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Andrew J. Herod
Professor
University of Georgia
Department of Geography
Athens, GA 30602

Phone: 706-542-2366
FAX: 706-542-2388
URL for more info: http://www.ggy.uga.edu/people/faculty/aherod/
Research Interests:Labor, Political Economy, Economic, Social Theory, and Qualitative Methods
Publications:

Books

Andrew Herod, 2009. Geographies of Globalization: A Critical Introduction Basil Blackwell: Oxford

Andrew Herod, 2009. Geographies of Globalization: A Critical Introduction Basil Blackwell: Oxford

Luis L. M. Aguiar and Andrew Herod (editors), 2006. The Dirty Work of Neoliberalism: Cleaners in the Global Economy. Basil Blackwell: Oxford. [Issue published simultaneously as a special issue of Antipode, 38.3]

Andrew Herod and Melissa W. Wright (editors), 2002. Geographies of Power: Placing Scale. Basil Blackwell: Oxford. (ISBN 0-631-22557-9 hbk/ ISBN 0-631-22558-7 pbk: xii plus 315 pages, 9 figs., 2 photos).

Andrew Herod and Melissa W. Wright (editors), 2001. Labor Geographies: Workers and the Landscapes of Capitalism. Guilford Press: New York (“Perspectives on Economic Change” Series). (ISBN 1-57230-685-8 pbk: xvi plus 352 pages, 5 figs., 2 tables, 12 photos).

Andrew Herod (editor), 1998. Organizing the Landscape: Geographical Perspectives on Labor Unionism. University of Minnesota Press: Minneapolis and London. (ISBN 0-8166-2970-6 hbk/ 0-8166-2971-4 pbk: xix plus 372 pages, 9 figs., 7 tables).

Andrew Herod, Gearóid Ó Tuathail, and Susan Roberts (editors), 1998. An Unruly World? Globalization, Governance and Geography. Routledge: London and New York. (ISBN 0-415-16931-3 hbk/ 0-415-16932-1 pbk: xiii plus 372 pages, 10 figs., 4 tables).

Guest Edited Journal Volumes

Luis L.M. Aguiar and Andrew Herod (eds.), 2006. Special issue on “The Dirty Work of Neoliberalism: Cleaners in the Global Economy,” Antipode, 38.3: 425-666.

Andrew Herod and Melissa Wright, 2001. Special issue on “Theorizing Space and Time,” Environment and Planning A, 33.12: 2089-2093.

Articles

Shaun Ryan and Andrew Herod, 2006. “Restructuring the architecture of state regulation in the Australian and Aotearoa/ New Zealand cleaning industries and the growth of precarious employment.” Antipode 38.3: 486-507. [Published simultaneously in Luis L. M. Aguiar and Andrew Herod (eds.), The Dirty Work of Neoliberalism: Cleaners in the Global Economy, pp. 60-80. Basil Blackwell: Oxford.]

Andrew Herod and Luis L. M. Aguiar, 2006. “Section II Introduction: Ethnographies of the cleaning body.” Antipode 38.3: 530-533. [Published simultaneously in Luis L. M. Aguiar and Andrew Herod (eds.), The Dirty Work of Neoliberalism: Cleaners in the Global Economy, pp. 102-105. Basil Blackwell: Oxford.]

Karen Søgaard, Anne Katrine Blangsted, Andrew Herod, and Lotte Finsen, 2006. “Work design and the labouring body: Examining the impacts of work organisation on Danish cleaners’ health.” Antipode: 38.3: 579-602. [Published simultaneously in Luis L. M. Aguiar and Andrew Herod (eds.), The Dirty Work of Neoliberalism: Cleaners in the Global Economy, pp. 150-171. Basil Blackwell: Oxford.]

Andrew Herod and Luis L. M. Aguiar, 2006. “Cleaners and the dirty work of neoliberalism.” Antipode 38.3: 425-434. Introduction to special issue on “The Dirty Work of Neoliberalism: Cleaners in the Global Economy,” pp. 1-10. Basil Blackwell: Oxford.]

Andrew Herod and Luis L. M. Aguiar, 2006. “Section I Introduction: Geographies of neoliberalism.” Antipode 38.3: 435-439. The Dirty Work of Neoliberalism: Cleaners in the Global Economy, pp. 11-15. Basil Blackwell: Oxford.]

Andrew Herod and Luis L. M. Aguiar, 2006. “Section III Introduction: Cleaners’ agency.” Antipode 38.3: 603-607. [Published simultaneously in Luis L. M. Aguiar and Andrew Herod (eds.), The Dirty Work of Neoliberalism: Cleaners in the Global Economy, pp. 172-176. Basil Blackwell: Oxford.]

