Leverhulme ECR Fellow, University of Sheffield
Jonathan is a Leverhulme Early Career Research Fellow undertaking a project on ‘Postcolonial urbanisms and a comparative theory of infrastructure’. He joined the Urban Institute in November 2016 having gained his doctorate from the Department of Geography, Durham University following degrees from University of Leeds (BA Hons) and University of Manchester (MA). Prior to his appointment he had worked on a number of research projects at the London School of Economics and Durham University.
As an urban geographer his research agenda is concentrated on developing new ideas and vocabularies to comparatively think about cities, politics, ecology and infrastructure. First, thinking about the geographies of everyday urbanisms across popular neighbourhoods in global Norths and Souths around issues of survival, social infrastructure and the lived experience of various forms of urban service provision such as energy waste and sanitation. Second, in examining the political ecologies of urban transformation including the relations across climate change and cities, the geo-political restructuring of infrastructure space in world ecology and the socio-environmental injustices of urbanisation. Third, in considering the urban politics of infrastructure in relation to race and capitalism, new collective imaginaries of service provision and forms of urban theory.
China's 'Silk Road urbanism' is changing cities from London to Kampala – can locals keep control?
Apr 01, 2019 17:25 pm UTC| Insights & Views
A massive redevelopment of the old Royal Albert Dock in East London is transforming the derelict waterfront to a gleaming business district. The project, which started in June 2017, will create 325,000 square metres of...