Chair in Urban Geography, with a focus on: The Geography of Everyday Life

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Profile Report (full professor, 1.0 fte) Chair in Urban Geography, with a focus on: The Geography of Everyday Life Introduction Urbanization processes across the globe have resulted in a situation in which more than half of the world s population is currently living in cities and urban regions. Cities and urban milieus are seen as core locations for economic, cultural, environmental and social development and innovation, and function as prime scenes for competition, inequality, and struggle. Although often presented as global phenomena, such urban social challenges - relating to quality of life, social mobility, social inequality, life-chances, conflict, culture, polarisation, segregation, and integration - play out in different ways in different urban contexts. Urban Geography, like geography in general, is intrigued by this interaction between society and urban space. More in particular by the way in which local institutional, economic and spatial structures are shaped in the course of time, and in turn enable or constrain societal processes, or more concretely, affect the lives of urban citizens. This dual focus - on urban space as outcome and as driver of change - is core to the Amsterdam Urban Geography discipline. At the University of Amsterdam, the field of Urban Geography is further characterised by its thematic interests, methodological expertise, and focus on contexts. Researchers bring together macro as well as micro level approaches to study the development of urban spaces and places, and their effects on groups and individual lives. Within this broad and dynamic framework and through its profile Urban Geography has become one of the key fields of study in the area of Human Geography and Urban Studies. To maintain that position, we are now searching for candidates for a full professorship in the domain of Urban Geography that addresses the field of the Geography of Everyday Life. In this document we will first sketch what the focus is of our current (Urban Geography) research in the domain of Everyday Life. This will be followed by information on the embedding of the chair and the position of Urban Geography in the University of Amsterdam. Subsequently, a global overview of tasks and responsibilities will be presented, followed by a more specific profile of the position. The current research foci of the Urban Geography group Our current research in the field of the Geography of Everyday Life takes the actor (individuals, households, others) as its starting point for investigating the development of urban spaces and places. The emphasis is on the spatiality of social life, studying the way in which every-day routines, practices, and emotions are both shaped by, and construct urban spaces and places in which these evolve, i.e. as a distinctly two-way, interactive process. Whereas the focus is on micro-level behavioural processes, it is recognized that the geography 1

of everyday life is also influenced by global processes affecting mobility, opportunity, and constraints; and by various institutional arrangements. Key to the current study of the Geography of Everyday Life at the University of Amsterdam are questions of diversity and processes of in- and exclusion in concrete and often rather local settings (notably public spaces and neighbourhoods). Everyday lives are shaped by multiple dimensions of difference, including age, gender, class, wealth, employment status, education level, household situations, ethnic background etc., in their relation with spaces and places. The Amsterdam staff working on the Geography of Everyday Life take the position that the understanding of how time-space routines and people s emotional and social relationships to place reflect their identities necessitates investigation of social networks. Yet, it also requires research into neighbourhood belonging, in- and exclusion in public space, connections between social and spatial mobility, the consumption of, and attitudes and perceptions towards, spaces and places; and issues of local and regional identification and territorial attachment. The groups current interests clearly highlight understandings of urban dynamics from a bottom-up perspective, build on rich data, and thorough fieldwork, and other empirical investigation. The demarcation of current research on the Geography of Everyday Life is not only inspired by debates on how urban life can be shaped by individuals and households, but also by insights on how various positions in wider networks and spatial and institutional contexts impact on such processes. A key issue current researchers in Amsterdam aim to address is, to what extent the knowledge of the geography of everyday life gained (the theory) is transferable across different urban contexts with different urban histories. Embedding The Chair in Geography of Everyday Life is one of the two chairs in the Urban Geography programme group; with the other one focused on Urbanization and Urban Social Challenges. Researchers under that umbrella frequently address multiple geographical units (neighbourhoods, cities, regions) simultaneously. They deal with socio-spatial processes such as (hyper-) urbanization, suburbanization, shrinking cities, and urban revitalization; or focus on urban social challenges related to segregation, polarisation, and gentrification, including their potential effects on life chances, integration and marginality. Current research in the latter sphere is frequently characterised by longitudinal studies in which large-n multivariate data analysis has taken centre stage. Whereas the two chairs often differ in terms of the questions they ask, the scales they address, and the methods they apply, they are not fundamentally disconnected from each other. Both are part of the core chairs in the Department of Geography, Planning and International Development Studies in the Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences at the University of Amsterdam. The Urban Geography programme group (approximately 20 members, including PhDs and postdocs) is an internationally well-known and very high-ranked research and teaching group with many promising young staff. UG is rated no 14 worldwide in the QS ranking; and is no 1 in Continental Europe. The group has an extensive international networks, and an excellent external funding record. 2

