Home
Home  
Undergraduate Graduate Courses People News/Events Affiliated Contact
Faculty
By Field
Endowed Chairs

Baker, Keith
Beinin, Joel
Bernstein, Barton
Buc, Philippe
Camarillo, Al
Carson, Clayborne
Chang, Gordon
Como, David
Corn, Joseph
Crews, Robert
Daughton, J.P.
Duus, Peter
Findlen, Paula
Frank, Zephyr
Freedman, Estelle
Haber, Stephen
Hanretta, Sean
Herzog, Tamar
Holloway, David
Jolluck, Katherine
Kahn, Harold
Kennedy, David
Klein, Herbert
Kollmann, Nancy
Lewis, Mark Edward
Lewis, Martin W.
Lougee Chappell, Carolyn
Mancall, Mark
Miller, Kathryn
Moon, Yumi
Morris, Ian
Mullaney, Thomas
Naimark, Norman
O'Mara, Margaret Pugh
Proctor, Robert N.
Rakove, Jack
Riskin, Jessica
Roberts, Richard
Robinson, Paul
Rodrigue, Aron
Satia, Priya
Schiebinger, Londa
Seaver, Paul
Sheehan, James
Sommer, Matthew
Stansky, Peter
Uchida, Jun
Weiner, Amir
White, Richard
Wigen, Karen
Winterer, Caroline
Zipperstein, Steve
 

 

Martin W. Lewis

 

Senior Lecturer in International History


 

Email: mwlewis@stanford.edu

Contact Information


 

Ph.D., UC Berkeley


 

BIO SKETCH:

Martin W. Lewis is lecturer in international history and interim director of the program in International Relations at Stanford University. He graduated from UC Santa Cruz with a degree in Environmental Studies in 1979, and received a Ph.D. from UC Berkeley in geography in 1987. His dissertation, and first book, examined the interplay among economic development, environmental degradation, and cultural change in the highlands of northern Luzon in the Philippines. Subsequently, he turned his attention to issues of global geography, writing (with Karen Wigen) The Myth of Continents: A Critique of Metageography (University of California Press, 1997). He is also the co-author of a world geography textbook, Diversity Amid Globalization: World Regions, Environment, Development (Prentice Hall), and is the former associate editor of The Geographical Review. Martin W. Lewis taught at the George Washington University and then at Duke University, where he was co-director of the program in Comparative Area Studies, before coming to Stanford University in the fall of 2002. His current research is on the core-periphery model of global spatial relations, focusing on its application to issues in Philippine and world history.

 

 

Copyright © 1998-2005 Stanford University History Department. All rights reserved. Contact information