Ian Cook (geographer)

Ian Cook is an Emeritus Professor of Cultural Geography at the University of Exeter in the UK, and formerly a Lecturer and Senior Lecturer in Human Geography at the University of Birmingham, and a Lecturer in Human Geography at the University of Wales, Lampeter.[1]

Background

Cook has a BSc in Human Sciences, University College London (1986); an MA in Human Geography, University of Kentucky (1992); a PhD in Human Geography, University of Bristol (1997). Their PhD was highly autobiographical, and took several years to be awarded.[2] They began their academic career at the University of Wales, Lampeter (1993-9), then worked at the University of Birmingham (1999-2007), before moving to the University of Exeter (2007-2025).[3]

They were the Director of Education & Resources for the Fashion Revolution movement (2014-2016)[4][5] and a Visiting Professor of Geography, University of Paris 7 - Denis Diderot (2016-18).

'Follow the thing'

Cook's contributions to research, teaching and pedagogy have been to develop geographical approaches to:

Awards & recognition

See also

References

  1. ^ Chris Philo (2002) Our journey through Lampeter': a marginal space of geographical knowledge. Paper delivered at the AAG Annual Meeting, Los Angeles, March
  2. ^ a b Ian Cook (2001) You want to be careful you don’t end up like Ian. He’s all over the place: autobiography in/of an expanded field. In Moss P (ed) Placing Autobiography in Geography, Syracuse, NY: Syracuse University Press, 99-120 [Director's cut]
  3. ^ "Staff | Geography | University of Exeter".
  4. ^ Press, Clare (2018). Rise and Resist: How to Change the World. Melbourne University Publishing Ltd.
  5. ^ Sarah Ditty, Ian Cook, Laura Hunter, Futerra, Tamsin Blanchard (2018) How to be a Fashion Revolutionary. Ashbourne: Fashion Revolution
  6. ^ Ian Cook & Philip Crang (1996) 'The world on a plate': culinary culture, displacement and geographical knowledges. Journal of Material Culture 1(2), 131-153
  7. ^ Ian Cook et al (2006) Geographies of food: following. Progress in Human Geography, 30(5), 655-666
  8. ^ Ian Cook & Tara Woodyer (2012) Lives of things. in Eric Sheppard, Trevor Barnes & Jamie Peck (eds) Wiley-Blackwell Companion to Economic Geography. Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell, 226-241
  9. ^ Ian Cook (1995) Constructing the exotic: the case of tropical fruit. in John Allen & Doreen Massey (eds) Geographical worlds. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 137-142
  10. ^ Ian Cook et al. (2004) Follow the Thing: Papaya. Antipode 36(4), 642-664
  11. ^ Ian Cook & Michelle Harrison (2003) ‘Cross over food: re-materialising postcolonial geographies’. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 28(3), 296-331
  12. ^ Ian Cook & Michelle Harrison (2007) Follow the thing: ‘West Indian hot pepper sauce’. Space and Culture 10(1), 40-63
  13. ^ "Food globalisation | RGS". www.rgs.org. Retrieved 11 March 2026.
  14. ^ Barnaby, Wendy (5 May 2000). "When a meal out changes lives". Times Higher Education. Retrieved 20 February 2011.
  15. ^ Cook, Ian (2019). Ethnography in Human Geography. SAGE Publications Ltd. ISBN 978-1-5297-4868-0.
  16. ^ Ian Cook & Mike Crang (1995) Doing ethnographies. CATMOG 58. Norwich: Environmental Publications
  17. ^ a b Mike Crang & Ian Cook (2007) Doing ethnographies. London: Sage
  18. ^ Ian Cook (2005) Positionality / situated knowledge. in David Atkinson, Peter Jackson, David Sibley & Neil Washbourne (eds) Cultural geography: a critical dictionary of key ideas. London: IB Tauris, 16-26
  19. ^ Ian Cook, Tim Angus & James Evans (2001) A Manifesto for Cyborg Pedagogy. International Research in Geographical & Environmental Education 10(2), 195-201
  20. ^ Ian Cook, James Evans, Helen Griffiths, Rebecca Morris, & Sarah Wrathmell (2007) 'It's more than just what it is': defetishising commodities, expanding fields, mobilising change. Geoforum 38(6), 1113-1126
  21. ^ "REF Case study search". impact.ref.ac.uk. Retrieved 10 March 2026.
  22. ^ "'Students describe my module as an emotional rollercoaster'". Leiden University. 17 April 2019. Retrieved 10 March 2026.
  23. ^ FutureLearn. "Who Made My Clothes? - Fashion Revolution Online Course". FutureLearn. Retrieved 10 March 2026.
  24. ^ Cook, Ian (16 December 2024). "Who made my clothes?". followthethings.com. Retrieved 10 March 2026.
  25. ^ Fashion Revolution (13 July 2020). Teaser - Programa Educacional Jovens Revolucionários. Retrieved 10 March 2026 – via YouTube.
  26. ^ "Welcome to the Course". RecyCOOL Imperfections. Retrieved 10 March 2026.
  27. ^ Cook, Ian (18 August 2025). "Who made my stuff?". followthethings.com. Retrieved 10 March 2026.
  28. ^ Ian Cook et al (compiler) (2011-) followthethings.com [Internet archive versions]
  29. ^ Ian Cook et al (2019) A new vocabulary for cultural-economic geography? Dialogues in human geography 9(1), 83-87
  30. ^ Ian Cook et al (2017) From 'follow the thing: papaya' to followthethings.com. Journal of consumer ethics 1(1), 22-29
  31. ^ Alison Hulme (2017) Following the (unfollowable) thing: methodological considerations in the era of high globalisation. Cultural geographies 24(1), 157-160
  32. ^ Ian Cook et al (2018) Inviting construction: Primark, Rana Plaza & Political LEGO. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 43(3), p.477-495
  33. ^ Ian Cook et al (2018) Minifigurative politics. Inaugural Lecture, University of Exeter, 8 June
  34. ^ National Centre for Research Methods (NCRM) (7 October 2021). In Conversation with Sophie Woodward and Ian Cook – Material Methods 4: Political Lego. Retrieved 11 March 2026 – via YouTube.
  35. ^ Paula Crutchlow & Ian Cook (2022) Museum of Contemporary Commodities: valuing the things we buy today as the heritage of tomorrow. Exeter: Museum of Contemporary Commodities
  36. ^ Paula Crutchlow & Ian Cook (2015-) Museum of Contemporary Commodities website. [Internet archive versions]
  37. ^ University of Exeter (2014) ‘Follow The Things’: developing critical pedagogies to promote geographically-informed and ethically-aware consumption in school geography curriculum. Research Excellence Framework Impact Case Study
  38. ^ Crane, Nicholas; Cliff, Andrew; Conway, Gordon; Evans, David J A; Hilsum, Lindsey; Yeung, Henry Wai-Chung (2017). "Royal Geographical Society (with IBG) Medals and Awards celebration 2017". The Geographical Journal. 183 (3): 312–319. ISSN 0016-7398.