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1 JAN NIJMAN CURRICULUM VITAE December 2018 Work Address in the USA: Andrew Young School of Policy Studies, Georgia State University, 14 Marietta St. NW, Suite 658, Atlanta, GA 30303; [email protected] +1-305-490-8640 Work Address in the Netherlands: Department of Geography, Planning, & International Development Studies, University of Amsterdam, Nieuwe Achtergracht 166, 1018 WV Amsterdam. +31-6-48361519; [email protected]. CURRENT POSITIONS AND AFFILIATIONS Distinguished University Professor and Director of the Urban Studies Institute, Georgia State University, since 2016 Professor of Urban Studies, University of Amsterdam, since 2011 External Faculty, Institute for Advanced Study, University of Amsterdam, since 2017 PREVIOUS POSITIONS AND AFFILIATIONS 2011-2015 Founding Director, Centre for Urban Studies, U of Amsterdam 2011-2015 Chair, Degree Program in Interdisciplinary Social Sciences, U of Amsterdam 2011-2016 Chair, Global Exploration Fund – Europe, National Geographic Society 1998-2011 Full Professor, Department of Geography & Regional Studies, University of Miami FL 2004-2011 Director, Urban Studies Program, College of Arts & Sciences, U of Miami 2009-2011 Resident Faculty Master, Pearson Undergraduate Residential College, U of Miami 2002-2011 Member, Committee for Research & Exploration, National Geographic Society 2000-2002 Director, Sponsored Programs & Research, School of International Studies, U of Miami 1993-2001 Director, International Studies Program, College of Arts & Sciences, U of Miami 1998-2000 Member, NSF Senior Panel in Geography and Regional Sciences 1994-1998 Associate Professor, Department of Geography & Regional Studies, U of Miami 1992-1995 Associate Faculty Master, Hecht Undergraduate Residential College, U of Miami 1990-1994 Assistant Professor, Department of Geography & Regional Studies, U of Miami 1988-1990 Part-time instructor, Department of Geography, U of Colorado, Boulder 1987-1988 Teaching-assistant, Department of Geography, U of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
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Page 1: JAN NIJMAN - Andrew Young School of Policy Studies

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JAN NIJMAN

CURRICULUM VITAE December 2018

Work Address in the USA:

Andrew Young School of Policy Studies, Georgia State University, 14 Marietta St. NW, Suite 658, Atlanta, GA 30303; [email protected]

+1-305-490-8640 Work Address in the Netherlands: Department of Geography, Planning, & International Development Studies, University of Amsterdam, Nieuwe Achtergracht 166, 1018 WV Amsterdam. +31-6-48361519; [email protected].

CURRENT POSITIONS AND AFFILIATIONS

Distinguished University Professor and Director of the Urban Studies Institute, Georgia State University, since 2016

Professor of Urban Studies, University of Amsterdam, since 2011 External Faculty, Institute for Advanced Study, University of Amsterdam, since 2017

PREVIOUS POSITIONS AND AFFILIATIONS 2011-2015 Founding Director, Centre for Urban Studies, U of Amsterdam 2011-2015 Chair, Degree Program in Interdisciplinary Social Sciences, U of Amsterdam 2011-2016 Chair, Global Exploration Fund – Europe, National Geographic Society 1998-2011 Full Professor, Department of Geography & Regional Studies, University of

Miami FL 2004-2011 Director, Urban Studies Program, College of Arts & Sciences, U of Miami 2009-2011 Resident Faculty Master, Pearson Undergraduate Residential College, U of

Miami 2002-2011 Member, Committee for Research & Exploration, National Geographic Society 2000-2002 Director, Sponsored Programs & Research, School of International Studies, U of

Miami 1993-2001 Director, International Studies Program, College of Arts & Sciences, U of Miami 1998-2000 Member, NSF Senior Panel in Geography and Regional Sciences 1994-1998 Associate Professor, Department of Geography & Regional Studies, U of Miami 1992-1995 Associate Faculty Master, Hecht Undergraduate Residential College, U of Miami 1990-1994 Assistant Professor, Department of Geography & Regional Studies, U of Miami 1988-1990 Part-time instructor, Department of Geography, U of Colorado, Boulder 1987-1988 Teaching-assistant, Department of Geography, U of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign

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EDUCATION

Ph.D. in Geography, University of Colorado at Boulder, 1990 M.A. in Geography, University of Amsterdam, 1985 B.A. in Geography, University of Amsterdam, 1980

Post-graduate Training

The Netherlands Institute for International Affairs “Clingendael”, in association with the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Dutch Foreign Service, The Hague, fall 1986. “Leergang Buitenlandse Betrekkingen”: a full-time 3-month preparatory program for Dutch diplomats on foreign policy making, cross-cultural training, diplomacy, and conflict resolution. Languages Fluent English and Dutch; working knowledge French and German; basic knowledge Spanish

RESEARCH AND TEACHING INTERESTS/EXPERTISE Thematic: urban and regional development; human geography; history of cities; geopolitics. Regional: North America, India, West Europe.

PROFESSIONAL HONORS Mellon Visiting Professor, University of Pretoria, 2015-2016 J.B. Jackson Book Prize, Association of American Geographers, 2012 (Miami: Mistress of the

Americas, University of Pennsylvania Press) Guggenheim Fellowship, John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation, 2003 Excellence in Teaching Award, University of Miami, 1998. Wibaut Chair (Distinguished Visiting Professor), University of Amsterdam, 1996 Knight Fellowship, University of Miami, for outstanding new research faculty, 1990-1992 Warren Nystrom Award, Association of American Geographers, for best doctoral dissertation in

Geography in the United States, 1991 University Fellowship, for doctoral studies at the University of Illinois in Urbana-Champaign,

1987-1988

SELECTED KEYNOTES AND INVITED LECTURES

(see appendix for full list and details): Future Forum, Miami 2019 U.S. Department of State, Annual Fulbright Seminar, Atlanta 2018 Kennesaw State University, Atlanta 2018 Young African Leaders Initiative, Atlanta 2017 Georgia Institute for Technology, Atlanta 2016

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Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2016 European University at St. Petersburg, Russia, 2015 Georgia State University, Atlanta, 2015 University of Pretoria, 2015 Urban Affairs Association, Miami, 2015 Regional Studies Association, Tampa FL, 2014 Leiden University, Netherlands, 2014 Spaces and Flows Conference, Amsterdam 2013 Universitas21 Conference, Amsterdam, 2013 Santa Fe Institute, 2013 Cities-2030 Conference, University of Miami, 2013 University of Manchester, United Kingdom, 2012 Center for Humanities, University of Miami, 2012 Indian Anthropological Association/Indian Institute for Technology Bombay, India, 2012 L’Institut d’Études Politiques (Sciences Po), Paris, 2011 Kampong, National Botanical Tropical Garden, Coconut Grove FL, 2011 The Asia Center, University of Utah, 2011 School of Human Evolution and Social Change, Arizona State University, 2011 Global Metropolitan Studies, University of California at Berkeley, 2010 Royal Dutch Geographical Society, Utrecht, Netherlands, 2009 Journal for Economic and Social Geography (TESG), Centennial Lecture, Las Vegas, 2009 City Institute at York University, Toronto, 2008 Kutztown University, Pennsylvania, 2008 Florida Society of Geographers, Annual Meeting Keynote Speech, Miami, 2008 Trinity College, Hartford, 2007

Kiran C. Patel Center for Global Solutions, University of South Florida, Tampa, 2006 University of Wisconsin, Dhaliwal Lecture, 2006 Harvard Museum of Natural History / NGS: series of lectures on tour in India, 2005 Rachna Sansad School of Architecture, Mumbai / Mumbai Study Group, 2005 School of Geography, Clark University, 2003 Davis Center for Historical Studies, Princeton University, 2003 (declined) Department of Geography, UCLA, 2003 Committee for Research and Exploration, National Geographic Society, 2001 James Baker III Institute, Rice University, 2001 Department of Geography, University of Georgia, Athens, 2000 Department of Humanities and Social Sciences, IIT, Mumbai, 2000 Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs, Syracuse University, 1999 Huntington Library, San Marino, California, 1998 Wolfsonian Museum, Miami Beach, 1997 Department of Geography, University of Bombay, 1996 School of Environmental Sciences, University of Amsterdam, 1996 Amsterdam Study Centre for the Metropolitan Environment, 1996 Department of Geography, Syracuse University, 1995 Faculdad Latinoamericana Ciencias Sociales, Universidad Catolica de Ecuador, Quito, 1994

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EXTERNAL RESEARCH GRANTS/CONTRACTS (PI or co-PI unless noted otherwise) Food Well Alliance, Atlanta 2018-2019. Contract: “Mapping Atlanta’s Local Food Network.”

