Staff Profile
Dr Ingrid A. Medby
Senior Lecturer in Human Geography
- Email: ingrid.medby@ncl.ac.uk
- Personal Website:
- Address: Room 3.50, Henry Daysh Building
School of Geography, Politics and Sociology (GPS)
缅北禁地
缅北禁地 upon Tyne
NE1 7RU
UK
I am a Senior Lecturer in Human Geography, with a focus on Political Geography. I joined 缅北禁地 in 2021, prior to which I worked at Oxford Brookes University and University College London (UCL). I hold a PhD in Human Geography from Durham University (2017), an MSc in International Relations from The University of Edinburgh (2012), and a BA in International Studies from RMIT University (2011).
My research focuses on Arctic geopolitics, and I am particularly interested in the intersections of identity, statecraft, and changing environments. In addition to my academic publications (please see below), I regularly engage with public media and policy.
I am a UK representative on the International Arctic Science Committee's (IASC) Social & Human Working Group, and committee member of the UK Arctic and Antarctic Partnership.
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My research is situated in political geography and critical geopolitics. I am particularly interested in the intersections of identity, (geo)political practice and participation; and in governance of and responses to changing environments. My research focuses on the Arctic and High North, and seeks to broaden the voices and perspectives considered as contributors to ‘geopolitics’. In other words, key questions I have been and continue to be interested in include: Whose voices are heard, how, and why; what actions taken or not taken; and how may social relations across scales influence perceptions of self and other?
I completed my PhD in 2017, looking at how identity discourses are understood and articulated by state personnel representing three Arctic states (Norway, Iceland, and Canada), and arguing for a more ‘peopled’ account of geopolitics. I am currently working on a monograph based on this project. Since finishing my doctoral project, I have also explored how politics of sustainability become interwoven with national identity narratives, ‘Orientalism’ in Arctic affairs, critical security and the Anthropocene, Indigenous ‘inclusion’ in statecraft, and agency in peace-building/people-to-people initiatives (the latter funded by a BA Small Research Grant).
Most recently, I have also focused on the intersections of geopolitics and language, and in particular how we might apply Wittgenstein’s philosophy of language to the study of critical geopolitics. Across these concerns and projects, I continue to explore how we may challenge the taken-for-granted and the status quo.
I am Degree Programme Director (DPD) for our MA in Human Geography Research.
I currently lead the following modules:
- GEO3102: Geopolitics.
- GEO8015: Doing Geographical Research.
- GEO8017: Human Geography: Concepts in Action.
- GEO8089: Research Dissertation.
And I also teach on the following modules:
- GEO1024: Coasts and Communities.
- GEO2047: Political Geography.
- GEO2139: Exploring Everyday Political Geographies in a Divided City: Nicosia.
- GEO3099: Dissertation.
- POL8026: Security: Politics, Society, and Space.
Additionally, I contribute to the PhD supervision of Mr Carl Mohr at Oxford Brookes University, looking at the geopolitics of the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) in Central Asia; and of Mr Joaquim Gaignard at Durham University, looking at Scotland's Northern-Arctic identity.
I welcome contact from anyone interested in PhD supervision - especially on Political Geographical topics relating to geopolitics, identity, language, and Arctic relations.
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Articles
- Medby IA, Kristoffersen B, Steinberg P, Dodds K, Bennett MM, Bruun JM, Kontou DM. . Political Geography 2026, 124, 103391.
- Chuffart R, Hansen TV, Medby IA. . Political Geography 2024, 114, 103185.
- Medby IA. . Area 2023, 55(2), 221-226.
- Medby IA, Thornton P. . Area 2023, 55(1), 2-9.
- Medby IA. . Area 2023, 55(1), 18-25.
- Medby IA. . The Geographical Journal 2022, 189(3), 412-421.
- Alami I, Dixon AD, Gonzalez-Vicente R, Babic M, Seung-Ook Lee, Medby IA, Graaff ND. . Geopolitics 2021, 27(3), 995-1023.
- Medby IA, Dittmer J. . Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 2021, 39(1), 176-193.
- Medby IA. . Area 2020, 52(1), 148-155.
- Steinveg B, Medby IA. . Internasjonal Politikk 2020, 78(4), 535-544.
- Medby IA. . Antipode 2019, 51(4), 1276-1295.
- Medby IA. . Geoforum 2019, 107, 124-133.
- Medby IA. . Political Geography 2018, 62, 116-125.
- Bruun JM, Medby IA. . Geography Compass 2014, 8(12), 915-929.
- Steinberg PE, Bruun JM, Medby IA. . Polar Geography 2014, 37(4), 273-297.
- Medby IA. . Polar Geography 2014, 37(3), 252-269.
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Authored Book
- Medby IA. . Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2025.
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Book Chapters
- Steinveg B, Medby IA. . In: Østhagen, A, ed. Norway's Arctic Policy: Geopolitics, Security, and Identity in the High North. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar, 2023, pp.109-120.
- Medby IA. . In: Chih Y. Woon and Klaus Dodds, ed. 'Observing' the Arctic: Asia in the Arctic Council and Beyond. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar Publishing, 2020, pp.122-140.
- Medby IA. . In: Ulrik Pram Gad and Jeppe Strandsbjerg, ed. The Politics of Sustainability in the Arctic: Reconfiguring Identity, Space, and Time. London and New York: Routledge, 2019, pp.163-175.
- Medby IA. . In: Ilan Kelman, ed. Arcticness: Power and Voice from the North. London: UCL Press, 2017, pp.v-vii.
- Medby IA. . In: Lassi Heininen, ed. Arctic Yearbook 2015. Arctic Portal, 2015.
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Online Publication
- Medby IA. . Washington DC: The Arctic Institute, 2015. Available at: .
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Report
- Siegert M, Bacon S, Barnes D, Brooks I, Burgess H, Cottier F, Depledge D, Dodds K, Edwards M, Essery R, Heywood K, Hendry K, Jones V, Lea J, Medby I, Meredith M, Screen J, Steinberg P, Tarling G, Warner J, Young G. . London: Grantham Institute, Imperial College London, 2020. Grantham Institute Discussion Paper 7.
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Reviews
- Medby I. . Antipode Online 2019.
- Medby IA. . cultural geographies 2019, 26(3), 410-411.
- Medby IA. . cultural geographies 2016, 23(4), 756-757.