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- Towards geographies of privileged migration: An intersectional perspective
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Authors: Karine Duplan, Sophie Cranston Abstract: Progress in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. While geography has traditionally ‘looked down’ in the search for social justice, a recent trend in the social sciences has argued for thinking through privilege. Taking this call seriously, this paper draws on feminist scholarship and uses intersectionality to demonstrate that reflections about privilege are imperative in the pursuit of social justice. Through laying the groundwork for a theorisation of privilege within and beyond migration geographies, we use transnational circulation, as one of the – unquestioned and taken for granted – characteristics of elites, arguing that an understanding of privilege in migration is critical to understanding and combatting inequalities and injustices. This leads us to argue for the need to explore privilege in relation to its others, such as precarity and vulnerability. We conclude by advancing a research agenda on privilege in (migration) geography that draws upon a feminist ethics of responsibility. Citation: Progress in Human Geography PubDate: 2023-03-04T05:07:39Z DOI: 10.1177/03091325231156927
- Economic geography II: The economic geographies of the COVID-19 pandemic
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Authors: Andrew Leyshon Abstract: Progress in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. This is the second of three reports on economic geography. It focuses on research that addresses issues deemed to be both urgent and generative of crisis. This report focuses on the crisis created by the emergence of COVID-19. While the virus may have been novel, many of its implications were not, as several important processes of uneven development and inequality accelerated. The paper first determines the extent to which the emergence of a pandemic virus constituted a ‘crisis’, before examining some of the most salient economic geographical impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic. These include the rise of friction within the global economy resulting in significant disruption to global supply chains; the acceleration of the digital platform as an ever more dominant form of economic organisation; and how the pandemic deepened social inequalities and uneven development. The report concludes with observations about the emergence of what has been described as a post-pandemic polycrisis. Citation: Progress in Human Geography PubDate: 2023-03-04T04:36:15Z DOI: 10.1177/03091325231156926
- The case for an environmental labor geography: The role of organized labor
in the climate crisis-
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Authors: Nicole Kleinheisterkamp-González Abstract: Progress in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. Geographers have increasingly studied labor and climate change, albeit not in a unitary field. I propose to address this by outlining an environmental labor geography – that draws from labor geography’s tenets. Moreover, I agree with other scholars that organized worker-led mass movements will be key to solving the climate crisis. Thus, I argue that labor agency is a useful tool that centers workers’ actions. However, to derive useful generalizations for struggles on the ground, the concept should be delimited to organized expressions of agency. Finally, I examine past and present conversion debates as cases of interest in ELG. Citation: Progress in Human Geography PubDate: 2023-02-15T10:47:32Z DOI: 10.1177/03091325231154222
- Undoing settler imaginaries: (Re)imagining digital knowledge politics
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Authors: Isaac Rivera Abstract: Progress in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. Geography as a discipline is entangled in settler colonial regimes that continue to shape geographic practice and the boundaries of geographical knowledge. Digital technologies play an instrumental role in shaping the view of geography and sociospatial relations. This paper traces the construction of the settler imaginary in geographic thought through scholarship in digital geographies and anticolonialism. By bridging anticolonial scholarship in digital geographies, this paper contributes to debates on anticolonial and decolonial refusal politics and its role in realizing reciprocal land-life relations. The (re)imagining of digital knowledge politics begins with accountable digital geographic practices on the terms of Indigenous peoples’. Citation: Progress in Human Geography PubDate: 2023-02-07T07:06:50Z DOI: 10.1177/03091325231154873
- Intimate technologies: Towards a feminist perspective on geographies of
technoscience-
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Authors: Carolin Schurr, Nadine Marquardt, Elisabeth Militz Abstract: Progress in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. Technologies are at the heart of geographic analysis. More-than-human geographies, actor-network theory, and new materialism have all called for attending to technological infrastructures and artefacts. This attention is directed mainly towards large-scale technologies. What often escapes geographies of technoscience are small, mundane, and unspectacular technologies. Bringing into conversation work from feminist technoscience and feminist geographies, we broaden the understanding of technology in geographies of technoscience by developing the concept of intimate technologies. By exploring three sites that lie at the centre of feminist technoscience – the home, the laboratory, and the clinic – we carve out the spatial politics of intimate technologies. Citation: Progress in Human Geography PubDate: 2023-02-06T11:49:12Z DOI: 10.1177/03091325231151673
- Makeshift camp geographies and informal migration corridors
