senate District 46, State Senate District 47, State House District 113, and State House District 115 (October 30th). Georgia Center for Continuing Eduction. Broadcast live on WUGA 91.7 and 97.9 FM, 8-10pm.

2005-2007 Member, Safe Routes to School (SR2S) task force. A county-wide task force constituted by representatives of Barrow Elementary School, BikeAthens, elected officials, government staff, parents, neighborhood groups, businesses, and staff from county schools, hospitals, and local law enforcement. A task force formed in response to the 2005 federal transportation bill which includes a provision to support SR2S programs to encourage children and parents to walk or bike to school. October 2005-March 2007.

2005 “UGA-Tanzania Security Exchange Program” co-organizer. Working with the Office of the Associate Provost for International Affairs and the African Studies Institute, myself, the Director of ASI, and the Associate Provost brought to campus and hosted for a week the second- and third-most senior police officers in Tanzania. This program is part of an effort to develop an exchange focused around the issue of security, especially for our students who spend time in Tanzania for study abroad. The officers met with the Athens-Clarke County Mayor, Chief of Police, Sheriff, Chief Deputy, UGA Chief of Police, Georgia Bureau of Investigation, Georgia State Patrol, and Georgia Police Academy (Forsyth, GA) staff. Officers also engaged in hands-on training, including ride-alongs on patrol, working with UGA and ACC bomb squad, forensics, and K-9 units, and other activities related to law enforcement: February 7-February 11.

2005-2006 Member, Hearings Board, Athens-Clarke County. Appointed December 7, 2004 by a vote of the Mayor and Commission, Athens-Clarke County. Reappointed July 5, 2005, after Hearings Board was reconstituted and reduced in size by Mayor and Commission. The Hearings Board is a quasi-judicial entity of the ACC government (Planning Department) and considers requests from developers and others seeking variances from ACC zoning regulations. Term of appointment: January 1, 2005-June 30, 2009. Chair July 12, 2006-December 13, 2006 (resigned to take up position as Member of Athens-Clarke County Planning Commission).

2004 Moderator, Federation of Neighborhoods and Community Associations candidate forum for: State Senate District 46, State House District 115, and District Attorney for the Western Circuit (October 18th); and candidate forum for Athens-Clarke County Commission Districts 4, 6, and 8, and Sheriff (October 25th). Georgia Center for Continuing Eduction. Broadcast live on WUGA 91.7 and 97.9 FM, 7-10pm.

2004 Member, Stakeholder Committee to develop tree ordinance for Athens-Clarke County. Appointed by Athens-Clarke County Manager. Committee was charged with developing an ordinance to address issues of tree protection in Athens-Clarke County. Committee worked under auspices of Department of Central Services, Landscape Management Division, Athens-Clarke County government. October-November.

2004-2007 President, Athens-Clarke County Federation of Neighborhoods and Community Associations. Federation is a countywide organization made up of neighborhood associations; its purpose is to lobby Athens-Clarke County Mayor and Commission on issues related to community development and to serve as a community forum for such matters as they affect the city and county. January 2004-March 23, 2007 (resigned upon taking up office as District 8 ACC Commissioner).

2003-2004 Member, Athens-Clarke County Stormwater Advisory Committee. Appointed by Athens-Clarke County Manager. Committee was a joint citizen-staff committee tasked with providing advice to Athens-Clarke County Department of Transportation and Public Works, Athens-Clarke County Planning Department, and Athens-Clarke County Mayor and Commission concerning stormwater run-off and urban design.

2003-2005 Member, Board of Trustees of the Economic Justice Coalition, Athens-Clarke County. Coalition was established to lobby the Athens-Clarke Mayor and County Commission on issues of low wages and poverty.

2003-2007 President, Green Acres/ Crestwood Community Association. Association is a neighborhood association formed to lobby Athens-Clarke County Mayor and Commission on issues related to zoning, housing, economic development, and similar matters, as well as to develop programs to enhance the neighborhood. February 2003-March 23, 2007 (resigned upon taking up office as District 8 ACC Commissioner).

PUBLIC SCHOLARSHIP AND OUTREACH ACTIVITIES:

2009 Moderator for “American Values and the Current Recession Roundtable,” a public discussion involving faculty from Economics, Geography, History, and Romance Languages. Willson Center for Humanities and Arts, University of Georgia, Athens, GA: September 14, 2009.