($ 45,000). National Geographic Society, 2018. Contract: “Sustainable urbanization in South Asia.

Landscape Study.” With D. Parthasarathy (IIT Bombay) ($25,000). Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO), 2016-2020: Talent Grant

(Talentbeurs) for PhD student R.J. van Duijne, “A New Urban Epoch? Alternative ways to measure urbanization using VHR remote sensing data.” (€220,000).

Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada, Major Collective Research Initiative (MCRI), 2010-2016: “Global Suburbanism.” The project is coordinated at the City Institute of York University, Toronto, with Roger Keil as project manager. Nijman is co-investigator and “Team Lead” for the North American Research Cluster, involving 21 researchers in the United States and Canada ($ 2,500,000).

National Science Foundation, 2008-2009: REU Supplement to BCS-0721025 for undergraduate student Zachary Woordward ($15,200)

National Science Foundation, 2007-2009: BCS-0721025: “Neglected Spatiality: Slums as Sites of Economic Production. A Comparative Study of Mumbai and Johannesburg.” ($ 137,400).

National Science Foundation, 2002-2005: BCS-0213648: “Globalization, Liberalization, and Urban Restructuring in the Less-Developed World: A Comparative Study of Socio-economic and Spatial Polarization in Accra and Mumbai.” ($ 153,438)

John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation, 2003-2004: Guggenheim Fellowship: “Miami as a Laboratory of Urban Living.” ($35,000)

National Science Foundation, 2003-2005: BCS-0306230: REU Supplement for undergraduate students Ms. Daniela Belloli and Ms. Lynsey Irwin ($12,015)

National Science Foundation: 1999: BCS-9941446: REU Supplement for undergraduate student Ms. Shani Ospina ($4,750)

National Science Foundation, 1998-2001: BCS 9730920/0096078: “Globalization and Urban Restructuring in the Periphery of the World-Economy: A Comparative Geographic Analysis of Accra and Mumbai.” ($ 234,360).

Committee for Research & Exploration, National Geographic Society, 1998-2000: #6023-97. “Globalization, land values, and socio-economic polarization in Mumbai, India.” ($13,928)

Association of American Geographers: 1997: “Mumbai's globalization in the Context of Indian National Planning and Liberalization Policies.” ($760).

PUBLICATIONS

Books and monographs

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1. Geography: Realms, Regions and Concepts. 17th Edition. Wiley, 2017 (with P.O. Muller and H.J. de Blij).

2. The World Today: Concepts and Regions in Geography. 7th Edition. Wiley, 2016 (with P.O. Muller and H.J. de Blij).

3. Miami: Mistress of the Americas. University of Pennsylvania Press, 2011. Winner of the J.B. Jackson Book Prize of the Association of American Geographers, 2012.

4. The Global Moment in Urban Evolution. Amsterdam: Amsterdam Study Centre for the Metropolitan Environment, 1996.

5. The Geopolitics of Power and Conflict: Superpowers in the International System. New York: Wiley, 1993.

Edited collections

6. The Life of North American Suburbs. University of Toronto Press (2019 – in press). 7. Amsterdam’s Canal District: Origins, Evolution, and Future Prospects. University of Toronto

Press (under review). 8. “Mythical North American Suburbs.” Special guest-edited issue of Environment & Planning A

vol. 47 (2015). 9. “Comparative Urbanism.” Special guest-edited issue of Urban Geography vol. 28 (2007). 10. The Global Crisis in Foreign Aid. Syracuse University Press, 2nd edition 2000, 1st edition

1998 (with R. Grant). 11. “Foreign Aid in the New World Order.” Special guest-edited issue of Tijdschrift voor

Economische en Sociale Geografie, vol. 86 (1995) (with R. Grant). 12. “The Political Geography of the Post-Cold War World.” Special guest-edited issue of The

Professional Geographer, vol. 44 (1992) (with J. O’Loughlin).

Journal articles and book chapters 13. “India’s emergent urban formations.” Annals of the AAG (in press) (with R.J. van Duijne). 14. “Introduction: The life of North American suburbs.” In: J. Nijman (ed.), The Life of North American Suburbs. University of Toronto Press (in press).

15. “Epilogue: Suburbs as transitional spaces.” In: J. Nijman (ed.), The Life of North American Suburbs. University of Toronto Press (in press).

16. “Rethinking suburbia: A case study of metropolitan Miami.” In: J. Nijman (ed.), The Life of North American Suburbs. University of Toronto Press (in press). Reprint from Environment & Planning A vol. 47 (2015) (with T. Clery).

17. “Urbanization and Economic Development: Comparing the Trajectories of China and United States.” In: R. Forrest, J. Ren, and B. Wissink (eds.), The City in China: Perspectives on Contemporary Urbanism. Polity Press (in press).

18. “Urban health indicators: the role of data disparities.” In: J. Nriagu (ed.), Encyclopedia of Environmental Health, 2nd edition (in press) (with R. Rothenberg, C. Stauber, D. Dai).

19. “The social sustainability of European cities: The importance of local government.” In: V. Mamadouh & a. van Wageningen (eds.), Urban Europe: Fifty Tales of the City. Amsterdam University Press / University of Chicago Press, 2016, pp. 219-226 (with S. Musterd).

20. “Naissance d’une ville mondiale.” Problèmes d’Amérique Latine 96 (2016): 19-37.

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21. “De sociale duurzaamheid van Europese steden. Het belang van lokale overheden.”. In: V. Mamadouh & A. van Wageningen (eds.) EU @ Amsterdam: Een Stedelijke Raad. Amsterdam University Press, 2015, pp. 217-224 (with S. Musterd).

22. “The theoretical imperative of comparative urbanism.” Regional Studies 49/1 (2015): 183-186.

23. “India’s urban future: Views from the slum.” American Behavioral Scientist 59/3 (2015): 406-423.

24. “North American suburbia in flux.” Environment & Planning A vol. 47 (2015): 3-9. 25. “Rethinking suburbia: A case study of metropolitan Miami.” Environment & Planning A vol.

47 (2015): 69-88 (with T. Clery). 26. “Economische vitaliteit en sociale duurzaamheid: Bestuurlijke uitdagingen van de stad.”

[Economic vitality and social sustainability: Urban management challenges]. Invited essay for the Ministry of the Interior of the Dutch Government, The Hague, 2015 (with S. Musterd).

27. “The United States: Suburban imaginaries and metropolitan realities.” In: P. Hamel & R. Keil (eds.), Suburban Governance: A Global View. University of Toronto Press, pp. 57-79, 2015 (with T. Clery).

28. “Megacities” In: Paul Knox (ed.) Atlas of Cities. Mapping the Origins, Development, and Impacts of Urbanization. Princeton University Press, 2014, pp. 140-157 (with M. Shin).

29. “Transnational Cities.” In: Paul Knox (ed.), Atlas of Cities. Mapping the Origins, Development, and Impacts of Urbanization. Princeton University Press (2014, with M. Shin).

