Dr Nihan Akyelken

Associate Professor in Sustainable Urban Development

Director of Research

Dr Akyelken obtained her DPhil in Economic Geography from the University of Oxford (2009-2012), and her BSc and MSc degrees from the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE) in the areas of Economics and Philosophy (2002-2005) and European Political Economy (2006-2007), respectively. 

Nihan joined Oxford as a Research Fellow at the Transport Studies Unit in the School of Geography and the Environment in 2008, and in January 2017 she was appointed as an Associate Professor in Sustainable Urban Development (SUD) on the SUD programme. Previously, she worked at the LSE Public Policy Group, Westminster Business School, and Koc University Department of Economics.

DPhil supervision 

Current 

Astrid Haas: Financing Urban Infrastructure, Labour and Gender 

Adithi Khodke: Electrification and Gender in Delhi 

Imogen Tyndale: Housing Inequalities in London – Measuring the perceptions of inequalities 

Marion Lagadic: A feminist economic geography of cycling in Tokyo 

Completed 

Deland Chan: Community Responses to Sustainable Urban Infrastructure: San Francisco Chinatown (1990-2020) 

Nihan is an economic geographer, specialising in mobility of people and goods, inequalities and access, infrastructure, and work. Her research is based on both qualitative and quantitative methodologies and to date has addressed the following concerns: 

  • Political economy of infrastructure and labour markets 
  • Mobility-related economic exclusions, gendered inequalities and work 
  • Governance and equity implications of innovations 
  • Mobility of goods, globalisation and sustainability 

In addition to working on research projects funded by the European Commission, the UK Research Councils, the Swedish International Development Agency, the British Council and the British Academy, Nihan has held academic awards from Wolfson College, Alan Nesta Ferguson Foundation, and the LSE Award Schemes. She is the winner of the 2015 OECD-ITF Young Researcher of the Year Award and was named as a World Social Science Fellow in Sustainable Urbanisation by the International Social Science Council in 2014.

Books 

  • Akyelken, N. (2024) Women, Work and Mobilities. Abingdon: Routledge. 

Journal articles 

  • Arora, N. and Akyelken, N. (2026) Using financial diaries as a spatial–affective method: tracing everyday economies of labour. Finance and Space 3(1) 2646887 
  • Akyelken, N., Arora, N., Ballard, R., Sekwatlakwatla, M., & Genç, D. (2026, May). Infrastructures to work: Tracing the labour footprint of large urban infrastructure projects. Geoforum, 171, 104545. 
  • Akyelken, N., Beyazit E., Kayaoglu, A., Yildirim, S. and Tanyeri, F. N. (2023) Economic vulnerabilities and pandemic mobilities: Mobility of low-income populations in İstanbul during the Covid-19 pandemic. Habitat International 141 102903. 
  • Akyelken, N. and Hopkins, D. (2022). Researching mobility in times of immobility. Transport Reviews 43(1): 1-4. 
  • Akyelken, N. (2020) Living with urban floods in Metro Manila: a gender approach to mobilities, work and climatic events. Gender, Place & Culture: A Journal of Feminist Geography 27(11): 1580-1601 
  • Cohen, T., Stilgoe, J., Stares, S., Akyelken, N. et al. (2020) A constructive role for social science in the development of automated vehicles. Transportation Research Interdisciplinary Perspectives 6 (July 2020): 1-8. 
  • Schafran, A., McDonald, C., Morales, E.L., Akyelken, N. and Acuto, M. (2018) Replacing the services sector and the three-sector theory: Urbanization and control as economic sectors. Regional Studies 52(12): 1708-1719. 

Book chapters 

  • Hopkins, D. and Akyelken, N. (2022) MotherTruckers? The Gendered Work of Freight and Logistics. In: Wright, T. Budd, K. and Ison, S. Women, Work and Transport Emerald Publishing. pp. 71-86. 
  • Lucas, K., Akyelken, N. and Stanley, J. (2019) Social assessment of transport projects in Global South cities using community perceptions of needs. In: Hickman, et al. (eds). A Companion to Transport, Space and Equity. Edward Elgar. pp. 180-195. 
  • Akyelken, N. (2011) Distance in the existence of political pathologies: rationalized transport policies and trade. In, Button, K. and A. Reggiani (eds.) Transportation and Economic Development Challenges. Edward Elgar: Cheltenham. pp. 72-84. 

Published reports 

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