Stan Openshaw (10 August, 1946 – 19 May, 2022.) was a British academic and geographer. His last post was professor of human geography based in the School of Geography at the University of Leeds.
Openshaw began a research career in the Department of Town and Country Planning at Newcastle University, where, during the 1970s he worked on zone design methodology and the analysis of socio-economic data in geographical and planning contexts. In the 1980s, Stan collaborated on the BBC Domesday Project and developed a way to estimate death or kill rates of various nuclear bombing strategies evolving computerised techniques for identifying geographical clusters.
Openshaw worked at Newcastle University for eighteen years, becoming professor of quantitative geography before moving to work at the University of Leeds in 1992 where he set up the Centre for Computational Geography and debated the direction geography should take, putting forward a view that the subject needed an applied and scientific edge that harnessed the growing power of computers to have positive impacts.
Stan directed the CCG for seven years until he had a stroke in 1999. His career as an academic was sadly cut short at the age of 55.
In 2012 at the GISRUK conference in Lancaster a special session was arranged to celebrate Stan's career.
Openshaw made many contributions as a scholar nurturing and inspiring others. His research interests were broad and his work spanned urban morphology, regional planning, nuclear power, epidemiology, demography, geodemographics and environmental change impacts. Stan strove to remove human bias from the scientific process and was a strong believer in human-competitive machine intelligence. He innovated the use of genetic programming, artificial neural networks and fuzzy inference techniques in geography.
In the 1980s, Stan explored the Modifiable Areal Unit Problem (MAUP) as a source of statistical bias that can significantly impact the results of statistical hypothesis tests. His work on this topic led Mike Goodchild to suggest it be referred to as the "Openshaw effect".
Openshaw became a fellow of the Institute of Statisticians and a member of the British Computer Society in 1983, and a fellow of the Royal Geographical Society and a Chartered Statistician in 1993.
Stan invented new spatial analysis methods for identifying geographical clusters and developing geographical models.
He contributed to the field of geodemographics, working on the classification of individuals and groups of people.
He shaped computational geography as a subject, which he termed GeoComputation by editing a book on the subject and instigating an international GeoComputation Conference Series first hosted at the University of Leeds in 1996.
Openshaw authored books, peer reviewed journal articles, editorials and opinion pieces, book reviews and web sites.
Books:
Theses: