[Portrait of Beverley Mullings.]

Beverley Mullings

Adjunct I

Department of Geography and Planning

People Directory Affiliation Category

Research Interests

I am interested in the ways that contemporary capitalist regimes are transforming how racialized communities in the majority world reproduce themselves. Drawing upon decolonial, anti-colonial and feminist theories and debates, I am engaged in projects that explore how transformations in the value of work, the emergence of new urban governance regimes, and the growing financialization of everyday life are shifting the terrain of struggle of historically devalued and dispossessed populations. Much of my scholarship is located in the Caribbean and its diaspora, a region that I view as an important place of geographical theory making given its historical role in the making of the world capitalist system. I also have a longstanding commitment to the promotion of structures to support mental wellness in the academy and am a founding member of the Association of American Geographer鈥檚 Mental Health in the Academy Affinity Group.

I am currently engaged in three research projects: the first explores Black women鈥檚 labour in Canada and Jamaica within Hustle Economies; the second examines the relationship between informality and the spatialization of life work; and the third project traces the relationship between Caribbean middle-class formations and Black liberation struggles. I welcome students who are interested in extending the boundaries of economic geography, through the application of racial analytics to study economies and economic relationships. I am especially interested in supervising students who want to develop black political economy approaches to the study of work, labour regimes, finance and social economies.