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Dr. Matthew Kurtz

Adjunct Research Professor

Academic Research and Student Matters:kurtzm@uwalumni.com

Professional Consulting: Regi.consulting@gmail.com

Biography

Dr Matthew Kurtz is a socio-economic research consultant. He obtained a bachelor鈥檚 in mathematics (summa cum laude) in 1986, a master鈥檚 in geography in 1990, then started teaching in the History and Geography Department at University of Alaska Anchorage. His doctoral studies in geography took him to Lexington, Kentucky. He returned to Anchorage with two competitive grants from the National Science Foundation to conduct his research on the birth of Alaska鈥檚 economic development institutions. The study included fieldwork on the northwest arctic coast, the subject of Alaska鈥檚 earliest regional development studies. He completed his PhD in 2005 and took a research fellowship at Open University in Great Britain, where he had the privilege to work in one of geography鈥檚 leading research departments.

In 2008, Dr Kurtz returned to this part of the world. In Ottawa, he serves as an academic author and consultant on matters of economic geography, institutional analysis, and research methodology. His training and experience with sophisticated qualitative methodologies and his facility with statistical techniques make an excellent combination in economic geography, a field whose strength resides in its power to discern complex and critical connections between (macro) economic restructuring and the everyday (micro) experience of life in a community. He has taught economic geography at three universities and maintains a strong interest in indigenous communities and the Arctic.

Research Interests

His research revolves around the geographies of economic knowledge production. Thus, it explores the junction of three fields of inquiry: 1) economic geography 2) historical geography and 3) research methodology. While he uses related historiographic techniques in other areas of human geography, the core of his work traces the quotidian practices through which economic information has been produced, analyzed, disseminated, and interpreted, in order to contribute to a better understanding of the limitations of different knowledge streams.

He has completed substantial research projects on:

His current research examines various topics in three different areas:

Select Publications

 Books

Arctic Approach: Journeys through a Changing World, Volume Two (co-authored with Joe Smith and Mark Brandon). Open University Press, 2010.

 Book Chapters

鈥淗eritage and Tourism鈥 in Understanding the Practice of Heritage, edited by Susie West. Manchester University Press, 2010

鈥淎rctic鈥 (lead author with Annette Watson) in the International Encyclopedia of Human Geography, edited by Rob Kitchin and Nigel Thrift. Elsevier, 2009.

鈥淎rchives鈥 in International Encyclopedia of Human Geography, eds Kitchin and Thrift. Elsevier, 2009.

 Refereed Journals

鈥淩uptures and Recuperations of a Language of Racism in Alaska鈥檚 Rural / Urban Divide,鈥 Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 96/3 (2006): 601-621.

鈥淩emembering the Town Body: Methodology and the Work of Local History,鈥 Journal of Historical  Geography 28/1 (2002): 42-62.

鈥淪ituating Practices: The Archive and the File Cabinet鈥 Historical Geography, 29 (2001): 26-37.

Web Publications

鈥,鈥 Atlas of Interdependence, 2011

鈥,鈥 Interdependence Day, 2006

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