[3] Hubbard's work has principally focused on contested land uses in the city, and the resolution of social conflict via legal techniques of planning and licensing.
[4] Hubbard has also written or co-edited a number of texts and collections on theory and philosophy in human geography.
[9] In 2015, Hubbard presented evidence to Scottish Parliament, calling for a unified approach to the licensing and regulation of sexual entertainment venues.
The book returned him to his native Kent to consider the way post-Brexit anxieties are shaping English coastal communities.
A chapter of this book on asylum seekers and the English Channel appeared on the Independent news website as a 'long read'.