Gertler joined the University of Toronto Department of Geography and Planning as a lecturer in 1983. He was promoted to Associate Professor in 1988 and full Professor in 1993, at which point he also received tenure.[7]
Gertler's work focuses on the geography of innovative activity and the economies of city-regions. His work also examines the local nature of a globalized economy, focusing on manufacturing as embedded within local cultural norms, practice, and assumptions. Gertler's work examines the role of tacit knowledge and interactive learning in explaining local agglomeration economies and innovation.[8] Gertler is the author, co-author or co-editor of more than 80 scholarly publications and seven books.[9] These have had significant impact in his field and have led him to be one of Canada's most highly cited geographers.[5]
Gertler has served as an advisor to local, regional and national governments in Canada, the United States and Europe, as well as to international agencies such as the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development and the European Union. He was the founding co-director of the Program on Globalization and Regional Innovation Systems (PROGRIS) at the Munk School of Global Affairs, served as director of the Department of Geography's Program in Planning and holds the Goldring Chair in Canadian Studies.[9]
In May 2012, he was awarded an honorary Doctor of Philosophy degree from Sweden's Lund University, for his exceptional contributions to the fields of economic geography and regional development. In the same year, he was made an Academician of the Academy of Social Sciences (UK), becoming the first University of Toronto scholar inducted and one of only two Canadian members of the Academy.[10]
He has been a Senior Fellow of the University of Toronto's Massey College since 2000.
A textbook co-edited by Gertler, the Oxford Handbook of Economic Geography, received the Choice Magazine's "Outstanding Academic Book" award.
He won the 2007 Award for Scholarly Distinction from the Canadian Association of Geographers.
In December 2015, Gertler was awarded the Order of Canada with the grade of member.[11]
In March 2016, Gertler made the decision not to divest the University of Toronto from fossil fuels, which prompted a negative reaction from some students and faculty members. Sources credited his personal ties to fossil fuel industry leaders for this decision.[13]
In May 2021, Gertler allowed an offer to be rescinded to a human rights lawyer, Valentina Azarova, whose legal research and papers included the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.[14]
In May 2024, Gertler made the decision not to refuse negotiation with pro-Palestinian student protesters on campus. He made the comment that the pro-Palestinian camp must end, by force if necessary. He refused to divest the University of Toronto from Israeli companies and terminate partnerships with Israeli academic institutions, in response to demands from the protesters.[15]
Gertler, M. S. 2004. Manufacturing Culture: the Institutional Geography of Industrial Practice. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Gertler, M. S. 2003. A cultural economic geography of production: are we learning by doing? In The Handbook of Cultural Geography, eds. K. Anderson, M. Domosh, S. Pile and N. Thrift, 131-146. London: Sage.
Gertler, M. S. and D.A. Wolfe, eds. 2002. Innovation and Social Learning: Institutional Adaptation in an Era of Technological Change. Basingstoke, UK: Macmillan/Palgrave.
Rutherford, T. D. and M. S. Gertler. 2002. Labour in ‘lean’ times: geography, scale and the national trajectories of workplace change. Transactions, Institute of British Geographers NS27: 1-18.