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- Uncanny frontiers: Amazon in outer space
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Authors: Mia M. Bennett Pages: 181 - 185 Abstract: Dialogues in Human Geography, Volume 12, Issue 2, Page 181-185, July 2022.
Citation: Dialogues in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-08-02T06:35:03Z DOI: 10.1177/20438206221106827 Issue No: Vol. 12, No. 2 (2022)
- Rooting debt
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Authors: Chiara De Cesari Pages: 328 - 331 Abstract: Dialogues in Human Geography, Volume 12, Issue 2, Page 328-331, July 2022.
Citation: Dialogues in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-08-02T06:36:01Z DOI: 10.1177/20438206221075703a Issue No: Vol. 12, No. 2 (2022)
- Spacing sovereign debt
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Authors: Kathryn Furlong Pages: 331 - 334 Abstract: Dialogues in Human Geography, Volume 12, Issue 2, Page 331-334, July 2022.
Citation: Dialogues in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-08-02T06:36:01Z DOI: 10.1177/20438206221075703b Issue No: Vol. 12, No. 2 (2022)
- Collectively organized endurance through space and time to transform debt
relations-
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Authors: Melissa García-Lamarca Pages: 334 - 336 Abstract: Dialogues in Human Geography, Volume 12, Issue 2, Page 334-336, July 2022.
Citation: Dialogues in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-08-02T06:36:01Z DOI: 10.1177/20438206221075703c Issue No: Vol. 12, No. 2 (2022)
- ‘Sinews’ in Sinews
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Authors: Sharad Chari Pages: 344 - 347 Abstract: Dialogues in Human Geography, Volume 12, Issue 2, Page 344-347, July 2022.
Citation: Dialogues in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-08-02T06:41:21Z DOI: 10.1177/20438206221074461a Issue No: Vol. 12, No. 2 (2022)
- Arabia adrift
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Authors: Fahad Bishara Pages: 347 - 350 Abstract: Dialogues in Human Geography, Volume 12, Issue 2, Page 347-350, July 2022.
Citation: Dialogues in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-08-02T06:41:59Z DOI: 10.1177/20438206221074461b Issue No: Vol. 12, No. 2 (2022)
- Logistical futures and the Arabian Peninsula
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Authors: Rafeef Ziadah Pages: 350 - 353 Abstract: Dialogues in Human Geography, Volume 12, Issue 2, Page 350-353, July 2022.
Citation: Dialogues in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-08-02T06:41:58Z DOI: 10.1177/20438206221074461c Issue No: Vol. 12, No. 2 (2022)
- Contemporary Brazil is Unequal and Divided and Milton Santos’
geographical thought is still relevant-
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Authors: Rafael Sanzio Araújo dos Anjos Abstract: Dialogues in Human Geography, Ahead of Print.
Citation: Dialogues in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-08-08T06:53:53Z DOI: 10.1177/20438206221082345
- Thinking through the anthropocene
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Authors: Simon Dalby Abstract: Dialogues in Human Geography, Ahead of Print.
Citation: Dialogues in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-07-28T05:52:40Z DOI: 10.1177/20438206221088376
- Repair and care: Locating the work of climate crisis
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Authors: Chantel Carr Abstract: Dialogues in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. Climate crisis has arrived, and as predicted it has brought with it high levels of uncertainty. More frequent and extreme weather events expose infrastructural shortcomings, signalling a future characterised by profound disruption. It is time to turn our attention to the tangible work of climate crisis. Work is fundamental to embodied, material and spatial understandings of the world, yet it remains largely overlooked in social and cultural geography. What does the work of climate crisis look like, and who will do it' In this paper I argue that climate crisis demands more attention be paid to the deeply interwoven labours of repair and care. Reflecting on fieldwork across a range of carbon-intensive sectors and places, I locate the work of repair and care within the context of adaptation and mitigation action. Capacities to repair and care for our world and each other are profoundly important for adapting to the conditions of planetary breakdown. But the work of repair and care is also crucial for transitioning to low-carbon futures. A focus on this vital work suggests a deeply pragmatic and inclusive environmental politics and scholarship, bringing into dialogue rich veins of work within and beyond geography, on labour and everyday life. Citation: Dialogues in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-06-30T06:16:05Z DOI: 10.1177/20438206221088381
- Debt, colony, morality, and other odious cocktails: A review of Zambrana's
Colonial Debts-
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Authors: Jose Caraballo-Cueto Abstract: Dialogues in Human Geography, Ahead of Print.
