The map of Michael Storper’s career-long study of economic geography is characterized by “depth and quality,” according to the American Association of Geographers, which is awarding Storper its Distinguished Scholarship Honors for 2017.
The UCLA distinguished professor of regional and international development — and longtime faculty member in the UCLA Luskin School of Public Affairs’ Department of Urban Planning — will receive the accolade at the association’s annual awards meeting in April in Boston.
Storper’s “outstanding record of scholarly achievement and innovative contributions to the fields of global economic development and geography of urban and regional systems” place him “in a category of scholarship that is truly deserving of this prestigious award,” according to the citation.
The co-author of the 2015 book “The Rise and Decline of Urban Economies: Lessons from Los Angeles and San Francisco” also was cited for the breadth of his research and “highly influential scholarly publications and foundational contributions to economic and urban geography and related disciplines.”
“My current research is about understanding the sharp splits that have opened up between prosperous urban regions and other places, and the future of both of these types of regions,” said Storper, who also serves as director of Global Public Affairs at UCLA Luskin. “This geography of increasingly separate worlds is also behind the sharp splits in politics and social attitudes that characterize the U.S. and other countries today.”
Storper was previously named to the Thomson Reuters list of the "World’s Most Influential Scientific Minds of 2014."
In addition to his extensive scholarship, Storper was recognized by the Washington, D.C.-based association for holding several academic positions, including chair in economic sociology at the Institut des Sciences Politiques in Paris and a permanent chair in economic geography at the London School of Economics and Political Science.
Most recently, Storper was awarded the 2016 Gold Founder’s Medal from the Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British Geographers). Storper received the honor for his pioneering research in economic geography.
“I am honored to be recognized for my scholarship thus far,” Storper said, “and this recognition motivates me to continue the hard work of rigorous scholarship and publication on these topics in the future.”