Staff Profile
Dr Alison Williams
Dean of Postgraduate Research
- Email: alison.williams1@ncl.ac.uk
- Telephone: +44 (0) 191 208 8489
Introduction
I am a Reader in Political Geography. My research is situated in military geographies and geopolitics. Specifically, I am interested in vertical and aerial geopolitics; analysing the role of aviation and aircraft in the projection of power across space. This interest has both historical and contemporary foci and includes work on the aerial geopolitics of the inter-war Pacific, the use of military air power to enforce international boundaries, the performativity of UK military airspaces, and the embodied geopolitics of drone warfare.
Qualifications
PhD Human Geography, University of Hull
MA International Relations, Keele University
BA (Hons) Geography, University of Liverpool
Roles and Responsibilities
Postgraduate Research Dean - Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences (2025-)
Director of Postgraduate Research for the School of GPS (2021-24)
PGR Director for Geography (2020-22)
ESRC NINE DTP Human Geography pathway lead (2020-22)
Degree Programme Director for Geography (L701, F800, FH82) (2015-19)
ESRC NINE DTP Conflict, Security and Justice pathway lead (2016-19)
ESRC Peer Review College member (2010-)
Northumbrian Universities Military Education Committee member (2008-2018)
Professional Recognition
Fellow of Royal Geographical Society-Institute of British Geographers
Senior Fellow of the Higher Education Academy (Advance HE)
Previous Positions
2014-2020 - Senior Lecturer in Political Geography, School of Geography, Politics and Sociology, 缅北禁地
2011-2014 Lecturer in Human Geography, School of Geography, Politics and Sociology, 缅北禁地
2008-11: ESRC Research Fellow, School of Geography, Politics and Sociology, 缅北禁地
2007-8: Lecturer in Human Geography, University of Liverpool
2005-7: Post-Doctoral Research Associate, International Boundaries Research Unit, Geography Department, Durham University
Research Interests
My research seeks to consider ideas of geopolitics and specifically the relationships between aerial technologies and power projection, with an empirical focus on military geography, especially relating to military air power. My work in these areas seeks to understand how aircraft can be and are used to project state power, and also how that can be challenged and disrupted. Empirically, my work ranges from the use of aviation to project US power across the interwar Pacific, through the performance of UK military airspace, to the use of unmanned aerial vehicles (drones) and the relationships between bodies and technologies in the projection of military power by aircraft.
I also have a research interest in the transferable skills agenda within UK Higher Education. This encompasses pedagogic work to help develop opportunities for students to develop skills during their degree programme, but also focuses on how students might be enabled to develop other skills and knowledges at university, and the legacy of these in graduate life. This overlaps with my military geography interests in research on the University Armed Service Units.
Research Roles
Military, War and Security (faculty-level) Research Group - Convenor (2012-15)
Power, Space, Politics research cluster - Convenor (2012-15)
Postgraduate Supervision
I welcome PhD enquiries from students interested in undertaking research on topics broadly related to aerial geographies, geopolitics, and military geographies.
Current PhD supervisions
2023-: Chloe Barker - Investigating the operational geographies of deterrence: a creative methods analysis (NUAcT funded)
2023-: Ria Jones - Lifecycles of public statues: ideological contestation, cultural memory, and shifting political meaning (full time self-funded)
2019-: Karen Passmore - Military Pilots, identity and flying drones (part-time self-funded)
Completed PhD supervisions
2019-24: Tom Shrimplin - Everyday geopolitics of online video gaming (ESRC DTP)
2018-22: Paul Barber - Cadet forces and the skills agenda (ESRC DTP)
2012-22: Panayiotis Hadjipavlis - Analysing the geopolitics of Cypriot airspace (part-time self-funded)
2015-19: Hannah Lyons - Young people, religion and popular geopolitics (ESRC DTC)
2013-17: Matthew Scott - Technogeopolitics and transcontinental railways (ESRC DTC)
2011-15: Daniel Bos - Popular geopolitics of military video games (ESRC DTC)
2008-12: Matthew Rech - Critical geopolitics of RAF recruitment (ESRC)
Research Funding
2022-23: University Education Development fund (£2350) Transferable skills development for PGRs
2018-19: GPS Research Fund (£980) Interwar air defence of the UK (scoping study)
2013-14: Leverhulme Artist-in-Residence award (c.£15,000) Visualising Military Airspaces (PI; artist Dr Matthew Flintham)
2013-2014: Catherine Cookson Foundation (£700) Historical geographies of military aviation in the north-east (scoping study)
2012-15: ESRC Research Grant (c.£270,000) 'The value of University Armed Service Units' (PI; Co-I Prof Rachel Woodward; Co-I & SRA Dr Neil Jenkings) ES/J023868/1
2011-12: 缅北禁地 Teaching and Learning Committee Innovation Fund (c. £3000) 'Learning from Research Practice: developing a web-based video resource that will provide Geography dissertation students with examples of how Geography staff and postgrads do their research' (with Simon Tate)
2009-2010: HaSS Faculty Research Fund (£3650) 'The graduate skills agenda and the university armed services experience'
2008-2011: ESRC Research Fellowship (c. £350,000 including PhD studentship)'The Geographies of Military Airspaces' - RES-063-27-0154
2001-2005: ESRC Open Competition PhD funding (c. £40,000)'Aviation Technogeopolitics and the Territorialisation of the Pacific as US Space, 1918-1941'- R42200134521
In 2024-25 I will be contributing to the following modules:
GEO1026 Becoming a Geographer
GEO2140 Research Design and Planning for Human Geographers (Module Leader)
GEO3099 Dissertation
GEO3102 Geopolitics
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Articles
- Williams AJ. . Geopolitics 2025, 30(4), 1879-1906.
