- About
- Research
- Prospective Students
- Current Students
- News & Events
- News
- Events
- News & Kudos Archives
- 2023 Archives
- Scientists dig deep and find a way to accurately predict snowmelt after droughts
- Cracking the Case of Missing Snowmelt After Drought
- 2023 Esri Canada GIS Scholarship for ¶¡ÏãÔ°AV
- Thesis Defence - Congratulations to Daniel Murphy
- Thesis Defence - Congratulations to Kyle Kusack
- Thesis Defence - Congratulations to Matthew Taylor
- Anke Baker Wins Staff Achievement Award
- Spring 2023 Virtual Geospeaker Event with Ginger Gosnell-Myers
- CAG Paper Presentation Award - Congratulations to Alysha van Duynhoven!
- Informing & Engaging Urban Youth on Public Hearings: GEOG 363 Final Showcase
- Research Talk: Modeling Urban Wetland Complexities
- Highlight Paper: Quantifying land carbon cycle feedbacks under negative CO2 emissions
- Bright Addae winner of the 2023 ¶¡ÏãÔ°AV ECCE GIS Scholarship Award
- Thesis Defence - Congratulations to Jonny Cripps
- Thesis Defence - Congratulations to Diandra Oliver
- 2023 Geospeaker Presentation with Dr. Pauline McGuirk
- Congratulations to Our Graduates - October 2023
- Evaluating the impact of educational goals at ¶¡ÏãÔ°AV
- The Belongings of Precariously Housed People - A Report
- Thesis Defence - Congratulations to Takuma Mihara
- Thesis Defence - Congratulations to Adrienne Arbor
- Thesis Defence - Congratulations to Claire Shapton
- 2023 Distinguished Speaker Presentation with Dr. Deb Cowen
- Cheers to Paul Degrace and his well-earned retirement!
- 2024 Archives
- Professor Nicholas Blomley Honored with the Community-Engaged Research Achievement Award
- Graduate Students Claire Shapton and Marina Chavez Honored with the Community-Engaged Graduate Scholar Award
- Applications now open: 2024 ESRI Canada GIS Scholarship for ¶¡ÏãÔ°AV
- Associate Professor Rosemary Collard achieves 13th place on ¶¡ÏãÔ°AV Altmetric List
- The PEAK feature: GSU hosts inaugural RANGE conference
- Gabrielle Wong wins First Prize in 2023 Student Learning Commons Writing Contest
- Gabrielle Wong receives Warren Gill Memorial Award
- Professor Nick Blomley receives Warren Gill Memorial Award for Community Impact
- Geography Student Union recipient of the FENV 2024 Changemaker Awards
- Senior Lecturer Tara Holland reveals the secret sauce of great teaching
- Senior Lecturer Tara Holland Receives ¶¡ÏãÔ°AV 2023 Excellence in Teaching Award
- Thesis Defence - Congratulations to Bright Addae
- GIS undergraduate students participate in the Canada-wide 2024 AppChallenge competition
- Senior Lecturer Andrew Perkins Receives ¶¡ÏãÔ°AV 2024 Dean's Award of Excellence in Teaching
- Congratulations to Alysha van Duynhoven, Canada's 2024 ESRI Young Scholar
- Thesis Defence - Congratulations to Robert Ehlert
- Thesis Defence - Congratulations to Stephan Nieweler
- Eugene McCann writes on "livable cities" in The Tyee
- Tiana Andjelic wins the 2024 ¶¡ÏãÔ°AV ECCE GIS Scholarship Award
- Thesis Defence - Congratulations to Marina Chavez
- Thesis Defence - Congratulations to Mia Fitzpatrick
- Thesis Defence - Congratulations to Lan Qing Zhao
- Thesis Defence - Congratulations to Tyler Cole
- Thesis Defence - Congratulations to Benjamin Lartey
- Thesis Defence - Congratulations to Olivia Nieves
- Thesis Defence - Congratulations to Max Hurson
- Thesis Defence - Congratulations to John Sykes
- Farewell to Robert "Bob" Horsfall, Associate Professor
- Thesis Defence - Congratulations to André Araújo
- ¶¡ÏãÔ°AV Geography welcomes ethnobotanist, Leigh Joseph, as professor of Indigenous geographies
- Physical Geography September: What is Physical Geography?
- Alysha Van Duynhoven communicates award-winning research at international GIS conference
- How Dr. Tracy Brennand’s visionary leadership shaped the Department of Geography - a heartfelt thank-you
- Dr. Tracy Brennand honoured with the Canadian Association of Geographers (CAG) Award
- Thesis Defence - Congratulations to Jay Matsushiba
- Human Geography October: What is Human Geography?
