Richard Rodger (academic)
Richard G. Rodger, FRHistS, FAcSS, is a historian specialising in the urban, economic and social history of modern Britain. Previously Professor of Urban History and Director of the Centre for Urban History at the University of Leicester, and from 2007-2017 Professor of Economic and Social History at Edinburgh University.
Career
Rodger completed his master of arts and doctor of philosophy degrees in economics and economic history at Edinburgh University; his PhD was awarded in 1976 for a thesis entitled . He was appointed to a lectureship in economic history at Liverpool University before moving to the University of Leicester, where he was appointed as a lecturer economic and social history in 1979, subsequently becoming Professor of Urban History and Director of the Centre for Urban History and the East Midlands Oral History Archive. Rodger held a position as associate professor in the University of Kansas, and visiting positions at Trinity College, Hartford CT, and Meijo University, Japan. He also held an ESRC Senior Fellowship and a Leverhulme Senior Fellowship at Edinburgh University, where he returned in 2007 as Professor of economic and social history. He remained at Leicester University as an Honorary Visiting Professor, and in 2017 became Emeritus Professor of History at Edinburgh University.In addition to his university appointments, Rodger has been the editor of the journal Urban History and the series editor for Ashgate Publishing's Historical Urban Studies book series. He is a fellow of the Royal Historical Society and the Academy of Social Sciences. and he has been a member of the council of trustees of the Edinburgh conservationist organisation the Cockburn Association since 2011.
Publications
Rodger's research relates to the urban, economic and social history of modern Britain and his publications include:- Campaigning For Edinburgh: The Cockburn Association 1875-2049 246pp Happy Homes: Cooperation, Community and the Edinburgh Colonies Space and Spatial Relationships Special Issue, Urban History, vol 47 Leicester: A Modern History Insanitary City: H. D. Littlejohn and the Report on the Sanitary Condition of Edinburgh .Edinburgh's Colonies: Housing the Workers Environmental and Social Justice in the City: Historical Perspectives Testimonies of the City: Identity, Community and Change in a Contemporary Urban World Teaching Urban History in Europe Cities of Ideas: Civil Society and Urban Governance in Britain 1800–2000 The Transformation of Edinburgh: Land, Property and Trust in the Nineteenth Century awarded the Frank Watson Book Prize in Scottish History for books published in 2001 and 2002Housing the People: the 'Colonies' of Edinburgh 1860–1950.Housing in Urban Britain 1780–1914 Research in Urban History Leicester in the Twentieth Century The Victorian City: A Reader in British Urban History, 1820–1914 European Urban History: Prospect and Retrospect Scottish Housing in the Twentieth Century
- ''Housing in Urban Britain 1780–1914: Class, Capitalism and Construction''