Loretta Lees is a university professor, urbanist, author, and scholar-activist. She is the Director of the Initiative on Cities and professor of sociology at Boston University.[1] Prior to moving to Boston, she was Professor of Human Geography at the University of Leicester in the UK and served as Chair of the London Housing Panel working with the Mayor of London and Trust for London.[2] Since 2009, she has co-organized The Urban Salon, a London forum and seminar series for architecture, cities, and international urbanism, which examines urban experiences using an international and comparative frame.[3] Lees’ scholarship focuses on gentrification, urban regeneration, global urbanism, urban policy, urban public space, architecture, and urban social theory.[4] She was identified as the only woman in the top 20 most referenced authors in urban geography worldwide and the top author on gentrification globally.[5] She was awarded the 2022 Marilyn J. Gittell Activist Scholar Award from the Urban Affairs Association.[6] Other accolades of Lees include her election as a fellow of Academia Europaea (MAE) in 2022, and Academy of Social Sciences (FAcSS) in 2013.[7][8] She has published 16 books and over 100 journal articles and book chapters.[9] Her research has been featured extensively in documentaries, newspapers, and in podcasts.
In 2013 she joined the University of Leicester as Professor of Human Geography and Director of Research, where she worked until 2022. She was Professor of Human Geography and Chair of the Cities Research Group at King's College London from 1997 to 2013. From 1995 to 1997, she was a Post-Doctoral Research Fellow in geography at the University of British Columbia in Canada and a visiting lecturer in geography at the University of Waikato in New Zealand in 1994.[11]
Professor Lees became Director of the Initiative on Cities at Boston University in September 2022, where she is also a tenured professor of sociology.[12]
Research
Lees has been at the forefront of authorship on gentrification globally, coining the term "super-gentrification" in relation to the resurgence of a new form of gentrification in Brooklyn Heights, New York City at the beginning of the 21st century and used it in reference to Barnsbury in London.[13][14] Her 2008 book Gentrification focused on the development of theories and concepts in gentrification studies, and looked at how gentrification as a process had mutated over time, particularly in Anglo-America.[15] Her 2016 Planetary Gentrification took the lens global and informed by comparative urbanism looked at ideologies and practices of gentrification in different parts of the world.[16] Lees has also been at the forefront of researching state-led gentrification in London: she undertook Antipode Foundation and ESRC funded research on the demolition and redevelopment of council estates in London and presented evidence in three public inquiries.[17] Working with Just Space and the London Tenants Federation, she co-produced Staying Put: An Anti-gentrification Handbook for Council Estates in London and a website estatewatch.london.[18] With the late Italian urbanist Sandra Annunziata, she also produced an anti-gentrification toolkit for Southern European cities.[19] Her work has been cited over 19,900 times and she has a h-index of 53.[20]
Books
Lees has published 16 books in geography and urban studies.
Lees, L. and Demeritt, D. (eds) (2023) Concise Encyclopedia of Human Geography, Edward Elgar.
Lees, L., Slater, T. and Wyly, E. (2023) The Planetary Gentrification Reader, Routledge: New York.
Lees, L. and Warwick, E. (2022) Defensible Space on the Move: Mobilisation in English Housing Policy and Practice, RGS-IBG Book Series, Wiley.
Annunziata, S. and Lees, L. (2020) Staying Put: An Anti-gentrification Handbook for Southern European cities
Lees, L. with Phillips, M. (eds) (2018) Handbook of Gentrification Studies, Edward Elgar.
Lees, L., Shin, H. and Lopez-Morales, E. (2016) Planetary Gentrification Polity Press: Cambridge.
Lees, L., Shin, H. and Lopez-Morales, E. (eds) (2015) Global Gentrifications: uneven development and displacement, Policy Press: Bristol.
Imrie, R. and Lees, L. (eds) (2014) Sustainable London? The Future of a Global City, Policy Press: Bristol.
The London Tenants Federation, Lees, L., Just Space and SNAG (2014) Staying Put: An Anti-Gentrification Handbook for Council Estates in London.
Bridge, G., Butler, T., and Lees, L. (eds) (2011) Mixed Communities: Gentrification by Stealth?, Policy Press: Bristol.
Lees, L., Slater, T. and Wyly, E. (2010) The Gentrification Reader, Routledge: London.
Imrie, R., Lees, L. and Raco, M. (eds) (2009) Regenerating London: Governance, Sustainability and Community in a Global City, Routledge: London.
Kitchen, R. and Thrift, N. (eds in chief) with Anderson, K., Castree, N., Cloke, P., Crampton, J., Crang, M., Domosh, M., Graham, B., Hadjimichalis, C., Hubbard, P., Kearns, R., Kwan, M-P., Lees, L., McLafferty, S., Paasi, A., Philo, C., Sidaway, J., Willis, K., Yeung, H. (eds) (2009) The International Encyclopedia of Human Geography, Elsevier.
Lees, L., Slater, T. and Wyly, E. (2008) Gentrification, Routledge: New York.
Lees, L. (ed) (2004) The Emancipatory City: Paradoxes and Possibilities?, Sage: London.
Hoggart, K., Lees, L. and Davies, A. (2002) Researching Human Geography, Arnold, Oxford University Press, USA.
She currently sits on the editorial boards of Dialogues in Urban Research, Sustainability,[21]Art and the Public Sphere,[22]Geography Compass – Urban Geography.[23]
^Lees, L. (2017) Salford, (re)tracing my roots, and the ‘new’ urban renewal, in Brake,J. and van Aitken, J. (eds) All materials of value, IUD, p.25-29.