The Urban Geography research programme is one of the 13 programmes in the Amsterdam Institute of Social Science research (AISSR). This institute also represents research in the fields of Anthropology, Sociology, Political Sciences, Urban Planning and International Development Studies. There is frequent collaboration between members of these groups. The chair in the Geography of Everyday Life will also be affiliated with the Centre of Urban Studies, which hosts one of the 15 research priority areas of the University of Amsterdam. The Centre for Urban Studies focuses on inter-disciplinary research in the urban arena. In terms of teaching the Chair is connected to the Graduate School for the Social Sciences (GSSS) and to the Undergraduate programmes in the College for Social Sciences. Teaching will mainly involve courses in the Bachelor Human Geography and Planning, the Bachelor in Interdisciplinary Social Sciences; and courses in the Urban Geography track in the Master Human Geography; and in the Research Master Urban Studies. Within the Urban Geography programme group there is one additional chair that is shared with the Urban Planning group. That chair is focused on Housing, Society and Space (Prof. dr. Richard Ronald). In addition, there are two special chairs, occupied by professors on special appointment (one day per week). One deal with Population Dynamics and Spatial Development (Prof. dr. Dorien Manting); and the other with the Demographic and Spatial Aspects of Relation- and Household Formation (Prof. dr. Jan Latten). Within the programme group chair holders frequently collaborate. The University of Amsterdam and Urban Geography The University of Amsterdam has a long history in fostering Urban Geography as a subdisciplinary field. There are a number of reasons for this. The first is that there are multiple connections between the city and the urban region of Amsterdam, and the University, with the University establishing its first chair in Human Geography in 1877. Secondly, Urban Geographers at the University of Amsterdam, together with city planners and other urban scientists have been closely monitoring developments in the urban field for a number of decades, putting developments in Amsterdam in international perspective. In doing so, they have created broad-ranging theoretical frameworks based on local, nationwide and international research that help to understand and explain local urban developments. Thirdly, and relatedly, the Urban Geography programme has built on a range of very positive outcomes in internal and external assessment exercises. In the most recent international research assessment, Urban Geography has been classified as excellent in terms of the quality of its research, its effectiveness in securing prestigious and highly competitive international funding and its leadership of, and impact on the field. The research programme has an outstanding international reputation. This is reflected in the impressive international standing and esteem accorded to senior staff in the group, as well as the strong international relationships formed with other institutions and the participation of staff members in international research associations. A fourth manifestation of its strength is the nestling of Urban Geography in a network of disciplines in the University of Amsterdam. UG is part of a wider framework of research 3