30. “Cities – Mumbai.” In: China, India, and East and Southeast Asia: Assessing Sustainability. Berkshire Encyclopedia of Sustainability, 2013, 255-258.

31. “The American suburb as utopian constellation.” In: Roger Keil (ed.), Suburban Constellations. Jovis Publishers, Berlin, 2013, pp. 159-167.

32. “India’s urban challenge.” Eurasian Geography and Economics 53/1 (2012): 7-20. 33. “Mumbai as a global city. A theoretical essay.” In: B. Derudder, M. Hoyler, P.J. Taylor & F.

Witlox (eds.), International Handbook of Globalization and World Cities. Edward Elgar, 2012.

34. “India in the urban revolution.” The Indian Anthropologist 42/2 (2012): 1-17. 35. “A study of space in Mumbai’s slums.” Tijdschrift voor Economische en Sociale Geografie

101 (2010): 4-17. 36. “Mumbai: Een post-koloniale wereldstad.” Geografie November 2009: 19-22. 37. “Against the odds: Slum rehabilitation in neoliberal Mumbai.” Cities 25 (2008): 75-87. 38. “Aufstieg auf Pump: Auf der Suche nach Indiens Neue Mittelschicht.” Der Überblick:

Zeitschrift für Ökumenische Begegnung und Internationale Zusammenarbeit (Germany) 43/3 (2007): 70-75.

39. “Mumbai since liberalization: The space-economy of India’s gateway city.” In: A. Shaw (ed.), Indian Cities in Transition. New Delhi: Orient Longman, 2007. Pp. 238-259.

40. “Comparative Urbanism.” Urban Geography 28 (2007): 1-6. 41. “Place-particularity and deep analogies: A comparative historical essay about Miami’s

emergence as a world city.” Urban Geography 28 (2007): 92-107. 42. “Locals, exiles, and cosmopolitans. A theoretical argument about identity and place in

Miami.” Tijdschrift voor Economische en Sociale Geografie 98 (2007): 167-178. 43. “Mumbai’s mysterious middle class.” International Journal for Urban and Regional

Research 30 (2006): 758-775.

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44. “The rescaling of uneven development in Ghana and India.” In: W. Moseley, D. Lanegran & K. Pandit (eds.), The Introductory Reader in Human Geography. London: Blackwell, 2006. Pp. 297-308 (with R. Grant). [Reprinted from TESG 2004].

45. “Globalization and the corporate geography of cities in the less-developed world.” In: N. Brenner & R. Keil (eds.), The Global Cities Reader. New York: Routledge, 2006. Pp. 224-237 (with R. Grant). [Reprinted from The Annals of the AAG 2002].

46. “Cultural globalization and the identity of place: The reconstruction of Amsterdam.” In: N. Fyfe & J.T. Kenny (eds.), The Urban Geography Reader. New York: Routledge, 2005. Pp. 93-102. [Reprinted from Ecumene 1999].

47. “Miami: Één grote migrantenwijk.” Stedenbouw en Ruimtelijke Ordening (Netherlands) (2005): 53-58.

48. “Globalization and the hyper-differentiation of space in the less developed world.” In: J. O’Loughlin, L. Staeheli and E. Greenberg (eds.), Globalization and its Outcomes. Guilford Press, 2004. Pp. 45-66 (with R. Grant).

49. “Observaties vanuit Miami: Schaalkwesties bij de analyse van mondiale stedelijke netwerken.” (Matters of scale in the analysis of global urban networks), Agora (Belgium) 20 (2004): 18-22.

50. “The rescaling of uneven development in Ghana and India.” Tijdschrift voor Economische en Sociale Geografie 95 (2004): 461-481 (with R. Grant).

51. “Post-colonial cities in the global era: A comparative study of Mumbai and Accra.” In: A. Dutt & A. Noble (eds.), Challenges of Asian Urbanization. Dordrecht, The Netherlands: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 2003. Pp. 31-52 (with R. Grant).

52. “The effects of economic globalization on land use and land values in Mumbai.” In: R. Grant and J.R. Short (eds.), Globalization at the Margins. Basingstoke (UK): Palgrave Publishers, 2002. Pp. 150-169.

53. “Metropolitane politiek in Miami.” Rooilijn: Tijdschrift voor Wetenschap en Beleid in de Ruimtelijke Ordening (Netherlands) 8 (October 2002): 379-386.

54. “Globalization and the corporate geography of cities in the less-developed world.” Annals of the Association of American Geographers 92 (2002): 320-340 (with R. Grant).

55. “The global moment in urban evolution.” In: L. Deben et al (eds.), Understanding Amsterdam: Essays in Economic Vitality, City Life and Urban Form. Amsterdam: Het Spinhuis, 2001 (2nd rev. and exp. ed.), 2001. Pp. 19-57.

56. “The political geography of world cities.” In: G. Dijkink and H. Knippenberg (eds.), The Territorial Factor. Political Geography in a Globalizing World. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2001. Pp. 97-112.

57. “Foreign Aid.” In: J. Krieger (ed.), The Oxford Companion to Politics of the World. 2nd Edition. New York: Oxford University Press, 2001. Pp. 288-290.

58. “Madeleine Albright and the denial of geopolitics.” In: M. Antonsich, V. Kolossov and M.P. Pagnini (eds.), Europe Between Political Geography and Geopolitics. Roma: Societa Geografica Italiana, 2001. Pp. 461-472.

59. “New York City and the geopolitical transition.” The Arab World Geographer 4 (2001): 96-99.

60. “The paradigmatic city.” Annals of the Association of American Geographers 89 (2000): 135-145.

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61. “World cities and grand theory.” Review essay. Economic and Political Weekly (India) 35/15 (April 8-14, 2000): 1255-1258.

62. “Mumbai’s real estate market in the 1990s: Deregulation, global money, and casino capitalism.” Economic and Political Weekly (India) vol. 35, no. 7 (2000): 575-582.

63. “Madeleine Albright and the geopolitics of Europe.” GeoJournal 46 (1999): 267-278. 64. “Cultural globalization and the identity of place: The reconstruction of Amsterdam.” Cultural

Geographies 6 (1999): 146-164. 65. “The foreign aid regime in flux: crisis or transition?” In: R. Grant & J. Nijman (eds.), The

Global Crisis in Foreign Aid. Syracuse, NY: Syracuse University Press, 1998, pp. 3-10. (with R. Grant).

66. “Foreign aid at the end of the century: The emerging transnational liberal order and the crisis of modernity.” In: R. Grant & J. Nijman (eds.), The Global Crisis in Foreign Aid. Syracuse, NY: Syracuse University Press, 1998, pp. 183-198. (with R. Grant).

67. “United States foreign aid: Crisis, what crisis?” In: R. Grant & J. Nijman (eds.), The Global Crisis in Foreign Aid. Syracuse, NY: Syracuse University Press, 1998, pp. 29-43.

68. “Urban change and institutional adaptation: The geographic identity of the University of Miami.” In: H. van der Wusten (ed.), The Urban University and its Identity: Roots, Locations, Roles. Boston: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1998, pp. 187-206.

69. “Historical changes in US and Japanese foreign aid to the Asia-Pacific region.” Annals of the Association of American Geographers 87 (1997): 32-51 (with R. Grant).

70. “Globalization to a Latin beat: the Miami growth machine.” Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Sciences 551 (May 1997): 163-176. (Also translated in Chinese by the United States Information Agency, in the journal Exchange, 1998).

71. “Entre le nord et le sud: l'internationalisation de Miami.” In: P. Claval & A. Sanguin (eds.), Métropolisation et Politique. Série “Culture et Politique, Collection “Géographie et Culture. Paris: L’Harmattan Inc. 1997. Pp. 83-94

72. “Ethnicity, class, and the economic internationalization of Miami.” In: J. O'Loughlin & J. Friedrichs (eds.), Social Polarization in Post-Industrial Metropolises. Berlin and Chicago: Gruyter-Aldine 1996: 283-300.

