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- Policing sounds
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Authors: Nick Lally Abstract: Progress in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. Sound is always present in exercises of police power, whether produced through sonic weaponry, routinized interventions into social life, or contributions to everyday soundscapes. The use of sound is productive of how police produce, govern, and intervene in space. Scholars in geography and adjacent fields have grappled with sound in ways that engage with or have the potential to inform the study of police within the discipline. Attention to sound adds texture to understandings of state power as expressed through the contested sonic politics of policing. This article explores sound and policing through their territorial, affective, atmospheric, and political effects. Citation: Progress in Human Geography PubDate: 2023-05-26T06:31:32Z DOI: 10.1177/03091325231178029
- Reckoning with the digital turn in electoral geography
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Authors: Luke Temple Abstract: Progress in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. The sub-discipline of electoral geography contains research threads that draw on different theoretical, philosophical, and methodological traditions. I link these threads to the ‘digital turn’ that is occurring in the electoral landscape and in the discipline of geography itself. The use of digital technology is increasingly shaping electioneering and data regimes, providing new conceptual challenges concerning the spatial mediation and subsequent knowledge politics of voting and campaigning. Responding to these challenges requires not only building on the subfield’s tradition of interdisciplinarity but also on strengthening intra-disciplinary dialogue, in particular working across the quantitative–qualitative divide. Citation: Progress in Human Geography PubDate: 2023-05-23T09:42:45Z DOI: 10.1177/03091325231170328
- The multiple geographies of constrained labour agency
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Authors: Neil M Coe, David C Jordhus-Lier Abstract: Progress in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. This article critically evaluates the burgeoning work on labour agency in human geography over the past decade. We review efforts to distinguish varied forms of labour agency and locate them in different social contexts. In so doing, we identify certain disjunctures in the cross-case conceptualisation of labour agency and propose a morphogenetic approach to structure-agency dynamics in the world of work. In turn, we then address the lack of explicit reflection on the geographies inherent to labour agency. Four temporal moments are highlighted as central to the spatialities of worker actions, as well as to their structural constraints and outcomes. Citation: Progress in Human Geography PubDate: 2023-05-22T01:27:48Z DOI: 10.1177/03091325231174308
- Towards a post-foundational geography: Spaces of negativity, contingency,
and antagonism-
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Authors: Friederike Landau-Donnelly, Lucas Pohl Abstract: Progress in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. The relation between politics, ontology, and space remains one of the most contested concerns in human geography, often leading to a dismissal of ontology in favor of the politicization of space. In contrast, this article mobilizes post-foundationalism to propose a political ontology of space. After reviewing geographers’ engagements with politics, post-politics and the political, the article demonstrates how a post-foundational geography radically uproots geographic understandings of political and socio-spatial realities. Grounded upon parameters of negativity, contingency, and antagonism, the article equips geographers to grapple with the crumbling foundations of an uncertain present, and unknown futures. Citation: Progress in Human Geography PubDate: 2023-05-19T11:28:15Z DOI: 10.1177/03091325231156928
- Regional economic resilience: A scoping review
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Authors: Jesse Sutton, Alessia Arcidiacono, Gianpiero Torrisi, Robert Nutifafa Arku Abstract: Progress in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. Since the late 2000s, the concept of regional economic resilience has become the new buzzword in economic geography. Despite considerable attention, a common sentiment in the literature is that regional economic resilience is an underdeveloped and fuzzy concept. Therefore, this paper conducted a scoping review of 168 articles on the concept of regional economic resilience from 2000 to 2022 to assess its present conceptual state. The paper finds that the notion of regional economic resilience has become a well-developed concept and does not bear the markers of a fuzzy concept anymore. A conceptual framework is advanced. Citation: Progress in Human Geography PubDate: 2023-05-18T01:47:31Z DOI: 10.1177/03091325231174183
- Social geography III: Emotions and affective spatialities
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Authors: Elaine Lynn-Ee Ho Abstract: Progress in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. The emotions and the affective qualities of space (i.e. affective spatialities) have featured prominently in social geography research. This report discusses how recent studies have taken seriously earlier critiques of affect theory, foregrounding intersubjective relations, collectives and the socio-spatial hierarchies of power instead. The emotions can be mobilised to serve entrenched interests or challenge power hierarchies in social life, including through digitally mediated spaces. Whether in real or digital life, emotional labour and emotion work are constitutive of temporality, sociality and spatiality. The report concludes by reflecting on what ‘caring-with’ the emotions means for our institutions and the international academy. Citation: Progress in Human Geography PubDate: 2023-05-16T05:30:44Z DOI: 10.1177/03091325231174191
