Erik Swyngedouw

Erik Achille Marie Swyngedouw (Dutch: [ˈeːrɪk ˈswɪnʝədɔuw]) (born 30 July 1956) is professor of geography at the University of Manchester in the School of Environment and Development.

Background

Born in Flemish-speaking Belgium and fluent in Dutch, English, French, and Spanish, he graduated from Sint-Jozefscollege, Hasselt in 1974. He graduated with an MSc in Agricultural Engineering from the Catholic University of Leuven in 1979, with a thesis focussed on agrarian change in the community of Heers. His 1985 Master in Urban and Regional Planning was also from Leuven. He earned his PhD with a thesis entitled "The production of new spaces of production" under the supervision of the renowned Marxist geographer David Harvey at Johns Hopkins University in 1991. From 1988 until 2006 Swyngedouw taught at the University of Oxford as professor of geography and was a fellow of St. Peter's College. He began teaching at the University of Manchester in 2006.[1]

Scholarship

Swyngedouw has committed his studies to political economic analysis of contemporary capitalism, producing several major works on economic globalisation, regional development, finance, and urbanisation. His interests have also included political-ecological themes and the transformation of nature, notably water issues, in Ecuador, Spain, the UK, and elsewhere in Europe.[2]

Selected publications

Recognition

External links

References

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