73. “Breaking the rules: Miami in the urban hierarchy.” Urban Geography vol. 17 (1996): 5-22. 74. “Foreign aid: crisis or transition?” Tijdschrift voor Economische en Sociale Geografie 86

(1995): 215-218 (with R. Grant). 75. “Wereldsteden in het proces van mondialisering.” In: J. Heilbron & N. Wilterdink (eds.),

Mondialisering: de wording van de wereldsamenleving. Groningen: Wolters-Noordhoff, 1995: 206-224. [Reprinted from Amsterdams Sociologisch Tijdschrift 1995].

76. “Reshaping US foreign aid: continuity and change.” Tijdschrift voor Economische en Sociale Geografie vol. 86 (1995): 219-234.

77. “Integratie en desintegratie in het geopolitieke wereldbestel.” In: B. De Pater (ed.), Eenwording en Verbrokkeling: Paradox van de Regionale Dynamiek [The Paradox of Regional Integration and Fragmentation]. Van Gorcum 1995: 111-146 (with T. Nierop).

78. “Wereldsteden in het proces van mondialisering.” Amsterdams Sociologisch Tijdschrift (The Netherlands) 22 (1995): 206-224.

79. “The Dutch East India Company (VOC) and the expansion of the world-system, 1602-1799.” Political Geography 13 (1994): 211-227.

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80. The Geopolitics Dictionary (nineteen entries), ed. J. O'Loughlin. Westport CT: Greenwood Press 1994 (also translated in Italian and Japanese).

81. “Breaking the cold war mould in Europe: a geopolitical tale of gradual change and sharp snaps.” In: J. O'Loughlin & H. van der Wusten (eds.), The New Political Geography of Eastern Europe. London: Belhaven Press, 1993: 15-30. (with H. van der Wusten).

82. “Contra Wishful Thinking.” Invited commentary on P.J. Taylor's ‘Contra Political Geography’. Tijdschrift voor Economische en Sociale Geografie 84 (1993): 91-93.

83. “The Political Geography of the Post Cold War World.” “Introduction.” and “Closing Remarks.” The Professional Geographer 44 (1992): 1-3, 28-29.

84. “The Limits of Superpower: The United States and the Soviet Union since World War II.” Annals of the Association of American Geographers 82/4 (1992): 681-695.

85. “The dynamics of superpower spheres of influence. US and Soviet military activities, 1948-1978.” In: M. D. Ward (ed.), The New Geopolitics. New York: Gordon & Breach, 1992: 91-120. [Reprinted from International Interactions 1991].

86. “The dynamics of superpower spheres of influence: US and Soviet military activities, 1948-1978.” International Interactions 17 (1991): 63-91.

87. “Deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon: a classroom-project.” Journal of Geography 90 (May/June 1991): 102-105 (with A.D. Hill).

88. “Determinanten van het tijdstip van politieke dekolonisatie, 1945-1983.” Geografisch Tijdschrift (The Netherlands) 21 (1987): 240-252.

89. “Security policies of European countries outside the Soviet sphere.” Journal of Peace Research 22 (1985): 303-319 (with H. van der Wusten and R. Thijsse).

90. Finlandisering, de voorloper van ‘Hollanditis’ (contributions to various chapters) Edited by M. de Kwaasteniet & H. van der Wusten. Amsterdam: Subfaculteit der Sociale Geografie, Universiteit van Amsterdam, 1982. 163 pp.

Book reviews

91. Annals of the Association of American Geographers vol. 90 (2001): R.S. Khare, “Cultural Diversity and Social Discontent. Anthropological Studies on Contemporary India.”

92. Annals of the Association of American Geographers vol. 90 (2001): P. Trubowitz, “Defining the National Interest. Conflict and Change in American Foreign Policy.”

93. Geographical Review vol. 89 (1999): D.T. Murphy, “The Heroic Earth: Geopolitical Thought in Weimar Germany, 1918-1933.”

94. Geojournal, vol. 43 (1998): G. Dijkink, “National Identity and Geopolitical Vision. Maps of Pride and Pain.”

95. The Professional Geographer 50 (1998): J. Agnew (ed.), “Political Geography: A Reader.” 96. Urban Geography 18 (1997): P.L. Knox and P.J. Taylor (eds.), “World Cities in a World

System.” 97. GeoJournal 42 (1997): P.J. Taylor, “How the Modern World Works. World Hegemony to

World Impasse.” 98. Journal for Economic and Social Geography (TESG) 88 (1997): J. Agnew and S. Corbridge,

“Mastering Space: Hegemony, Territory, and International Political Economy.” 99. Environment and Planning A 26/12 (1994): Z. Mlinar (ed.), “Globalization and Territorial

Identities.”

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100. Annals of the Association of American Geographer 84/3 (1994): A. Portes and A. Stepick, “City on the Edge: The Transformation of Miami.”

101. Geographical Review 82 (1992): R.M. Siverson & H. Starr, “The Diffusion of War: A Study of Opportunity and Willingness.”

102. The Professional Geographer 44 (1992): I. Wallerstein, “Geopolitics and Geoculture: Essays on the Changing World-System.”

103. Geographical Review 81 (1991): H. Faringdon, “Strategic Geography: NATO, the Warsaw Pact, and the Superpowers.”

104. Urban Geography 12 (1991): G.W. Shannon, G.F. Pyle and R.L. Bashshur, “The Geography of AIDS: Origins and Course of an Epidemic.”

105. Journal for Economic and Social Geography (TESG) 82 (1991): P.J. Taylor, “Britain and the Cold War. 1945 as Geopolitical Transition.”

106. Political Geography Quarterly 9 (1990): G.R. Sloan, “Geopolitics in United States Strategic Policy, 1890-1987.”

Popular press publications:

107. “In 12 Years, China built more houses than there are in all of the U.K. The New Republic, August 27, 2014 (with M. Shin)

108. “Miami Is the #1 Airport in America for Shipping Dead Foreigners. Here's What It Costs to Fly a Corpse Home.” The New Republic, August 31, 2014. (with M. Shin)

109. “Pecking order: World city in the middle.” World City Business May 2007: 18-19. 110. “War will hurt US economy.” Op-ed article, The Miami Herald 11-13-2002. 111. “Drugs, corruption in a world city...sounds like Shanghai in 1900s.” World City Business 9-

11-2001. 112. “Hong Kong, Miami separated by more than just distance.” World City Business 8-14-2001. 113. “Washington-Miami contrast brings 'home-bias' to light.” World City Business 7-17-2001. 114. “FedEx study finds Miami ranks 10th, listens to N.Y.” World City Business 7-3-2001. 115. “Today's Miami strikingly like 17th century Amsterdam.” World City Business 6-19-2001. 116. “New poll ranks Miami low but should we care?” World City Business 6-5-2001. 117. “A great plan is needed to harvest great potential.” World City Business 5-22-2001. 118. “Latin American gains could be Miami’s loss.” Op-ed article, The Miami Herald 5-9-2001. 119. “Miami's tomorrow, N.Y.'s yesterday.” World City Business 5-8-2001. 120. “There is more riding on taxi cabs than you think.” World City Business 4-24-2001. 121. “Is stability in region really good for Miami?” World City Business 4-10-2001. 122. “Miami, of all places, ignored by 'Magical Urbanism'.” World City Business 3-27-2001. 123. “Houston is old economy city in new economy world.” World City Business 3-13-2001. 124. “NAP center could change face of downtown.” World City Business 2-27-2001. 125. “Miami’s origins as a ‘world city’ differ from L.A.’s.” World City Business 2-13-2001. 126. “Dublin is a world city by design - unlike Miami.” World City Business 1-30-2001. 127. “Miami a north-south hub, but that's half the story.” World City Business 1-16-2001. 128. “Rest of the U.S. does not see Miami as a world city.” World City Business 1-2-2001. 129. “Singapore is prosperous, but give me Miami's grit, freedom.” World City Business 12-19-

2000. 130. “Miami an 'e-gateway to the America's? - not yet.” World City Business 12-5-2000. 131. “Ships, trains and cars did little for Miami.” World City Business 11-21-2000.