Citation: Dialogues in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-06-23T05:49:14Z DOI: 10.1177/20438206221102934
- Dialogues for well being in an ecological emergency: Wellbeing-led
governance frameworks and transformative Indigenous tools-
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Authors: Amanda Yates, Kelly Dombroski, Rita Dionisio Abstract: Dialogues in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. At a time of ecological emergency there are pressing reasons to develop more responsive wellbeing-led governance frameworks that engage with both human and more-than-human wellbeing. Attempts to incorporate wellbeing indices into wellbeing-led governance include the Sustainable Development Goals of the United Nations, the Gross National Happiness index of Bhutan, and a variety of emerging wellbeing-led governance frameworks in the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. Some of these frameworks have begun to include more-than-human wellbeing indices in their toolkit, but like many geographers and Indigenous scholars, we are wary of the dangers of universalising and abstractionist ‘indexology’ ( Ratuva, 2016). In this paper, we review wellbeing-led governance frameworks with a view to more-than-human wellbeing and Indigenous knowledge. We outline an emerging pluriversal and prefigurative project where Indigenous scholars engage with partners in co-creation methods in place, incorporating Indigenous-Māori cultural perspectives into more situated and holistic wellbeing tools. We argue that while critique is important, so too is engaging in Indigenous-led research interventions fortransformative metrics and tools, particularlyin these times of socio-ecological crisis. As we ‘stay with’ this trouble ( Haraway, 2018), we hope to contribute to a culturally specific place-based set of wellbeing indices and tools to inform wellbeing-led governance for more-than-human wellbeing. Citation: Dialogues in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-06-21T04:09:37Z DOI: 10.1177/20438206221102957
- What is ‘affective infrastructure’'
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Authors: Kai Bosworth Abstract: Dialogues in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. Recent work in analyses of infrastructure and affect theory has mobilized a concept of ‘affective infrastructure’ in two related but somewhat different ways. On the one hand, some scholars use the concept to draw our attention to the emotions produced by concrete infrastructure systems. On the other hand, scholars have sought to locate how affect might condition forms of political organization. The concept risks analytic confusion: is ‘infrastructure’ metaphor, analogy, or material-technical system' Is the concept historically, spatially, or empirically situated, or does it have potential generic parameters as well' This article seeks to reconstruct two ‘sides’ of affective infrastructure while drawing out its significance for infrastructural politics. Doing so also involves understanding the problem space from which it emerged: affective geographies and 20th century Marxism. This article's process of reading results in a cluster of attendant concepts that give ‘affective infrastructure’ further specificity: mediation, endurance, determination, technical alienation, temporalities of repair, and political organization. The article's wager is that the concept gains analytic utility when it is used to clarify the ratio between historically situated technical alienation as a power relation of enduring colonial capitalism and the project of organizing anti-colonial social relations that might work to transform the capitalist mode of production. Citation: Dialogues in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-06-10T06:37:13Z DOI: 10.1177/20438206221107025
- Arabia adrift
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Authors: Fahad Bishara Abstract: Dialogues in Human Geography, Ahead of Print.
Citation: Dialogues in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-06-10T06:36:42Z DOI: 10.1177/20438206221074459
- “Legalizing War/Militarizing Law”
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Authors: Lisa Stampnitzky Abstract: Dialogues in Human Geography, Ahead of Print.
Citation: Dialogues in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-05-30T06:14:57Z DOI: 10.1177/20438206221102946
- Legal Geography on the Edge
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Authors: Nicholas Blomley Abstract: Dialogues in Human Geography, Ahead of Print.
Citation: Dialogues in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-05-30T06:14:23Z DOI: 10.1177/20438206221102938
- Encounters with For a New Geography
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Authors: Mariana Lamego Abstract: Dialogues in Human Geography, Ahead of Print.
