Herod Andrew

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Andrew Herod is Distinguished Research Professor of Geography at the University of Georgia, USA, where he has worked since 1992. He writes frequently upon issues of labour, globalization, and the geography of capitalism. In 2015 he was a Fulbright scholar to Greece and in 2023 was selected as a John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellow.

Major Publications

  1. Al Rainnie & Andrew Herod (2022) Working on waste: beyond ahistorical chronicles and false dichotomies in circular economy narratives, Labour and Industry, 32:2, 194-205.
  2. Herod, A., Gialis, S., Psifis, S., Gourzis, K., & Mavroudeas, S. (2022). The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic upon employment and inequality in the Mediterranean EU: An early look from a Labour Geography perspective. European Urban and Regional Studies, 29(1), 3–20. 
  3. Herod, A., Gourzis, K., & Gialis, S. (2021). Inter-regional underemployment and the industrial reserve army: Precarity as a contemporary Greek drama. European Urban and Regional Studies, 28(4), 413–430.
  4. Herod, A., Rainnie, A., & McGrath-Champ, S. (2007). Working space: why incorporating the geographical is central to theorizing work and employment practices. Work, Employment and Society, 21(2), 247–264.
  5. Andrew Herod et.al, Global destruction networks, labour and waste, Journal of Economic Geography, Volume 14, Issue 2, March 2014, Pages 421–441.
  6. McGrath-Champ, S., Rainnie, A., Pickren, G., & Herod, A. (2015). Global destruction networks, the labour process and employment relations. Journal of Industrial Relations, 57(4), 624–640. 
  7. Herod, A., Rainnie, A., & McGrath-Champ, S. (2007). Working space: why incorporating the geographical is central to theorizing work and employment practices. Work, Employment and Society, 21(2), 247–264.
  8. Herod, A. (2007). The agency of labour in global change: Reimagining the spaces and scales of trade union praxis within a global economy. In J. Hobson & L. Seabrooke (Eds.), Everyday Politics of the World Economy (pp. 27-44). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  9. Nik Heynen, Peter Hossler & Andrew Herod (2011) Surviving Uneven Development: Social Reproduction and the Persistence of Capitalism, New Political Economy, 16:2, 239-245.
  10. Andrew Herod (2012) Workers as geographical actors, Labor History, 53:3, 335-353.