Prof N Wrigley

Prof N Wrigley

University of Southampton
University Road
Southampton
SO17 1BJ

Position: Professor of Human Geography
Research group: Economy, Society and Space

Research interests

  • Retail restructuring and regulation
  • Globalization of retail capital
  • Transnational retail and buyer driven supply chains in the global economy
  • Finance, the firm, and economic geography

Research projects

  • Tesco plc Research Award 2007-2009 to conduct research on 'Revisiting the Impacts of Large Foodstore Development on Market Towns and District Centres'
  • ESRC Research Award 2007-2009 (with Dr Alex Hughes, Univ. of Newcastle) to develop a strategic research agenda on "Retailers and Corporate Social Responsibility"
  • Tesco plc Research Award 2007-2008 (with GeoData Institute, Univ. of Southampton) to conduct research on the "Entry and exit of small and specialist stores in British high streets"
  • ESRC Research Award 2005-2007 (with Dr. Alex Hughes, Univ. of Newcastle) to conduct research on 'Organising Ethical Trade a UK-USA Comparison'
  • Tesco plc Research Award 2005 to conduct research on 'Consumer Responses to Supply Chain Transformation in the UK Convenience Store Sector'
  • ESRC, Research Award 2001-2003 to conduct research on 'Globalizing Retail and the Challenge of E-Commerce'
  • ESRC, Research Award 2000-2004 to conduct research on 'Food Deserts in British Cities' (co-funded by industrial partner J.Sainsbury plc)
  • Leverhulme Trust Research Award 1997-1999: to conduct research on 'The Post-LBO Reconfiguration of US Food Retailing'
  • ESRC Research Fellowship, 1996-97 awarded under ESRC Nation's Diet Research Programme to conduct research on 'Changing Conditions of Competition and Regulation in UK Food Retailing'

Biographical notes

Neil Wrigley is currently Professor of Human Geography. He has been a member of staff in the School of Geography, at the University of Southampton since 1991.

Qualifications

  • B.A. (Geography) Wales
  • Ph.D. (Geography) Cambridge
  • D.Sc. (Geography) Bristol,
  • AcSS Academician, Academy of Social Sciences
  • FRGS Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society
  • MCIT Member of the Chartered Institute of Transport

Details

  • 1991 - present University of Southampton, Professor of Geography (Head of Dept 1992-95, Head of Dept 1999-2001)
  • 1986 - 1991 University of Wales, Cardiff, Professor of City and Regional Planning (Head of Dept 1989-91)
  • 1976 - 1986 University of Bristol, Lecturer then Reader in Geography
  • 1973 - 1976 University of Southampton, Lecturer in Geography
  • Editor, Journal of Economic Geography, Oxford Univ Press (2000-present)
  • Editor, Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers (1988-93)
  • Senior Research Fellow, St Peter's College, University of Oxford (1996-97)
  • Committee member UK Economic and Social Research Council 1984-91
  • Member Editorial Boards of 5 other leading journals (including Environment and Planning A; Society: Journal of the Academy of Social Sciences; International Journal of Retail & Distribution Management

Personal Profile

Neil Wrigley has been Professor of Geography at the University of Southampton since 1991, serving as Head of Department 1992-95 and 1999-2001. He has been Editor of the Journal of Economic Geography (Oxford University Press) since its launch in 2001, steering that journal into its current world top three ranked position. Previously (1988-93) he was Editor of Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers.

Prior to his appointment at Southampton he was Professor and Head of the Department of City & Regional Planning, University of Wales, Cardiff (1986-91), Reader in Geography at the University of Bristol, and a member of the Research Resources & Methods Committee of the UK Economic & Social Research Council (1984-91). He was elected Academician of the Academy of Social Sciences (2003) and, amongst several prizes he has received, was most recently awarded the Ashby Prize 2004 by the leading international urban and regional research journal Environment & Planning A, and the Murchison Award 2008 by the Royal Geographical Society.

He is a member of the Editorial Board of many journals across the wider social sciences including Environment and Planning A, Regional Studies, 21st Century Society:Journal of the Academy of Social Sciences, and a number of business studies/management journals.

Author of 140 academic journal papers and several well-known books (including Reading Retail: A Geographical Perspective on Retailing and Consumption Spaces, 2002, Arnold: London; Oxford Univ. Press, New York, with Michelle Lowe), his research focuses on economic geography – with a distinctive focus on retail and consumption. He has written many widely cited papers on the restructuring, regulation and globalization of the retail industry, including issues of retail development and finance, e-commerce, the rise of transnational retail corporations, and retailer-driven global supply chains.

Since 2000 his research on the geography of retail and consumption has focused on three themes.

  • Pioneering work on issues of food poverty, diet-related inequalities and food retail access in underserved low-income neighbourhoods in British cities. That research on so-called ‘food deserts’ (more precisely unsupportive local food environments), and the potential of retail-led urban regeneration in underserved markets is internationally acknowledged as having established an agenda for related research in many countries and has resulted in invited presentations on the public policy implications of the work to the Parliamentary Food & Health Forum at the House of Commons, the British Retail Consortium, the British Association for the Advancement of Science, the Cambridge-MIT Institute, and the World Economic Forum.
  • Internationally recognized research on transnational retail and the global economy which has explored the rapid globalization of retail capital since the mid 1990s, the management of international investment by retail transnational corporations, the organization of those firms across institutional and national divides, the impacts of transnational retail on host economies in East Asia, Latin America and Eastern Europe, ethical trading initiatives, and the private-interest regulation of global supply chains by UK and US retailers. The host economy and trade policy impacts of transnational retail have become increasingly important issues to the governments of many developing countries and this has resulted in many invitations to give keynote presentations to national and international policy bodies – e.g. recently to the Agricultural Trade Research Consortium in China, to the Human Sciences Research Council in South Africa, and to the Ethical Trading Initiative and Institute of Development Studies in the UK.
  • Public policy oriented contributions to debates surrounding the Competition Commission’s Inquiry (2006-08) into competitive conditions in the UK groceries market – in particular a parallel investigation to that conducted by the Commission of retail change in over 1,000 UK town centres and high streets focused on market entry and exit conditions in the small store sector.

Earlier in his career – not least via his role on ESRC’s Research & Methods Committee and as Chair of ESRC’s 1991 Census Committee - Professor Wrigley made significant contributions to quantitative social science. In particular has contributions on categorical data analysis, discrete choice modelling, longitudinal/panel data analysis, modifiable areal unit and census data analysis are well-known – with his classic book Categorical Data Analysis (Longman, 1985) from that period being republished (2002) in the USA as a landmark text in quantitative social science.

Professor Wrigley has held ESRC and Leverhulme Research Fellowships, an Erskine Fellowship (New Zealand), and was Senior Research Fellow, St Peter's College, Oxford (1996-97). He has held visiting positions at many overseas universities including: University of Boston, University of California-Los Angeles, University of California-Santa Barbara, University of Toronto, George Mason University, Karlsruhe University (Germany), Macquarie University (Australia), University of Canterbury (New Zealand), and has presented distinguished/keynote lectures in more than 40 universities in North America, East Asia, Australia and continental Europe. Most recently he was invited by the Human Sciences Research Council of South Africa to give one of its 2007 Distinguished Scholar Lectures.