Citation: Dialogues in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-05-27T05:32:12Z DOI: 10.1177/20438206221102955
- Diversifying the compact city: A renewed agenda for geographical research
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Authors: Håvard Haarstad, Kristin Kjærås, Per Gunnar Røe, Kristian Tveiten Abstract: Dialogues in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. The compact city has become part of the policy orthodoxy in dealing with climate change and other sustainability challenges, and scholars from a diverse set of disciplines have informed this policy through empirical research. In this paper, we argue that attuning research in this field to key perspectives and concepts in human geography and critical urban studies can help ‘diversify’ understandings of compact urbanism in ways that advance social and ecological justice. We show that the compact city has been conceived primarily through the lens of territorially bounded physical urban form, and thereby many of its social, political, and ecological implications are overlooked. Based on this critique, we propose a renewed agenda for compact urbanism that rearticulates it as a strategy for sustainable transformation by bridging socio-material and relational approaches and engaging the human geographical toolbox. Three entry points for this agenda are highlighted: (1) commoning the compact city; (2) metabolism of compact cities; and (3) antagonism in the compact city. Citation: Dialogues in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-05-25T06:22:48Z DOI: 10.1177/20438206221102949
- Glitch Epistemology and the Question of (Artificial) Intelligence:
Perceptions, Encounters, Subjectivities-
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Authors: Casey R Lynch Abstract: Dialogues in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. Reflecting on Leszczynski and Elwood's theorization of glitch epistemology, this commentary argues for epistemological approaches to the question of (artificial) intelligence in geography focused around perceptions, encounters, and subjectivities. Such an approach denies technologies marketed as AI or otherwise as “smart” the ontological status ascribed to them, instead investigating how particular technologies may be perceived as intelligent within the context of contingent and situated encounters with always differentiated and differentiating subjects. Glitch and related epistemological approaches reorient attention to the uneven production of desire and expectations for particular kinds of technologies and create opportunities to radically reimagine our relationships to them. Citation: Dialogues in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-05-24T05:18:55Z DOI: 10.1177/20438206221102952
- From glitch epistemologies to glitch politics
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Authors: Luis F Alvarez Leon Abstract: Dialogues in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. Given the influential (but incomplete) characterization of cities as computers, new ways of disrupting ruling urban computational logics become crucial to reimagine cities and urban life as they are constituted in the 21st century. Addressing this need, Agnieszka Leszczynski and Sarah Elwood center the notion of the glitch to develop glitch epistemologies. These are ways of knowing digitally mediated environments against the ruling urban computational logics. Building on the glitch's capability to both unveil and disrupt such dominant logics, the authors advance glitch epistemologies as a means of political and material urban change. This commentary examines the ramifications and potential of glitch epistemologies for reimagining cities. In view of such potential, the commentary argues for the urgent task of drawing their substantive connections to urban politics not only to realize the possibilities opened by glitch epistemologies to make new urban futures, but also to decide which futures to make. Citation: Dialogues in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-05-24T05:18:35Z DOI: 10.1177/20438206221102951
- On Colonial Exceptionality, Neoliberal Coloniality, and Legal
Interruptions-
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Authors: Jose Atiles Abstract: Dialogues in Human Geography, Ahead of Print.
Citation: Dialogues in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-05-23T05:13:33Z DOI: 10.1177/20438206221102936
- Planetary Vegetal Thought
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Abstract: Dialogues in Human Geography, Ahead of Print.
Citation: Dialogues in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-05-23T05:13:14Z DOI: 10.1177/20438206221102931
- Logistical futures and the Arabian Peninsula
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Authors: Rafeef Ziadah Abstract: Dialogues in Human Geography, Ahead of Print.
Citation: Dialogues in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-05-02T03:55:15Z DOI: 10.1177/20438206221074475
- ‘Sinews’ in Sinews
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Authors: Sharad Chari Abstract: Dialogues in Human Geography, Ahead of Print.
Citation: Dialogues in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-04-26T06:53:29Z DOI: 10.1177/20438206221074460
- Finding ‘new’ geographies in dedications, acknowledgements,
and citations-
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Authors: Hannah Neate Abstract: Dialogues in Human Geography, Ahead of Print.
