I am a geographer and urban planner. My work focuses on infrastructure, housing, and transportation, exploring how intersecting forms of inequality are produced and contested in cities.
My doctoral research examined the webs of violence and conflict that surround the movement of goods through the global capitalist economy. I studied these dynamics in the context of the expansion of the Panama Canal, opened in June 2016 to some of the world’s largest cargo ships. In connection with the canal expansion, port cities throughout the Western Hemisphere were transformed. Local and national governments, port authorities, and actors in the shipping, logistics, and real estate industries invested in infrastructure and forged new alliances to position their regions as strategic nodes within a shifting geography of transnational trade. My research took me to Panama City, Los Angeles, and New York—three of the busiest container ports in the Americas—to explore the reorganization of commodity flows and the political struggles it is provoking over land, labour, and the environment.
Before coming to Concordia, I was a policy analyst at the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation and an assistant professor of geography at the University of Nottingham. I have a PhD in geography and an MSc in urban planning from the University of Toronto.
Peer-reviewed journal articles
Rod MacRae, Joe Nasr, James Kuhns, Lauren Baker, Russ Christiansen, Martin Danyluk, Abra Snider, Eric Gallant, Penny Kaill-Vinish, Marc Michalak, Janet Oswald, Sima Patel, and Gerda Wekerle. 2012. “
Could Toronto Provide 10% of Its Fresh Vegetable Requirements from within Its Own Boundaries? Part II, Policy Supports and Program Design.” Journal of Agriculture, Food Systems, and Community Development 2 (2): 147–69.
Edited Collection
Book Chapter
Katie Mazer, Martin Danyluk, Elise Hunchuck, and Deborah Cowen. 2019. “Mapping a Many-Headed Hydra: Transnational Infrastructures of Extraction and Resistance.” In
Standing with Standing Rock: Voices from the #NoDAPL Movement, edited by Nick Estes and Jaskiran Dhillon, 354–81. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
Book Reviews