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Bio
Professor David Green is trained as a geographer (BA and PhD from University of Cambridge) and has worked at King’s since 1979 in the Geography Department. He is currently Professor of Historical Geography.
His main interests focus on historical geographies of poverty, wealth and welfare in Britain between the eighteenth and the twentieth centuries. He has published widely on topics as varied as poor relief in London to landownership in Britain and from the finance of eighteenth-century towns to postal workers health in the UK. What links these different interests together is an awareness of the spatial differences in social conditions and the different ways in which welfare policies operate to address these differences.
His work outside academia has included a variety of advisory and consultancy roles for a wide range of organisations, ranging from the Qualifications and Curriculum Authority (QCA) on developing new geography curricula at GCSE and A level to TV production companies and the New Deal for Communities programme.
He has appeared on national and international television in programmes relating to various aspects of nineteenth-century London, family history and the history of the British landscape. He is passionate about outreach activities that extend the opportunity to experience a university education as widely as possible. He is also equally passionate about his role as a teacher and as a learner.
Research interests:
Urban histories of poverty and wealth in nineteenth and twentieth century Britain; history of welfare, focussing on the poor law between c. 1780 and 1930; cities in nineteenth and twentierh century Britain; inheritance and wealth in nineteenth and twentieth century Britain.
Teaching:
Historical geography; urban history; GIS; London; internships
His main interests focus on historical geographies of poverty, wealth and welfare in Britain between the eighteenth and the twentieth centuries. He has published widely on topics as varied as poor relief in London to landownership in Britain and from the finance of eighteenth-century towns to postal workers health in the UK. What links these different interests together is an awareness of the spatial differences in social conditions and the different ways in which welfare policies operate to address these differences.
His work outside academia has included a variety of advisory and consultancy roles for a wide range of organisations, ranging from the Qualifications and Curriculum Authority (QCA) on developing new geography curricula at GCSE and A level to TV production companies and the New Deal for Communities programme.
He has appeared on national and international television in programmes relating to various aspects of nineteenth-century London, family history and the history of the British landscape. He is passionate about outreach activities that extend the opportunity to experience a university education as widely as possible. He is also equally passionate about his role as a teacher and as a learner.
Research interests:
Urban histories of poverty and wealth in nineteenth and twentieth century Britain; history of welfare, focussing on the poor law between c. 1780 and 1930; cities in nineteenth and twentierh century Britain; inheritance and wealth in nineteenth and twentieth century Britain.
Teaching:
Historical geography; urban history; GIS; London; internships
Research Interests
Papers共 193 篇Author StatisticsCo-AuthorSimilar Experts
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Emission Control Science and Technologypp.1-11, (2024)
Environment international (2023): 108081-108081
MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETYno. 3 (2023): 4598-4611
Marsailidh M. Twigg,Chiara F. Di Marco, Elizabeth A. McGhee,Christine F. Braban,Eiko Nemitz,Richard J. C. Brown, Kevin C. Blakley,Sarah R. Leeson,Agnieszka Sanocka,David C. Green,Max Priestman,Veronique Riffault,
ATMOSPHERIC ENVIRONMENT (2023): 120148-120148
Scientific reportsno. 1 (2023): 9450-8
Andrea Davidson, Neil Wait, Robert Cairns, Lyndon Trinder, Dan Fawcett, Daniel Marsh, Carl Desouza, James Thorpe, Niki Welch,David Green
High Speed Two (HS2): Infrastructure Design and Construction (Volume 4)pp.217-227, (2023)
REMOTE SENSINGno. 24 (2023): 5709-5709
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