Deborah P. Dixon | |
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Citizenship | British |
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Website | www |
Deborah P. Dixon is a British geographer and Professor of Geography at the University of Glasgow. She is recognized for her contributions to feminist geopolitics. [1] Dixon serves as the Deputy Head of School at the School of Geographical and Earth Sciences at Glasgow University. [1] Her research spans environmental issues, art-science collaborations, and geopolitical theory, with a particular focus on feminist perspectives and interdisciplinary approaches. [1]
Dixon received her undergraduate degree from the University of Cambridge, followed by a Master's degree from the University of Wisconsin-Madison where she completed a thesis on cholera in British India. She earned her PhD from the University of Kentucky with a thesis on the political reanimation of regions. [2]
Dixon began her academic career at East Carolina University, where she researched rural geographies of marginal economies and the experiences of migrant women. [2] She later returned to the United Kingdom to work at Aberystwyth University, where she became a Reader in 2010 and was promoted to Professor in 2012. [3] In 2012, she moved to the University of Glasgow as Professor of Geography in the School of Geographical and Earth Sciences. [3] As of 2025, she serves as the Deputy Head of School at Glasgow University. [1]
Throughout her career, Dixon has maintained collaborative research relationships with colleagues at institutions including the University of Arizona, East Carolina University, the University of Texas-Austin, San Diego State, the University of Toronto, and the University of Wisconsin-Madison. [4]
Dixon's research spans several interconnected areas including feminist geopolitics, geohumanities, environmental issues, and art-science collaborations.
Dixon is an internationally recognized scholar in feminist geopolitics. Her book Feminist Geopolitics: Material States (2016) explores how feminist imaginaries of Self, Other, and Earth reconfigure understandings of geopolitics. [5] The book examines four objects of analysis: flesh, bone, touch, and abhorrence, grounded through globally diverse case studies. [5] Her work in this area has been described as a "transformative contribution to both geopolitical and feminist thought" by Sallie Marston of the University of Arizona. [5]
Her feminist geopolitical research has resulted in numerous publications, including a special issue introduction co-authored with Sallie Marston titled "Introduction: Feminist engagements with geopolitics" (2011) in the journal Gender, Place & Culture. [6] Her article "The way of the flesh: Life, geopolitics and the weight of the future" (2014) further develops her feminist geopolitical framework. [6]
Dixon's work in geohumanities explores the intersections between geography and humanities disciplines, fostering new scholarly interactions and approaches to understanding place, space, and environmental relationships. [2]
Dixon's environmental research has addressed aesthetic, technological, political, and cultural responses to environmental issues, including toxic landscapes, biodiversity loss, and climate change impacts, in Europe, the United States, sub-Saharan Africa, Australia, and Japan. [1] More recently, her research has focused on geoengineering efforts to address climate change, examining the geopolitics, governance, and aesthetics associated with manipulations of the Earth's climate system. [2]
Her environmental research initiatives include:
Dixon has conducted extensive work on art-science collaborations, examining the conceptual and methodological possibilities afforded by poststructuralist and feminist theories in this context. [4] She has undertaken research projects with colleagues at various institutions, including a residency with SymbioticA, an artistic laboratory at the University of Western Australia, where she studied the aesthetics and politics of bio-art creation. [4]