Susan Hanson Emerita, School of Geography Clark University

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Susan Hanson Emerita, School of Geography Clark University 1 Susan Hanson Emerita, School of Geography Clark University Worcester, MA 01610 Mailing address: Box 5 Ripton, VT 05766 Telephone: 802-388-9977 E-mail: [email protected] Education Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois, 1967-1973, Ph.D., (Geography); Dissertation: Information Levels and the Intra-urban Travel Patterns of Swedish Households. Teachers College, Columbia University, Fall 1964, Peace Corps Training. Middlebury College, Middlebury, Vermont, 1960-1964, B.A. (Geography) Cum Laude, Phi Beta Kappa. Northfield School, East Northfield, Massachusetts, 1956-1960, Cum Laude (now Northfield Mt. Hermon School). Professional Positions Distinguished University Professor Emerita, Clark University, 2010- Research Professor, Clark University, 2007-2010. Jan and Larry Landry University Professor, Clark University, 2001-2007. Professor, School of Geography, Clark University, 1984-2007. Richmond Visiting Professor of Environmental Studies, Williams College, Spring 1998. Director, School of Geography, Clark University, 1988-95; 2002-2004. Associate and Assistant Professor, School of Geography, Clark University, 1981-1984. Adjunct Associate Professor, Department of Geography, Middlebury College, Middlebury, Vermont, 1979-1981. Associate and Assistant Professor, Departments of Geography and Sociology, SUNY at Buffalo, 1972-1980. 2 Peace Corps Volunteer. Language and Geography Teacher, Kakamega Secondary School, Kakamega, Kenya, 1964-1966. Courses Taught: Divided Cities, Connected Lives: Urban Social Geography Research Methods in Geography Urban Transportation Research Seminar in Urban Geography Feminist Geography Gender, Work, and Space Research Grants Subcontract on grant awarded by National Institute of Aging (of NIH) to Dr Wenjun Li (UMass Medical Center)—Neighborhood Risk Factors for Falls in the Elderly. 2008- 12. National Science Foundation Grant: Doctoral Dissertation Research—Awareness of Vulnerability to Terrorism in Urban Areas: Social Network and Mobility Effects in Worcester, MA and New York, NY. 2008-10. $12,000 (support of Kevin Keenan) National Science Foundation Grant: Dissertation Research—Gender and emigration in the not-so-global city. 2007-09. $12,000 (support of Anna Cieslik) National Science Foundation Grant: Dissertation Research—Impacts of rapid urbanization on livelihoods in African cities: The case of Accra, Ghana. 2006- 08. $11,000 (support of Cynthia Adom) National Science Foundation Grant: Dissertation Research—Gentrification and the Displacement of Work and Home. 2002-04. $10,053 (support of Winifred Curran) National Science Foundation Grant: Dissertation Research—Changing Urban Spatial Structure and the Growth of the Temporary Help Services Industry. 2001-03. $7,076 (support of Sarah Niles). National Science Foundation Grant: Dissertation Research—Corporate Philanthropy in an Age of Capital Mobility. 2000-2002. $9,852 (support of Mary Thomas). Sloan Foundation Grant, Entrepreneurship as a Strategy for Creating an Alternate Workplace. 2000-01. $29,865. Seed grant from NSF via the Varenius Project, On the Web and on the Ground: Social Networks and Internet Use. 1999-2000, $3,000 (for support of Sarah Niles). National Science Foundation Grant: Geography, Gender, and Entrepreneurship. 1998-2002, $232,218 (includes 2 REU supplements). 3 National Science Foundation Grant: Dissertation Research– It takes a village: Gender-based segmentation, women entrepreneurs, and entrepreneurial networks. 1998-2000, $6,053 (support of Megan Blake). National Science Foundation Grant: Research Workshop--Toward a Comprehensive Geographic Perspective on Urban Sustainability 1998-2000, $28,628 (with R. Lake). Social services and urban poverty. 1997-98, $25,000 (for support of two graduate students). Clark University Asher Fellowship Award for innovative pedagogical development. 1997. $3,000 (with David Angel). National Science Foundation Grant: Dissertation Research in Geography-- Privatization, Restructuring, and Gender Relations in the Post-Soviet Textile Industry. 1997-99, $9,210 (for support of Tara Kominiak). National Science Foundation Grant: Developing Active Learning Modules on the Human Dimensions of Global Change. 1995-99. (PI for grant through the Association of American Geographers) $311,906. (Includes 2 REU supplements) National Science Foundation Grant: Dissertation Research in Geography--Su Casa es mi trabajo: Domestic Service, Migration, & Local Market Transformations. 