2007 “The US labor movement, housing, and anti-Communism in Latin America during the 1960s.” Presentation to Athens-Clarke County Kiwanis Club, Athens, GA: July 31.

2001 “The political economy of rainforest destruction in the Amazon.” Presentation via GSAMS (Georgia Statewide Academic and Medical System) distance-learning system as part of the Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia Outreach Program, to Sandy Creek High School, Tyrone, GA, October 30.

2000 Just in Time: The Geography of Workers’ Power. Pamphlet published by the People’s Geography Project (). Pamphlet explores the 1998 UAW-GM strike based in Flint, MI, and shows how understanding its geography provides insights into how workers may exert political power in response to the introduction of Just-in-Time production methods.

2000-2008 Member, Economic Geography Outreach Program, Association of American Geographers. (1 of 2 economic geographers serving as contact person and information source for media, government, schools, and other members of the public concerning economic geography matters).

MASS MEDIA:

[In addition to numerous columns in local newspaper Athens Banner Herald on topics ranging from local, national, and international politics to the environment to transportation planning to land-use issues to tax policy and poverty.]

2014 Interviewed by Tim Bryant, Newstalk 1340 WGAU radio, concerning the Lexington Road Corridor Study Group and other matters affecting Athens-Clarke County. Program was broadcast live, August 12.

2012 Interviewed by Tim Bryant, Newstalk 1340 WGAU radio, concerning roundabouts and how they function as traffic management devices. Program was broadcast live, August 10.

2012 Interviewed by Michael Donovan, Community Director for the UNESCO Noosa Biosphere Reserve and presenter for Voices of the Biosphere on FM 101.3 Noosa Community radio (Noosa, Queensland, Australia), on issues of sustainable development initiatives implemented by local governments. Program was recorded on March 16 and broadcast on March 30.

2012 Mentioned in “A (bio)sphere of influence” story in the Noosa News newspaper, Noosa, Queensland, Australia, edition of March 23 (.au/story/2012/03/23/a-biosphere-of-influence-noosa-university-georgia/).

2012 Quoted in “For R.E.M. fans, tunes may linger but trestle faces day of reckoning” by Cameron McWhirter, Wall Street Journal, February 6, p. A1 & A10 (interviewed January 13). Story on the “R.E.M. trestle” and its fate in Athens.

2011 Interviewed (October 14) on Atlanta WXIA 11 Alive News on the issue of expanding the Athens-Clarke County Jail and public art. Interview aired October 14 ().

2011 “Forum: EDF gambit is not political maneuver.” Published in the Athens-Banner Herald, July 12, 2011 ().

2010 Research and public service work highlighted at watch?v=c2wmRNNbTo0

2006 “The truths of science.” Letter to New York Times on evolution and “Intelligent Design” February 21, p. A18.

2006 Interviewed (January 18) for background material by Kirk Johnson for story “Clogged Rockies Highway divides Coloradoans – at issue is a wider I-70 vs. mass transit.” New York Times January 25, p A17.

2005 Interviewed (May 25) (in French) by freelance journalist concerning issues of neoliberalism and globalization on occasion of public speech by José Bové (founder, Confédération paysanne [Peasants Confederation]), Olivier Besancenot (representative, Solidaires unitaires démocratiques – Postes telégrammes et télécommunications [SUD-PTT, French postal workers’ union] and 2002 Presidential candidate), and Jean-Luc Mélenchon (Member, French Senate, Sénateur de l’Essonne, Ile-de-France, Parti socialiste) opposing passage of the European Union constitution, Paris.

2001 Interviewed on the topic of “Labor and Geography” on “Focus,” a weekly, 30-minute interview program which airs every Tuesday evening on National Public Radio affiliate WYSU, 88.5 FM, Youngstown, OH. Program was recorded on April 18 and broadcast on May 22.

1999 Invited guest on the “Dick Mendenhall Show,” WGAU 1340 AM Talk Radio, Athens, GA. One hour show on “The Millennium,” May 12.

ACADEMIC PROFESSIONAL SERVICE:

2017 External reviewer for promotion to Full Professor, Department of Geography, University of Kentucky.

2016 External reviewer for promotion to Associate Professor with tenure, Department of Geography, University of North Texas.

2016 External reviewer for appointment to Full Professor, National University of Singapore.

2014 External reviewer for Extended Employment review of Associate Professor, Department of Urban Studies, Eugene Lang College and the New School for General Studies, New York City, NY.

2013 External reviewer for promotion to Associate Professor with tenure, School of Labour Studies & School of Geography and Earth Sciences, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.

