Principal Research Fellow, University of Nottingham
Sabina is a human geographer interested in the intimate geopolitics of gender, health and activism at work in the global garment and footwear industry. Prior to becoming a Nottingham Research Fellow in July 2020, she was a Leverhulme Early Career Fellow (2017-2020) in the Department of Geography at Royal Holloway, University of London. She has a PhD in Geography from King's College London, an MA in International Development from the Royal University of Phnom Penh, and a BA in Politics from Durham University.
Across this work, she retains a long-standing area focus on the political economy of Cambodia. Her first co-authored book (with Dr. Laurie Parsons at Royal Holloway, University of London) entitled 'Going Nowhere Fast: Mobile Inequality in the Age of Translocality' was be published in 2020 with Oxford University Press. It brings together a decade of fieldwork spanning my MA to PhD, exploring the uneven geographies of Cambodia's integration into the global economy.
Sabina works across academic, policy and practice fields, building collaborations with grassroots groups including Cambodian trade unions and feminist organisations, as well as partnerships and consultancies with international organisations (ILO, UN Women, and UNDP) and NGOs (Care International, Transparency International, ActionAid). You can follow her on X @SabinaLawreniuk.
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