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132. “Jacksonville, Miami: Same state, but worlds apart.” World City Business 11-7-2000. 133. “Miami's 'centrality' key to ranking as world city.” World City Business 10-24-2000. 134. “Global economy feels more impact from vital cities.” World City Business 10-10-2000. 135. “De kruis-raketten fixatie.” [The cruise missiles fixation]. Intermediair 23 (1987): 44. 136. “Angola, de schijn van tien jaar onafhankelijkheid.” [Angola: the deceptive appearance of

ten years of independence]. Intermediair 21 (1985): 73-77 (with T. Nierop). 137. “Finlandisering, een misbruikte metafoor.” [Finlandization: an abused metaphor].

Intermediair 20/34 (1984): 45-49, 53 (with R. Thijsse). 138. “Al 36 jaar lijdend aan Finlandisering maar nog steeds kerngezond.” [36 years of suffering

from Finlandization but still perfectly healthy]. De Volkskrant 10-31-1981 (with R. Thijsse).

Consulting Reports Sustainable urbanization in 21st century South Asia. A Landscape Study for National

Geographic. Urban Studies Institute, Atlanta 2018 (with D. Parthasarathy, IIT Bombay). Lagere overheden, openbare diensten, en sociaal-ruimtelijke omgeving. [Local governments,

public services, and the urban environment]. Instituut voor Sociale Geografie, Universiteit van Amsterdam, 1986. 89 pp.

De sociaal-economische en ecologische functies van het Markermeer. [The social, economic, and ecological functions of the Marker-Lake]. Research and Consultancy Firm "Regioplan", commissioned by the Foundation for the Conservation of the IJssel-lake (VBIJ) and presented to members of the Dutch Parliament. Edam, the Netherlands, 1985. 60 pp.

Referee, since 1990: Journal manuscripts: American Political Science Review Annals of the Association of American Geographers Antipode Area Development and Policy Cultural Geographies Current Anthropology Economic Geography Ecumene Environment and Planning A Ethnic and Racial Studies Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment Geographical Review Geography Research Forum GeoJournal Geopolitics and International Boundaries Habitat International International Journal for Urban and Regional Research Journal of Geography Journal of Housing and the Built Environment

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Journal of Urban Affairs Journal of Urbanism Political Geography Professional Geographer Singapore Journal of Tropical Geography Southeastern Geographer Tijdschrift voor Economische en Sociale Geografie Urban Affairs Review Urban Geography Urban Studies Research grant proposals: Global Exploration Fund (Europe), National Geographic Society (panel member, ~500

proposals) Committee for Research and Exploration, NGS (panel member, ~3,000 proposals) National Science Foundation USA, Geography and Regional Science Program (panel member,

~100 proposals) National Science Foundation USA, International Programs National Science Foundation USA, Economics Program Fonds voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek, Vlaanderen (NSF, Belgium) Ohio University Office of Sponsored Programs Sponsored Research Programs, School of International Studies, University of Miami Miami Consortium for Urban Studies, University of Miami Israel Science Foundation Swiss National Science Foundation Book manuscripts: Frank Cass Publishers; Oxford University Press; Prentice Hall Publishers; Routledge Press; Vanderbilt University Press; Sage Publications Institutional reviews/proposals and tenure/promotion reviews: Georgia State University, Geosciences Department (2018) Georgia State University, Department of Anthropology (2018) UCLA, Department of Geography (2018) Harvard University, School of Design (2011) Austrian Academy of Sciences: Commission for Migration and Integration Research; Institute for Urban and Regional Research (2010) Loughborough University, UK (Queen’s Anniversary Prize, 2009) Department of Geography, Ohio State University (2006) Department of Geography, Temple University (2006) Vakgroep Sociale Geografie, Universiteit Gent, Belgium (2005) College of Arts and Sciences, University of Miami (2005-08) School of Social and Behavioural Sciences, Universiteit van Amsterdam (2004) Department of Geography, Pennsylvania State University (2003) Committee for Research and Exploration, National Geographic Society (2001)

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Organization of conferences • Comparative urbanism in global perspective. Urban Studies Institute, Georgia State

University, January 2019 (in progress). • Urban Sustainable Development: Integrating Social Sciences and Technology. Collaborative

symposium of the Centre for Urban Studies (U of Amsterdam) and the Centre for Science and Engineering (IIT Mumbai). Mumbai, March 26-27, 2015.

• The 400th Anniversary of Amsterdam’s Canal District: Historical Perspectives and Future Challenges. Centre for Urban Studies of the University of Amsterdam, October 18, 2013.

Special conference sessions organized • “North American Suburbanisms.” Annual Meeting of the AAG, New York, February 2012 • “Affordable Housing in North American Cities, I, II.” Annual Meeting of the AAG, San

Francisco, April 2007 • “Comparative Urbanism I, II.” Annual Meeting of the AAG, Denver, April 2005 • “India in the World-Economy.” Annual Meeting of the AAG, Fort Worth, TX, April 1997 • “The Political Geography of the Post-Cold War Order.” Annual Meeting of the AAG, Miami,

March 1990 (with J. O'Loughlin)

TEACHING / EDUCATIONAL EXPERIENCE

Teaching Appointments I have teaching experience at the U of Illinois, U of Colorado, U of Miami, U of Amsterdam, and Georgia State U in programs of Geography, Planning, International Development Studies, Urban Studies, and International Studies. Student evaluations are consistently very high and at the top among colleagues of respective departments/programs. I am a recipient of the Excellence in Teaching Award at the U of Miami. Resident Faculty Master Appointments Two stints as resident faculty in the U of Miami’s undergraduate Residential College system have been invaluable in my understanding of student life and the importance of student learning and growing outside the classroom. I was Associate Faculty Master in Hecht College from 1992-1995 and Faculty Master in Pearson College from 2009-2011. Responsibilities included general student advising; facilitating student programming teams for social and educational events; working with students in volunteering programs; community building; increasing multicultural awareness and diversity; leadership development; supervision student teams and Pearson Residential College staff; budget authority (as Master in Pearson College); liaising with the higher administration, advising offices, and counseling services. Textbooks My interests in education and in didactical-pedagogical issues extend in the realm of textbooks and writing. I am the senior author of two leading undergraduate Geography texts in the United

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States. The books appear in print and digital formats and I am much involved in the ‘digital transition’ facing the textbook industry, teaching, and higher education in general. - Geography: Realms, Regions, and Concepts, 17th edition, 2017 (with H.J. de Blij and P.

Muller). New York: Wiley. - The world Today: Concepts and Regions in Geography, 7th edition, 2016 (with P. Muller

and H.J. de Blij). New York: Wiley.

National Geographic Lecturer Since 2005, I am a frequently invited expert lecturer at the National Geographic Society’s reputed travel program, National Geographic Expeditions, on programs in India, Northern Europe, and Around the World. I am experienced with audiences outside the college classroom, including corporate, government, and alumni circles.

