Tiffany Muller Myrdahl

Urbanist and Feminist Geographer Simon Fraser University

  • Vancouver BC

Specializes in equity and inclusion. Uses policy analysis and collaborative research with women and LGBTQ people to examine urban change.

Contact

Social

Biography

Tiffany Muller Myrdahl is an urbanist and feminist geographer. Her work combines interests in municipal social policy, participatory planning, and collaborative approaches to researching and responding to urban change.

Tiffany serves on the board of Women in Cities International and was active on the board of Women Transforming Cities from 2012-2015. She is a Senior Lecturer at Simon Fraser University and teaches with University of British Columbia’s Humanities 101 program.

From 2012-2015, Tiffany held the Ruth Wynn Woodward Junior Chair in the Department of Gender, Sexuality, and Women’s Studies at Simon Fraser University (Vancouver, Canada). She was an Assistant Professor in the Department of Women & Gender Studies at the University of Lethbridge (Alberta, Canada) from 2008-2013.

Dr Muller Myrdahl completed her PhD in Geography with a Certificate in Feminist Studies at the University of Minnesota in 2008.

Industry Expertise

Research
Women
Education/Learning
Public Policy
Program Development
Writing and Editing

Areas of Expertise

Geographies of social difference (with an emphasis on gender and sexuality)
Municipal Social Inclusion Policy
Qualitative and Mixed Method Research
Oral history methods for research and policymaking

Accomplishments

Ruth Wynn Woodward Junior Chair

2012-01-01

Junior Chair in the Department of Gender, Sexuality, and Women’s Studies at Simon Fraser University

Education

University of Minnesota

Ph.D.

Geography

2008

University of Minnesota

M.PP.

Public Policy

2002

University of Wisconsin-Madison

B.A.

History

1994

Affiliations

  • Simon Fraser University
  • Women Transforming Cities
  • Women in Cities International

Media Appearances

Women and Gender in (Public) Transportation

SFU City Program Next-Generation Transportation Webinar Series  online

2017-07-27

Transportation infrastructure and services are often assumed to be "gender neutral," where projects and services are assumed to provide an equal benefit to men and women, and where there is no significant difference in travel patterns, modes of access or participation in project planning, design and maintenance. In fact, when transportation data is disagreggated by gender, what becomes visible is how transportation policies affect women and men differently. In this webinar, SFU's Tiffany Muller Myrdahl will explain the use of disaggregated data to highlight gendered transportation patterns and discuss how gendered experience shapes transit use. Most importantly, this webinar will focus on what transportation planners and decision-makers need to know to develop policies that improve equity in access and provision of services. Moderated by Tara Gallen of City of Vancouver and instructor in SFU's Next-Generation Transportation Certificate.

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TIFFANY MULLER MYRDAHL

Complex Social Change  online

2015-04-15

Tiffany Muller Myrdahl is the Junior Ruth Wynn Woodward Chair in Gender, Sexuality & Women’s Studies (2012-15) at Simon Fraser University. Tiffany completed her PhD in Geography and a certificate in Feminist Studies at the University of Minnesota in 2008. Since 2008, she has been an Assistant Professor in the Department of Women and Gender Studies and an associate member of the Department of Geography at the University of Lethbridge. She is on leave from the University of Lethbridge during her tenure as the Junior RWW Chair.

Tiffany’s research links urban, social, and feminist geography with a focus on social inclusion and feminist praxis. She employs a community-engaged qualitative research practice to examine the social and spatial processes that constitute and shape cities. Her scholarship has attended to sport-centred urban entrepreneurial policies; the social geographies and mobilities of marginalized communities, with an emphasis on women and LGBTQ populations; and the intersection between municipal social policy and participatory planning. Her academic publications can be found in Gender, Place and Culture; Social & Cultural Geography; Journal of Lesbian Studies; Leisure/Loisir; Leisure Studies; and ACME: An International E-Journal for Critical Geographies (forthcoming). Her recent work also includes chapters in Queerying Planning: Challenging Heteronormative planning practice (Ashgate, 2011) and in Stadium Worlds: Football, Space and the Built Environment (Routledge, 2010).

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UBC’s women safety forum

Global News  online

2014-01-14

Last night members of the UBC community got together to talk about how to make their campus safer amid a recent string of sexual assaults, and a spike in assaults on Translink. Tiffany Muller Myrdahl teaches women and gender studies at SFU, and spoke to Global News about what was accomplished at last night’s forum...

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Research Grants

The lives of (sexual) others: Social difference and urban change in Lethbridge, Alberta

Social Science and Humanities Research Council of Canada

2011-05-01

This Insight Development Grant supported research that involved the collection and analysis of stories of the city - including LGBTQ oral histories, city social policies, census data, and participatory planning documents. Its purpose was to examine the practices of, and changes in, LGBTQ lives in a small urban centre.

Queering Canadian Suburbs: LGBTQ2S place-making outside of central cities

Social Science and Humanities Research Council of Canada

2016-05-01

This is an ongoing Insight Grant led by Alison Bain (York University) and Julie Podmore (Concordia University).

Articles

Ordinary (small) cities and LGBQ lives

ACME: An International E-Journal for Critical Geographies

2013-06-30

This is an academic article that asks how theorists think and write about lesbian, gay, bisexual, and queer (lgbq) lives. I write that a hierarchy continues to inform our understanding of lgbq lives, whereby the “gay metropolis” is situated at the top, looming over the many small cities and rural places outside of purportedly “welcoming” metropolitan centres. I argue that this hierarchy shapes our imaginations about cities and lgbq lives, despite evidence that counters the validity of the hierarchical order.

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Politics “out of place”? Making sense of conflict in sport spaces

Leisure/Loisir

2011-05-13

Despite their relevance to the function of sport and social relations, the spaces produced in and through sport practices and performances remain under-examined. Consequently, there is little engagement with the logics that are employed in sport spaces or with the shape and material form that such logics take in sport spaces. Likewise, there is only a modest sense of how social change works in and through sport space. I argue that more attention must be paid to the social spaces that are both produced through and are productive of the intersections of sport and social relations. Without this awareness, the ways in which cultural values are reproduced through game-day practices and spatialized discourses remain obscured. My discussion focuses on on-court activism of and reactions to US college basketball player Toni Smith who, in 2003, held a series of protests against the US involvement in Iraq. This case illustrates the discursive construction of sport spaces as apolitical and shows that sport space played a vital role in Smith's statement of dissent.

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Lesbian visibility and the politics of covering in women’s basketball game spaces

Leisure Studies

2011-03-18

In this article, I use research on the lesbian fans of US women’s professional basketball (WNBA) to outline how a set of exclusive cultural politics (re)produces a curious form of self‐regulation amongst target consumers. I link leisure geographies and geographies of sexuality through an analysis of lesbian visibility to examine the ways that identity performance is shaped by the implicit cultural politics at work in WNBA arenas. I use Kenji Yoshino’s adoption of Erving Goffman’s term ‘covering’ to discuss the ways that normative ideologies are reinforced by management‐driven practices and by the self‐circumscribing practices of some lesbian fans. I show that covering is noteworthy as both an effect of marginalisation and as a mandate that encourages lesbian fans to reproduce the dominant discourse at work in WNBA arenas. I argue that act of covering illustrates the material effects of normative power relations and the ways that these effects are understood to be a natural outcome of an apolitical economic logic instead of the result of the decidedly political process of spatial production. I contend that attempts to cover give lesbian fans a false sense of power to regulate the reception of their bodies and their enactments of normativity.

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