PHD CANDIDATE
MA, GEOGRAPHY, UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO. BA, GEOGRAPHY, UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD.
borders, cities, water, colonialism, migration
187 McCone
giglioli@berkeley.edu
Research Interests
My research has developed around two main themes that seek to address the relationship between the organization of space and the production of inequality.
The first theme, which I have been working on most recently, concerns the production and reproduction of borders. My PhD research focuses on the material and discursive production of the Southern Border of Europe. Studying two-way migration between Sicily (Italy) and Tunisia from the early 1900s to present, I examine the progressive production of difference between Sicilians and Tunisians in order to understand the way in which contemporary notions of ‘civilizational divides’ between Europe and North Africa came to be. Alongside my PhD research, I have also coordinated workshops and taught classes analyzing the processes that led to the current fortification of the US/Mexico border and the fragmentation and militarization of the Palestinian Territories.
The second theme, which I worked on prior to my PhD, concerns the relationship between infrastructure development, access to natural resources and the production and reproduction of inequality. I have worked on these questions both in the context of the Palestinian West Bank, and in Sicily. In the former, I analyzed the relationship between water infrastructure development, territorial control and the creation and perpetration of difference along lines of ethnicity and citizenship. In the latter, I examined the role of water infrastructure development in the reinforcement of the island’s power structure.
Publications
Journal Articles
Book Chapters
Book Reviews
Teaching
Main Instructor
Globalization. University of California Berkeley, Summer 2016.
Graduate Student Instructor/Teaching Assistant
Globalization. University of California Berkeley. Spring 2018.
The Southern Border. University of California Berkeley. Fall 2017.
Postcolonial Geographies. University of California Berkeley. Fall 2015.
Globalization. University of California Berkeley. Spring 2015.
Globalization, regional development and the world economy. University of California Los Angeles. Fall 2014
Development in Theory and History. University of California Berkeley. Spring 2012.