Dr Will Haynes

School of Geography and Planning

Lecturer in Cultural Geography

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w.haynes@sheffield.ac.uk

Full contact details

Dr Will Haynes
School of Geography and Planning
c13b
Geography and Planning Building
Winter Street
91Ö±²¥
S3 7ND
Profile

Will was awarded a PhD in Human Geography from the University of 91Ö±²¥. Funded by the Arts & Humanities Research Council, Will’s doctoral research was an interdisciplinary ethnography exploring the (in)visibility and (im)mobility of homeless migrants at Termini railway station in Rome, Italy.

Prior to the awarding of his PhD, Will was a Research Associate at the British Council, and a Research Assistant at the Amsterdam Centre of European Studies, working on critical perspectives on hospitality and the experiences of urban refugees in the Netherlands. Will has conducted and presented research on a wide-range of urban and social issues in several countries, including Denmark, Italy, Latvia, the UK, the Netherlands, and Serbia.

Will also holds an MA in European Studies (Cum laude), University of Amsterdam and BA (Hons) Geography (First Class) from the University of Birmingham.

Research interests

Broadly speaking, Will is a cultural and urban geographer and is interested in the intersections of everyday life, migration and marginality in transit spaces and urban environments. Spatial perspectives from history, politics, literature and visual arts are also an important aspect of Will’s research and teaching, as he is committed to working outside of discrete academic boundaries.

His research can be categorised into 4 main overlapping themes:

Marginality in urban environments

Cities, historically and in contemporary times, are fascinating spaces of possibility but present a number of pressing challenges. As a result, Will’s research focuses on different aspects of the built environment and inequality, marginality, and exclusion. This includes contested public spaces and transit sites like railway stations, which are cultural reference sites for alterity and difference. It also includes critical understandings of ‘home’, and reassessing how homes are made in unlikely and often stigmatised places throughout cities. Will’s critical urban research has led to his co-organisation of the Contemporary Rome Conference in Italy in 2023 and a 2022 residence and membership at the British School of Rome.

Geographies of migration

Will is a member of the University of 91Ö±²¥â€™s Migration Research Group. He is interested in the overlap between experiences homelessness and migration broadly conceived, including asylum and refugee politics and processes, and the way that border politics are enacted and embodied in urban public space. This includes the racialisation of urban governance discourses, and critical assessments of ‘whiteness’ within city development projects. Will also looks at the storying of migration journeys, the representation of ‘irregular’ migration in politics and by the media. Previous research on migration includes a Research Assistantship at the University of Amsterdam focussing on refugee initiatives and hospitality and commissioned research for the British Council on intercultural encounters in Cape Town, Guangzhou and Rome.

Creative, interdisciplinary and ethical methodologies

Will has worked with several interdisciplinary methods, including film, poetry and sketching in his geographical research, on which he is widely published. Will has presented these methods in several settings, including to the EU-funded MIGREC research network in Belgrade. He has a core focus on ethically-led methodologies, which can be utilised for social justice and inclusion in geographical research, and Will co-led the University of 91Ö±²¥â€™s Participatory Action Research group through the pandemic. He is also an active member and 2023-24 research lead of Culture Space and Difference Research Group, which convene around these kinds of methods.

Urban water, sanitation, and city rivers

Will has an emergent project on Rome’s rivers, in collaboration with John Cabot University in Rome, where he held a visiting fellowship in 2023. The project focusses around the socio-cultural lives of Rome’s three rivers (Tiber, Almone & Aniene), leading to an international conference in 2024, connecting his work on everyday urban inhabitations with wider environmental and ecological concerns. Will’s ‘watery’ research also relates to a longstanding critical concern for toilet access in cities (particularly for those experiencing homelessness) and the discursive relationship between urban waste, sanitation facilities and urban development – particularly for the most marginalised citizens.

Will’s other interests include (post-)Soviet geopolitics and memory, medieval history, rock music, visual arts, and football.

Publications

Journal articles

  • Haynes W (2024) Whiteness and 'whiteness' in Roma Termini. lo Squaderno, 69, 35-40. RIS download Bibtex download
  • Phillips R, Seaborne K, Goldsmith A, Curtis N, Davies A, Haynes W, McEnroe R, Murphy N, O’Neill L, Pacey C , Walker E et al (2022) . The Geographical Journal, 188(2), 277-293. RIS download Bibtex download
  • Haynes W (2020) . Housing Studies, 35(6), 1163-1164. RIS download Bibtex download
  • Haynes W () . The Sociological Review Magazine. RIS download Bibtex download

Chapters

  • Bialasiewicz L & Haynes W (2019) Charity, hospitality, tolerance? Religious organisations and the changing vocabularies of migrant assistance in Rome In Bialasiewicz L & Gentile V (Ed.), Spaces of Tolerance Changing Geographies and Philosophies of Religion in Today's Europe (pp. 197-220). London: Routledge. RIS download Bibtex download

Reports

  • Haynes W (2021) The importance of the everyday: endotic cultural relations in Cape Town, Rome and Guangzhou RIS download Bibtex download
Teaching interests

Will’s teaching is mutually informed by his research interests and overall agenda to address marginality across urban environments and to developing more equal, open and sustainable environments through scholarship and impact.

Will teaches across:

  • Urban geographies, both historical and contemporary
  • Geographies of migration, borders, and geopolitics
  • Postcolonial geographies and 'race'
  • Cultural geographies of gender and embodiment
  • Identity, memory, landscape
  • A wide spectrum of qualitative/quantitative methods and research skills
Teaching activities

At the University of 91Ö±²¥, Will teaches or has taught on the following modules:

  • GEO114 Exploring Human Geographies (1st year)
  • GEO11004 Why Geography Matters (1st year)
  • GEO11005 Geographical Skills, Methods and Techniques (1st year)
  • GEO21017 Urban Culture and Conflict: The Making of Modern Cities (2nd year)
  • GEO21009 Analysing Voice, Image and Text (2nd year)
  • GEO21015 Culture, Space and Difference (2nd year)
  • GEO3100 Employing Geography Skills in Sustainability and Social Justice (3rd year)
  • GEO31013 Creative Geographies: Media, Imaginaries and Conflict (3rd year)
  • GEO3003 Decolonising Geographies (3rd year)
  • GEO6801 Ideas and Practice in International Development (Masters’)
  • GEO608 Doctoral Training in Human Geography (PGR)