Anna
Secor is a political, urban, feminist geographer
who does field research on questions of identity,
politics and space in Istanbul, Turkey . Through
ongoing fieldwork and multi-method research designs
(consisting of large-scale surveys, focus groups
and interviews), Anna's work explores the spatial
politics of gender and other dimensions of difference,
such as ethnicity, class, migrant status and
religion. She is particularly interested in how
the discourse and practices of citizenship, civil
society and the state are enacted in everyday
life in Turkey. Her recent research on civil
society has been funded by the National Science
Foundation, Geography and Regional Science. The
project, which is funded until 2005, is titled: "Reshaping
Civil Society: Islam, Democracy and Diversity
in Istanbul." Anna's published work includes
articles on veiling as a socio-spatial practice
in Istanbul (in Gender, Place and Culture), identity,
belonging and rights in the city (in Urban Geography),
women's work and the performativity of gender
(in Environment and Planning A), and the everyday
politics of citizenship in Istanbul (in Annals
of the Association of American Geographers).
Other work forthcoming or under review includes
a study of human rights discourse and the production
of "the headscarf issue" in Turkey,
and a chapter on policing, guilt and justice
in Istanbul. Her current project focuses on everyday
encounters with the state. Anna received her
PhD from the University of Colorado-Boulder in
2000.
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