Sarah Hinman
Assistant Professor
- Name
- Dr. S.E. Hinman
- Telephone
- +31 70 800 9327
- s.e.hinman@luc.leidenuniv.nl
Sarah Hinman is a broadly trained human geographer with research and teachings interests meeting at the intersection of geographic information systems, urban sustainability, and public health. Her current research draws on her passion for digital mapping and visualization through the development of three-dimensional digital models of urban land uses.
Extension number: 8727
Biography
Sarah E. Hinman is a broadly trained human geographer with research and teachings interests meeting at the intersection of geographic information systems, urban sustainability, and public health. Her current research draws on her passion for digital mapping and visualization through the development of three-dimensional digital models of urban land uses. She received a Ph.D. from Louisiana State University in 2007 with degrees from Ohio University (M.A) and Mary Washington College (B.A.) as well. At LUC she will be offering courses in World Regional Geography, Public Health, and Designing Academic Inquiry.
Academic Expertise
- Human Geography
- Geographical Information Systems & Cartography
- Public Health & Medical Geography
- Urban-Environment Interaction
Courses
- World Regional Geography
- Designing Academic Inquiry
- Principles of Public Health
- Urban Environmental History
Assistant Professor
- Faculty Governance and Global Affairs
- Leiden University College
Work address
Anna van BuerenpleinAnna van Buerenplein 301
2595 DG The Hague
Room number 4.05
Contact
- Hudson P.F. & Hinman S.E. (2017), The integration of geography in a curriculum focused to internationalization and interdisciplinarity: A liberal arts & sciences perspective from the U.S. and the Netherlands, Journal of Geography in Higher Education 41(4): 549-561.
- Hinman Sarah E. (2017), Comparing spatial distributions of infant mortality over time: Investigating the urban environment of Baltimore, Maryland in 1880 and 1920, Applied Geography 86: 1-7.
- Blackburn J.K. & Curtis A. (2006), Spatial and temporal structure of typhoid outbreaks in Washington, DC, 1906 1909: evaluating local clustering with the Gi* statistic, International Journal of Health Geographics 5: .