- Woodward R, Jenkings KN, Williams A. . Political Geography 2017, 60, 203-212.
- Williams AJ. . Journal of Historical Geography 2017, 58, 71-81.
- Woodward R, Jenkings KN, Williams AJ. . RUSI Journal 2016, 161(1), 32-39.
- Rech MF, Bos D, Jenkings KN, Williams A, Woodward R. . Critical Military Studies 2015, 1(1), 47-60.
- Williams AJ. . Political Geography 2014, 42, 12-22.
- Williams AJ. . Geopolitics 2013, 18(1), 225-246.
- Williams AJ, Jeffrey A, McConnell F, Megoran N, Askins K, Gill N, Nash C, Pande R. . Political Geography 2013, 34, 24-34.
- Pugh J, Gabay C, Williams AJ. . Geoforum 2013, 44, 193-201.
- Williams AJ. . Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 2011, 36(2), 253-267.
- Ward K, Anderson B, Coward M, Sheller M, Williams AJ, Cresswell T, Adey P. . Political Geography 2011, 30(8), 461-469.
- Jenkings KN, Woodward R, Williams AJ, Rech M, Murphy A, Bos D. . Sociology Compass 2011, 5(1), 37-51.
- Williams AJ. . Political Geography 2011, 30(7), 381-390.
- Adey P, Whitehead M, Williams AJ. . Theory, Culture and Society 2011, 28(7-8), 173-187.
- Williams AJ. . Area 2010, 42(1), 51-59.
- Elden S, Williams AJ. . Geoforum 2009, 40(3), 407-417.
- Donaldson JW, Williams AJ. . Geopolitics 2008, 13(4), 676-700.
- Bialasiewicz L, Campbell D, Elden S, Graham S, Jeffrey AS, Williams AJ. . Political Geography 2007, 26(4), 405-422.
- Williams AJ. . Geopolitics 2007, 12(3), 505-528.
- Donaldson JW, Williams AJ. . Journal of International Affairs 2005, 59(1), 135-156.
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Authored Book
- Woodward R, Jenkings KN, Williams AJ. . London, UK: Ubiquity Press, 2015.
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Book Chapters
- Williams AJ. . In: Woodward, R, ed. A Research Agenda for Military Geographies. London: Edward Elgar, 2019, pp.57-69.
- Rech MF, Williams AJ. . In: Williams,AJ;Jenkings,KN;Rech,MF;Woodward,R, ed. The Routledge Companion to Military Research Methods. London, UK: Routledge, 2016, pp.268-284.
- Rech MF, Jenkings KN, Williams AJ, Woodward R. . In: Williams, AJ; Jenkings, KN; Woodward, R; Rech, MF, ed. The Routledge Companion to Military Research Methods. London: Routledge, 2016, pp.1-17.
- Williams AJ. . In: Wastl-Walter, D, ed. The Ashgate Research Companion to Border Studies. Aldershot: Ashgate, 2011, pp.283-300.
- Williams AJ. . In: MacDonald, F.; Hughes, R.; Dodds, K, ed. Observant states: geopolitics and visual culture. London: I B Tauris, 2010, pp.81-99.
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Edited Books
- Williams AJ, Jenkings KN, Woodward R, Rech MF, ed. . London: Routledge, 2016.
- Adey P, Whitehead M, Williams AJ, ed. . London: Hurst, 2013.
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Reviews
- Williams A. . Antipode 2022.
- Williams AJ. . Space and Polity 2021, 25(1), 153-156.
- Williams AJ. . Geographical Review 2017, 107(2), e19-e23.
- Williams AJ. . Geopolitics 2010, 15(4), 785-793.