2013 External reviewer for award of a Personal Chair, Business School, Leeds University, Leeds, United Kingdom.

2012 External reviewer for promotion to Full Professor, Department of Design, Housing, and Apparel, University of Minnesota (Twin Cities), St. Paul, MN.

2011 External reviewer for tenure review of Associate Professor, Department of Urban Studies, Eugene Lang College and the New School for General Studies, New York City, NY.

2011 External reviewer for promotion to Full Professor, Department of Geography and Urban Studies, Temple University, Philadelphia, PA.

2010 External reviewer for promotion to Full Professor, Department of Geography and Urban Studies, Temple University, Philadelphia, PA.

2009 External reviewer for promotion to Associate Professor, Department of Geography, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada.

2009 External reviewer for post-probationary review of Assistant Professor, Department of Urban Studies, Eugene Lang College and the New School for General Studies, New York City, NY.

2009 External reviewer for City University of New York’s Internal Research Award Program for junior faculty.

2007 Question writer for Advanced Placement (AP) Program Human Geography College Board. [“The College Board is a national nonprofit membership association whose mission is to prepare, inspire, and connect students to college and opportunity” ().]

2007 External reviewer for promotion to Full Professor, Department of Geography-Anthropology, University of Southern Maine, Gorham, ME.

2007 External reviewer for promotion to Associate Professor with tenure, Department of Geography, University of Vermont, Burlington, VT.

2007 External reviewer for promotion to Associate Professor with tenure, Department of Geography, University of Colarado, Boulder, CO.

2006 External reviewer for promotion to Full Professor, School of Economics and Commerce, University of Western Australia, Crawley, WA, Australia.

2006 External reviewer for promotion to Associate Professor with tenure, Department of Geography, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI.

2006 Question writer for Advanced Placement (AP) Program Human Geography College Board. [“The College Board is a national nonprofit membership association whose mission is to prepare, inspire, and connect students to college and opportunity” ().]

2006 External reviewer for promotion to Associate Professor with tenure, Department of Geography, Kent State University, Kent, OH.

2006 External reviewer for promotion to Full Professor, Department of Geography, Syracuse University, Syracuse, NY.

2005 Question writer for Advanced Placement (AP) Program Human Geography College Board. [“The College Board is a national nonprofit membership association whose mission is to prepare, inspire, and connect students to college and opportunity” ().]

2005-2007 Member, Doctoral Dissertation Research Improvement Grant Advisory Panel, Geography and Regional Science, Division of Behavioral and Cognitive Sciences, National Science Foundation, Washington, DC. Appointed by Division Director.

2003 External reviewer for promotion to Associate Professor with tenure, Department of Geography, East Carolina University, Greenville, NC.

2002 External reviewer for promotion to Associate Professor with tenure, Department of Design, Housing, and Apparel, University of Minnesota (Twin Cities), St. Paul, MN.

2001 External reviewer for promotion to Associate Professor with tenure, Department of Geography-Anthropology, University of Southern Maine, Gorham, ME.

2000 Judge, Antipode Graduate Student Scholarship Award, 2000-2001.

1999-2006 Editorial Board Member, Antipode: A Journal of Radical Geography.

1999 Co-Organizer, Conference on “Theorizing Space and Time at the End of the Millennium.” Athens, GA: April 9-11.

1998 Organizer, Student Travel Awards, Socialist Geography Specialty Group, Association of American Geographers (for the Boston, MA: March 25-29 meeting).

1998 Organizer, Student Paper Competition, Socialist Geography Specialty Group, Association of American Geographers (for the Boston, MA: March 25-29 meeting).

1997 Nominated as Executive Committee Member, Urban Geography Specialty Group, Association of American Geographers (declined nomination due to other commitments).

1997-1999 Chair, Socialist Geography Specialty Group, Association of American Geographers. Elected by the membership of the Specialty Group.

1997 Organizer, Student Paper Competition, Socialist Geography Specialty Group, Association of American Geographers (for the Fort Worth, TX: April 1-5 meeting).

1997 Organizer, Student Travel Awards, Socialist Geography Specialty Group, Association of American Geographers (for the Fort Worth, TX: April 1-5 meeting).

1996 Membership Committee, Southeastern Division of the Association of American Geographers.

1996 Elected as State Representative from Georgia, Southeastern Division of the Association of American Geographers.

1996-1998 Executive Committee Member, Industrial Geography Specialty Group, Association of American Geographers. Elected by the membership of the Specialty Group.