Courses designed/taught (U of Miami; U of Amsterdam; GSU): Undergraduate: World Cities; India Lecture Series; Geographies of Europe; Geopolitics; Introduction to Human Geography; World Regional Geography; Metropolitan Miami; Cities in Time & Space; Globalization and Urbanization Graduate: Place, Region, Nature (Theory in Geography); South Asian Geographies; Geopolitics & Geoculture; Social Challenges and the City; Advanced Urban Studies, Advanced Urban Geography; The Evolution of Cities

Graduate student advising, GSU Kristin Allin (MIS), in progress Sharita Underwood (MIS), in progress Sophia Gallagher (MIS), in progress PhD student advising, U of Amsterdam PhD Committee Chair: Robbin-Jan van Duijne, in progress; Shubhagato Dasgupta, in progress; Thijs Jeursen, in progress PhD Committee Member: Xu Zhang, in progress; Nuria Arbones Aran, in progress; Jana Kleibert, 2015; Pieter van der Heijden, 2014; Tara van Dijk, 2014; Josje Hoekveld, 2014; Justin Kadi, 2014; Sabine Meier 2013; Sebastian Dembski 2013; Navtej Nainan 2012 Summa Cum Laude undergraduate thesis advisees, U of Miami:

Christopher Hooton, BA in International Studies/Economics (joined LSE) Daniela Belloli, BA in Economics/International Studies (joined US foreign service) Shani Ospina, BA in International Studies/Geography (joined LSE) Ana Carrion, BA in International Studies/Political Science (joined Carnegie Endowment) Emily Brelsford, BA in International Studies/Anthropology (joined Nike Corporation) Gisela Munoz, BA in International Studies/French (joined Yale Law School) Brett Vernetti, BA in International Studies/Economics (joined Defense Intelligence Agency)

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Yordanka Valdez, BA in International Studies/Political Science (joined Harvard Law School) External research funding for undergraduate students, U of Miami: Mr. Zachary Woodward. NSF: REU Supplement,2008-2009, BCS-0721025 Ms. Daniela Belloli. NSF: REU Supplement, 2003-2004, BCS-0306230 Ms. Lynsey Irwin. NSF: REU Supplement, 2003-2004, BCS-0306230 Ms. Shani Ospina. NSF: REU Supplement, 1999-2000, BCS 9941446

Graduate student advisor/committees, U of Miami: Luke Drake, Alpen Sheth, Daniela Belloli, Ryan McLemore, Srinivas Chokkakula, Sarah Reginelli, Sydney Schwartz Gross, Emily Martens, Tom Clery, William Kutz, Karla Turcio, Ajay Panicker, Adam Levy, Gabriella Marin-Thornton, Marco Millones, Toni Nelson, Pamela Blackmon, Mark White, David Feuer, Lorna Green

LEADERSHIP, ADMINISTRATIVE AND MANAGERIAL EXPERIENCE

Director, Urban Studies Institute, Georgia State University, 2016-present Founding director of the Urban Studies Institute at Georgia State University.

Director, Centre for Urban Studies, 2011-2015 CUS is one of the largest social science research centers of its kind in the world, with 50+ affiliated faculty, 60+ PhD students, and ongoing external funding of more than €20 million (2014). Responsibilities include strategic development of the Centre’s research agenda; faculty recruitment; international visibility in the academy; valorization and networking beyond the academy (esp. with local/national government, local communities, and NGOs); connecting research to relevant undergraduate and graduate education programs; synergy and exchange among urban scholars in various disciplines (esp. sociology, history, anthropology, geography, and political science); public outreach; budget authority; staff supervision; report to, and consult with, Dean of the School of Social and Behavioral Sciences and to the University President. Highlights: - Founding of the Centre for Urban Studies (2011); - Secured structural University support for the Centre’s basic operations (€300,000/yr); - Oversaw acquisition of external research funds averaging €3.5 million per year since 2011; - Forged synergetic connections of the Centre with the MA degree program in Urban Studies; - Recruitment of young faculty talent with interdisciplinary urban studies expertise, six of

whom obtained tenure by 2015; - Designed a new undergraduate interdisciplinary Minor in Urban Studies beginning in 2012; - Established a funding program for synergistic activities across departments: seed grants,

workshops (e.g., annual Urban China Symposium), collaborative research proposals, symposia, lecture series, working paper series, forum with elected City officials, etc.;

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- Won recognition of CUS as “Innovating Research Center” by the UN Global Compact Cities Programme (2014); negotiated partnership with the city of Amsterdam as a signatory of the UN Global Compact;

- Created new institutional networks with, IIT Mumbai, Sciences Po (Paris), Centre for Policy Research (Delhi), U of Hong Kong, University College London, U of Pretoria.

- Development of an urban sustainability agenda in partnership with the city of Amsterdam; - Collaboration with Delft Technological University, Wageningen University, and MIT in

“Amsterdam Metropolitan Solutions” - Organization of major conferences on themes of urban sustainable development. - Supported various student initiatives including symposiums, exhibitions, and community

debates in collaboration with local stakeholders.

Chair, National Geographic Society’s Global Exploration Fund - Europe, 2011-present The Global Exploration Fund (GEF) is a global initiative modeled on National Geographic’s century-long approach to funding research, conservation, and exploration projects through targeted grant programs. Supported through funding partnerships, GEF-Europe relies on a peer-review process to evaluate projects and an advisory board of scientific experts. Funded projects are led by European residents but fieldwork may take place anywhere in the world, in the fields of biology, geography, archaeology, geology, paleontology, and anthropology. The grantees and outcomes supported by the fund benefit from National Geographic media and outreach. After having served for nearly a decade on the NGS Committee for Research & Exploration in Washington DC, I became Chair of the Board of the European GEF. Responsibilities include overseeing funding priorities; liaising and negotiating between the European Board, staff in the Stockholm office, and DC headquarters; chairing advisory board meetings, supporting fund raising; maintaining contacts with key PIs; strategic counsel to NGS mission programs. Contributed significantly to the successful development of the European branch as the first of NGS Global Exploration Funds since 2011, now emulated in China, India, and Southeast Asia. Chair, Interdisciplinary Social Sciences, U of Amsterdam, 2011-2015 The undergraduate major in Interdisciplinary Social Sciences enrolls about 70 students per year (250-300 in total) and 15 fulltime and part-time teachers. Responsibilities included curriculum development; course planning; examination policies; negotiation with involved departments in the School of Social and Behavioral Sciences; formulation of honors code; disciplinary actions (plagiarism and fraud); chairing staff meetings; reporting to the Dean. Developed a standard for examination policies that served as a model throughout the School; developed a for-credit internship elective in the local community; designed a new track in Urban Studies within the Interdisciplinary Social Sciences major.

Director, Urban Studies Program, College of Arts & Sciences, U of Miami, 2004-2011 Initiated and designed, and became the founding director of, a new interdisciplinary curriculum in Urban Studies in the College of Arts & Sciences, in collaboration with the School of Business and the School of Architecture. Responsibilities included administration of the program; support of interdisciplinary scholarly exchange and collaboration in the field of urban studies; negotiation with involved departments; administration of seed grants for externally funded research; student advising; design of innovative courses; community outreach activities; student

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internships and research opportunities; speaker series; budget management; chairing the Advisory Board; liaise between the Board and the higher administration. Director, Undergraduate Programs, School of International Studies, U of Miami, 1999-2002 Responsibility for the curricular design of a new Bachelor of Arts in International Studies in the new School of International Studies; set up curriculum committee; supervise advising staff; support new course designs; oversee course scheduling; seek student input; support student organization; advise the Dean on all undergraduate matters. (Moved temporarily to the new School of International Studies, returned fulltime to the College of Arts & Sciences in 2002) Director, Undergraduate Program in International Studies, College of Arts & Sciences, U of Miami, 1993-1998 Responsibility for one of the largest undergraduate majors in the College: curricular and overall programmatic development; strategic planning; course scheduling; coordination with various departments (esp. Political Science, Geography, Anthropology, Economics, Sociology, History, and Foreign Languages); staff supervision; student advising; support for student activities; budget management; reporting to the Dean. Selected University Service, Committees, etc. Chair, various Search Committees, U of Amsterdam

Chair, Examination Committee, Interdisciplinary Social Sciences, U of Amsterdam Member, Civic Engagement Committee, U of Miami Member, University Honors Graduation Committee, U of Miami Member, Fulbright Applications Committee, U of Miami Member, Promotion & Tenure Committee, College of Arts & Sciences, U of Miami Member, Freshman Seminar Committee, College of Arts & Sciences, U of Miami Member, Strategic Planning Committee, College of Arts & Sciences, U of Miami Member, Curriculum Committee of the College of Arts & Sciences, U of Miami Member, Faculty Senate’s General Education Requirements Committee, U of Miami Director of Graduate Studies, Department of Geography & Regional Studies, U of Miami Faculty advisor, U of Miami delegation to the Harvard Model UN Program, U of Miami Member, University’s Teaching Award Committee, U of Miami Member, Steering Committee for the Environmental Sciences Program, U of Miami Member, Advisory Committee of the Study Abroad Program, U of Miami Member, Council of the College of Arts & Sciences, U of Miami Member, Advisory Committee, Provost’s Awards for Innovative Teaching, U of Miami

++++++++++++++

APPENDIX: INVITED LECTURES, KEYNOTES AND OTHER PRESENTATIONS

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1. “Inclusive urban development: Global challenges.” Keynote lecture. U.S. Department of State Fulbright Seminar, Atlanta, March 2018.