- Geography and ethics II: Justification and the ethics of anti-oppression
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Authors: Jeremy J Schmidt Abstract: Progress in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. This report on geography and ethics focusses on the justification of normative evaluations. Justifying why actions are right or wrong often relies on appeals to high-order principles, such as the common good. But this is not always the case, as this report shows by identifying an ethics of anti-oppression that relies instead on struggles against individual and social harms and the conditions that generate them. Through resistance, ethics of anti-oppression also shift the terms of normative justification across a range of considerations within geography and beyond it, from refugees and asylum seekers to food production and blockades against extractive infrastructure. Citation: Progress in Human Geography PubDate: 2023-05-12T05:46:16Z DOI: 10.1177/03091325231174965
- Doing the work: Locating labour in infrastructural geography
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Authors: Kathleen Stokes, Alejandro De Coss-Corzo Abstract: Progress in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. As the social sciences undergo an infrastructural turn, geographers have taken steps to broaden, disrupt, and reconceptualise understandings of infrastructure and its relationship to social, political, economic, and ecological processes. We contribute to this discussion by highlighting the emergence of a comparatively understudied yet crucial aspect within infrastructural geographies – infrastructural labour. We identify key theoretical anchors that guide contemporary analyses of infrastructural labour, which we query by focusing on five key areas of scholarly discussion. Building on these, we offer a working definition of infrastructural labour to help guide further engagement and point to questions meriting additional investigation. Citation: Progress in Human Geography PubDate: 2023-05-12T02:35:40Z DOI: 10.1177/03091325231174186
- Queering as (un)knowing: Ambiguities of sociality and infrastructure
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Authors: Gediminas Lesutis Abstract: Progress in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. Putting queer theory in dialogue with critical infrastructure studies, this article proposes a theoretically, methodologically and empirically expansive reading of queer epistemologies. Reiterating the expansiveness of queer theory as an intellectual and political endeavour, the article argues that queering might also be perceived, and engaged with, as a theoretical and practical concern with non-linear, ambiguous, never-fully-knowable textures of subjectivity, self and social life, such as those implicated in mega-infrastructure development. Exploring this, the article develops the case for approaching queering as (un)knowing – an epistemology to foreground ambiguities of the social – intended to build expansive forms of solidarity. Citation: Progress in Human Geography PubDate: 2023-05-10T12:01:05Z DOI: 10.1177/03091325231173564
- Living digitally like a migrant: Everyday smartphone practices and the
(Re)mediation of hostile state-affects-
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Authors: Hannah Morgan Abstract: Progress in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. Over the last decade, geographical research has documented how digital technologies are changing experiences of (im)mobility into and within Europe. For irregular migrants in the European context, the smartphone has become a vital digital tool for mediating everyday experiences of hostile environments that have become characteristic of mobility landscapes. Building upon novel work in Social Media and Media studies, which explores the entanglements between smartphones and mobility, this paper aims to bring forward a geographical research agenda that centres everyday smartphone practices as a central object of inquiry in work on irregular migration and broader work around everyday life: specifically in the context in which hostility has become one of the main affective experiences of mobility governance throughout Western Europe. Introducing the concept of living (digitally) like a migrant, this paper highlights how we can no longer conceptualise irregular ‘migrant life’ without consideration of the way in which life, in a biopolitical sense, is productive of and enmeshed within, everyday digital practices. This paper thus offers an agenda for geographic research concerned with forms of the everyday: demanding we can no longer conceptualise the everyday, nor experiences of irregular migration, without serious consideration of the digital – specifically of everyday smartphone practices. We must, therefore, take seriously the forms of digital agency or experience that (re)mediate encounters with state-administered hostility, whilst remaining open to the affirmative forms of living or flourishing that may emerge through everyday engagement with the digital. Citation: Progress in Human Geography PubDate: 2023-05-10T06:21:20Z DOI: 10.1177/03091325231174311
- Financial geography I: The state-finance nexus
