Dr Nick Gill
Professor of Human Geography, Director of Research (Human Geography)
N.M.Gill@exeter.ac.uk
7635
01392727635
Amory C421
Amory Building, University of Exeter, Rennes Drive, Exeter, EX4 4RJ , UK
Overview
Nick Gill is a political geographer. He graduated from the London School of Economics and Political Science with a degree in Geography with Economics in 2000. Following the award of his PhD in 2008 he was a lecturer in geography at Lancaster University, moving to take up a position as Lecturer in Human Geography at Exeter in 2010 and being promoted to Professor of Human Geography in 2016.
Nick has served as Book Review Editor of the journal Space & Polity and as Communications Officer and Secretary of the Political Geogeraphy research group of the Royal Geographical Society. He is a member of the ESRC's peer review college. From 2017-2018 to 2019-2020 he was the human geography external examiner of the University of Oxford's undergraduate geography degree programme and from 2023 has been the University of Swansea's undergraduate human geography external examiner.
Nick has engaged with a range of non-academic organisations through his work inlcuding as a Trustee of the charity City of Sanctuary, a national charity that promotes a culture of welcome and hospitality to those seeking safety from violence and persecution. During his trusteeship he was honoured to have the opportunity to launch the Universities of Sanctuary stream of their work, via the writing and publication of the stream's first handbook, with then-undergraduates Abigail Grace and Emma Finlinson (both now Exeter University alumni). He remains on the University of Sanctuary national steering group. He also served as a member of the charity JUSTICE's working party on immigration and asylum determination reform resulting in a report entitled 'Immigration and Asylum Appeals - A Fresh Look' that recommended a series of improvements to the first tier asylum and immigration tribunal. In October 2023 Nick delivered a keynote on the subject of the 'The Job of the Asylum Case Officer: Ethnographic Perspectives' to representatives of the asylum divisions of the EU member states during a workshop in Bratislava on the same theme organised by the EUAA.
Nick's work has been funded by the Nuffield Foundation, the Economic and Social Research Council and, since September 2016, by the European Research Council via a Starting Grant (see https://asyfair.com/).
Broad research specialisms:
Legal geography, carceral geography, migration and border control, mobility, political geography.
Qualifications
BSc (LSE),
MSc (LSE),
MSc (Bristol),
PhD (Bristol),
PGcert Academic Practice (Lancaster)
Research group links
Research
Research interests
My research is concerned with issues of justice and injustice. I explore this theme through a geographical approach, especially in the context of border control, mobility and its confiscation, incarceration and the law. I believe in the effectiveness of multiple methodologies, and have employed interviews, ethnography, focus groups and quantitative analysis in my work.
There are currently three strands to my research
1. Border Control, Migration and Human Mobility
Border control is one of the most topical issues of the 21st century. My work questions the utility and feasibility of the contemporary configuration of international border controls (Gill, 2009, Refuge; Gill, 2016, Wiley-Blackwell). It examines the relation between mobility and forced migration (Gill et al, 2011, Mobilities), sets the current malaise surrounding border control into the broader context of tolerance and intolerance (Gill et al, 2012, Political Geography) and examines the tactics used to respond to militarised control practices around the world (Gill et al, 2014, Annals of the Association of American Geographers).
2. Carceral Practices and Spaces
The proliferation and diversification of carceral systems is a hallmark of contemporary Western society. They are increasingly big-business, increasingly divorced from commonsense notions of justice, and increasingly obscured and obfuscated (Gill, 2013; Moran, Gill and Conlon, 2013). This strand of research seeks to take account of the emerging and increasingly intricate circuitry of carceral establishments (Gill et al, 2017, Progress in Human Geography).
3. The State, Injustice and Justice Systems
I am pursuing my long standing interest in the state and state theory (Rodriguez-Pose and Gill, 2003, EPA; Rodriguez-Pose and Gill, 2004, Regional Studies: Gill, 2010, Progress in Human Geography) via an exploration of the difference geography makes to systems of justice (even, sometimes, when it shouldn't). This strand of research has a range of issues from observed biases in judicial behaviour (Gill et al, 2017, Socio-Legal Studies), the importance of ethnographic apporaches to legal system (Gill and Good, 2018, Asylum Determination in Europe; Ethnographic Perspectives, Palgrave) and the way ethically meaningful encounters are suspended in legally institutionalised contexts (Gill, Nothing Personal? 2016, Wiley-Blackwell).
I am the human geography Director of Research for the department in 2021-2
Research projects
Grants/Funding:
- 2023-2024 'Forcibly Displaced Students in Higher Education' GW4 Generator Fund (PI) with Co-Is Lisa Lucas (Education, Bristol), Katharina Lenner (Social Policy, Bath), Sin Yi Cheung (Sociology, Cardiff) and Isabelle Schafer (Migration Studies, Exeter)
- 2016-2022 'Fair and Consistent Border Controls? A Critical, Multi-Methodological and Inter-Disciplinary Study of Asylum Adjudication in Europe' European Research Council Starter Grant (PI).
- 2013-2014 'Research Matchmaking: Linking the Demand and Supply of Research with Migrants' Dr. Nick Gill (Exeter) (PI), Dr. Dierdre Conlon (Co-I), ESRC Knowledge Exchange Grant.
- Three year project from 2013 ESRC standard grant Exploring Differences Between Asylum Appeal Hearing Centres in the UK £559 000 FEC (PI).Project website: http://geography.exeter.ac.uk/asylumappeals/
- 2012-2014 ESRC Seminar Series 'Exploring Everyday Practice and Resistance in Immigration Detention'. Dr Nick Gill (Exeter) (PI), Prof Mary Bosworth (Oxford), Dr Imogen Tyler (Lancaster), Dr Dominique Moran (Birmingham), Dr Alex Hall (York, UK).
- 2010 – 2012 ESRC Small Grant ‘Making Asylum Seekers Legible and Visible: An Analysis of the Dilemmas and Mitigating Strategies of Asylum Advocacy Organisations in the UK and US’, £99,000 FEC (PI). See the project website here asylum-network.com/ and view the final report here.
- 2009 Centre for Mobilities Research, Lancaster, Workshop Grant leading to Special Issue of Mobilities entitled ‘Mobility and Forced Migration’, £1,000 with Drs. Javier Caletrio and Vicky Mason.
- 2008 – 2009 Nuffield Foundation Small Grant ‘Polish Migration to the UK: The Material Effects of Imagined Geographies’, £6,884 (PI).
- 2007 Lancaster University Faculty of Science and Technology Research Grant ‘Polish Immigrants in the North West of England’, £1,000.
- 2003 - 2007 1 + 3 ESRC Research Scholarship, £42,000.
- 2001 Graduate Merit Award for outstanding degree performance, London School of Economics, £5,000.
Links
Publications
Books
Journal articles
Chapters
Reports
Teaching
I am the Human Geography Director of Research in 2023-4.
Modules
2024/25
Supervision / Group
Postgraduate researchers
- Sian Pearce
- Souvik Saha
- Laura Scheinert
- Sophia Simelitidou
- Stephen Wise De Jong
Alumni
- Shoker Abobeker
- Cevdet Acu
- Joanna Hynes
- Phil Johnstone
- Emma Marshall
- Julian M�ller
- Katie Orchel
- Keumjoo Park
- Pat Pinkowska
- Lindsay Whetter