In addition to a research career spanning more than 20 years, Professor Smith is experienced in research management, research strategy, and research assessment of all kinds. She has contributed to the work of the ESRC (Research Grants Board, Professorial Fellowships Commissioning Panel, Public Services Programme Commissioning Panel), HEFCE (as a panel member in the 2001 and 2008 Research Assessment Exercises), the Leverhulme Trust (Philip Leverhulme Prize panel), and to research development and monitoring in HEIs within and beyond the UK. She also has a wide-ranging teaching and examining portfolio, at all levels, in a variety of topics. Born in Northumberland and brought up in Newcastle-upon-Tyne, I have lived in the North East for most of my life. I completed my first degree in geography at Lancaster University and PhD at the University of Edinburgh, then worked as a lecturer in geography at Northumbria University before moving to Durham in 2000. Here, I teach at undergraduate level, supervise PhD students, and am Co-Director of the Centre for Social Justice and Community Action. I'm a social geographer whose research is informed by feminist and participatory theory and practice. I work on a range of issues around fear, violence and community safety; emotions and geopolitics; and participatory practice, politics, theory and activism. My research, teaching and public engagement activities are underpinned by a commitment to social justice. Recently I've worked on a number of participatory action research projects in the North East, with partners including refugee-led organisations, youth groups, Rivers Trusts and survivors of violence. As well as locating my own research and some training and teaching locally outside the University, I am involved in a number of initiatives to encourage two-way research collaborations, including the Centre for Social Justice and Community Action which develops and supports theory and practice around participatory action research at local, national and international levels. I'm also interested in the challenges that the idea of work life balance presents for academic business and cultures, and in supporting fairer institutional policies and practices for fractional, flexible and non-traditional workers.
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Introduction: Situating Social Geographies - Susan J Smith et al PART ONE: DIFFERENCE AND DIVERSITY Introduction: Social Geographies of Difference - John Paul Jones III Gender, Race, Sexuality - Linda Peake Social Geographies of Age and Ageism: Landscapes, Lifecourses and Justice - Rachel Pain and Peter Hopkins Disability, Health and Citizenship - Muchael L Dorn and Carla C Keirns Tensioned Landscapes and Contested Identities: Social Geographies of Difference and Relationships between Indigenous and Non-Indigenous Peoples - Audrey Kobayashi and Sarah de Leeuw Social Collisions - Katie D Willis Geographies of Affect - Keith Woodward and Jennifer Lea Assemblage Geographies - Paul Robbins and Brian Marks PART TWO: GEOGRAPHIES AND SOCIAL/ECONOMY Introduction: Into the Black Box - Susan J Smith Economic Society/Social - Roger Lee Geography Geographies of Financial Risk and Exclusion - Paul Bennet Emotional Economic Geographies - Nancy Ettlinger The Limits to Value - David B Clarke Publics and Markets: What's Wrong with Neoliberalism? - Clive Barnett PART THREE: GEOGRAPHIES OF WELL-BEING Introduction - Rachel Pain and Susan J Smith Geographies of Well-Being - Robin A Kearns and Gavin J Andrews Health, Risk and Resilience - Rich Mitchell Young People, Care and Social Well-Being - Nicola Ansell Phobias and Safe-Keeping: Exploring Emotional Intersections between Selves and Spaces - Joyce Davidson Fear and Its Others - Hille Koskela PART FOUR: GEOGRAPHIES OF SOCIAL JUSTICE Introduction - Sallie A Marston Geography and Social Justice - Marv Waterstone The Spaces of Being In-Common: Ethics and Social Geography - Jeff Popke Evironmental Justice and The Commons - Richard Howitt and Michael Hillman Crime and the 'Re-Moralization of City Spaces' - Nicholas R Fyfe A Social Geography of Human Rights - Amy Ross PART FIVE: DOING SOCIAL GEOGRAPHIES Introduction - Rachel Pain Participation - Sara Kindon Relevance - Lynn A Staeheli and Don Mitchell The Politics and Ethics of Trust in Geographic Research - Kathryn Besio Quantification - Mei-Po Kwan Positionalities: It's Not about Them, It's about Us - Kath Browne, with Leela Bakshi and Arthur Law

