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Ruth Evans

Ruth Evans portrait
  • Human Geography Research Cluster leader, member of Global Development Research Division Leadership Group 
  • Undergraduate teaching: Spaces of Care and Wellbeing, Research Training for GES, Dissertation, Global Challenges
  • Postgraduate teaching: Participatory Visual Methods; Postgraduate Research Student supervision
  • University of Sanctuary Co-ordinator and Co-Chair of University of Sanctuary Implementation Group

Areas of interest

  • Geographies of children, youth and families, focusing on: 
  • Young caregiving and family relations, disability, HIV and chronic illness.
  • Young people’s and women’s land rights and  food security in West Africa.
  • Sibling relationships and child- and youth-headed households in East Africa.
  • Participation of marginalised groups in research and policy.

Postgraduate supervision

Ruth is interested in supervising research students on geographies of care, migration and transnational families; childhood, youth, intergenerational relations, and intersectionality; responses to death, bereavement and inheritance.

Recent PhD graduates:

  • Salvidge: Analysing the lives and livelihoods of young informal vendors in urban Tanzania (2022)
  • Atim: Participatory healthcare delivery in post conflict transition in northern Uganda (2015)
  • Ottósdóttir: Care and disability in refugee families in the South-East of England (2015)
  • Downing: Disabled young people's socio-sexual networks and transitions in the UK (2015)
  • Adjei-Amoako: Experiences of disability and inclusive development in Ghana: facilitating factors and barriers to participation (2014)
  • Day: Making the Transition to Adulthood in Zambia: A Comparison of the Experiences of Caregiving and Non-Caregiving Youth (2014)

Research projects

Background

Ruth's research focuses on geographies of care, childhood, youth and 'family' in diverse contexts, including transnational families, bereavement and chronic illness. She is currently leading a JPI/UKRI-ESRC research project on (2021-2024).

She recently led a Leverhulme Trust-funded project, Death in the Family in Urban Senegal: Bereavement, Care and Family (2014-16). Download the Research Report and Executive Summary and see the  for the press release, Rapport et Résumé (versions français) and more information.

Ruth completed a collaborative research project with colleagues at the University of Cape Coast, Ghana on (2012-15), including a video and articles in Geoforum (2015) and Geo: Geography & Environment (2019).

Research has also focused on (2011-12), with articles published in Social & Cultural Geography (2014), Gender, Place and Culture (2016) and Emotions, Space & Society (2021). She also conducted research with Geoff Griffiths on Palm Oil, Land Rights and Ecosystems Services in Liberia (2012-13) (reports are available below).

Ruth and Caroline Day led dissemination workshops with young people with caring responsibilities in Zambia in 2014. Watch the  or read more about the research here.

Ruth also completed a study on stigma, gender and generational inequalities in asset inheritance and the intergenerational transmission of poverty in Tanzania and Uganda (with Caroline Day), funded by the Chronic Poverty Research Centre (2010-11). 

From 2008-2010, Ruth conducted a qualitative, participatory study of young people's caring responsibilities for their siblings within child- and youth- headed households in Tanzania and Uganda, funded by the RGS-IBG and the °ÄÃÅÁùºÏ²Ê¿ª½±¼Ç¼ (2008-10). (See Research Report and articles below).

Her book (co-authored with Prof. Saul Becker, 2009, The Policy Press),  draws on findings from an ESRC study of the experiences of children caring for parents and relatives with HIV in Tanzania and the UK, conducted while Ruth was based at University of Nottingham (2006-2007). For more information about the research, read the news article: or download the Stakeholder Report (PDF 1652KB) and Executive Summary (PDF 539KB).

While based at the University of Hull (2001-2002) and University of Birmingham (2003-2006), Ruth worked on a number of research projects that investigated the social exclusion/inclusion of children and young people and their participation in policy initiatives in the UK. Ruth's doctoral research at the University of Hull (2002-2004) explored the gendered 'street careers' of children and youth and the impacts of HIV in Tanzania.

 

Professional bodies/affiliations

Ruth is a member of the Editorial Board of the international journal, .

She is a Fellow of the .

Publications

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