David Harvey is a social theorist born on 31 October 1935 in England. Harvey, one of the most cited social scientists in the world, is a professor at the City University of New York.
After completing his doctorate in geography in 1961, he wrote many articles and books on urbanization and the city in the capitalist economy.
David Harvey sheds light on many issues such as urbanization, social justice, globalization, and the environment; He is a geographer who applied the concept of creative destruction to the city. He introduced the concept of time-space compression to the literature.
David W. Harvey (born 31 October 1935) is a British Marxist economic geographer, podcaster, and Distinguished Professor of anthropology and geography at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York (CUNY). He received his PhD in geography from the University of Cambridge in 1961. Harvey has authored many books and essays that have been prominent in the development of modern geography as a discipline. He is a proponent of the idea of the right to the city.
The most important feature of Harvey's work is that he included the idea of spatiality in Marxist theory, pioneered new concepts and methods that enabled modern geography to become a discipline, made rich use of human subjects such as language and culture, and always placed material processes at the center of his analyses. In this sense, we can say that he introduced the geographical dimension into historical materialism. David Harvey, who ranked 18th among the most cited and cited social science writers worldwide in 2007, has also been the teacher of many academics.
Harvey worked as a Geography Lecturer in Bristol, England, between 1961 and 1969. Harvey, who made significant contributions to spatial science and positivist theory until the mid-1960s, moved to Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, USA, after 1969. While he was an Associate Professor at Johns Hopkins University, he became interested in the field of radical and Marxist Geography. After 1973, he became a Professor of Geography at Johns Hopkins University, where he continued as an Associate Professor, and continued his duty until 1989. He also served as Halford Mackinder Professor of Geography at Oxford University from 1987 to 1993. After 1993, he returned to Johns Hopkins University and continued to serve as Professor of Geography until 2001. David Harvey, who gave the Ellen Churchill Semple lecture at the Department of Geography at the University of Kentucky in 1996, moved to the Graduate Center of the City University of New York as a distinguished professor of Anthropology and Geography in 2001.
If we take a look at the research topics; geography and social theory, geographical knowledge, urban political economy and urbanization, architecture and urban planning, Marxism and social theory, cultural geography and cultural change, environmental philosophies, environment and social change, ecological movements, social justice, geographies of difference in developed capitalist countries.