Linda McDowell


Linda Margaret McDowell is a British geographer and academic, specialising in the ethnography of work and employment. She was Professor of Geography at the University of Oxford from 2004 to 2016.

Early life and education

McDowell studied for her PhD as a part-time student at the Bartlett School of Planning, where she had previously earned a master's degree.
Supervised by Peter Cowan, she researched housing change in London.

Academic career

Prior to completing her PhD, she lectured at the Open University. She then returned to the University of Cambridge, where she had studied as an undergraduate.
She took a chair at London School of Economics in 1999, after which she moved first to University College London and then, in 2004, to the University of Oxford.
She is an economic geographer, who describes herself as an ethnographer of work and employment.
She wrote the first paper on feminism in the journal Society and Space, while her three books on work and gender - Capital Culture: Gender at Work in the City, which explored the role of gender in the City of London's financial services; Gender, Place and Identity, which offered a broader introduction to gender and geography; and Redundant Masculinities, which explored masculinity in the context of economic downturns - have been major contributions to feminist geography and geographies of gender. More recently, her research has explored labour and economic migration since 1945.
McDowell's work has received numerous awards. From the Royal Geographical Society she has been awarded the Back Award and the Victoria Medal. In 2008, she became a fellow of the British Academy. She is also a fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences. McDowell has edited the journals Area and Antipode.
She was appointed Commander of the Order of the British Empire in the 2016 New Year Honours for services to geography and higher education.

Selected publications