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Authors: Karen PY Lai Abstract: Progress in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. In the first of my reports on financial geography, I focus on a growing body of work that engages with the state as a vital and strategic actor in financial markets and in the global economy. After the 2008 global financial crisis, austerity measures and impacts on public finance have reshaped local-central government relationships with increasing use of financial instruments and market solutions. The growing prominence of sovereign wealth funds, shifting roles of national development banks and central banks, and impacts of currency internationalisation are raising questions about new forms of financial statecraft and opportunities for changing configurations of global hegemony. Taken together, a renewed engagement with a political economic lens and focus on state-finance relations illuminate the changing positionalities of economies and financial actors in the spatial organisation of international financial and monetary relations. Citation: Progress in Human Geography PubDate: 2023-04-20T03:08:40Z DOI: 10.1177/03091325231170756
- Cultural geographies II: In the critical zone' – Environments,
landscapes and life-
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Authors: Harriet Hawkins Abstract: Progress in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. In this second review of recent cultural geography research, I use the concept of The Critical Zone (originally from US Geoscience) as a lens. The environment is far too voluminous a field of cultural geographic research to be surveyed here, but it is too significant a body of research to be overlooked. Here, three key dimensions of Critical Zone studies offer a means to navigate this work: (i) multi-scalar (temporal and spatial) considerations of matter, energy and forces; (ii) biotic and abiotic relations; and, (iii) a commitment to producing knowledge beyond disciplinary silos. Discussion explores each of these in turn before reflecting, to close, on what cultural geographical thought and practice might add to considerations of the criticality of the critical zone. Citation: Progress in Human Geography PubDate: 2023-04-14T04:08:43Z DOI: 10.1177/03091325231152945
- Geographies of migration III: The digital migrant
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Authors: Francis L Collins Abstract: Progress in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. There is a growing focus on digitisation, datafication, automation and artificial intelligence in migration studies. This report reviews accounts of these technological innovations with a particular emphasis on their impacts for how migration is conceived and governed. The discussion overviews research that identifies and describes forms of digitisation and datafication, examines the role of automation and artificial intelligence in migration management, and discusses the links between and ethics of digitally mediated migrations and digital solidarities with mobile people. In closing, the report raises questions about the intellectual and political agenda of a purported sub-field of digital migration studies. Citation: Progress in Human Geography PubDate: 2023-04-12T10:32:24Z DOI: 10.1177/03091325231157709
- Political ecology III: Praxis - doing, undoing, and being in radical
political ecology research-
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Authors: Farhana Sultana Abstract: Progress in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. Praxis is central to political ecology scholarship but replete with tensions and ambiguities. This report explores advancements in praxis across epistemological, methodological, pedagogical, and political dimensions. Praxis in political ecology has benefited from detailed insights drawn from Indigenous, decolonial, postcolonial, feminist, anti-racist, and multi-species scholarship, among others. Attention to praxis allows for enriched research that has the potential to be useful and transformational for marginalized communities and better inform policy-making. Political ecology can remain relevant and meaningful when praxis is foregrounded and reflexively interrogated and performed for both intellectual advancements and radical socio-ecological justice. Citation: Progress in Human Geography PubDate: 2023-04-11T04:04:29Z DOI: 10.1177/03091325231157360
- Unpacking pervasive heteronormativity in sub-Saharan Africa: Opportunities
to embrace multiplicity of sexualities-
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Authors: Sthembiso Pollen Mkhize, Anele Mthembu Abstract: Progress in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. This article provides a critical review of research on geographies of sexuality and acknowledges how sexual identities are constructed through an intersection of multiple dimensions in the sub-Saharan Africa region. Although the region is experiencing a gradually changing landscape regarding the rights of queer people, ongoing discriminatory practices attached to heteronormativity suppress the expression of non-normative sexual identities. Upon exploration of queer theory and a review of literature on the challenges facing queer people, this article argues for reimagining an African society that embraces a multiplicity of sexualities. It also advocates for tackling hetero- and binary-defined norms by presenting counterarguments and scenarios that demonstrate the significance of deconstructive and non-binary approaches towards sexuality and space in sub-Saharan Africa. Citation: Progress in Human Geography PubDate: 2023-03-31T02:49:46Z DOI: 10.1177/03091325231166402