Andrew Herod, 2006. “Labour, space and capitalist restructuring.” Labor History 47.1: 102-108. Part of a Symposium on the book Global Restructuring and the Power of Labour by Bill Dunn (2004, Macmillan).

Andrew Herod, 2004. “The impact of containerization on work on the New York-New Jersey waterfront.” Social Science Docket, 4.1 (Winter-Spring) 5-7. [Special issue on “Work and workers in New Jersey and New York.”]

Andrew Herod, 2003. “Geographies of labor internationalism.” Social Science History, 27.4: 501-523. [Special issue on “Labor Internationalism.”]

Andrew Herod, 2003. “Workers, space, and labor geography.” International Labor and Working-Class History, no. 64 (Fall): 112-138. [Special issue on “Workers, Suburbs, and Labor Geography.”]

Andrew Herod, 2003. “Towards a more productive engagement: Industrial relations and economic geography meet.” Labour and Industry: A Journal of the Social and Economic Relations of Work, 13.2: 5-17. [Special issue on “Industrial Relations Meets Human Geography: Spatialising The Social Relations of Work.”]

Andrew Herod and Melissa W. Wright, 2001. “Theorizing space and time.” Environment and Planning A 33.12: 2089-2093. Introduction to special issue on “Theorizing Space and Time,” Andrew Herod and Melissa W. Wright, guest editors. Issue contains 7 papers (Simon Lewis; David Hamers; Trevor Barnes, Roger Hayter, and Elizabeth Hay; Gavin Bridge; Melissa Wright; Andreas Dafinger; Jean La Marche), pages 2089-2218.

Andrew Herod, 2001. “Labor internationalism and the contradictions of globalization: Or, why the local is sometimes still important in a global economy.” Antipode 33.3: 407-426. [Special issue on “Place, Space and the New Labour Internationalisms” –issue published simultaneously as Jane Wills and Peter Waterman (eds.), Place, Space and the New Labour Internationalisms, pp. 103-122. Basil Blackwell: Oxford.]

Andrew Herod, 2000. “Workers and workplaces in a neoliberal global economy.” Environment and Planning A 32.10: 1781-1790.

Andrew Herod, 2000. “Implications of Just-in-Time production for union strategy: Lessons from the 1998 General Motors-United Auto Workers dispute.” Annals of the Association of American Geographers 90.3: 521-547. [Publisher’s erratum for figures published Annals of the Association of American Geographers (2001) 91.1: 200-202.]

Ben Salt, Ron Cervero, and Andrew Herod, 2000. “Workers’ education and neoliberal globalization: An adequate response to transnational corporations?” Adult Education Quarterly 51.1: 9-31. [Awarded 2001 American Association for Adult and Continuing Education Imogene Okes Award for Best Article in the field of adult and continuing education for 2000.]

Andrew Herod, 1999. “Using industrial disputes to teach about economic geography.” Journal of Geography 98.5: 229-241. [Awarded 2000 National Council for Geographic Education (NCGE) Journal of Geography Awards Task Force Best Content Award for the best article published during 1999 in Journal of Geography.]

Andrew Herod, 1999. “Reflections on interviewing foreign elites: Praxis, positionality, validity, and the cult of the insider.” Geoforum 30.4: 313-327. [Special issue on “Networks, Cultures and Elite Research: The Economic Geographer as Situated Researcher.”].

Andrew Herod, 1998. “Discourse on the docks: Containerization and inter-union work disputes in US ports, 1955-1985.” Transactions, Institute of British Geographers, New Series 23.2, 177-191.

Andrew Herod, 1997. “Reinterpreting organized labor’s experience in the Southeast: 1947 to present.” Southeastern Geographer 37.2, 214-237. [Special issue on “The Changing South, 1947-1997.”]

Andrew Herod, 1997. “From a geography of labor to a labor geography: Labor’s spatial fix and the geography of capitalism.” Antipode 29.1, 1-31. [A shortened and edited version of this article was reprinted in John Bryson, Nick Henry, David Keeble, and Ron Martin (eds.) (1999) The Economic Geography Reader: Producing and Consuming Global Capitalism, pp. 380-387. John Wiley and Sons: Chichester, UK.]

Andrew Herod, 1997. “Labor’s spatial praxis and the geography of contract bargaining in the US east coast longshore industry, 1953-89.” Political Geography 16.2, 145-169. [Special issue on “The Political Geography of Scale.”]

Andrew Herod, 1995. “The practice of international labor solidarity and the geography of the global economy.” Economic Geography 71.4, 341-363.

