Paolo Russumanno (Ph.D., ongoing)
Paolo is an urban geographer with strange devotions to his hometown of Hamilton, Ontario. His Master’s thesis analyzed neoliberal urbanization, primarily the discursive mechanisms that shaped a hyper-vigilant, exclusionary and consumerist creative city landscape that experts, boosters and managers across Hamilton touted as viable and necessary progress. He found many of these same discourses, threads and relations, which shaped contemporary urban design and processes, also informed early childhood learning and curriculum.
His research thinks with common world pedagogies, and the possibilities that emerge when we reimagine and create space in cities for childhood rather than as sites of consumption. He thinks with Hamilton’s city motto, “the best place to be and raise a child”, as a provocation to his research.