Dashiell Anderson
- Email: bnda@leeds.ac.uk
- Thesis title: The Political Economy of Rural Wage Determination and Persistent Rural-Urban Wage Differentials: A Critical Appraisal
- Supervisors: Professor David Spencer, Professor Andrew Brown, Dr Gary Slater
Profile
I am a PhD candidate in Economics at the University of Leeds. My academic background is interdisciplinary in economics, geography, English literature, philosophy, and law. I grew up in Salt Lake City, Utah, USA. Travelling through the western U.S., I developed an interest in the cultural, economic, political, and social divides that exist between rural and urban people. During my undergraduate years at the University of Utah I became interested in cultural geography, social theory, and political economy. I developed these interests further during my M.A. in Economics at the New School for Social Research in New York City, where I began to apply my interdisciplinary interests to rigorous debates in the political economy of rural-urban divides. Before moving to Leeds to start my PhD, I completed a second masters in Comparative Law, Economics, and Finance at the International University College of Turin in Turin, Italy. During this time, I was able to both expand and refine my interdisciplinary toolset in understanding the intersection of capitalism and space that remains central to my research and teaching at the University of Leeds.
You can find my personal academic website here, and my CV here
Research interests
I am interested in a variety of topics pertaining to political economy, economic geography, and cultural geography. My PhD thesis focuses on constructing a theory of rural labour exploitation and rural wage determination in high capital accumulation countries, with particular attention given to the US and the UK. Critically engaging with relevant academic literature in economics, geography, sociology, political science, and cultural theory, I critically examine the persistence of rural-urban wage differentials tied to the historical and geographical tendencies of capital accumulation.
After my PhD, I intend to continue developing a rigorous theoretical framework that can be used to conceptualize the role of rural labour at different levels of capitalist development. My goal is ultimately to develop a manuscript that challenges conventional thinking about rural labour and rurality more generally, and which offers a constructive analytical framework to explore the persistence of rural-urban divides through capitalist urbanization and the fragmentary tendencies of capital accumulation.
In addition to my PhD research, I have been a teaching assistant on numerous courses/modules in the School of Geography at the University of Leeds. You can find my University of Leeds teaching profile page here.
Qualifications
- Ph.D., Economics, University of Leeds, 2022-Present
- LL.M., Comparative Law, Economics, and Finance, International University College of Turin, 2022
- M.A., Economics, The New School for Social Research, 2021
- B.S., Economics, University of Utah, 2019
- Honors B.A., English, University of Utah, 2019