Andrew Herod, 1994. “On workers’ theoretical (in)visibility in the writing of critical urban geography: A comradely critique.” Urban Geography 15.7, 681-693. [Special issue on “Social (In)justice and the City: Twenty Years On.”]

Andrew Herod, 1994. “Further reflections on organized labor and deindustrialization in the United States.” Antipode 26.1, 77-95.

Andrew Herod, 1993. “Gender issues in the use of interviewing as a research method.” The Professional Geographer 45.3, 305-317.

Andrew Herod, 1991. “Local political practice in response to a manufacturing plant closure: How geography complicates class analysis.” Antipode 23.4, 385-402.

Andrew Herod, 1991. “From rag trade to real estate in New York’s Garment Center: Remaking the labor landscape in a global city.” Urban Geography 12.4, 324-338.

Andrew Herod, 1991. “Homework and the fragmentation of space: Challenges for the labor movement.” Geoforum 22.2, 173-183. [Special issue on “Changing Gender Relations in Urban Space.”]

Andrew Herod, 1991. “The production of scale in United States labour relations.” Area 23.1, 82-88.

Book Chapters

Andrew Herod, 2007. “Die Geographie der Arbeiter/innen: Der spatial fix der Arbeitskräfte und die Geographie des Kapitalismus.” In Bernd Belina and Boris Michel (eds.) Raumproduktionen, pp. ??-??. Münster: Westfälisches Dampfboot. [German translation of a paper originally appearing as “From a geography of labor to a labor geography: Labor’s spatial fix and the geography of capitalism,” Antipode 29.1 (1997), 1-31.]

Andrew Herod, 2007. “Scale: The local and the global.” In Sarah Holloway, Stephen Rice, Gill Valentine, and Nick Clifford (eds.) Key Concepts in Geography, 2nd Edition, pp. ???-???. Sage: London. [Updated and rewritten version of chapter that appeared in the first edition of Key Concepts in Geography (Sarah Holloway, Stephen Rice, and Gill Valentine [eds.], 2003, Sage.]

Andrew Herod and Kathleen Parker, 2007. “Operational decisions.” In Basil Gomez and John Paul Jones III (eds.) Research Methods in Geography: A First Course. Blackwell: Oxford (forthcoming).

Noel Castree, David Featherstone, and Andrew Herod: , 2007. “Contrapuntal geographies: The politics of organising across socio-spatial difference.” In Kevin Cox, Murray Low, and Jenny Robinson (eds.) Handbook of Political Geography. Sage: London (forthcoming).

Andrew Herod, 2007. “Reimagining the spaces and scales of labor praxis within a global economy.” In John M. Hobson and Leonard Seabrooke (eds.), Everyday Politics of the World Economy, pp. ??-??. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. (In press).

Andrew Herod, 2007. Labour organising in the new economy: Examples from the United States.” In Peter W. Daniels, Jonathan V. Beaverstock, Michael J. Bradshaw, and Andrew Leyshon (eds.) Geographies of the New Economy. Routledge: London (in press).

Andrew Herod, 2006. “Cleaners and the dirty work of neoliberalism” In Luis L.M. Aguiar and Andrew Herod (eds.) The Dirty Work of Neoliberalism: Cleaners in the Global Economy, pp. 1-10. Blackwell: Oxford. [Published simultaneously in Antipode 38.3: 425-434 as part of special issue on “The Dirty Work of Neoliberalism: Cleaners in the Global Economy,” Luis L.M. Aguiar and Andrew Herod (eds.).]

Andrew Herod and Luis L. M. Aguiar, 2006. “Section I Introduction: Geographies of neoliberalism” In Luis L.M. Aguiar and Andrew Herod (eds.) The Dirty Work of Neoliberalism: Cleaners in the Global Economy, pp. 11-15. Blackwell: Oxford. [Published simultaneously in Antipode 38.3: 435-4396 as part of special issue on “The Dirty Work of Neoliberalism: Cleaners in the Global Economy,” Luis L.M. Aguiar and Andrew Herod (eds.).]

Shaun Ryan and Andrew Herod, 2006. “Restructuring the architecture of state regulation in the Australian and Aotearoa/ New Zealand cleaning industries and the growth of precarious employment.” In Luis L.M. Aguiar and Andrew Herod (eds.) The Dirty Work of Neoliberalism: Cleaners in the Global Economy, pp. 60-80. Blackwell: Oxford. [Published simultaneously in Antipode 38.3: 486-507 as part of special issue on “The Dirty Work of Neoliberalism: Cleaners in the Global Economy,” Luis L.M. Aguiar and Andrew Herod (eds.).]

