Professor David Robinson
School of Geography and Planning
Professor
Professor of Housing and Urban Studies
+44 114 222 7947
Full contact details
School of Geography and Planning
Room C6
Geography and Planning Building
Winter Street
91Ö±²¥
S3 7ND
- Profile
-
My interest in housing and urban studies first emerged during my undergraduate studies in geography at the University of Newcastle Upon Tyne and was subsequently pursued through a PhD in the Department of Geography at the University of Edinburgh. Following a post-doctoral research position at Loughborough University, I moved to the Centre for Regional Economic and Social Research at 91Ö±²¥ Hallam University where I was based for 20 years. I joined the University of 91Ö±²¥ in 2016. I have held a number of leadership roles at 91Ö±²¥, including Head of the Department of Geography and Head of the Department of Urban Studies and Planning.
I am a co-investigator in the (CaCHE) and a Fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences. I am a trustee of the Housing Studies Charitable Trust and a member of the international editorial advisory board of the Housing Studies journal, having previously served as a managing editor.
- Research interests
-
My research practice is situated at the interface of planning, geography and social policy and focuses on exposing and understanding contemporary challenges in urban society and critically analysing the responses of policy and practice.
Much of my career has been spent at the interface of knowledge and action. My work is dominated by an interest in questions of how inequality arises, the associated burdens and benefits, and issues of social justice.
Housing
Decent, secure housing provides more than just a roof over someone’s head. It is a place of safety and security. It can promote health and well-being and inform life chances.
My work has sought to expose and understand inequalities in access to these benefits within the UK housing system; related processes of urban transformation; and associated consequences for people and places.
Particular areas of interest include the politics and provision of social housing; discrimination in the housing system; and hidden and neglected experiences of particular groups.
The Politics of Community
This stream of work has focused on the new politics of community that has gained ascendency within public policy making.
The focus has been on exploring and critiquing the processes through which particular places are increasingly portrayed as spatial containers of social failure, allowing social problems to be localised and thrown back at places to resolve themselves through the reinvigoration of community.
It has included analysis of the shift in policy from tackling inequality and disadvantage toward correcting the behaviour of social groups / communities seen as deviant. A key concern within this strand of work has been on the community cohesion agenda.
More recently, I have explored the application of resilience thinking to the social world, focusing on the concept of community resilience.
New Migration
Since the 1990s, the flows of people between different locations across the globe have become larger in volume, more varied in form, and increasingly complex in nature as a result of various transformations in political, economic, and social structures.
In the UK, these global trends have been manifest in a marked rise in the arrival of foreign nationals from a wide range of countries of origin, who have moved through a diversity of migration channels and been allocated different legal statuses.
A new geography of settlement has emerged, with many new migrants moving beyond the locations that traditionally served as reception points for new arrivals into the UK, and settling in locations with little history of accommodating diversity and difference.
The result is a situation of increasing social and demographic complexity that surpasses anything previously experienced in the UK.
My research has sought to explore and understand this complexity and associated experiences and consequences for new arrivals and settled populations.
A key feature of my contribution has been the insertion of an appreciation of place into analysis of migrant experiences, community relations and processes of integration.
Current and Recent Research Projects
- (Economic & Social Research Council, Arts & Humanities Research Council, Joseph Rowntree Foundation)
- Publications
-
Edited books
Journal articles
Chapters
Book reviews
Reports
Working papers
Dictionary/encyclopaedia entries
- Research group
-
PhD supervision
I am Secondary Supervisor for the following research students:
- Ingun Borg, Impact of welfare reform on low-income families' employment strategies: the case of Universal Credit in-work progression
- Helen Brown, Housing and ageing
- Bruce Moore, The Social Construction of Sheltered Housing: Considering the attitudes and expectations of older people living in social rented ‘retirement’ and affordable ‘extra care’ housing in England
- Itzel San Roman Pineda, The Impact of the Tourism Industry on inequality in Southeast Mexico
- Teaching activities
-
My approach to teaching is rooted in a commitment to promoting positive change within society by bringing expertise and knowledge to bear on contemporary challenges facing public policy, whilst simultaneously engaging in philosophising about the way things are and might be.
My teaching contributions centre on contemporary housing issues and challenges, including the problems that particular groups encounter negotiating a satisfactory residential settlement within the contemporary housing system.
I teach on the following modules:
- GEO383, Urban Transformations
- , Postgraduate Research Methods