Susan E. Hanson | |
---|---|
Born | March 31, 1943 |
Alma mater | Middlebury College Northwestern University |
Occupation(s) | Professor of urban geography, author |
Years active | 1972- |
Employer | Clark University |
Organization(s) | National Academy of Sciences (2000) American Academy of Arts and Sciences (2000) Transportation Research Board Division Committee chair |
Notable work | Geography, Gender, and the Workaday World. Hettner Lectures. Volume 6. Stuttgart: Franz Steiner Verlag. (2003) |
Awards | Guggenheim Fellowship 1989 American Association for the Advancement of Science fellow in 1991 Van Cleef Memorial Medal 1999 [1] 2015 Stanley Brunn Award for Creativity in Geography [2] Lifetime Achievement Honors in 2003 [3] |
Susan E. Hanson (born March 31, 1943) is an American geographer. She is a Distinguished University Professor Emerita in the Graduate School of Geography at Clark University. Her research has focused on gender and work, travel patterns, and feminist scholarly approaches.
Hanson studied as an undergraduate at Middlebury College between 1960 and 1964, subsequently working with the Peace Corps in Kenya. She studied for a PhD in Geography at Northwestern University between 1967 and 1973, [4] moving to Uppsala, Sweden with her husband and two young children in 1970 to conduct research for her dissertation. [5] In Uppsala, she found a data file that allowed her to sample the population and conduct the Uppsala Household Travel Survey. [6]
Hanson was awarded tenure at the University at Buffalo, where she worked in the geography and sociology departments between 1972 and 1980. She moved to Clark in 1981. She is a past president of the American Association of Geographers (then known as the Association of American Geographers) [4] and has been the editor of four geography journals: Urban Geography , Economic Geography , the Annals of the Association of American Geographers , and The Professional Geographer . [2]
Hanson has published extensively throughout her career, writing and editing books, and by 2010 had contributed more than 70 journal articles, and many chapters in books. [4]
Professor Emeritus at the University of Washington, Victoria Lawson has argued that Hanson's career "is an empowering example of a collage of woven-together life experiences, substantive research interests, feminist values and progressive professional practices". [7] In 2010, Marianna Pavlovskaya wrote that Hanson "is one of the most accomplished academics in U.S. geography today". [4]
Hanson was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1989, [8] was made a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in 1991, [9] and in 1999 received the Van Cleef Memorial Medal from the American Geographical Society, a medal conferred on scholars in the field of urban geography. [10] In 2000, she became the first female geographer to be elected to both the National Academy of Sciences and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. [4]
At the 2008 Association of American Geographers conference, three panels were dedicated to honouring her contribution to the discipline, and five of the papers presented were subsequently published as a themed section of an issue of Gender, Place & Culture: A Journal of Feminist Geography . [11] She was awarded the 2015 Stanley Brunn Award for Creativity in Geography by the American Association of Geographers, [2] which also awarded her Lifetime Achievement Honors in 2003. [3]
She served on the Transportation Research Board's (TRB) Executive Committee from 2019 - 2022, representing TRB as an ex officio member on the NRC Governing Board. [12]
Human geography or anthropogeography is the branch of geography which studies spatial relationships between human communities, cultures, economies, and their interactions with the environment, examples of which include urban sprawl and urban redevelopment. It analyzes spatial interdependencies between social interactions and the environment through qualitative and quantitative methods. This multidisciplinary approach draws from sociology, anthropology, economics, and environmental science, contributing to a comprehensive understanding of the intricate connections that shape lived spaces.
A geographer is a physical scientist, social scientist or humanist whose area of study is geography, the study of Earth's natural environment and human society, including how society and nature interacts. The Greek prefix "geo" means "earth" and the Greek suffix, "graphy", meaning "description", so a geographer is someone who studies the earth. The word "geography" is a Middle French word that is believed to have been first used in 1540.
Feminist geography is a sub-discipline of human geography that applies the theories, methods, and critiques of feminism to the study of the human environment, society, and geographical space. Feminist geography emerged in the 1970s, when members of the women's movement called on academia to include women as both producers and subjects of academic work. Feminist geographers aim to incorporate positions of race, class, ability, and sexuality into the study of geography. The discipline was a target for the hoaxes of the grievance studies affair.
In geography, the quantitative revolution (QR) was a paradigm shift that sought to develop a more rigorous and systematic methodology for the discipline. It came as a response to the inadequacy of regional geography to explain general spatial dynamics. The main claim for the quantitative revolution is that it led to a shift from a descriptive (idiographic) geography to an empirical law-making (nomothetic) geography. The quantitative revolution occurred during the 1950s and 1960s and marked a rapid change in the method behind geographical research, from regional geography into a spatial science.
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