Sylvia Hamilton Chant (24 December 1958 – 18 December 2019)[1] was a British academic who was professor of Development Geography at the London School of Economics and Political Science[2][3] and was co-director of the MSc Urbanisation and Development Programme in the LSE's Department of Geography and Environment.[4]
Background
Chant was born in 1958 in Dundee. Her parents were June Dollis Mary (born McCartney) and Stuart Ralston Chant (1930–2013), virologist and plant pathologist. She left Scotland when she was a baby.[5] She earned her BA at King's College, Cambridge and then her PhD at University College London in 1984 (Las Olvidadas: a study of women, housing and family structure in Queretaro, Mexico). Chant was a so that her father could research and lecture. She said that pride in her father's work with tropical agriculture, iincluding the cassava mosaic virus influenced her career choice.[5] She took Geography at the University of Liverpool from 1987 to 1988, before joining the LSE. She died after a battle with cancer in 2019.[5]
Contributions
She read the works of Betty Friedan, Angela Carter and Marilyn French and realised the bias that was present in academia. Her doctorate and first paper looked at how women were involved with self-help housing in Querétaro in Mexico.[5]
Gender and development research were her interests and in particular the 'feminisation of poverty', livelihoods and employment in urban areas. Working in Costa Rica, Mexico, the Philippines and The Gambia. In the Gambia she has also worked on resistance to female genital mutilation.[6]
She was the editor of The International Handbook of Gender and Poverty : Concepts, Research, Policy (2010),[7]