Academic Career
- 2013 onwards: Fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences.
- 2012: British Academy Mid-Career Fellow.
- 2010 onwards: Professor of Human Geography, ߲Ƶ.
- 2007: Philip Leverhulme Prize Winner.
- 1994 -2007: Lecturer, Senior Lecturer and Reader in Human Geography, ߲Ƶ.
Professional Responsibilities
- 2011onwards: Editorial Board Member, Social and Cultural Geography.
- 2009 onwards: Editorial Board Member, Children’s Geographies.
Sarah is a social and cultural geographer, with twin interests in ‘Geographies of Children, Youth and Families’ and ‘Geographies of Social Difference’.
Her current research explores these themes through a focus on geographies of education and learning, a field which foregrounds the ways wider social processes shape (and are reshaped through) formal and informal spaces of education, and considers how this is experienced, embraced and contested by educators and diverse subjects of education. Her research on primary education explores: neoliberal educational restructuring; the growth of enrichment activities for children; the changing nature of play; parenting education; and mothers efforts to balance earning a living with caring for their children. In the secondary sector, her research explores the marketisation of private tuition and socio-spatial differentiation in the use of tutors. In the university sector, she has explored implications of gender, sexuality and religion in young people’s accrual of cultural capital when they are internationally mobile for higher education.
Her previous research has investigated: (i) class differentiated geographies of childrearing; (ii) young people’s use of new technologies at home and school; (iii) gender and youth in domesticated and public drinking landscapes; (iii) racialisation of Gypsy-Traveller and rural racism.
Sarah’s teaching examines the importance of social divisions such as class, gender and race at local, national and global scales. Across the undergraduate programme, she considers: the empirical geographies of these differences; philosophical changes in geographical approaches to them; and the ways they shape geographies of housing, home life, and senses of being at home.
Current Postgraduate Research Students
- Emma Bates: Discerning the perceptions of middle-class, pre-career women towards their careers and work-family balance
- Aysegul Dilbirligi: Attitudes to parenting in Turkey and the UK
Recent Postgraduate Research Students
- Sophie Beer (2018): Spaces of early education and care: exploring ethos, choice and parental engagement
- Tim Fewtrell (2018): Geographies of youth, volunteering and religion: Narratives of young Muslim volunteers in Birmingham, UK
- Stacey Balsdon (2015): 'Studentsification': Recognising the diversity of student populations and student accommodation pathways
Selected Publications
- Holloway, S.L. & Pimlott-Wilson, H. (2021) Solo self-employment, entrepreneurial subjectivity and the security-precarity continuum: Evidence from private tutors in the supplementary education industry Environment and Planning A, 53.6: 1547–1564
- Pimlott-Wilson, H. & Holloway, S.L. (2021) Supplementary education and the coronavirus pandemic: economic vitality, business spatiality and societal value in the private tuition industry during the first wave of COVID-19 Geoforum, 127(December): 71-80
- Holloway, S.L. & Kirby, P. (2020) Neoliberalising education: New geographies of private tuition, class privilege and minority ethnic advancement Antipode, 52.1: 164–184 (Free access – download here).
- Holloway, S.L. & Pimlott-Wilson, H. (2020) Marketising private tuition: Representations of tutors' competence, entrepreneurial opportunities, and service legitimation in home tutoring business manuals British Educational Research Journal, 46.1: 205–221 (Free access – download here).
- Kučerová, S.R., Holloway, S.L. Jahnke, H. (2020) The Institutionalization of the Geography of Education: An International Perspective Journal of Pedagogy, 11.1: 13-34. (Open access publication – download here).
- Holloway, S.L., Holt, L. & Mills, S. (2019) Questions of agency: Capacity, subjectivity, spatiality and temporality Progress in Human Geography 43.3: 458-477. (Open access publication – download here)
- Holloway, S.L. & Pimlott-Wilson, H. (2018) Reconceptualising play: Balancing childcare, extra-curricular activities and free play in contemporary childhoods Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers43.3: 420-434. (Open access publication – download here)
- Holloway, SL & Pimlott-Wilson, H. (2016) New economy, neoliberal state and professionalized parenting: mothers’ labour market engagement and state support for social reproduction in class-differentiated Britain Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 41.4: 376–388 (Open access publication – download here)
- Holloway, S.L. (2014) Changing children's geographies Children's Geographies, 12(4):377-392 (Open access publication – download here)
- Holloway, S.L. & Pimlott-Wilson, H. (2014) Enriching children, institutionalizing childhood?: Geographies of play, extra-curricular activities, and parenting in England Annals of the Association of American Geographers 104(3): 613-27 (Open access publication – download here)
- Holloway, SL & Pimlott-Wilson, H. (2014) “Any advice is welcome isn’t it?”: neoliberal parenting education, local mothering cultures and social class Environment and Planning A46(1): 94-111 (Open access publication – download here)