I am a Senior Lecturer in Economics. Before joining Kingston in January 2019, I was a Senior Researcher in the Society, Work and Politics Institute (SWOP) at the University of the Witswatersrand, where from 2012 I led the Mining and Rural Transformation in Southern Africa (MARTISA) project, funded by the Ford Foundation. I hold a PhD in Development Studies from the London School of Economics and Politics (2010), and have previously taught at Wits University, LSE, SOAS, Open University and University of Central Lancashire.
My research interests are in natural resource extraction and development, with special reference to the South African platinum mining industry and its impacts on communal tenure, customary authority and rural livelihoods in the former 'homelands'. I am also interested in contending theories of land rent, agrarian change, local resource governance and post-colonial development, and approach these issues from a critical political economy perspective that pays particular attention to questions of historical specificity and geographical variegation.
My work has previously been published in academic journals such as the Review of African Political Economy, Journal of Peasant Studies and Journal of Agrarian Change, where it was awarded the Bernstein and Byres Prize for best article in 2016. It has also informed pro-poor strategic litigation and social justice activism in rural South Africa. At present, I am writing up the results of the MARTISA project in two book-length studies: the first on land, labour and financialisation in the post-apartheid platinum industry, and the second on the new dynamics of rural accumulation and dispossession currently unfolding in the mineral-rich chieftaincies of South Africa's northern provinces.
I welcome PhD applications in the broad fields of natural resource governance and economic development, both globally and in Africa, as well as international development more generally. Please email me for an informal discussion.
Senior Lecturer in Economics