1996 Student Paper Award Committee, Urban Geography Specialty Group, Association of American Geographers. Appointed by Specialty Group Executive Committee.

1996 Program Committee, Annual Conference of the Association of American Geographers. Appointed by AAG Council for the Charlotte, NC: April 9-13 meeting.

1996 Lead organizer, Conference on “Crises of Global Regulation and Governance.” Athens, GA: April 6-8.

1996 Organizer, Student Paper Competition, Socialist Geography Specialty Group, Association of American Geographers (for the Charlotte, NC: April 9-13 meeting).

1996 Organizer, Student Travel Awards, Socialist Geography Specialty Group, Association of American Geographers (for the Charlotte, NC: April 9-13 meeting).

1995-1997 Chair, Socialist Geography Specialty Group, Association of American Geographers. Elected by the membership of the Specialty Group.

1995 Program Committee, Urban Geography Specialty Group, Annual Conference of the Association of American Geographers. Appointed by Specialty Group Executive Committee for the Chicago, IL: March 14-18 meeting.

1994-1996 Executive Committee Member, Urban Geography Specialty Group, Association of American Geographers. Elected by the membership of the Specialty Group.

1994-1995 Executive Committee Member, Socialist Geography Specialty Group, Association of American Geographers. Elected by the membership of the Specialty Group.

1994 Nominated as Executive Committee Member, Industrial Geography Specialty Group, Association of American Geographers.

1994 Member from Georgia, Program Committee, Annual Conference of the Southeastern Division of the Association of American Geographers. Appointed by the Program Chair for the Virginia Beach, VA: November 20-22 meeting.

1989 Geography Tutor, Morristown High School, Morristown, NJ. Prepared students for “The United States Academic Decathlon.”

UNIVERSITY SERVICE:

2016 Faculty Salary Study Committee, Office of International Education, University of Georgia. Elected by the UGA Study Abroad Directors to represent them on the Committee; formally appointed by the Associate Provost for International Education.

2016 VAT Recovery Study Committee, Office of International Education, University of Georgia. Appointed by the Associate Provost for International Education.

2014-2017 Promotion and Tenure Review Committee (Social and Behavioral Sciences), Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia. Appointed by the Dean (Chair 2014).

2013-2016 Member, Special Professorships Committee to determine Franklin College of Arts and Sciences nominees for Regents, University, and Distinguished Research Professor. Appointed by the Interim Vice Provost for Academic Affairs.

2012 Member, Search and Screen Committee for senior-level Financial Director for the Office of International Education’s Business Office. Appointed by the Associate Provost for International Education.

2011-2014 Member, William A. Owens Creative Research Award Selection Committee. Appointed by the Vice President for Research.

2011-2013 Member (one of three), Evaluation Committee to select a graduate student to be sent to “Singularity University,” an “‘ideas incubator’ that exposes select students with imagination, leadership potential and a passion for addressing the planet’s great challenges, to some of world’s best and brightest entrepreneurs, scientists, industry pioneers and academic leaders, as well as the leading, innovative technologies.” At Singularity University “small groups of students drawn from around the world work in teams during a 10-week period to address major challenges and design solutions that will positively impact a billion people within 10 years.” Appointed by the Dean of the Graduate School.

2011-2012 Member, Program Review Committee for Political Science Department Program Review during the 2011-2012 academic year, University of Georgia. Appointed by the Dean of the School of Public and International Affairs.

2010-2011 Member, Search and Screen Committee for Assistant Professor position in Political Rhetorics, Department of Speech Communication, University of Georgia.

2010 Member, Committee to assess research grant applicants for the U.S. Student Fulbright Program, 2011-2012 competition, University of Georgia. Appointed by the Director of the University of Georgia Honors Program.

2010-present Member, Study Abroad Approval Committee, Office of International Education, University of Georgia. Appointed by the Associate Provost for International Education.

2010 Member, Search and Screen Committee for Assistant Professor position in Political Rhetorics, Department of Speech Communication, University of Georgia.

2009-2010 Member, Faculty Grievance Committee, University of Georgia. Elected by the members of University Council.

2009 Member, Committee to assess research grant applicants for the U.S. Student Fulbright Program, 2010-2011 competition, University of Georgia. Appointed by the Director of the University of Georgia Honors Program.