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Authors: Joanna Jordan, Claudio Minca Abstract: Progress in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. Makeshift camps have increasingly become a permanent presence along border areas and in cities around Europe and elsewhere, constituting a ‘hidden geography’ that is crucial to overland mobilities of thousands of migrants each year and essential to understanding contemporary informal migration. While there is rich and burgeoning scholarship on makeshift camps, substantial gaps remain in the understanding of these informal geographies which have not yet been conceptualized in terms of the key roles they play in the production of informal migration corridors nor the unique forms of daily life en route that they support, as this paper intends to do. Citation: Progress in Human Geography PubDate: 2023-02-06T10:37:50Z DOI: 10.1177/03091325231154878
- Aporias at the intersection of geography and feminist science and
technology studies: Critical engagements with Black studies-
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Authors: Alexander Liebman, Liana Katz, Andrea Marston Abstract: Progress in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. In this review, we read the interdisciplinary traffic across critical human geography and feminist science and technology studies (FSTS) in light of the insights and destabilizing aporias—in other words, irresolvable contradictions or logical disjunctions—emerging from Black radical and feminist study. We highlight three thematic areas that have received sustained attention and debate and that resonate across the three fields: objectivity and subjectivity, agency, and life and its excesses. Inspired by the methodological provocations of Katherine McKittrick’s Dear Science and the political demands of multiple intellectual currents within Black studies, we venture a modest upending of the form of the review itself. Rather than seek to delineate and codify contributions to a scholarly debate, we point to troubled assumptions and potential openings for those working at the intersection of critical human geography, FSTS, and Black studies. Citation: Progress in Human Geography PubDate: 2023-02-06T05:35:24Z DOI: 10.1177/03091325221149721
- The enclaved body: Crises of personhood and the embodied geographies of
urban gating-
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Authors: Devra Waldman, D Asher Ghertner Abstract: Progress in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. This essay analyzes embodied experiences of enclaving. It argues that by tracking revolutions in built form that gating enacts, urban geography has simultaneously tracked revolutions in urban subjectivity. It highlights three enclaved “body types” within existing literature: securitized bodies in fortressed cities, performative bodies in consumptive enclaves, and hygienic bodies in purified zones. It then offers three ethnographic scenes of gating related to new crises of personhood: metabolic illness, atmospheric breakdown, and resurgent ethno-nationalism. Attention to the psychic forces behind gating, it finally argues, can further show the gender, class, and ethnic underpinnings of what appear as generic architectural zones. Citation: Progress in Human Geography PubDate: 2023-02-06T04:25:44Z DOI: 10.1177/03091325221150792
- Algorithmic epistemologies and methodologies: Algorithmic harm,
algorithmic care and situated algorithmic knowledges-
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Authors: Sophia Maalsen Abstract: Progress in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. Algorithms have been the focus of important geographical critique, particularly in relation to their harmful and discriminatory effects. However, less attention has been paid to engaging more deeply with the epistemological effects of algorithms, the result being that geographers continue to overlook more generative algorithmic potentials, practices, epistemes and methodologies. This paper progresses our engagements with algorithms by first considering practices of care as a means to reframe our relationship with algorithms. Second, the paper identifies an epistemological rupture that allows us to reconceptualise algorithms as co-researchers, enabling us to encounter new spaces and understand these spaces in new ways. Citation: Progress in Human Geography PubDate: 2023-02-06T04:20:04Z DOI: 10.1177/03091325221149439
- Political geography III: International migration and geopolitics
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Authors: Jennifer L Fluri Abstract: Progress in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. This report provides an overview of contemporary scholarship on the geopolitics and political geographies of migration. There has also been an extensive amount of scholarship, including several special issues focused on migration, borders, and displacement from state and non-state institutional management to the everyday experiences of individual migrants. The political geographies and geopolitics of human displacement in this report are organized into the following thematic categories: state and institutional management, institutionalized suspicion of migrant populations, border management techniques and technologies, and re-centering migrant experiences. Citation: Progress in Human Geography PubDate: 2023-02-06T02:15:04Z DOI: 10.1177/03091325221150016
- Decolonizing energy justice: Identity politics, attachment to land, and
warfare-
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Authors: Dunlap Alexander Abstract: Progress in Human Geography, Ahead of Print.
Citation: Progress in Human Geography PubDate: 2023-02-03T05:41:29Z DOI: 10.1177/03091325221149553
- Energy justice beyond identity: Planting anarchist seeds towards total
liberation-
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Authors: Carlos Tornel Abstract: Progress in Human Geography, Ahead of Print.