2. “India’s rural-urban transition: Emergent urban forms and socio-economic transformations.” Keynote lecture. Envisioning the Future and Understanding the Realities of India’s Urban Ecologies. Kennesaw State University, Atlanta, March 2018.

3. “New urban forms of the 21st century: views from the north and the south.” Invited lecture. Young African Leaders Initiative, Mandela Washington Fellows. Atlanta, June 2017.

4. “Russian identity in geopolitical context.” Invited lecture. National Geographic Expeditions. Irkutsk, Russia, June 2017.

5. Dynamic Cities. Invited panelist (with Dennis Lockhart, former president of Federal Reserve). Atlanta, May 2017.

6. “Next Generation Cities.” Invited panelist, HOPE Global Forum, Atlanta, March 2017. 7. “Urbanization and development in the global south: The case of India.” School for City and

Regional Planning, Georgia Institute for Technology, Atlanta, November 2016. 8. “Positioning urban China: A comparative essay.” Chinese University of Hong Kong, June

2016. 9. “The Nature of Urbanization and the Portability of Western Theory.” Invited lecture,

European University of St. Petersburg, Russia, December 2015. 10. “Urban Revolutions.” Invited lecture, Netherlands Institute of St. Petersburg, Russia,

December 2015. 11. “Emergent Urban Formations: The Case of India.” Invited lecture, Georgia State University,

Atlanta, October 2015. 12. “Emergent Urban Formations: The Case of India.” Invited lecture, University of Pretoria,

August 2015. 13. “Miami: A window on the global urban future.” Invited plenary presentation, Annual

Meetings of the Urban Affairs Association, Miami, April 2015. 14. “Elusive comparative urbanism.” Invited Commentary on Jamie Peck’s Regional Studies

Lecture. Annual Meeting of the AAG, Tampa, April 2014. 15. “India’s Urban Future.” Gravensteen Lecture (invited), University of Leiden, February 2014. 16. “Amsterdam’s Historic Canal District: A Space of Flows.” Keynote speech, Conference

Spaces and Flows, Amsterdam, November 2013. 17. “The logic of slums.” Keynote speech, Conference Universitas21, Amsterdam, June 2013. 18. “The slum as organism.” Invited lecture, Santa Fe Institute, June 2013. 19. “Dharavi as urban genre.” Paper presentation. Annual Meetings of the AAG, Los Angeles,

April 2013. 20. “Urban perspectives of the world.” Invited lecture, University of Manchester, May 2012. 21. “Suburbanizing Miami: To the Everglades and back.” Paper presentation. Annual Meetings

of the AAG, New York, February 2012. 22. “Miami: Mistress of the Americas.” Invited Lecture. Center for Humanities, University of

Miami, February 2012 23. “India in the urban revolution.” Keynote speech. The 3rd J.S. Bhandari Memorial Lecture,

The Indian Anthropological Association/IIT Bombay, January 2012. 24. “World city theory: A view from Mumbai.” Invited lecture, L’Institut d’Etudes Politiques,

Paris, October 2011.

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25. “The first hemispheric city.” Panel presentation, Annual Meeting of the Association of Collegiate Schools of Planning, Salt Lake City, October 2011.

26. “Elusive subtropical urbanism.” Invited lecture, The Kampong, National Botanical Tropical Garden, Coconut Grove FL, October 2011.

27. “Miami: Mistress of the Americas.” Invited presentation, Books and Books, Coral Gables FL, September 2011.

28. “The urban revolution in China and India.” Keynote speech, Asia Center, University of Utah, August 2011.

29. “Identity and Place in a Global City: Miami’s Neighborhoods.” Invited lecture, School of Human Evolution and Social Change, Arizona State University, February 2011.

30. “Miami, World City of the Americas.” CEO Club, Coral Gables FL, February 2011. 31. “Mobility and power in the global city: Geographies of Miami.” University of California at

Berkeley, Global Metropolitan Studies. Invited lecture, September 2010. 32. “Een Ruimtelijke Analyse van Mumbai’s Sloppenwijken.” Keynote speech, Royal Dutch

Geographical Society, Utrecht, December 2009. 33. “Architects live in Fantasy Land.” Invited discussant, panel on “Miami Modern Metropolis:

Paradise and Paradox in Midcentury Architecture and Planning.” School of Architecture of the University of Miami, 2009.

34. “The Congruence of Economic and Social Geography: A Study of Space in Mumbai’s Slums.” Centennial Lecture, Tijdschrift voor Economische en Sociale Geografie, Las Vegas, March 2009.

35. “Western imaginations of India.” Invited lecture, Department of Geography, Planning & Development Studies, University of Amsterdam, February 2009.

36. “What to Think of India.” Invited lecture at the India & the Subcontinent Conference at Kutztown University, March 2008.

37. “The Miami Growth Machine.” Invited lecture at the City Institute, York University, Toronto, March 2008.

38. “Florida’s World City.” Keynote, Florida Society of Geographers, Miami, January 2008. 39. “Paradise lost? De-constructing the affordable housing crisis in Miami.” Paper presentation

at the Annual Meetings of the AAG, San Francisco, April 2007 (with D. Belloli). 40. “The urban middle class and Indian modernity.” Invited lecture, Trinity College, Hartford,

March 2007 41. “In search of the Indian urban middle class.” Invited lecture, Department of Geography,

University of Maryland, College Park, February 2007 42. “Asia Ascendant.” Invited panel presentation (with Clyde Prestowitz, Economic Strategy

Institute, and Eric Farnsworth, Council of the Americas), USTradeNumbers Symposium, World City Business, Miami, April 2006

43. “A place overwhelmed by flows: Miami in the global era.” Invited lecture, Conference on “Globalization, Cities, and the Production of Culture” hosted by the Kiran C. Patel Center for Global Solutions at the University of South Florida in Tampa, April 2006.

44. “Neo-liberal reform and the restructuring of class in urban India.” Annual Dhaliwal Lecture, Department of Geography, University of Wisconsin at Milwaukee, March 2006.

45. “Mumbai’s mysterious middle class.” Invited lecture, Rachna Sansad School of Architecture, Mumbai (in association with the Mumbai Study Group), June 2005.

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46. “Place particularity and deep analogies: Four individualizing comparisons of Miami.” Paper presentation at the Annual Meetings of the AAG, Denver, April 2005.

47. “The fragmentation of India.” Panel presentation at the Annual Meetings of the AAG, Denver, April 2005.

48. “Miami as a laboratory of urban living.” IGU Conference on Urban Cultures and Identities, Cologne, February 2004

49. “Globalization as neo-colonialism? The production of space in Mumbai.” Invited lecture, School of Geography, Clark University, December 2003.

50. “The transient city”. Invited lecture, Shelby Cullom Davis Center for Historical Studies, Princeton University. September 2003 (declined).

51. “Mumbai: A different world city.” Invited lecture, Department of Geography, University of California at Los Angeles. February 2003.

52. “Economic globalization and the hyper-differentiation of space.” Fourth European Social Science History Conference. The Hague, February 2002 (with R. Grant).

