Professor David Tyfield

Professor of Sustainable Transitions and Political Economy

Research Interests

My research focuses on the complex systems of processes of knowledge production and their interaction with issues of global cultural political economy, especially regarding critical analysis of the emergence of a globalised "knowledge-based" economy, climate change and the rise of China. These issues have become even more important and intertwined in recent years, amidst and as part of increasing global turbulence. My analysis of how these themes may co-evolve in the medium term is summarized in my recent book: (2018, Routledge), which I discussed on Radio 4’s in June 2018.

Building on previous work (below), my current research (including as an in 2018-19) explores China’s project of ¡®ecological civilization’ and what it could mean for the world at this crucial moment, focusing on the reshaping of cities in the ¡®urban century’, not least through the massive infrastructure projects of the new ¡®Silk Roads’. In the process of integrating urbanism (and rural-urban relations) and the ¡®planetary’ centrally into cultural political economy, the goal is to initiate a new economics (or ¡®oeconomics’) for the Anthropocene. This also centrally involves exploring methods, epistemologies and social interventions based on 'phronesis' or situated practical and power-aware wisdom.

Alongside, and related, I am a Co-I in the NERC project (led by Dr Nils Markusson, with Dr Duncan McLaren, Rebecca Willis, Dr Bron Szerszynski and Dr Andrew Jarvis, 2017-19) assessing the risks of mitigation deterrence from the exploration of greenhouse gas removal technologies ()

Recent work (2013-18) has been focused on three themes:

1) Low-Carbon Socio-Technical Systems Transition in China, especially regarding automobility and agri-food.

From December 2013-May 2017, I was Co-I and then PI and lead project coordinator on the ESRC project , and leading the Research Package on urban electro-mobility. This project is in collaboration with colleagues at CeMoRe, Ãå±±ÂÖ¼é (Prof John Urry, Dr Dennis Zuev); STEPS Centre, Sussex University (Dr Adrian Ely, Dr Sam Geall); SOAS (Dr Frauke Urban); Tsinghua University (Dr Yu WANG); Tsinghua University Graduate School, Shenzhen (Dr Ping LI); and the CAS Centre for Agricultural Policy (Dr Yiching SONG).

Relating to this work, and an interest in the politics of the discourse of 'responsible innovation', I was PI in a British Council grant (April 2014 - April 2015) on 'Responsibly Innovating Energy for Mobility: Brazil, China, UK', with colleagues at UFABC (Dr Leo de Mello), Strathclyde (Dr Brian Garvey) as well as UniCamp (Dr Andre Campos).

2) The Cultural Political Economy of Research & Innovation - following the argument of my book (2 Volumes, Routledge, 2012), I continue my interest in the interaction between changing practices of R&I and a changing political economy. Staring with a Ãå±±ÂÖ¼é Early Career Small Grant (2011-13), this has evolved now into an established workshop series on the '. After Lancaster (October 2012) and York University in Toronto (December 2013), further annual workshops have been held since: at University of California, San Diego (March 2015) University of Liege (June 2016), Boston (August 2017) and Lancaster (July 2018). The 2019 meeting is scheduled to be in New Orleans around the time of the 4S conference. The CPERI series has already resulted in the publication (2017) of the first (Routledge).

3) These themes were brought together in the recent book on ¡®Liberalism 2.0 and the Rise of China’, exploring the crisis of neoliberalism and the central role of innovation, particularly in China.

Blogs making related arguments:

- ¡®’ (October 2017)

- ¡®’ (July 2016)

- concerning new knowledge politics of complex systems and the need for a , in response to commentary about the UK election 2015.

For my blog pieces 'On Post-Capitalism', reviewing Paul Mason's book of that title, are also available: , , .

Background

Before starting my PhD, I studied Biochemistry and Molecular Cell Biology at Oxford and the Philosophy of Social Sciences at LSE. I also qualified as a solicitor, working in London and Brussels in various areas of corporate and commercial law, including intellectual property law and EU competition law. Bringing together these interests, I began my PhD in the Philosophy and Sociology of Science at Exeter in 2003. My research was based across two institutions: the Centre for Philosophy of the Social Sciences and the ESRC Centre for Genomics in Society (Egenis), the sister-centre of Lancaster's CESAGen. My thesis was a multidisciplinary examination of the dramatic changes to the funding of science, especially the biosciences, that have occurred since 1980 including the growth of intellectual property rights (IPRs) in scientific research, alongside the global strengthening of IPRs under the auspices of the World Trade Organisation's TRIPs agreement. By examining how TRIPs came to be signed, a theory for the (critical) realist examination of the economics of science is elaborated. This includes concerted attention to the role and importance of philosophical/ontological reflection in the development of social scientific theory. The project thus engages with work in the philosophy of science, science & technology studies, innovation economics, international relations (particularly regarding IPRs), critical theory and cultural political economy.


01/02/2022 → 31/07/2023
Research


17/01/2022 → 30/11/2022
Research


27/10/2021 → 26/03/2022
Research


01/10/2021 → 31/03/2022
Research


01/01/2020 → 31/12/2020
Research


01/08/2017 → 30/04/2020
Research


01/12/2013 → 31/05/2017
Research


01/07/2007 → 30/04/2010
Other


Participation in conference -Mixed Audience


Participation in conference -Mixed Audience


Membership of committee

  • CeMoRe - Centre for Mobilities Research
  • Centre for the Study of Environmental Change
  • Institute for Social Futures Fellow
  • Political Ecology