Citation: Progress in Human Geography PubDate: 2023-02-02T05:40:00Z DOI: 10.1177/03091325221149568
- Why can’t we grasp gentrification' Or: Gentrification as a
moving target-
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Authors: Marijn Knieriem First page: 3 Abstract: Progress in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. Since the term “gentrification” was coined by Ruth Glass in 1964, this concept and the phenomenon it referred to have been subject to change. This paper reviews the literature and employs Ian Hacking’s work to investigate how two types of changes—that is, changes of the concept and of the phenomenon—are implicated by each other. By investigating the interaction between a classification and its class, it becomes possible to understand gentrification as, in Hacking’s terms, a “moving target.” This paper argues that gentrification can be conceptualized as such and explores the consequences of this for gentrification research. Citation: Progress in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-12-21T02:35:09Z DOI: 10.1177/03091325221135564
- Revocalising human geography: Decolonial language geographies beyond the
nation-state-
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Authors: Eleanor Chapman First page: 24 Abstract: Progress in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. This paper emphasises the decolonial importance of geographical engagement with the materiality of language as an embodied and embedded relation. It shows how abstractions of language(s) as discrete, codified and possessable objects participate in a ‘coloniality of language’ that risks obscuring alternative geographies of language within, against and beyond the territorialised monolingualism of the colonial nation-state. Through considering Italian philosopher Adriana Cavarero’s analysis of Western modernity’s systematic ‘devocalisation of logos’ from a modernity/coloniality perspective, I argue that geographical consideration of language as a ‘revocalised’ relation could contribute to moving beyond colonial and (ethno)nationalist geographies of language. Citation: Progress in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-10-06T11:25:51Z DOI: 10.1177/03091325221131852
- Decolonizing energy justice from the ground up: Political ecology,
ontology, and energy landscapes-
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Authors: Carlos Tornel First page: 43 Abstract: Progress in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. The purpose of the paper is to expand the concept of energy justice by considering the struggles over coloniality and cultural identity in the Global South and their interactions with the spatial and historical development of energy systems and the ongoing forms of energy transitions. The article argues that the current conceptualizations of energy justice cannot be separated from the politics of incumbency as, without a decolonial critique, they tend to reproduce rather than transform hegemonic power relations. To be transformative, energy justice must be articulated from the politics of actually existing unsustainability. In other words, the starting position for energy justice must be that energy injustices are already embedded in existing energy systems and energy policies. Drawing on Latin-American decolonial thought, and the work of political ecologists around energy, this article advocates looking beyond a universalized conception of justice towards an approach where justice is based on a sense of place and is informed by the community’s relationship with the land. Using the concept of energy landscapes, the article puts forth an alternative way of understanding energy systems and conceptualizations of justice in decolonial settings. Citation: Progress in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-10-11T01:19:59Z DOI: 10.1177/03091325221132561
- New geographical directions for food systems governance research
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Authors: Christopher Yap First page: 66 Abstract: Progress in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. Food systems governance has emerged as a distinct focus of geographical research. Researchers and policymakers are increasingly engaging with food systems as complex, multi-scalar and cross-cutting sets of issues. This article examines the potential of critical, interdisciplinary readings of the relationships between the state, space and territory to explore new directions and opportunities for food systems governance research and practice. In doing so, the article proposes a critical research agenda that emphasises the interdependent spatial and relational character of food systems governance. Citation: Progress in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-10-14T04:06:08Z DOI: 10.1177/03091325221133808
- Path tracing in the study of agency and structures: Methodological
considerations-
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Authors: Markku Sotarauta, Markus Grillitsch First page: 85 Abstract: Progress in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. Despite the rapidly expanding literature on agency in regional development, the methodological approaches available to study it have not followed theoretical development and empirical studies. This article aims to shed light on methodological issues related to the study of path dependence, path creation and agency. The article’s main purpose is to construct a methodology - path tracing - that would allow studying path development by scrutinising how structures constrain actors and how actors work to shape the very same structures in which they are embedded. Path tracing draws on critical realism, process tracing and structured narrative analysis. Citation: Progress in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-12-17T07:13:55Z DOI: 10.1177/03091325221145590
- Regional opportunity structures: A research agenda to link spatial and
social inequalities in rural areas-
