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Maarten van Ham

Professor of Urban Geography at Delft University of Technology

Areas of expertise

  • - Urban inequalities and their effects
  • - Socio-economic segregation
  • - Neighborhood effects

Major works

  • van Ham M. Tammaru T., Ubarevičienė R. & Janssen H. (2021) Urban socio-economic segregation and income inequality. A global perspective. Springer Open.
  • van Ham M., Uesugi M., Tammaru T., Manley D. & Janssen H. (forthcoming) Changing occupational structures and residential segregation in New York, London and Tokyo. Nature Human Behavior.

Social links

About me

Maarten van Ham is Professor of Urban Geography, head of the Urban Studies Research Group and head of the Department of Urbanism at Delft University of Technology. He is a population geographer with a background in economic and urban geography and has published over 110 academic papers and has written, edited or contributed to 10 edited.

Van Ham studied economic geography at Utrecht University, where he obtained his PhD with honors in 2002. He worked at the University of Amsterdam and Utrecht University and was affiliated with the Max Planck Institute in Berlin.

In 2006 he was appointed Director of the Centre for Housing Research (CHR) at the University of St Andrews. In 2011 he was appointed full Professor of Geography at the University of St Andrews in the UK and also became full Professor of Urban Geography at Delft University of Technology in the Netherlands.

He has expertise in the fields of urban poverty and inequality, segregation, residential mobility and migration; neighborhood effects; urban and neighborhood change; housing market behavior and housing choice; geography of labor markets; spatial mismatch of workers and employment opportunities.