Terry McGee explained
Terence Gary McGee, usually called Terry McGee (born January 1936 in Cambridge, New Zealand) is an urban geographer and social scientist.
Key themes
McGees' major academic work has mainly been in the following areas:
- the geography of Southeast Asian cities
- the informal economy in developing countries;
- systems of food distribution in developing countries' cities;
- the emergence of extended metropolitan regions.
- rural-urban migration[1]
Key publications
His major publications include:
- (1967) The Southeast Asian city: a social geography of the primate cities of Southeast Asia, London, Bell
- (1971) The Urbanization Process in the Third World, T. G. McGee. G. Bell and Sons, Ltd., London
- (1985) Theatres of Accumulation: Studies in Asian and Latin American Urbanization, together with Warwick Armstrong, London: Methuen
Academic career
McGee has been for many years the Director of the Institute of Asian Research at the University of British Columbia. He has also served as President of The Canadian Association of Geographers.
Awards
Other sources
Notes and References
- Lea, J. P. (2006): Terence Gary McGee. In: David Simon (ed): Fifty Key Thinkers in Development, Routledge, pp. 176–181
- http://www.cag-acg.ca/en/terry_mcgee.html Canadian Association of Geographers (CAG) Award for Scholarly Distinction
- https://web.archive.org/web/20120412134528/http://www.geog.ubc.ca/department/alumni/geogramme_09.pdf "Geogramme: A Newsletter for Alumni and Friends of UBC Geography"