- MA Student Joy Russell featured on CBC Vancouver
- Human Geography October: What is Urban Worlds?
- Ajay Minhas Receives 2024 Warren Gill Award
- Dr. Nadine Schuurman featured in ¶¡ÏãÔ°AV news article on Runnability
- GIS Month: What is Geographic Information Science (GIS)?
- Hallway Screens Slides
- 2023 Archives
- Alumni
Reflections of a Peripatetic Academic
Most academics begin their careers with one set of creative ideas and conclude with an entirely different set. Most often this is evolutionary but occasionally it is revolutionary just as disciplines themselves transition into new fields of enquiry. Such is the unique privilege in our university system- the freedom to question, investigate and discover while at the same time being constrained by Oscar Wilde’s adage that, ‘The truth is rarely pure and never simple.’ Skepticism is an important check on ‘fashions’ in research and a healthy reminder to students of the value and importance of evidence based enquiry.
I began my university education at the University of Toronto in the late sixties in Geography during the ‘Quantitative Revolution’. The wide-ranging curriculum, which required courses in science, social science and the humanities, later shaped many of my ‘new avenues’ for research. U of T was a rich and diverse place to learn. The quality of that learning was enhanced by so many luminary thinkers who gave generously of their time. One such person was my climatology professor, Kenneth Hare (former president of UBC), who planted seminal seeds into my research DNA on climate change, earth systems, food systems and global environmental change. But there were many other persons who were also very generous with their time such as Larry Bourne, Michael Bunce, Ian Burton, Alan Scott, Ross McKay, and graduate students, Geoff MacDonald and Mary Barker who later came to ¶¡ÏãÔ°AV as a faculty member.
I began my graduate work at University of Waterloo on land use modeling under the tutelage of Chris Bryant, Bruce Mitchell and Dieter Steiner. I went on to the LSE a year later for my PhD where I applied remote sensing data from 17 Canadian cities to estimate their morphology and spatial spread. Contact with leading intellectuals such as Lord Robbins, Michael Wise, Ralf Dahrendorf and Karl Popper impacted my world view significantly as did the highly contested political environment at LSE at the time.
My training in land use change; urban economics/geography-archive; modeling; and quantitative analysis was foundational and gave me a good start to my career at ¶¡ÏãÔ°AV in 1976. ¶¡ÏãÔ°AV was a very welcoming environment for a 27 year old ‘green’ academic. I was very appreciative of the support from my colleagues Phil Wagner, Ed Gibson, Mike Roberts, Mary Barker, Shue Tuck Wong, Len Evenden, Tom Poiker and Ted Hickin to name a few.
Of course other research opportunities beckoned and I became increasingly interested in food/agricultural systems, community development, sustainability and resource policies. This in turn shifted my teaching and supervisory interests which produced their own dynamics as did my interest in epistemic research communities where I became part of larger research networks at Guelph, UBC, the CAG and the IGU. Two Canadian individuals were key in shaping my subsequent thinking and approach to research and teaching –the geographer Vaclav Smil’s work on existential questions surrounding global food systems and environmental change and the ecologist Crawford (Buzz) Holling’s work on resilience, adaptive cycles and linked social and ecological systems. Buzz (a ¶¡ÏãÔ°AV honourary degree recipient) was instrumental in creating the Resilience Alliance and his work is particularly relevant to understanding the vulnerability of societies to surprise events such as COVID-19. Ironically, Smil is not well known in the profession but he is now amongst the most cited academics globally. I continue to work in these areas- the fruit of which is a recently published monograph based on a seven year study in Kefalonia, Greece – Ainos and its Regions: the Story of a Mountain Ecosystem and its People. This is classic Geography.
If there is unity to all of this it is at the intersection of three realms - science, what we know; policy, what we should do; and practice, what we actually do!
For over twelve years, I have been involved in promoting archaeological field schools in Greece in co-operation with Hellenic Studies (now the Stavros Niarchos Foundation Centre in Hellenic Studies). I was keenly interested in promoting experiential based learning opportunities for undergraduate students. This was one example that was incredibly successful. These efforts rekindled my interest in archaeology/anthropology (which I had studied at U of T) with a focus on understanding the rise and fall of Mycenaean pre-historical societies.
Within the context of Greece and, for that matter, the research journeys that academics pursue and the challenges of aging let me conclude with a few final lines from Tennyson’s poem,
Odysseus:
We are not now the strength which in old days
Moved earth and heaven, that which we are, we are,
One equal temper of heroic hearts,
Made weak by time and fate, but strong in will
To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield.
JTP, March 2020 (John Pierce)