Andrew Deener, Ph.D.

Professor of Sociology University of Connecticut

  • Storrs CT

Andrew Deener is a professor of sociology at the University of Connecticut.

Contact

University of Connecticut

View more experts managed by University of Connecticut

Biography

My research focuses on urban inequality, culture, organizations, infrastructure, markets, and the environment, and it combines historical and ethnographic methods. My first book was Venice: A Contested Bohemia in Los Angeles (University of Chicago Press, 2012). I recently completed The Problem with Feeding Cities: The Social Transformation of Infrastructure, Abundance, and Inequality in America (University of Chicago Press, 2020). I am currently writing a book about global urbanism (with Jonathan Wynn), and I am starting a new project about how climate change affects property valuations, risk assessments, and communities. I also write and teach about the logics of qualitative methods and the processes and practices of theorizing in sociology.

Areas of Expertise

Food Systems
Gentrification
Economic Sociology
Culture
City Development

Education

University of California

Ph.D.

Sociology

University of California

M.A.

Sociology

Pennsylvania State University

B.A.

Cultural Studies

Media Appearances

Could Gentrification Save Some Cities?

CNN  online

2017-10-20

In the US, academics and urban planners first started extensively talking about and debating gentrification in the 1970s. Between 1950 and 1970, urban manufacturing went overseas and white middle-class city-dwellers moved to the suburbs.

View More

The battle over gentrification is heating up around the US

Business Insider  online

2017-10-12

Over the past few decades, gentrification debates have migrated from the pages of academic journals into the streets and the mainstream press.

View More

Gentrification? Some cities say “bring it”

Salon  online

2017-10-12

The gentrification debates should also not blind us to what made New York and San Francisco attractive cities in the first place. The principles of urban activist Jane Jacobs for healthy city life still hold: diverse uses of streets and public places, mixed-use buildings, a variety of economic and commercial opportunities and local excitement about community building.

View More

Articles

The Origins of the Food Desert: Urban Inequality as Infrastructural Exclusion

Social Forces

2017

This article develops the concept of infrastructural exclusion as a form of urban inequality through the case of the origins of the food desert in Philadelphia. Infrastructural exclusion refers to the reorganization of spatial and material interdependence into a semi-autonomous and path-dependent force that separates resources from those reliant on them.

View more

The Ecology Of Neighborhood Participation and The Reproduction Of Political Conflict

International Journal of Urban and Regional Research

2016

Building on three years of participant observation and 30 life‐history interviews with activists in the Los Angeles community of Venice, this article introduces an ecological perspective to examine neighborhood participation and the reproduction of political conflict. As the official local space of community politics, the city‐funded Venice Neighborhood Council has experienced dramatic conflict.

View more

Cultural Reflexivity in Health Research and Practice

AJPH

2015

Recent public health movements have invoked cultural change to improve health and reduce health disparities. We argue that these cultural discourses have sometimes justified and maintained health inequalities when those with power and authority designated their own social practices as legitimate and healthy while labeling the practices of marginalized groups as illegitimate or unhealthy. This “misrecognition,” which creates seemingly objective knowledge without understanding historical and social conditions, sustains unequal power dynamics and obscures the fact that what is deemed legitimate and healthy can be temporally, geographically, and socially relative.

View more

Show All +