Ananya Roy


Ananya Roy is a scholar of international development and global urbanism. Born in Calcutta, India, Roy is Professor and Meyer and Renee Luskin Chair in Inequality and Democracy at the UCLA Luskin School of Public Affairs. She has been a professor of City and Regional Planning and Distinguished Chair in Global Poverty and Practice at the University of California, Berkeley. She holds a Bachelor of Comparative Urban Studies degree from Mills College, and Master of City Planning and Doctor of Philosophy degrees from the Department of City and Regional Planning at the University of California at Berkeley.

Career

Roy does work in three areas:
  1. The analysis of urban poverty in the global South;
  2. The investigation of new frontiers of capital accumulation, notably the conversion of economies of poverty into globally circulating capital; and
  3. The examination of new formations of global urbanism, notably bold urban planning experiments undertaken by nation-states in Asia.
Roy engages with feminist and ethnographic methodologies and often draws upon post-colonial feminism for theoretical inspiration.
In the field of urban studies, Roy is well known for advancing the theoretical concept of "urban informality"
and the call for "new geographies of theory" that are attentive to the urban condition of the global South. She argues for a transnational approach to urbanism and urban planning, and more recently, for a transnational approach to politics and ethics
In 2015 Roy was named Professor of Urban Planning and Social Welfare and Meyer and Renee Luskin Chair in Inequality and Democracy at the UCLA Luskin School of Public Affairs. She had been Professor of City and Regional Planning and Distinguished Chair in Global Poverty and Practice at the University of California at Berkeley, and, prior to that, held the Friesen Chair in Urban Studies and was a founder of the Urban Studies major at UC Berkeley. She also served as Education Director of the Blum Center for Developing Economies, where she was the founding chair of the undergraduate minor in Global Poverty and Practice at UC Berkeley. She served as co-director of the Global Metropolitan Studies Center from 2009 to 2012, and she served as Associate Dean of International and Area Studies from 2005 to 2009.
At Berkeley, Roy taught graduate and undergraduate students. Her undergraduate course, "Global Poverty: Challenges and Hopes in the New Millennium," drew 700 students each Fall at UC Berkeley. In 2006, she was awarded the Distinguished Teaching Award, the highest teaching honor UC Berkeley bestows on its faculty. Also in 2006, Roy was awarded the Distinguished Faculty Mentors award, a recognition bestowed by the Graduate Assembly of the University of California at Berkeley. In 2008, Roy was the recipient of the Golden Apple Teaching award, the only teaching award given by the student body. She was the 2009 California Professor of the Year by CASE/Carnegie Foundation. Most recently, Roy received the 2011 Excellence in Achievement Award of the California Alumni Association, a lifetime achievement recognition.
Along with colleagues in the UC system, Roy has been active in the mobilizations for public education in California. Her role in such struggles was chronicled in The New Yorker in 2009. Roy herself has written about fragile solidarities of the movement under the theme, "We Are All Students of Color Now" Roy has appeared on Democracy Now! to discuss these issues, as well as her work on poverty capitalism.

Work

Her book, Poverty Capital: Microfinance and the Making of Development is the recipient of the 2011 Paul Davidoff Book Award of the Association of Collegiate Schools of Planning. The primary book award in urban planning, the Davidoff prize "recognizes an outstanding book publication promoting participatory planning and positive social change, opposing poverty and racism as factors in society and seeking ways to reduce disparities between rich and poor; white and black; men and women." Roy has argued that microfinance is an instrument of financial inclusion, a part of the "democratization of capital," but also that it is potentially a new global subprime market, one in which debt is securitized and traded In a recent special issue of Public Culture, which she guest-edited, Roy highlights the making of poverty capitalism and markets in humanitarian goods Her work contrasts such approaches with poverty interventions that are concerned with social protection and the transformation of inequality.

Authored Books