Tim's research concentrates on the geographies of the everyday mobilities of people, goods and information. It is international in outlook, interdisciplinary in scope, informed by the thinking in various sub-disciplines within Geography, and organised around five more general concerns:
- Low-carbon mobilities and cities - innovation and experimentation, politics and governance, justice;
- Futures and temporality - sociotechnical transitions, path dependency, habit, rhythm, resilience, vulnerability;
- Social and spatial inequality - age, gender, the role of mobility and infrastructure;
- Well-being - conceptualisations, relationships with mobility and place, politics;
- Philosophy of transport and mobility - history of thought and praxis, new concepts and modes of thinking.