Andrew Herod and Luis L. M. Aguiar, 2006. “Section II Introduction: Ethnographies of the cleaning body” In Luis L.M. Aguiar and Andrew Herod (eds.) The Dirty Work of Neoliberalism: Cleaners in the Global Economy, pp. 102-105. Blackwell: Oxford. [Published simultaneously in Antipode 38.3: 530-533 as part of special issue on “The Dirty Work of Neoliberalism: Cleaners in the Global Economy,” Luis L.M. Aguiar and Andrew Herod (eds.).]

Karen Søgaard, Anne Katrine Blangsted, Andrew Herod, and Lotte Finsen, 2006. “Work design and the labouring body: Examining the impacts of work organisation on Danish cleaners’ health.” In Luis L.M. Aguiar and Andrew Herod (eds.) The Dirty Work of Neoliberalism: Cleaners in the Global Economy, pp. 150-171. Blackwell: Oxford. [Published simultaneously in Antipode 38.3: 579-602 as part of special issue on “The Dirty Work of Neoliberalism: Cleaners in the Global Economy,” Luis L.M. Aguiar and Andrew Herod (eds.).]

Andrew Herod and Luis L. M. Aguiar, 2006. “Section III Introduction: Cleaners’ agency” In Luis L.M. Aguiar and Andrew Herod (eds.) The Dirty Work of Neoliberalism: Cleaners in the Global Economy, pp. 172-176. Blackwell: Oxford. [Published simultaneously in Antipode 38.3: 603-607 as part of special issue on “The Dirty Work of Neoliberalism: Cleaners in the Global Economy,” Luis L.M. Aguiar and Andrew Herod (eds.).]

Andrew Herod, 2006. “Trotsky’s omission: Labour’s role in combined and uneven development.” In Bill Dunn and Hugo Radice (eds.) 100 Years of Permanent Revolution: Results and Prospects, pp. 152-165. Pluto: London.

Andrew Herod, 2004. “Impacts of the transition on unions in Eastern Europe.” In Berthold Unfried and Marcel van der Linden (eds.) Labour and New Social Movements in a Globalizing World/ Arbeit, Arbeiterbewegung und neue soziale Bewegungen im globalisierten Weltsystem, pp. 139-154. Internationale Tagung der Historikerinnen und Historiker der Arbeiter und anderer Sozialer Bewegungen, Tagungsberichte 38: Leipzig.

Scott Salmon and Andrew Herod, 2003. “Socialist geography.” In Gary L. Gaile and Cort J. Willmott (eds.) Geography in America at the Dawn of the 21st Century, pp. 209-220. Oxford University Press: Oxford.

Andrew Herod, 2003. “Scale: The local and the global.” In Sarah Holloway, Stephen Rice, and Gill Valentine (eds.) Key Concepts in Geography, pp. 229-247. Sage: London

Andrew Herod, Jamie Peck, and Jane Wills, 2003. “Geography and industrial relations.” In Peter Ackers and Adrian Wilkinson (eds.) Understanding Work and Employment: Industrial Relations in Transition, pp. 176-192. Oxford University Press: Oxford.

Andrew Herod, 2003. “Global change in the world of organized labor.” In Ron J. Johnston, Peter J. Taylor, and Michael J. Watts (eds.) Geographies of Global Change: Remapping the World (2nd Edition), pp. 78-87. Basil Blackwell: Oxford.

Andrew Herod and Melissa W. Wright, 2002. “Placing scale: An introduction.” In Andrew Herod and Melissa W. Wright (eds.) Geographies of Power: Placing Scale, pp. 1-14. Basil Blackwell: Oxford.

Andrew Herod and Melissa W. Wright, 2002. “Introduction: Theorizing scale.” In Andrew Herod and Melissa W. Wright (eds.) Geographies of Power: Placing Scale, pp. 17-24. Basil Blackwell: Oxford.

Andrew Herod and Melissa W. Wright, 2002. “Introduction: Rhetorics of scale.” In Andrew Herod and Melissa W. Wright (eds.) Geographies of Power: Placing Scale, pp. 147-153. Basil Blackwell: Oxford.

Andrew Herod and Melissa W. Wright, 2002. “Introduction: Scales of praxis.” In Andrew Herod and Melissa W. Wright (eds.) Geographies of Power: Placing Scale, pp. 217-223. Basil Blackwell: Oxford.

Andrew Herod, 2002. “Organizing globally, organizing locally: Union spatial strategy in a global economy.” In Jeffery Harrod and Robert O’Brien (eds.) Global Unions?: Theory and Strategies of Organized Labour in the Global Political Economy, pp. 83-99. Routledge: London (Review of International Political Economy Series in Gobal Political Economy).

