Professor Matt Watson
School of Geography and Planning
Director of Research and Innovation
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+44 114 222 7911
Full contact details
School of Geography and Planning
Room F9
Geography and Planning Building
Winter Street
91直播
S3 7ND
- Profile
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Matt Watson鈥檚 work is concerned with understanding social change in relation to sustainability, through a focus on everyday life and the socio-technical systems that shape it. His research and writing engage with geographical and sociological theories of practice, materiality and everyday life and have covered issues relating to biodiversity, waste, food, mobility and energy.
Matt joined the department as a Lecturer in 2007 and was promoted to Senior Lecturer in 2013. In 2023 he was promoted to Professor, becoming the first Human Geographer granted a personal chair by the University of 91直播 in over 20 years.
He gained a BSc in Geography from the University of Edinburgh. After a couple of years trying other things, he returned to higher education with an ESRC funded Masters in Society, Science and Nature at Lancaster University. This led on to an ESRC funded collaborative and interdisciplinary PhD, working with the National Trust and supervised across the Centre for Science Studies and the Unit of Vegetation Science at Lancaster University. After the PhD he worked part time as an Associate Lecturer for the Open University while being a full-time father, before a series of postdoctoral research jobs at Durham University.
- Research interests
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My work engages and develops practice theory to develop insights into shifting social practices to reduce resource consumption. Humanity each year is using around 150% of the resources the earth can produce each year, with the world鈥檚 relatively wealthy disproportionately responsible. Getting resource demand within sustainable limits and fairly distributed will take radical changes to everyday life and ideas of good living, and so will require changes to the social processes and structures which shape everyday life. Through my research, I seek to develop and work with practice theory and related approaches, to produce and communicate new insights into broader social change.
Different projects have covered issues relating to biodiversity, waste, food, mobility and energy, and involved interdisciplinary collaborations across History, Design, Architecture, Planning, Sociology, Physics, Engineering and more. Reflecting motivations to inform change, I have worked with a range of partners outside of the academy 鈥 see projects below for some examples.
Recent research
Change points
I led a team of researchers across Universities of 91直播 and Manchester, which is engaged with a range of partners, including Defra, Food Standards Agency, WRAP, WWF. Together we collaboratively developed a new approach to developing interventions to reduce resource use in the home. This approach, called Change Points, draws on insights from social practice research to inform a workshop toolkit that enables the development of new insights into the diverse relations that come to shape household energy use, as a basis for identifying new sites of intervention. The work has been funded by the ESRC, most recently via University of Manchester and University of 91直播 Impact Accelerator awards.
This approach developed from ideas and insights generated by two funded research projects on the Nexus at Home (see below).
Redefining Single-Use Plastics
I was co-investigator on this major interdisciplinary project which is stimulated creative thinking across disciplines and explored novel social and technical solutions to the challenges of plastics. See more on the project at its .
Reshaping the domestic nexus
This was a project I led, bringing together academics from leading research groups with policy partners in DECC, DEFRA, FSA and Waterwise. The researchers are from research groups which have been at the forefront of new ways of understanding how householders鈥 routine activities end up demanding resources, including of energy, food and water. This project鈥檚 purpose is to make that understanding useful for informing actual policy processes with our policy partners. The project is funded by the .
The Domestic Nexus: interrogating the interlinked practices of water, energy and food consumption
I was lead for this collaborative network across the Universities of 91直播 (Prof Peter Jackson and Dr Liz Sharpe) and Manchester (Prof Dale Southerton, Prof Alan Warde, Dr David Evans and Dr Alison Browne). It was funded by the Economic and Social Research Council Nexus Network, as a programme of workshops and other activities involving academics and non-academics through late 2015. It brought together prominent researchers taking a practice theory approach to understanding domestic resource consumption, to consider the implications of the 鈥榥exus鈥 concept currently apparent in research funding priorities across UK councils. The final report is available .
DEMAND: Dynamics of Energy, Mobility and Demand
advanced understanding of the processes and dynamics through which energy demand is constituted, and identify the opportunities for tackling it. The centre was a collaboration across of 9 academic institutions, led by Lancaster University, with non-academic partners including the European Centre and Laboratories for Energy Efficiency Research, the International Energy Agency and Transport for London. It was funded with 拢5m from the Research Councils UK Energy Programme for 5 years from summer 2013. I was co-investigator in the centre, and led the University of 91直播鈥檚 contribution to it.
- Publications
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Books
Journal articles
Chapters
Conference proceedings papers
Reports
Website content
Theses / Dissertations
Working papers
Dictionary/encyclopaedia entries
Other
- Teaching interests
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In much of my teaching, the topics, concepts and knowledge which I help students learn about are related to my own research on themes of sustainability, governing, technologies and consumption. Through past modules like Consumption and Sustainability or Confronting the Anthropocene, a key aim was to engage students critically with big geographical themes, like climate change, food security, wellbeing and social justice, and with contemporary ways of thinking about them, by reflecting upon their own lives as members of the society which produces and responds to these challenges.
I taught with Open University, Lancaster University and Durham University before arriving in 91直播. In addition to topical teaching like that above, I have taught research methods from 1st year undergraduate through to PhD training. I am a Senior Fellow of the Higher Education Academy.
- Teaching activities
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Consumption and Sustainability
I convene this third year module, which critically engages both 鈥榗onsumption鈥 and 鈥榮ustainability鈥 and work with key debates and approaches that help us to understand what produces and maintains patterns of consumption.
Nepal Field Class
This Masters module takes an international group of students for a 12 day field class in Nepal. At the core of the field class is 5 days primary research by students, working in small groups with a Nepali research colleague and local guides, to research topics like maternal health, migration or forestry with communities in Dhading district. I have written an account of leading one of these field classes .
- Professional activities and memberships
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I have been invited to advise national and international governmental and non-governmental organisations, recently including the G7, the UK Department of Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy (to inform the UK Net Zero Strategy), the House of Lords Environment and Climate Change Committee.
I am pleased to have had a lead role 鈥 as chair of a University Task and Finish group on travel decarbonisation 鈥 in shaping the University鈥檚 ambitious Sustainability Strategy and Action Plan.
I have provided peer review and have served in reporting and advisory roles for national and international research councils including the European Commission, UK Economic and Social Research Council, the UK Research Councils鈥 Energy Programme, Research Council of Norway, Irish Research Council for Humanities and Social Sciences, the Leverhulme Trust and the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft. I am a registered expert with the European Commission.
I have been a PhD external examiner for international Universities including Stockholm University (Sweden) Aalborg University (Denmark), Copenhagen University (Denmark), Aalto University (Finland) and RMIT (Australia) as well as Manchester and Lancaster Universities, and the University of East Anglia, in the UK.
I have been an invited peer reviewer for over 30 scholarly journals and reviewed book manuscripts and proposals for publishers including Sage, Routledge and Polity
Current and recent advisory and working group roles include:
- International Advisory Board member for the Centre for Practice Theory at Lancaster (2022-)
- International Advisory Board member for ERC Advanced Investigator eCAPE, 鈥淣ew Energy Consumer roles and technologies 鈥 Actors, Practices and Equality鈥 Kirsten Gram-Hanssen, Copenhagen University, Denmark, 2018-22
Within the department I am currently Director of Research and part of the Department鈥檚 Executive team as well as chairing Research Committee. I have previously served as Faculty co-Director of PGR, Departmental Director of Masters Programmes and Departmental Director of PGR Tutor.
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