RODGERS Dennis

Contact details

Profile picture

dennis.rodgers@univ-amu.fr

Professor of Sociology and A*Midex Chair of Excellence in Comparative Studies of Violence and Urban Governance

Academic work

2025-2028: Rethinking urban violence

What is urban violence? How can we conceive of it in a way that goes beyond simply considering cities as a context in which violence takes place? This project starts from the premise that the common denominator of any urban space is that it is fundamentally and intensely collective and relational. Logically, this means that the experience of urban violence should be too. But how do we capture this in practice? What are the best ways of conceiving, studying and measuring the collective and relational dimensions of urban violence? Adopting a global and comparative approach, this project will aim to rethink the notion of urban violence through a research programme built around three interdependent lines of study, linked respectively to (1) the relationality of urban violence, (2) the mobility of urban violence, and (3) the governance of urban violence. Drawing empirically on case studies in Buenos Aires (Argentina), Cape Town (South Africa), Geneva (Switzerland) and Marseille (France), the project aims to develop new ways of conceiving, studying and measuring the collective, situated and interdependent nature of urban violence, in order to develop a more holistic and nuanced understanding of the phenomenon across its multiplicity and variability. Funding: A*Midex Chair of Excellence (AMX-23-CEI-117).

2019-2024: Gangs, Gangsters, and Ganglands: Towards a Global Comparative Ethnography (GANGS) 

Gangs are an almost universal phenomenon, present throughout time and space in almost every society on the planet. That said, they can vary enormously in their forms, dynamics and consequences, and it is not always clear which of these dynamics are general and which are specific to particular times and places. The GANGS project has developed comparative and collaborative research to better understand why gangs emerge, how they evolve over time, whether they can be associated with particular contexts and configurations, how and why individuals join gangs, and what impact this may have on their life trajectories. The project involved three primary case studies, Managua in Nicaragua, Cape Town in South Africa and Marseille in France, as well as two secondary studies, Naples in Italy and Algeciras in Spain. A team of six researchers conducted 59 months of ethnographic research, both individually and collaboratively, and 41 other researchers also collected the life stories of 31 gang members in 23 countries around the world. For more details, see here. Funding: ERC Advanced Grant from the European Research Council (no. 787935).

Areas of research

Urban anthropology

Conflict and violence

Gangs

Socio-spatial governance

Political economy of development

Qualitative research methods

The relationship between art, culture and the social sciences

Latin America (Nicaragua, Argentina), Asia (India), Europe (France, Switzerland)

Productions

Recent publications (selection):

The Conversation (France) :