1993-95, $8,795 (for support of Doreen Mattingly). National Science Foundation Grant: Dissertation Research in Geography--Ties to People, Bonds to Place: The Urban Geography of Low-income Minority Women's Survival Strategies,1991-93, $8,755 (for support of Melissa Gilbert). National Science Foundation Grant: Occupational Mobility in Spatial Context, 1991- 93, $122,589 (with Geraldine Pratt). National Research Council Grant: travel funds ($1,500) to attend Congress of the International Geographical Union, Beijing, China, August 1990. National Science Foundation Grant: The Spatial Clustering of Women's Employment: Causes and Implications, 1988-90, $137,575 (with Geraldine Pratt). National Research Council Grant: Travel funds ($1,000) to attend Congress of the International Geographical Union, Melbourne and Sydney, Australia, August 1988. National Geographic Society, Committee for Research and Exploration Grant: Geographic Factors in the Occupational Segregation of Women, 1987-88, $38,100 (with Geraldine Pratt). 4 National Science Foundation Grant: Dissertation Research in Geography - Exposure to Carbon Monoxide: A Disaggregate Social Geography Approach 1986-87, $3,425 (for support of Margo Schwab). National Science Foundation Grant: Geographic Perspectives on the Occupational Segregation of Women, 1986-88, $95,415 (with Geraldine Pratt). National Research Council Grant: Travel funds ($1,000) to attend Congress of the International Geographical Union, Besancon and Paris, Summer 1984. Clark University Faculty Development Fund: The Journey to Work and Occupational Segregation of Women, Summer 1984, $1,200 for support of graduate student. National Science Foundation Grant: Systematic Variability in Daily Travel Behavior, July 1981-31 January 1984, $52,232 (with James O. Huff). National Science Foundation Grant: A Mathematical Theory of Travel within a Space-Time Framework, 1 June 1978-30 August 1980, $181,354 (with K.P. Burnett). National Science Foundation Grant: The Impact of Journey Structure on Destination Choice, 1 July 1977-31 July 1978, $9,643. Grant from the University of Buffalo Foundation, 1974, $500 for summer support of a graduate student. Topic of Research: Activity Patterns and the Quality of Life of Urban Residents. Faculty Research Fellowship, SUNY Research Foundation, Summer 1973, Topic of Research: The Structure of the Work-trip in Intra-Urban Travel Behavior. Awards and Honors Brunn Award for Creativity, Association of American Geographers, 2015. Alumni Achievement Award, Middlebury College, 2006. National Associate of the National Academies, 2004. Lifetime Achievement Honors, Association of American Geographers, 2003. Fellow, Center for Advanced Study in the Social and Behavioral Sciences, Stanford, California, 2001-02. Hettner Lecturer, University of Heidelberg, Germany, June-July 2002. Ida Beam Distinguished Visiting University Professor, University of Iowa, November, 2001. Elected member, National Academy of Sciences. 2000. 5 Elected fellow, American Academy of Arts and Sciences. 2000. Alumni Award. Northfield Mount Hermon School. 2000. Van Cleef Medal for outstanding original work in the field of urban geography. American Geographical Society. 1999. Ullman Award for contributions to transportation geography, 1997. University Senior Faculty Award for excellence in research and teaching, Clark University 1996. Visiting Scholar, Reading University (U.K.), 1995-2000. Honors Award, Association of American Geographers, 1993. U.S. Delegate, International Geographical Congress, 1992. Exemplary Teaching Award, School of Geography, Clark University, 1991. Also, made honorary member of Gamma Theta Upsilon by the undergraduates at Clark University, 1995, for teaching and advising. Fellow, American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), elected 1991. President, Association of American Geographers, 1990-91. Vice-President, 1989- 90; Past President, 1991-92. Guggenheim Fellowship 1989-90 (from the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation). Award for career contributions to feminist geography, Geographic Perspectives on Women Specialty Group of the Association of American Geographers, 1989. National Science Foundation Dissertation Year Fellowship,1970-1971. Danforth Foundation Fellowship (Honorary), 1967-71. National Defense Foreign Language Fellowship, 1967-70. Middlebury College Geography Award, June 1964. Phi Beta Kappa, June 1964. Mortar Board Honor Society (recognizing scholarship, leadership, and service), May 1964. Middlebury Scholar (full-tuition scholarship), 1960-1964. Editorial Positions 6 Editorships Geography section co-editor, International Encyclopedia of Social and Behavioral Sciences, 2nd Edition, 2011-2015. Associate Editor, Transportation Research A, 2008- Editor-in-chief, Urban Geography, 2006-2013. Geography Section Editor, International Encyclopedia of the Social and Behavioral Sciences, 1st Edition, 1997-2001. Co-editor, Economic Geography, 1992-1999. Editor, Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 1984-1987. Co-editor, Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 1981-1984. Associate
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