Dr Shawn Bodden
Job Title
Research Fellow

Research interests
Background
I am a social geographer with expertise in civic innovation and emergent forms of place-based activism. I combine long-term ethnography with detailed interaction analysis to understand how communities and practitioners negotiate, share, and revise understandings of how to build better forms of social and environmental life. At present, my research focuses on community responses to energy demand reduction initiatives as well as innovation in low-carbon public infrastructure, such as tool libraries and repair cafes.
I am particularly interested in public sector and civil society data economies, and the strategies developed by community organisations to document, measure, evidence, and finance charitable activities. This has also led me to examine changing understandings of ‘the public good’ in historical and cross-cultural contexts. In previous research projects, I have studied activist cultures in Hungarian community centres, practices of public space co-design, and advocacy around climatic and seasonal mental health. I am committed to community-engaged and problem-led research that works with community members and practitioners to develop new resources for sharing and sustaining informed and inclusive civic cultures and public institutions.
Current Research
Everyday Talk and Energy Demand
This research is investigating the role of everyday interactions in mediating perceptions and uptake of energy demand reduction initiatives, with a focus on the existing and potential roles of community leaders to facilitate informed and empowered local and trans-local 'just transition' networks.
Rebuilding the Tool Library
This pilot project is being co-developed with partners from the Edinburgh Tool Library, Transition Scotland, and the Scottish Communities Climate Action Network to understand the ongoing and historical organisation of Tool Libraries as innovative forms of low-carbon infrastructure. The project will consider how understandings of 'public good' are developed, revised, and evidenced as Tool Libraries are established in different local communities.
Previous Research
Living with SAD: Practicing Cultures of Seasonality to 'Feel Light' Differently
Studied lived experiences of Seasonal Affective Disorder and strategies for biosocial solidarity among climate- and season-affected communities. Outcomes and details about the project's interdisciplinary collaboration across geography, psychiatry and the arts is available on the project website.
Future of the High Street
Studied public space co-design strategies within a pilot project trialling creative interventions to reimagine possible futures of UK high streets. A project overview is available on the Edinburgh Future Institute's project webpage.
Works in progress: The practical accomplishment of activist spaces and political projects in Budapest
Doctoral research investigating the everyday organisational activities and strategies of community centres and activist group in Budapest, Hungary. Building on in depth interaction analysis of community events, activist meetings, and public protests, it examines how affordances and obstacles to political agency are negotiated in practice. The research is presented in my publicly accessible thesis.
Works within
Publications by user content
Publication | Research Explorer link |
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Bodden S, Lorimer H, Parr H, Williams C. SAD geographies: making light matter. Progress in Human Geography. 2024 Jul 18. Epub 2024 Jul 18. doi: 10.1177/03091325241252846 |
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Bodden S, Lorimer H, Parr H. In a positive light? Experiencing Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD) and the promise of biosolidarity. Social & cultural geography. 2024 May 6;1-19. Epub 2024 May 6. doi: 10.1080/14649365.2024.2347873 |
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Bodden S, Awcock H. Stuck up, peeled off, covered up, shared and scribbled out: Doing ordinary politics with political stickers. GeoHumanities. 2024;10(1):131-149. Epub 2024 May 17. doi: 10.1080/2373566X.2024.2339848 |
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Bodden S. Working through our differences: Limits of ontology in the ordinary lives of critical geographical theory. Dialogues in Human Geography. 2023 Dec 21;1-19. Epub 2023 Dec 21. doi: 10.1177/20438206231221618 |
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Bodden S. The public lives of pigeon passengers: How pigeons and humans share space on a train. In Petri O, Guida M, editors, Winged Worlds: Common Spaces of Avian-Human Lives. Routledge. 2023 doi: 10.4324/9781003334767-11 |
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Bodden S, Elliott J. Finding space for shared futures: Exploring methods for co–evaluation in urban co–design projects. Edinburgh Architecture Research. 2022 Dec 14;37:90-104. doi: 10.2218/ear.2022.6657 |
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Bodden S. A work-in-progress politics of space: Activist projects and the negotiation of throwntogetherness within the hostile environment of Hungarian politics. City. 2022;26(2-3):397-410. Epub 2022 Mar 31. doi: 10.1080/13604813.2022.2055930 |
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Bodden S. [Review of] Lviv’s uncertain destination: a city and its train terminal from Franz Joseph I to Brezhnev: By Andriy Zayarnyuk, Toronto, Canada, Buffalo, USA, London, UK, University of Toronto Press, 2020, 392 pp., $66.00 (Cloth) ISBN 9781487505196; $66.00 (ePub) ISBN 9781487531737; $66.00 (PDF) ISBN 9781487531720. Eurasian Geography and Economics. 2021 May 20;64(3):378-380. doi: 10.1080/15387216.2021.1929371 |
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Bodden S, Ross J. Speculating with glitches: Keeping the future moving. Global Discourse: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Current Affairs and Applied Contemporary Thought. 2021 Feb;11(1-2):15-34. Epub 2020 Dec 14. doi: 10.1332/204378920X16043719041171 |
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