Publications

Wrigley, N. and Overman, H. (2010) Editorial.The 10th year of the Journal of Economic Geography: a decade of high impact publication. Journal of Economic Geography, 10, (1), 1-8. (doi:10.1093/jeg/lbp060)
[file icon][file icon]Wrigley, N. (2009) Retail geographies. In, Kitchin, Rob and Thrift, Nigel (eds.) International Encyclopedia of Human Geography. Oxford, UK, Elsevier, 398-405.
[file icon]Wrigley, Neil, Lambiri, Dionysia and Cudworth, Katherine (2009) Linked trips and town centre viability. Town & Country Planning, 78, 433-438.
Lowe, Michelle and Wrigley, Neil (2009) Innovation in retail internationalisation: Tesco in the USA. The International Review of Retail, Distribution and Consumer Research, 19, (4), 331-347. (doi:10.1080/09593960903331337)
Coe, Neil M. and Wrigley, Neil (eds.) (2009) The globalization of retailing, Cheltenham, UK, Edward Elgar, 1072pp. (Globalization of the World Economy)
Durand, Cédric and Wrigley, Neil (2009) Institutional and economic determinants of transnational retailer expansion and performance: a comparative analysis of Wal-Mart and Carrefour. Environment and Planning A, 41, (7), 1534-1555. (doi:10.1068/a4137)
Tacconelli, Wance and Wrigley, Neil (2009) Organizational challenges and strategic responses of retail TNCs in post-WTO-entry China. Economic Geography, 85, (1), 49-73. (doi:10.1111/j.1944-8287.2008.01003.x)
Wrigley, N., Branson, J., Murdock, A. and Clarke, G. (2009) Extending the Competition Commission's findings on entry and exit of small stores in British high streets: implications for competition and planning policy. Environment and Planning A, 41, (9), 2063-2085. (doi:10.1068/a41326)
Tokatli, Nebahat, Wrigley, Neil and Kizilgün, Ömür (2008) Shifting global supply networks and fast fashion: made in Turkey for Marks & Spencer. Global Networks, 8, (3), 261-280. (doi:10.1111/j.1471-0374.2008.00195.x)
Hughes, Alex, Wrigley, Neil and Buttle, Martin (2008) Global production networks, ethical campaigning, and the embeddedness of responsible governance. Journal of Economic Geography, 8, (3), 345-367. (doi:10.1093/jeg/lbn004)
Coe, Neil M. and Wrigley, Neil (2007) Host economy impacts of transnational retail: the research agenda. Journal of Economic Geography, 7, (4), 341-371. (doi:10.1093/jeg/lbm012)
Wrigley, Neil and Lowe, Michelle (2007) Transnational retail and the global economy. Journal of Economic Geography, 7, (4), 337-340. (doi:10.1093/jeg/lbm025)
Hughes, Alex, Buttle, Martin and Wrigley, Neil (2007) Organizational geographies of corporate responsibility: a UK-US comparison of retailers' ethical trading initiatives. Journal of Economic Geography, 7, (4), 491-513. (doi:10.1093/jeg/lbm011)
Wood, Steve and Wrigley, Neil (2007) Market power and regulation: the last great US department store consolidation? International Journal of Retail & Distribution Management, 35, (1), 20-37. (doi:10.1108/09590550710722323)
Wrigley, Neil and Lowe, Michelle (2007) Introduction: transnational retail and the global economy. Journal of Economic Geography, 7, (4), 337-340. (doi:10.1093/jeg/lbm025)
Wrigley, Neil and Shaw, Hillary (2007) Relocalising Food Shopping: Consumer responses to supply chain transformation in the UK convenience store sector. , University of Southampton, 16pp.
Puga, Diego and Wrigley, Neil (2006) Editorial. Two years at the top. Journal of Economic Geography, 6, (5), 567-569. (doi:10.1093/jeg/lbl020)
Wrigley, Neil and Currah, Andrew (2006) Globalizing retail and the ‘new e-conomy’: The organizational challenge of e-commerce for the retail TNCs. Geoforum, 37, (3), 340-351. (doi:10.1016/j.geoforum.2005.06.003)
Wood, Steve, Lowe, Michelle and Wrigley, Neil (2006) Life after PPG6:recent UK food retailer responses to planning regulation tightening. International Review of Retail, Distribution and Consumer Research, 16, (1), 23-41. (doi:10.1080/09593960500453435)
Coe, Neil and Wrigley, Neil (2006) Business as usual: a response to Palmer, Owens and Sparks. Environment and Planning A, 38, (10), 1784-1788. (doi:10.1068/a3810b)
Wrigley, N., Coe, N.M. and Currah, A.D. (2005) Globalizing retail: conceptualizing the distribution-based TNC. Progress in Human Geography, 29, (4), 437-457. (doi:10.1191/0309132505ph559oa)
Wrigley, N. (2004) Is the 'golden age' of British grocery retailing at a watershed? In, Findlay, Anne M. and Sparks, Leigh (eds.) Retailing: Critical Concepts. London, UK, Routledge, 337-347.
Currah, Andrew and Wrigley, Neil (2004) Networks of organisational learning and adaptation in retail TNCs. Global Networks, 4, (1), 1-23. (doi:10.1111/j.1471-0374.2004.00078.x)
Puga, D. and Wrigley, N. (2004) Editorial. Establishing it’s position. Journal of Economic Geography, 4, (2), 103-105. (doi:10.1093/jeg/4.2.103)
Wrigley, Neil (2004) [Report] Food Deserts in British Cities, 2004: final report on ESRC award. Swindon, UK, Economic and Social Research Council, 23pp. (L135251002)