- Geographies of science and technology III: Careful entanglements,
responsible futures-
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Authors: Martin Mahony Abstract: Progress in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. In my previous progress reports I suggested that geographers might attend more to the leaky boundaries of ‘science’ and ‘technology’ and to their imbrications in the mundane spaces of the everyday, and that stances of analytical critique might be joined by practices of engaged imagination of alternative lifeworlds in the shadow of the Anthropocene. In this final report, I zoom in on care as a ‘concept, emotion, practice, politics, moral exhortation’. This has recently provided a focus for much innovative and impactful research in critical geography. I explore the analytical and political potential of centring care within geographical engagements with science and technology, and suggest that nuanced engagements with the concept contain valuable insights into the everyday geographies of technoscience, and into how practices of care are central to – but not exhaustive of – political strategies for building alternative lifeworlds in uncertain times. Citation: Progress in Human Geography PubDate: 2023-03-30T07:33:42Z DOI: 10.1177/03091325231165965
- Development geography II: Community-based adaptation and locally-led
adaptation-
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Authors: Katharine Vincent Abstract: Progress in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. In this report, I review the concept of community-based adaptation, showing how it morphed from a participatory development-informed approach centred around agency and empowerment to one which is often externally driven, focusing on a spatial, rather than social, definition of community. I then highlight how locally-led adaptation is attempting to re-focus attention on agency, whilst also managing a conceptualisation of ‘local’ that is not limited to the community-level. Since the concept of locally-led adaptation is emerging, it is critical to learn from participatory development and the critiques of community-based adaptation to ensure that it is not also diluted from its intentions. Citation: Progress in Human Geography PubDate: 2023-03-30T07:29:52Z DOI: 10.1177/03091325231166076
- Health geographies II: Resilience, health and place
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Authors: Janine Wiles Abstract: Progress in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. Resilience means doing well in the context of difficulty; it is both process and outcome, individual and collective, and it relates to inequities because it is about accessing resources. Resilience helps understand and improve health and wellbeing because it incorporates adversity and challenges. In this report, I argue resilience is also inherently geographical, and operates at interconnected scales. I highlight health geographers are well-placed to help understand and enhance resilience through critically-aware and contextualized approaches. Moreover, resilience offers a way to connect and further develop health geographical scholarship on both wellbeing and addressing health and other inequalities. Citation: Progress in Human Geography PubDate: 2023-03-28T01:04:49Z DOI: 10.1177/03091325231166398
- History and philosophy of geography I: Heterodox progress, critical
scepticism and intellectual voluminosity-
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Authors: Paloma Puente-Lozano Abstract: Progress in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. Amongst recent contributions to the field, this report detects ongoing and emergent topics within disciplinary histories and reflects on the evolving meaning of the ‘international’ character of geography as it has been conceived and practised over the years. A set of books on the long-standing efforts to internationalise the geographical community, and on the intellectual histories of critical geographies, constitute an outstanding resource for historical reflection and self-awareness. The report argues for further critical interrogation of how recent calls to pluralise, internationalise and radicalise the history and philosophy of geography interact with prevailing historiographical stances, sets of theories and philosophical moods. Citation: Progress in Human Geography PubDate: 2023-03-27T02:32:50Z DOI: 10.1177/03091325231164620
- Geographies of gender and sexuality I: Engaging the shift towards Southern
urbanism-
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Authors: Andrew Tucker Abstract: Progress in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. Geographers working on sexuality - and specifically of relevance to this report, scholars working on non-heternormative sexualities - have come to understand the need to engage with the urban South, culminating in acknowledgement of the benefits of engagements with Southern urbanism literature. I summarise how very recent sexualities scholarship is starting to signal direct connections with some of the broader interests of Southern urbanism. Such scholarship, I argue, has more in common with some of the empirical and theoretical interests of Southern urbanism than existing interests of the geographies of sexualities literature. I also consider how such emergent scholarship can potentially enrich interests of the geographies of sexualities literature in new and exciting ways. Citation: Progress in Human Geography PubDate: 2023-03-27T02:24:18Z DOI: 10.1177/03091325231165779
- 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
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