March 21, 2025

Where are GIS Professors Hired From?

A
study
that
was
just
accepted
for
publication
by

Cartography
and
Geographic
Information
Science
(CaGIS)
Journal

takes
a
look
at
geographic
hiring
patterns
among
GIScience
faculty.
Titled
Where
are
GIScience
Faculty
Hired
from?
Analyzing
Faculty
Mobility
and
Research
Themes
Through
Hiring
Networks”

the
examines
where

GIS

faculty
come
from,
how
they
move
across
the
globe,
and
how
academic
networks
in
GIScience
are
formed
through
mobility
and
recruitment. 
The
analysis
was
conducted
by
a
research
team
led
by
Prof.
Yuhao
Kang
at
the
University
of
Texas
at
Austin
and
Yanbing
Chen
of
the
University
of
Wisconsin–Madison.

GISphere
Project
data

The
study
is
based
on
a
database
compiled
by

the
GISphere
Project
—containing
summary
information
on
more
than
400
GIS
programs
and
nearly
1,000
GIS
faculty
from
over
380
universities
worldwide.
Data
was
collected
from
departmental
websites,
academic
profiles
(such
as
ORCID
and
LinkedIn),
and
other
public
sources. The
analysis
for
this
study
focused
on
tenure-track
faculty
to
capture
those
actively
involved
in
mentoring
and
research.

Where
GIS
faculty
are
educated
influences
their
placement

The
study
found
two
strong
geographic
patterns:

  1. A
    handful
    of
    global
    institutions
    led
    in
    terms
    of
    overall
    placements.

    Wuhan
    University,
    Chinese
    Academy
    of
    Sciences,
    University
    of
    California
    Santa
    Barbara,
    and
    Ohio
    State
    University
    accounted
    for
    15.43%
    of
    global
    faculty
    placements.

  2. There
    is
    a
    strong
    regional
    bias
    in
    placements.

    The
    study
    found
    that
    many
    faculty
    members
    are
    hired
    by
    institutions
    within
    the
    same
    region
    where
    they
    earned
    their
    PhD,
    emphasizing
    strong
    local
    recruitment
    networks.
    Regional
    clustering
    is
    especially
    prominent
    in

    North
    America

    and
    Europe,
    where
    hiring
    practices
    typically
    favor
    domestic
    or
    nearby
    graduates.

Dominant institutions in the field in North America include well-known programs at the University of California Santa Barbara, Ohio State University, University at Buffalo, and the University of Wisconsin–Madison. Figure: GIS faculty working in North American institutions based on whether they earned their doctoral degrees in North America or in other regions, Kang & Chen, 2025.

This
study
builds
on
previous
work
by
the
authors
presented
at
Spatial
Knowledge
and
Information
Canada
2023:

Investigating
Demographics
and
Mobility
through
Faculty
Hiring
Network
in
GIScience

Go to Source
Author: Caitlin Dempsey