Research output per year
Research output per year
Prof
Research activity per year
Rebecca Elmhirst is Professor of Human Geography in the School of Applied Sciences. She is a human geographer and political ecologist, with two decades of research and teaching experience on struggles over environmental governance, migration and social justice in the global South. Most of her work is in partnership with scholar-activists in Southeast Asia, with whom she has developed various programmes of research and teaching. These include current projects on the gender dimensions of oil palm investment in Indonesia, links between migrant remittances, livelihoods and resource access, and on living with floods in a mobile Southeast Asia. She is a Principal Investigator in the WEGO (Wellbeing, Ecology and Gender) H2020 MSCA Innovative Training Network on feminist political ecology. Becky is a member of the Centre of Excellence for Spatial, Environmental and Cultural Politics and for Aquatic Environments. She also sits in the Society, Space and Environment research group. Becky has published more than 40 journal articles and chapters, co-edited three books and contributed to popular publications. Her research has been funded by the Economic and Social Research Council, the British Academy, the European Commission, the Research Council of Norway and European Commission Horizon 2020.
I am a human geographer with an interest in exploring the links between society and the environment. My teaching focuses on the negative and socially uneven impacts of extractive environmental degradation, and on actions that challenge social and ecological injustice in different parts of the world. I lead students through these issues via Political Ecology: a field of inquiry which enables analysis of so-called ‘wicked’ problems and highlights the possibilities of more ethical and convivial ways of inhabiting the planet.
I use teaching practices that equip students with the tools for thinking differently about some of these problems and possibilities, and the skills to take forward in careers that contribute to sustainable and equitable futures. I teach on first year undergraduate modules ‘Human Geography’ and ‘Global Environmental Issues’, ‘Sustainable Futures’ and ‘Professional Practice’ in the second year, and on ‘Political Ecology:Contested Environments’ in the final year.
I am an advocate of field-based learning, and have built and developed a second year geography field trip to Morocco in collaboration with a community partner in the Atlas Mountains. The fieldtrip offers a transformative opportunity for students and lecturers to reflect on and deepen their classroom learning whilst broadening critical perspectives on society-environment relationships in an unfamiliar setting.
I undertake research in the broad field of political ecology. My work is informed by intersectional feminist theory, critical development studies and environmental advocacy-activism around resource extraction, with an empirical focus on the gendered ecological politics of displacement, resettlement and dispossession in forest and flood contexts in Indonesia and Thailand. Current projects include work on the ways that gendered processes of mobility and migrant remittances unsettle linear analyses of dispossession associated with oil palm investment. I am also exploring ways to rethink feminist political ecology by linking theories associated with 'material feminisms' to empirical work on mobility, environmental change and gender in Southeast Asia and the practice of feminist political ecology pedagogy and research in diverse professional contexts.
I am currently supervising four PhD students, two of whom are part of a H2020 Marie Curie Sklodowska Innovative Training Network. I am interested in supervising MRes and doctoral projects relating to (feminist) political ecology, and in particular, projects that relate to social and environmental justice, climate and agrarian resource extractivism, decolonial thinking and critical approaches to sustainable development.
PhD, University of London
Award Date: 19 Jan 1997
Master, University of British Columbia
Award Date: 7 Sep 1989
Bachelor, Newcastle University
Award Date: 7 Jul 1987
Editor, Gender, Technology and Development (Taylor and Francis)
Research output: Book/Report › Book - authored › peer-review
Research output: Other contribution › peer-review
Research output: Chapter in Book/Conference proceeding with ISSN or ISBN › Chapter › peer-review
Research output: Non-textual output › Exhibition
Research output: Chapter in Book/Conference proceeding with ISSN or ISBN › Chapter › peer-review
Dian Ekowati (Invited presenter), Rebecca Elmhirst (Invited presenter), Persephone Pearl (Presenter) & Deru Anding (Invited presenter)
Activity: External talk or presentation › Invited talk
Maimunah Siti (Organiser), Elona Hoover (Organiser), Dian Ekowati (Organiser), Alice Owen (Organiser), Rebecca Elmhirst (Organiser) & Lydia Heath (Organiser)
Activity: Events › Exhibition, performance