Wrigley, Neil, Warm, Daniel, Margetts, Barrie and Lowe, Michelle (2004) The Leeds "food deserts" intervention study: what the focus groups reveal. International Journal of Retail and Distribution Management, 32, (2), 123-136. (doi:10.1108/09590550410521798)
Wrigley, Neil, Warm, Daniel.L., Margetts, Barrie.M. and Lowe, Michelle.S. (2004) The Leeds ‘food deserts’ intervention study: what the focus groups reveal. International Journal of Retail and Distribution Management, 32, (2), 123-136. (doi:10.1108/09590550410521798)
Wrigley, Neil and Currah, Andrew (2003) The stresses of retail internationalization: lessons from Royal Ahold's experience in Latin America. International Review of Retail, Distribution and Consumer Research, 13, (3), 221-243. (doi:10.1080/0959396032000101336)
Wrigley, Neil, Warm, Daniel and Margetts, Barrie (2003) Deprivation, diet, and food-retail access: findings from the Leeds 'food deserts' study. Environment and Planning A, 35, (1), 151-188. (doi:10.1068/a35150)
Wrigley, Neil, Currah, Andrew and Wood, Steve (2003) Commentary. Investment bank analysts and knowledge in economic geography. Environment and Planning A, 35, (3), 381-387. (doi:10.1068/a3638)
Wrigley, N., Warm, D.L. and Margetts, B.M. (2003) Food retail access and diet: what the Leeds 'food deserts' study reveals. In, British Retail Consortium Yearbook 2003. London, The Stationery Office, 228-230.
Wrigley, N. (2002) 'Food deserts' in British cities: policy context and research priorities. Urban Studies, 39, (11), 2029-2040. (doi:10.1080/0042098022000011344)
Wrigley, N. (2002) A shopping oasis in the food desert. Regeneration & Renewal, p.12.
Wrigley, Neil, Bodman, A.R. and Whitehand, J.W.R. (2002) Classics in human geography revisited. Whitehand, J.W.R. 1985: contributors to the recent development and influence of human geography: what citation analysis suggests. Progress in Human Geography, 26, (4), 511-519. (doi:10.1191/0309132502ph387xx)
Wrigley, Neil, Guy, Cliff and Lowe, Michelle (2002) Urban regeneration, social inclusion and large store development: the Seacroft development in context. Urban Studies, 39, (11), 2101-2114. (doi:10.1080/0042098022000011380)
Wrigley, Neil (2002) Transforming the corporate landscape of US food retailing: Market power, financial re-engineering and regulation. Tijdschrift voor Economische en Sociale Geografie, 93, (1), 62-82. (doi:10.1111/1467-9663.00183)
Wrigley, N. (2002) The landscape of pan-European food retail consolidation. International Journal of Retail and Distribution Management, 30, (2), 81-91. (doi:10.1108/09590550210418100)
Wrigley, N. and Marston, S.A. (2002) Guest editorial: The new geography of retailing. Tijdschrift voor Economische en Sociale Geografie, 93, (1), 3-4.
Wrigley, N., Warm, D.L. and Margetts, B.M. (2002) Food retail access and diet: what the Leeds ‘food deserts’ study reveals. The Dolphin, December 2002, 12-13.
Wrigley, N., Warm, D.L. and Margetts, B.M. (2002) Deprivation, diet and food retail access. In, Leaver, D. (ed.) Proceedings of the CIRM 2002 Retailing for Communities: Issues of Inclusion and Exclusion. Manchester, UK, Manchester Metropolitan University, Business School, 2-3.
Wrigley, N. (2002) Categorical data analysis for geographers and environmental scientists, Caldwell, USA, Blackburn Press, 392pp.
Wrigley, N. and Lowe, M.S. (2002) Reading Retail: A Geographical Perspective on Retailing and Consumption Spaces, London, UK, Arnold, 280pp.
Whelan, Amanda, Wrigley, Neil, Warm, Daniel and Cannings, Elizabeth (2002) Life in a 'food desert'. Urban Studies, 39, (11), 2083-2100. (doi:10.1080/0042098022000011371)
Wrigley, Neil, Warm, Daniel, Margetts, Barrie and Whelan, Amanda (2002) Assessing the impact of improved retail access on diet in a 'food desert': a preliminary report. Urban Studies, 39, (11), 2061-2082. (doi:10.1080/0042098022000011362)
Marsden, T.K. and Wrigley, N. (2001) Regulation, retailing and consumption. In, Findlay, Anne M. and Sparks, Leigh (eds.) Retailing: Critical Concepts. London, UK, Routledge, 228-246.
[file icon]Warm, D.L., Margett, B.M., Whelan, A.R. and Wrigley, N. (2001) Factors affecting and limiting food choice in a 'food desert'. Proceedings of the Nutrition Society, 60, (4b), p.177A. (doi:10.1017/S0029665101000684)
Arnott, R. and Wrigley, N. (2001) Editorial. Journal of Economic Geography, 1, 1-4. (doi:10.1093/jeg/1.1.1)
Wrigley, N. (2001) Local spatial monopoly and competition regulation: reflections on recent UK and US rulings. Environment and Planning A, 33, 189-194. (doi:10.1068/a33212)
Wrigley, N. (2001) The consolidation wave in US food retailing: a European perspective. Agribusiness, 17, (4), 489-513. (doi:10.1002/agr.1031)
Wrigley, N. (2001) Foreign retail capital on the battlefields of Connecticut: competition regulation at the local scale and its implications. In, Findlay, Anne M. and Sparks, Leigh (eds.) Retailing: Critical Concepts. London, UK, Routledge, 193-207.
Wrigley, N. (2001) Commentary. [Sunk capital, the property crisis and the restructuring of British food retailing]. Environment and Planning A, 24, (11), 1521-1530. (doi:10.1068/a241521)