Up, down and across: how growing cities can cope with moving millions more people
Movement data and psychology could allow infrastructure experts to squeeze efficiency from every meter of city space.
Donald's work is located at the intersection of human geography, economic sociology, spatial planning, and urban design and architecture, with a particular interest in the political and cultural economy of globalisation and cities. He is currently working with colleagues on ARC grants about the future of Sydney’s Chinatown, and on the social history of air-conditioning in South-east Asia, and has recently completed an ARC Discovery project, ‘The production and contestation of airport territory’ (2008-2010).