2009-2011 Member, Franklin College of Arts and Sciences Major Awards Committee, University of Georgia. Appointed by the Franklin Senate Committee on Committees to award major research, teaching, and service awards for members of the College.

2008 Member, Office of International Education Academic Rigor Subcommittee, University of Georgia. Appointed by the Associate Provost for International Education.

2008-2010 Member, Promotion and Tenure Review Committee (Social and Behavioral Sciences), Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia. Appointed by the Dean.

2008-2011 Member, Executive Council, University Council, University of Georgia. Elected by the Franklin College of Arts and Sciences University Council members.

2008 Member, Search and Screen Committee for Associate and Assistant Professor positions, Department of Anthropology, University of Georgia.

2007-2008 Member, Executive Council, University Council, University of Georgia. Appointed by the Executive Council to complete an unexpired term.

2007-present Member, Study Abroad Strategic Planning Committee, Office of International Education, University of Georgia. Appointed by the Associate Provost for International Education.

2007-2010 Elected to University Council, University of Georgia.

2006-2007 Member, Ad Hoc Committee on Low-Wage Work on Campus, University of Georgia. Appointed by University Council.

2006 Chair, Committee to select recipients of Junior Faculty Summer 2007 Research Awards, University of Georgia. Appointed by the Vice President for Research.

2006-2007 Member, Search and Screen Committee for Ecological and Environmental Anthropology position, Department of Anthropology, University of Georgia.

2005-2008 The Graduate School Representative, President’s Faculty Advisory Committee. Elected by a vote of the Graduate Faculty, University of Georgia. Chair: AY 2006-2007.

2005 Chair, Committee to select recipients of Junior Faculty Summer 2006 Research Awards. Appointed by the Vice President for Research.

2004 Member, Steering Committee, UGA Faculty Colloquium on the Integration of Research and Teaching, University of Georgia. Appointed by the Associate Director of the UGA Center for Undergraduate Research Opportunities.

2004-2005 Member, Task Force on Study Abroad Programs, University of Georgia. Primarily responsible for analysing issues of compensation. Appointed by the Provost.

2003-2004 Member, Planning Committee, “Globalization and Human Rights in Africa” Symposium, 10th symposium of the Program for Global Understanding, Center for Humanities and Arts, University of Georgia. Symposium included an Ambassadors’ roundtable.

2003 Member, Selection Committee to choose the Lilly Teaching Fellows for 2003-2004, Office of Instructional Support and Development, University of Georgia. Appointed by the Director of the Office of Instructional Support and Development.

2002-2003 Chair, Faculty Conference, University Council, University of Georgia.

2001-2004 Member, G-STEP (Georgia Systemic Teacher Education Program), College of Education, University of Georgia (funded by U.S. Title II funds).

2001 Chair, By-Laws Revision Committee, African Studies Institute, University of Georgia.

2001-2002 Member, Steering Committee, British Studies Program, University of Georgia.

2001-2003 Elected to Faculty Affairs Committee, University Council, University of Georgia.

2000-2003 Faculty Adviser to the Graduate Student Association, an organization to represent the interests of graduate students with the University of Georgia Graduate School administration.

1999-2002 Elected to University Council, University of Georgia.

1999 Member, Selection Committee to choose the Lilly Teaching Fellows for 1999-2000, Office of Instructional Support and Development, University of Georgia. Appointed by the Director of the Office of Instructional Support and Development.

1998-2000 Faculty Adviser to the Georgia Graduate Forum, an organization to represent the interests of graduate students with the University of Georgia administration.

1998 Nominated as Graduate School representative to University Council, University of Georgia.

1997-1999 Invited member of University Round Table, a University of Georgia (Faculty, Staff, and Students) and Community public affairs discussion group.

1995-1998 Member, Advisory Board for initiative in “Integrating Gender Equity and Reform (IN GEAR),” a collaborative project of five universities in the state (University of Georgia, Georgia Institute of Technology, Georgia State University, Georgia Southern University, and Clark-Atlanta University), together with the American Association of University Women and the Georgia Initiative in Mathematics and Science. Funded by the National Science Foundation.

1994-1997 Member, University Academic Honesty Review Panel, University of Georgia.

1987 Member, West Virginia University Student Board of Governors (Graduate Student Representative).

DEPARTMENTAL SERVICE:

2017 Member, Post-Tenure Review Committee for Full Professor, Department of Geography, University of Georgia.

2016-2017 Member, Instructional Technology Committee, Department of Geography, University of Georgia.