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Authors: Josef Bernard, Annett Steinführer, Andreas Klärner, Sylvia Keim-Klärner First page: 103 Abstract: Progress in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. This paper introduces and discusses regional opportunity structures as a concept for analysing the interlinkages between structural conditions in space, social inequalities, and people’s agency, with a focus on non-metropolitan areas. The concept adds value in the following ways: (1) it emphasises the regional scale as an important spatial context of access to opportunities; (2) it accounts for the complexity of the regional context, which provides a plethora of opportunities; (3) it recognises the interdependencies of regional effects and other drivers of inequality; and (4) it takes the regional level seriously as a background of the agency of a region's inhabitants. Citation: Progress in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-12-22T11:09:59Z DOI: 10.1177/03091325221139980
- Geographies of marketization: Studying markets in postneoliberal times
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Authors: Christian Berndt, Marc Boeckler First page: 124 Abstract: Progress in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. This paper is as an invitation to rethink social studies of economization and geographies of marketization at a time when the heydays of neoliberal marketization seem to be over. After briefly summarizing the thrust of the economization/marketization approach, we make two suggestions to develop the perspective further. The first is to make use of economic geography’s heterodox tradition and contribute to the ongoing “provincialization” of the neoclassical market. Second, theorizing actually existing market arrangements as necessarily involving struggles between competing logics and rationalities, we open social studies of economization and geographies of marketization for questions of social inequality, marginalization and exclusion. Citation: Progress in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-12-22T10:45:19Z DOI: 10.1177/03091325221144456
- The digitalising state: Governing digitalisation-as-urbanisation in the
global south-
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Authors: Ayona Datta First page: 141 Abstract: Progress in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. This paper will investigate the emergence of a digitalising state in the global south through a focus on new techniques of governance initiated by the information age. It will discuss the mechanisms of the digitalising state across two realms – the governance of information infrastructures evident in the transition from paper to digital data, and the governance of informational peripheries emerging across digital and territorial exclusions. The paper argues that through these dynamics, the digitalising state is engaged in a politics of digitalisation-as-urbanisation where digitalisation becomes both a product and producer of regional urbanisation. Citation: Progress in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-12-21T06:55:15Z DOI: 10.1177/03091325221141798
- Distribution, dis-sumption and dis-appointment: The negative geographies
of city logistics-
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Authors: Samuel Mutter First page: 160 Abstract: Progress in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. Critical approaches to logistics, in dialogue with geography and related disciplines, have exposed the turbulence behind apparently seamless transnational circulations of stuff. As everyday urban life becomes increasingly structured through logistical practices and expectations which imbricate consumption and distribution, now is an appropriate moment to take stock of these dialogues. Reviewing them, the article identifies three spatial assumptions – peripheral geographies, seamless consumption, forward motion – proposing that they express an additive, forward-leaning representation of logistics. In response, it draws upon debates on ‘negativity’ to suggest geographers pay greater attention to logistics’ negative spaces (voids), affects (dis-appointments) and mobilities (reversals). Citation: Progress in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-10-12T08:01:30Z DOI: 10.1177/03091325221132563
- Quantitative methods II: Big theory
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Authors: Rachel Franklin First page: 178 Abstract: Progress in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. In this second report on quantitative methods, I consider the foundational triumvirate that underpins the sub-discipline: data, methods, and theory. I argue that, although ‘big data’ and, more recently, ‘big code’ may have captured the limelight, theory is invaluable and should not be disregarded. Showcasing the integral role of theory in quantitative human geography, I identify three kinds of useful theory (old school, enduring and conceptual) and, along the way, highlight beneficial ways in which they contribute to our thinking about data and methods. Throughout, I emphasize that theory is a crucial component of contemporary and future quantitative methods development. Citation: Progress in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-12-24T05:19:46Z DOI: 10.1177/03091325221137334
- Labour geography I: Labour agency, informal work, global south
perspectives and ontology of futures-
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Authors: Gale Raj-Reichert First page: 187 Abstract: Progress in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. This review builds on Strauss’s (2020) discussion of how labour geographers conceptualise worker agency ontologically and epistemologically. Research on labour agency has been dominated by a narrow and limited lens based on a materialist ontology of capitalistic production which tends to depict labour agency as a ‘spatial fix’. Considering this critique, I review three themes of research on labour agency that push the boundaries of such dominant conceptualisations: understanding labour agency in informal work and by workers on the fringes of formalised economic spaces; from perspectives in the Global South; and via an ontology of the future. Citation: Progress in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-12-23T10:39:27Z DOI: 10.1177/03091325221144455
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