Andrew Herod, 2001. “Labor internationalism and the contradictions of globalization: Or, why the local is sometimes still important in a global economy.” In Jane Wills and Peter Waterman (eds.), Place, Space and the New Labour Internationalisms, pp. 103-122. Basil Blackwell: Oxford. [Published simultaneously in Antipode 33.3: 407-426 as part of special issue on “Place, Space and the New Labour Internationalisms,” Jane Wills and Peter Waterman (eds.).]

Andrew Herod, 2000. “Labor unions and economic geography.” In Eric Sheppard and Trevor Barnes (eds.) A Companion to Economic Geography, pp. 341-358. Basil Blackwell: Oxford.

Andrew Herod, 1999. “From a geography of labor to a labor geography: Labor's spatial fix and the geography of capitalism.” In John Bryson, Nick Henry, David Keeble, and Ron Martin (eds.) The Economic Geography Reader: Producing and Consuming Global Capitalism, pp. 380-387. John Wiley and Sons: Chichester, UK. [Shortened, edited, and reprinted version of paper originally appearing as “From a geography of labor to a labor geography: Labor’s spatial fix and the geography of capitalism,” Antipode 29.1, 1-31.]

Andrew Herod, 1998. “The spatiality of labor unionism: A review essay.” In Andrew Herod (ed.) Organizing the Landscape: Geographical Perspectives on Labor Unionism, pp. 1-36. University of Minnesota Press: Minneapolis and London.

Andrew Herod, 1998. “Increasing the scale of things: Labor’s transnational spatial strategies and the geography of capitalism.” In Andrew Herod (ed.) Organizing the Landscape: Geographical Perspectives on Labor Unionism, pp. 39-44. University of Minnesota Press: Minneapolis and London.

Andrew Herod, 1998. “The geostrategics of labor in post-Cold War Eastern Europe: An examination of the activities of the International Metalworkers’ Federation.” In Andrew Herod (ed.) Organizing the Landscape: Geographical Perspectives on Labor Unionism, pp. 45-74. University of Minnesota Press: Minneapolis and London.

Andrew Herod, 1998. “Geographic mobility, place, and cultures of labor unionism.” In Andrew Herod (ed.) Organizing the Landscape: Geographical Perspectives on Labor Unionism, pp. 123-128. University of Minnesota Press: Minneapolis and London.

Andrew Herod, 1998. “Political geographies of labor union organizing.” In Andrew Herod (ed.) Organizing the Landscape: Geographical Perspectives on Labor Unionism, pp. 197- 201. University of Minnesota Press: Minneapolis and London.

Andrew Herod, 1998. “Labor unions and the making of economic geographies.” In Andrew Herod (ed.) Organizing the Landscape: Geographical Perspectives on Labor Unionism, pp. 255-262. University of Minnesota Press: Minneapolis and London.

Andrew Herod, 1998. “Theorising unions in transition.” In John Pickles and Adrian Smith (eds.) Theorising Transition: The Political Economy of Change in Central and Eastern Europe, pp. 197-217. Routledge: London and New York.

Gearóid Ó Tuathail, Andrew Herod, and Susan Roberts, 1998. “Negotiating unruly problematics.” In Andrew Herod, Gearóid Ó Tuathail, and Susan Roberts (eds.) An Unruly World? Globalization, Governance and Geography, pp. 1-24. Routledge: London and New York.

Andrew Herod, 1998. “Of blocs, flows and networks: The end of the Cold War, cyberspace, and the geo-economics of organized labor at the fin de millénaire.” In Andrew Herod, Gearóid Ó Tuathail, and Susan Roberts (eds.)An Unruly World? Globalization, Governance and Geography, pp. 162-195. Routledge: London and New York.

Andrew Herod, 1997. “Notes on a spatialized labour politics: Scale and the political geography of dual unionism in the US longshore industry.” In Roger Lee and Jane Wills (eds.) Geographies of Economies, pp. 186-196. Edward Arnold: London, New York, Sydney, and Auckland.

Andrew Herod, 1997. “Back to the future in labor relations: From the New Deal to Newt’s Deal.” In Lynn Staeheli, Janet Kodras, and Colin Flint (eds.) State Devolution in America: Implications for a Diverse Society, pp. 161-180. Sage (Urban Affairs Annual Reviews No. 48): Thousand Oaks, CA, London, and New Delhi.

Andrew Herod, 1997. “Labor as an agent of globalization and as a global agent.” In Kevin Cox (ed.) Spaces of Globalization: Reasserting the Power of the Local, pp. 167-200. Guilford: New York and London.

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