groups that together sustain research and education programmes that focus on Urban Studies. The Centre for Urban Studies has among the widest disciplinary coverages worldwide. Finally, there is the fact that Amsterdam and its environment form an important urban laboratory in Urban Geography itself. In the international literature, Amsterdam is regarded to be a global city of the second order (after megacities such as New York, London and Tokyo), but outranks most competing cities of a similar size by some margin. Global overview of tasks and responsibilities The candidates for this Chair are expected to contribute to realising objectives in four fields: Teaching, Research, Valorisation, and Management. Teaching: The professor will teach in the Bachelor programme Human Geography and Planning, the Urban Geography track in the one-year Master programme Human Geography, and the two-year research master programme in Urban Studies. Teaching includes both design and delivery of courses and supervising bachelor and master theses and field work. Research: She/he will undertake and accomplish research in the field of Urban Geography, more specifically within the field of Geography of Everyday Life, publish in international refereed journals, and/or in edited volumes and/or monographs published by international academic publishers, and realize publications aimed at the professional and general public. Valorisation: The professor will contribute to the dissemination of academic knowledge about the Geography of Everyday Life among the general public and decision makers and will help to expand the international academic visibility. Management: The professor has as all other professors to show willingness to take some management responsibilities, such as leading the Programme Group, or of other institutions, such as the Centre for Urban Studies, or to fulfil other management tasks in the Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences. The professor will stimulate Urban Geography staff to jointly develop an ambitious research agenda, and to jointly acquire funding for research projects through national science organisations (such as NWO), prestigious European or other research funding institutions (such as ERC), and/or via third money that allows for a full focus on academic research. She/he is also expected to take action to foster collaboration within and beyond the Urban Geography group by way of joint activities (event organisation, joint publication, etc.). The professor is expected to take an active role in supervising PhDs and Post Docs. Profile The chair focusing on the Geography of Everyday Life is expected to develop and supervise innovative research in this field. Current activities within the group offer elements and opportunities for further developing the focus of the new chair. However, we are most interested in candidates who can both connect to the research of existing staff, and are open to innovation with the ambition to develop new avenues of research and research methodologies in and beyond the field. 4

Any prospective candidate should have in the first place a strong affinity with Urban Geography, and more specifically with the Geography of Everyday Life. They should also have well-founded ideas about future directions of change regarding the group s research agenda. Candidates will be expected to play a leading role in social science debates on urban spaces and places, be interested in theory driven, socially relevant and empirically grounded research in Urban Geography, mostly in international settings, and be able to highlight interaction between humans and the environment. The study of the Geography of Everyday Life not only requires an open and forward looking approach, but also methodological skills to unravel complexity. It necessitates collaboration within pluralistic frameworks combining insights derived from various disciplines. A wide array of methodological approaches may serve the development of knowledge on the issues mentioned above including multi-scalar, multi-dimensional, context-sensitive approaches. The Amsterdam Urban Geography group is open to and applies both quantitative analysis and qualitative fieldwork. The group welcomes innovation and a continuous willingness to search for new methods aimed at expanding and improving the understanding of the Geography of Everyday Life. The ideal candidate: Has a strong international embedding, as, for example, shown by an extensive publication record in international refereed academic journals and with high standing international publishers as well as by research grant records, roles in research, teaching and professional networks. With respect to research the ideal candidate: Is a social scientist with a broad interest and internationally recognized expertise in the broad field of Urban Geography/Urban Studies/Human Geography, but with a firmly motivated interest in Urban Geography and in the Geography of Everyday Life (but is not necessarily a human or urban geographer by training) Has a demonstrated expertise in applying a diversity of methodological approaches, quantitative and/or qualitative Has a strong position in international academic networks Has experience in supervising PhD projects With respect to teaching, the ideal candidate: Is willing and able to teach both at introductory and advanced levels in Urban Geography, but also in more general courses. Is comfortable lecturing sizeable groups as well as in more intimate seminar-like settings. Candidates should also have extensive experience in supervising thesis projects Is an interested and engaged teacher (i.e. does not see teaching as a side-activity) Is able to develop and innovate teaching programmes both in content and in didactics If not already in possession of a University Teaching Certificate (such as the Dutch BKO) is willing to acquire it within two years. 5

With respect to leadership style, the ideal candidate: Is willing and able to engage on a long term basis with the Urban Geography group Is willing and able to take a leading role in the further development of the group, but also to share leadership with others and operate in a largely self-managed, horizontally structured group Enables junior colleagues to mature and excel (both in research and teaching), through personal involvement and feedback Stimulates Urban Geography staff to jointly acquire funding for research projects which is relevant from an academic and societal perspective. Positively contributes to the development and consolidation of a team spirit Is open to exchange and collaboration with others, both inside and outside the university, and both with academics and practitioners. With respect to personal aspects, the ideal candidate: Is willing and able to become an active, stable, and accountable presence in the Urban Geography group, the department and the policy domain Has a critical, but also a constructive and enthusiastic personality If not already living in the Netherlands, is willing and able to move to and to engage with the Netherlands If not already speaking Dutch, is willing to learn it within two years. 6