Geography and a Geographer
Reimagining the Discipline After Ron Johnston
LSE Press
Will be published approx. on 6. August 2026
Book
Paperback/Softback
978-1-911712-75-6 (ISBN)
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Description
Professor Ron Johnston OBE, FAcSS, FBA was one of the most celebrated geographers of his generation. Producing a prolific research record that spanned six decades, Johnston was an insightful, thoughtful, and open-minded contributor to debates and research practices in human geography, to understanding the histories and productions of geographical knowledge in modern Anglo-American geography, and to the study of electoral, political, urban, and social geographies. He was widely recognised as a champion of geography whose work continues to influence the field today.
Geography and a Geographer: Reimagining the Discipline After Ron Johnston brings together contributors whose work speaks to the geographies Johnston helped shape. It offers an invitation to revisit Johnston's body of work and consider its relevance for the future of the discipline. Across the volume, authors reflect on Johnston's intellectual legacy, the evolution of human geography, disciplinary history and memory, mentorship, collaboration and collegiality. Other chapters respond to calls to decolonise and pluralise how geography is narrated and practised, and encourage fresh thinking about the role of quantitative approaches in human geography.
Thought-provoking and forward-looking, this collection reflects Johnston's passion for geography and celebrates his extensive contributions to the discipline. It pays tribute to his scholarship through engagement with the ideas and concepts he developed in his research, and reflects on where his work can take us next.
Geography and a Geographer: Reimagining the Discipline After Ron Johnston brings together contributors whose work speaks to the geographies Johnston helped shape. It offers an invitation to revisit Johnston's body of work and consider its relevance for the future of the discipline. Across the volume, authors reflect on Johnston's intellectual legacy, the evolution of human geography, disciplinary history and memory, mentorship, collaboration and collegiality. Other chapters respond to calls to decolonise and pluralise how geography is narrated and practised, and encourage fresh thinking about the role of quantitative approaches in human geography.
Thought-provoking and forward-looking, this collection reflects Johnston's passion for geography and celebrates his extensive contributions to the discipline. It pays tribute to his scholarship through engagement with the ideas and concepts he developed in his research, and reflects on where his work can take us next.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
United Kingdom
Target group
Adult education
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
ISBN-13
978-1-911712-75-6 (9781911712756)
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Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Richard Harris is Professor of Quantitative Social Geography at the School of Geographical Sciences, University of Bristol, Fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences, and Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society (with IBG), with interests in quantitative methods, socio-spatial inequalities and segregation, geographies of education, and the education of geographers. He co-authored Ethnic Segregation Between Schools: is it increasing or decreasing in England? with Ron. (It is decreasing.)
David Manley is Professor of Human Geography at the School of Geographical Sciences, University of Bristol. His work focuses on exploring neighbourhood effects, investigating how households locate in residential space, and understanding how segregation develops and is maintained over long periods of time. As a result of many conversations with Ron, he also has a sideline in political geography!
Robert Mayhew is Fellow and Senior Tutor at Pembroke College, Cambridge. He is an Honorary Professor of Historical Geography and Intellectual History at the Universities of Cambridge and Bristol. Robert is a historian of geographical thought with particular interests in eighteenth-century geography, demography, and migration. His latest book is?Debating Malthus?(2022). He is a Fellow of the British Academy.
David Manley is Professor of Human Geography at the School of Geographical Sciences, University of Bristol. His work focuses on exploring neighbourhood effects, investigating how households locate in residential space, and understanding how segregation develops and is maintained over long periods of time. As a result of many conversations with Ron, he also has a sideline in political geography!
Robert Mayhew is Fellow and Senior Tutor at Pembroke College, Cambridge. He is an Honorary Professor of Historical Geography and Intellectual History at the Universities of Cambridge and Bristol. Robert is a historian of geographical thought with particular interests in eighteenth-century geography, demography, and migration. His latest book is?Debating Malthus?(2022). He is a Fellow of the British Academy.