by Kirstie O'Neill
As you can see from reading through this GEESology blog,
geography is indeed a broad discipline covering all manner of exciting
areas. The ways which each of us GEESologists have come
to this are equally varied – so here’s my version as a social geographer!
1970s singer Kenny Loggins (Source: www.last.fm) |
I always loved geography, and reading maps – I had great
teachers at school which really helped, although sometimes the singing was a
drawback (‘footloose’ by Kenny Loggins sticks in my mind!).
I knew I wanted to do geography at A-level
and did better than expected so was able to study it at University too. I got a
place (unexpectedly) at Newcastle University.
Studying geography at University was different to school, and we got to
specialise in areas that hadn’t even come up at school – rural geography
appealed to me, I just seemed to enjoy and ‘get’ it. But, I couldn't believe our first fieldtrip was back to West Cumbria and my old school's barn (below) - no exciting field trips anywhere exotic unfortunately!
After university I wasn’t quite sure what I wanted to do, but knew it would be geography and rural based – luckily, the rural community council in Cumbria, Voluntary Action Cumbria, had Lottery funding to train up rural community development workers. The interview was a baptism by fire, a whole day with the other candidates and being ‘interviewed’ by the staff and trustees all day. But, I got the job and needed to quickly buy my first car to do the job, and enjoyed a few years back in my native Cumbria doing rural community development. But all good things must come to an end.
Bakerstead Barn, Eskdale, West Cumbria - on a rare sunny day! |
After university I wasn’t quite sure what I wanted to do, but knew it would be geography and rural based – luckily, the rural community council in Cumbria, Voluntary Action Cumbria, had Lottery funding to train up rural community development workers. The interview was a baptism by fire, a whole day with the other candidates and being ‘interviewed’ by the staff and trustees all day. But, I got the job and needed to quickly buy my first car to do the job, and enjoyed a few years back in my native Cumbria doing rural community development. But all good things must come to an end.
Over the next six years, I moved to Durham County Council,
Yorkshire Rural Community Council and finally North Yorkshire County Council
all doing rural development stuff. I was
working for North Yorkshire County Council when I saw a PhD advertised – I’d
been thinking of doing one for a while, although didn’t realise you could
actually get funding to do one. The one
advertised was funded, and was a collaborative research project with the local
council – so I had a chat to the people at Hull University. It sounded really exciting – local food was
an area I was really interested in, and the opportunity to learn Italian and getting to do research in Italy didn’t
sound so bad either!
Researching rural development and local food in the Abruzzo region of Italy
So, in 2007 I also gave up my job and went back to
University full-time (fieldtrips have improved!), I passed my PhD viva in 2012 (my thesis is available here) and have been lucky to get postdoc positions after the PhD
too – I’m about to start a new job at Lancaster University looking at food and whether
peoples’ decisions about what to buy include any consideration of
sustainability. This brings my PhD work
(food) and my post-doc work (low carbon, green entrepreneurs, sustainability)
together and hopefully I’ll get to write something about it soon...
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