2015 Member, Post-Tenure Review Committee for Associate Professor, Department of Geography, University of Georgia.

2015-2019 Member, Curriculum Committee, Department of Geography, University of Georgia.

2015 Member, Post-Tenure Review Committee for Full Professor, Department of Geography, University of Georgia.

2014 Chair, Space Committee, Department of Geography, University of Georgia.

2014-2015 Member, Colloquium Committee, Department of Geography, University of Georgia.

2014 Member, 3rd-year Review Committee for Assistant Professor, Department of Geography, University of Georgia.

2013-2015 GEOG 1101 Course coordinator, Department of Geography, University of Georgia.

2012 Chair, Post-Tenure Review Committee for Full Professor, Department of Geography, University of Georgia.

2011-2012 Internship Coordinator, Department of Geography, University of Georgia.

2011 Chair, 3rd-year Review Committee for Assistant Professor, Department of Geography, University of Georgia.

2010-2011 Member, Graduate Studies Committee, Department of Geography, University of Georgia.

2008-2010 Chair, Curriculum Committee, Department of Geography, University of Georgia.

2007 Chair, 3rd-year Review Committee for Assistant Professor, Department of Geography, University of Georgia.

2006-2008 Member, Curriculum Committee, Department of Geography, University of Georgia.

2005-2006 Member, Search and Screen Committee for Human Geographer position, Department of Geography, University of Georgia.

2004-2005 Member, Promotion and Tenure Guidelines Committee, Department of Geography, University of Georgia.

2004-2005 Chair, Search and Screen Committee for joint position in Human Geography and Women’s Studies, University of Georgia.

2004-2006 Member, Graduate Studies Committee, Department of Geography, University of Georgia.

2003-2004 Chair, Curriculum Committee, Department of Geography, University of Georgia.

2003-2010 Coordinator, Human Geography: Peoples, Places, and Cultures GEOG 1101 course offerings, Department of Geography, University of Georgia.

2003 Chair, 3rd-year Review Committee for two Assistant Professors, Department of Geography, University of Georgia.

2001-2002 Member, Search and Screen Committee for GIS position, Department of Geography, University of Georgia.

2001-2003 Chair, Human Geography Sub-Committee, Graduate Studies Committee, Department of Geography, University of Georgia.

2001-2002 Member, Search and Screen Committee for Human Geographer position, Department of Geography, University of Georgia.

2000-2003 Departmental mentor for junior faculty member, Department of Geography, University of Georgia.

2000-2001 Member, Public Relations Committee, Department of Geography, University of Georgia.

2000-2001 Member, Human Geography Graduate Studies Subcommittee, University of Georgia.

2000-2001 Chair, Search and Screen Committee for joint position in Human Geography and Women’s Studies, University of Georgia.

1999-2000 Chair, Search and Screen Committee for 2 Human Geographer positions, Department of Geography, University of Georgia.

1998-1999 Chair, Undergraduate Studies Committee, Department of Geography, University of Georgia.

1998-1999 Member, Search and Screen Committee for Urban Geographer position, Department of Geography, University of Georgia.

1997-1999 Chair, Public Relations Committee, Department of Geography, University of Georgia.

1996-1997 Chair, Search and Screen Committee for joint position in Human Geography and Women’s Studies, University of Georgia.

1996-1998 Member, Undergraduate Studies Committee, Department of Geography, University of Georgia.

1996 Chair, Human Geography Group Semester Conversion Committee, Department of Geography, University of Georgia.

1995-1996 Member, Search and Screen Committee for Economic Geographer position, Department of Geography, University of Georgia.

1995-1996 Member, Curriculum Committee, Department of Geography, University of Georgia.

1994-1996 Chair, Colloquium and Conference Committee, Department of Geography, University of Georgia.

1994-1995 Member, Search and Screen Committee for Economic Geographer position, Department of Geography, University of Georgia.

1993-1994 Member (Elected by the Graduate Student body), Faculty-Student Relations Committee, Department of Geography, University of Georgia.

1993-1994 Colloquium Organizer, Department of Geography, University of Georgia.

1993-1995 Member, Graduate Studies Committee, Department of Geography, University of Georgia.

1993-1994 Recording Secretary, Department of Geography, University of Georgia.

1992-1993 Member, Undergraduate Studies Committee, Department of Geography, University of Georgia.

1990-1992 Graduate Student Representative to Faculty Meetings, Department of Geography, Rutgers University.

REFERENCES AVAILABLE UPON REQUEST

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