53. “Liberalization, globalization, and uneven development in the less-developed world. A comparative study of Ghana and India.” International Studies Association, Hong Kong, July 2001 (with R. Grant).

54. “Research and funding opportunities in human geography.” Invited presentation, Committee on Research and Exploration, National Geographic Society. Washington DC, July 2001.

55. “Three challenges to the American geopolitical imagination.” Invited lecture, The James A. Baker III Institute, Rice University. Houston, March 2001.

56. “Globalization and uneven development in India.” Annual Meetings of the AAG, New York, March 2001.

57. “Postmodern urbanism and magical urbanism.” Invited panel presentation. Annual Meetings of the AAG, New York, March, 2001.

58. “India in the world economy.” Invited panel presentation. Annual Meetings of the AAG, New York, March, 2001.

59. “The Rise of the Global CBD: Mumbai’s Space-Economy in the 21st Century.” Global Conference On Economic Geography, National University of Singapore, December, 2000.

60. “Cities, Globalization, and International Studies.” Invited lecture, Jacksonville University, Jacksonville, Florida, USA, October, 2000.

61. “Globalization and development in local perspective: A view from Mumbai, India.” Invited lecture, Conference on Globalization and Third World Development. University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia, USA, April, 2000.

62. “An Indian world city? Mumbai in the 21st century.” Invited lecture. Department of Humanities and Social Sciences, Indian Institute of Technology, Mumbai, March 2000.

63. “Mumbai’s changing geography in the global era.” Invited lecture. Presidency College, Chennai, March 2000.

64. “Comparative urbanism in the lesser developed world: A model for the global era.” Sixth Asian Urbanization Conference, January 2000. University of Madras, Chennai (with R. Grant).

65. “Economic globalization and urban change in the developing world: Foreign corporate activity in Mumbai, India.” 17th Annual Meeting of the Association of Third World Studies. November 1999, San Jose, Costa Rica.

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66. “Of imperial temptations, seductions, and betrayals: World politics and the Kosovo conflict seen through American eyes.” Invited lecture, Rewachand Bhojwani Academy, Pune, India, June 1999.

67. “Casino capitalism on the margins? The Bombay real estate market in the 1990s.” Invited lecture. Global Affairs Institute, Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs. Syracuse University, April 1999.

68. “The extreme city: Comparing Miami to Los Angeles.” Invited Lecture. Orange Empires: A Comparison of Miami and Los Angeles. Conference sponsored by the Huntington, the Getty Research Institute for the History of Art and the Humanities, and the Southern California Studies Center. February 1998, The Huntington Library, San Marino, California.

69. “Madeleine Albright’s geopolitical vision.” The Third Israeli Seminar in Political Geography. Sponsored by the IGU and the University of Haifa and Ben Gurion University. Haifi, Israel, January 1998.

70. “The European nature of American geopolitics.” Conference on Europe between Political Geography and Geopolitics. Sponsored by the IGU and the Committee for the Centenary of Ratzel’s Politische Geographie, Department of Political Science, University of Trieste. Trieste, Italy, December 1997.

71. “The globalization of third world cities: The case of Mumbai, India.” Annual Meetings of the AAG, Fort Worth, TX, April 1997.

72. “Global place, local community?” Invited Presentation at Symposium "The Exploding City: Urban form, development, and design in South Florida. The Wolfsonian Museum, Miami Beach, March 1997.

73. “The price of globalization: Miami's rise to world city status.” Invited lecture. Department of Geography of the University of Bombay, Mumbai, India, November 1996.

74. “Foreign aid and the power of ideology in the post-Cold War era.” Invited lecture. Department of Geography of the University of Bombay, Mumbai, November 1996.

75. “The global moment in urban evolution: A comparison of Amsterdam and Miami.” Invited lecture. Amsterdam Study Centre for the Metropolitan Environment, October 1996.

76. “Ethnicity and power in metropolitan Miami.” Invited lecture. School of Environmental Sciences of the University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, October 1996.

77. “Cities and the geography of global trade: The case of Miami.” Annual Meetings of the AAG, Charlotte NC, April 1996.

78. “The geographic identity of the University of Miami: A tale of urban change and institutional adaptation.” Conference on Urban Universities and Their Cities. Amsterdam Study Centre for the Metropolitan Environment, March 1996.

79. “Development, environment and security: changing discourses on US foreign aid since the 104th Congress.” Conference on Development, Environment and Peace. IGU in collaboration with the National Association of Geographers of India. Delhi, December 1995.

80. “Geography is destiny? Miami in the urban hierarchy.” Invited lecture. Department of Geography/Maxwell School of Government, Syracuse University, March 1995.

81. “Urban centers in the globalization process: a theoretical and empirical investigation.” Annual Meetings of the AAG, Chicago IL, March 1995.

82. “Miami: une ville étrangère.” Conférence de la Commission Française de Géographie Politique: Les métropoles, la mondialisation de l'économie et la scene politique. Laboratoire Espace et Culture, Université Paris-Sorbonne, France, September 1994.

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83. “US foreign aid in the new world order: consequences for Latin America.” Invited lecture. Faculdad Latinoamericana de Ciencias Sociales, Universidad Catolica de Ecuador, Quito, Ecuador, June 1994.

84. “Geopolitics versus geo-economics? A comparative analysis of American and Japanese foreign aid in the Asia-Pacific.” International Geographic Union, Tokyo, Japan, August/September 1993 (with R. Grant).

85. “After containment: the United States in search of a geopolitical code.” Annual Meetings of the AAG, Atlanta GA, April 1993.

86. “From structure to agency: the Dutch East India Company and the logic of the world-system.” Conference of the Political Geography Specialty Group of the AAG, Blacksburg, VA, April 1993.

87. “The V.O.C. and the expansion of the world-system, 1602-1799.” Annual Meetings of the AAG, San Diego CA, April 1992.

88. “How and why the mold of divided Europe finally broke when it did: a tale of gradual change and sharp snaps.” International Conference "East Europe-Central Europe-Europe", International Geographic Union, Prague, August 1991 (with H. van der Wusten).

89. “The political geography of US-Soviet competition, 1948-1988: the value of a spatial perspective”. Paper submitted for the annual "Warren Nystrom Award Competition" of the AAG, Miami FL, April 1991.

90. “The political geography of the post Cold War era.” Panel discussion. Annual Meetings of the AAG, Miami FL, April 1991.

91. “From geopolitics to political geography: evolving perspectives on the human environment-relationship.” Southeastern Division of the AAG, Columbia SC, November 1990.

92. “Restructuring in the European security environment in the 1980's.” Annual Conference of the International Studies Association, Washington D.C., April 1990 (with H. van der Wusten).

93. “Quid pro quo? An analysis of the motivations behind US and Japanese foreign aid.” Annual Meetings of the AAG, Toronto, April 1990.

94. “Geography and International Relations.” Invited panel presentation. Annual Conference of the International Studies Association, Washington D.C., April 1990.

95. “Changing US-Soviet relations and superpower involvement in regional conflicts.” Annual Meetings of the Association of AAG, Baltimore MD, March 1989.

96. “Local governments and urban political geography: a Dutch perspective.” Invited presentation. Dutch Studies Symposium, "The politics of urban planning: Dutch and American perspectives." Dept of Geography, University of Minnesota, December 1988.

97. “Cooperation and deterrence in U.S. security policy towards the U.S.S.R., 1949-1987.” Annual Meetings of the AAG, Phoenix AZ, April 1988.

98. “The evolution of security policies in Western Europe.” Annual Conference of the International Studies Association, Washington D.C., March 1987 (with H. van der Wusten).

99. “Determinanten van het tijdstip van politieke dekolonisatie in Zuid-Oost Azië.” (Explaining the timing of political decolonization in Southeast Asia.). K.O.T.A. Conferentie, Erasmus Universiteit, Rotterdam, August 1985.