Citation: Dialogues in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-04-15T05:43:48Z DOI: 10.1177/20438206221088386
- Henri Lefebvre's conception of nature-society in the revolutionary project
of autogestion-
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Authors: Brian M. Napoletano, Pedro S. Urquijo, Brett Clark, John Bellamy Foster Abstract: Dialogues in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. Henri Lefebvre's intricate material-dialectical approach to the nature-society problematic, taken together with his advocacy of a praxis oriented to total transformation from the ground up through autogestion, offers a unified, critical, and dialectical approach to political ecology. Unfortunately, his work in these areas has too often been interpreted as divided and fragmentary, splitting his radical analysis of the production of space-time from his critical praxis related to autogestion. We offer a corrective to this by elaborating briefly on his use of Marx's material-dialectical approach, outlining how Lefebvre brings this method to bear on the nature-society problematic, and how his theorization of autogestion points to a radical praxis aimed at overcoming the social-ecological contradictions of capital. His engagement with Marx's theory of metabolic rift, and his advocacy of a radical project of autogestion as part of the critique of everyday life, serve to place the underlying issue of alienation in spatial terms, offering geography a transformative perspective that avoids positing closed systems and attempting to exhaust the various meanings assigned to nature. In this, Lefebvre demonstrates how the nature-society problematic overflows issues of ontological framing and language, calling for a unity of radical theory and practice to overcome the separations. Citation: Dialogues in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-03-30T06:10:53Z DOI: 10.1177/20438206221088385
- Glitch epistemologies for computational cities
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Authors: Agnieszka Leszczynski, Sarah Elwood Abstract: Dialogues in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. This intervention advances glitches as epistemological vectors for apprehending and engaging the significance of digitally-mediated spatialities that appear nonperformative against normative scripts of urban computational paradigms. Drawing on two strands of contemporary thinking about glitches as systemic design features of digital systems and as generative fissures within them, we mobilize a queer orientation that stays with the generative tensions of urban spatialities that present as idiosyncratic and as interrupting. We mobilize this epistemological approach through illustrative U.S. based examples of seemingly abandoned shared e-bikes, performatively ‘ugly’ homes, and wilful property dilapidation wrought through the registers of desire and aesthetics. In so doing, we show how glitch empistemologies render visible how the technocapitalist manufacturing of normative spatial desires for particular kinds of urban sociospatialities and aesthetic visual signatures are both secured and interrupted on digitally-mediated and -mediatized terrains. Glitch epistemologies establish the significance of small-scale disorientations in digital urban mediations, engaging these nonperformativities and non-computes as unexceptional openings onto everyday possibilities for politics in computational cities. Citation: Dialogues in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-03-15T08:30:37Z DOI: 10.1177/20438206221075714
- Review commentary: Planetary Social Thought: The Anthropocene Challenge to
the Social Sciences-
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Authors: Nigel Clark, Bronislaw Szerszynski Abstract: Dialogues in Human Geography, Ahead of Print.
Citation: Dialogues in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-02-24T03:35:48Z DOI: 10.1177/20438206221077151
- Dignity in Urban Geography: Starting a Conversation
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Authors: Katrin Grossmann, Elena Trubina Abstract: Dialogues in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. Studies in critical urban geography actively deal with injustices and humiliation, employing concepts like equity, justice, sustainability and the like, but strikingly, dignity is not among such current normative concepts. Analytic perspectives and definitions of dignity are widely discussed by philosophy, legal studies, and race and indigenous studies, but a dialogue of this literature with urban geographical work is still pending. This article initiates a conceptual conversation between these traditions. It reviews how dignity occurs in urban geographical work, then presents contemporary literature on the concept of dignity, and suggests a heuristic approach that can then serve geographical analyses. We outline the potential of scholarly engagement with the concept of dignity and its merits in considering two classic topics of urban geographical scholarship from a dignity-perspective: the employment of dignifying rhetoric for promotion of mega-events, and large housing estates as a stigmatized type of neighbourhood. We highlight affectual and relational perspectives of dignity, including the interpersonal and societal emergence of dignifying or humiliating practices, and the contingency of the concept of dignity across time and context. For critical urban studies and human geography, we thus establish dignity as the moral status of a person, of a collective, and of a place within a given context rather than a universal moral status. Citation: Dialogues in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-02-23T01:40:45Z DOI: 10.1177/20438206221075697
- Rooting Debt
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Authors: Chiara De Cesari Abstract: Dialogues in Human Geography, Ahead of Print.
Citation: Dialogues in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-02-15T05:37:40Z DOI: 10.1177/20438206221075712
- Geologizing the political ecology of intensive agriculture in the
Anthropocene-
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Authors: László Cseke Abstract: Dialogues in Human Geography, Ahead of Print.
Citation: Dialogues in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-01-24T12:31:43Z DOI: 10.1177/20438206221075717
- Collectively organized endurance through space and time to transform debt
relations-
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Authors: Melissa García-Lamarca Abstract: Dialogues in Human Geography, Ahead of Print.
Citation: Dialogues in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-01-24T12:30:43Z DOI: 10.1177/20438206221075705
- Spacing sovereign debt
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Authors: Kathryn Furlong Abstract: Dialogues in Human Geography, Ahead of Print.
Citation: Dialogues in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-01-24T12:29:24Z DOI: 10.1177/20438206221075689
- Geographies of ruralization
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Authors: Jamie Gillen, Tim Bunnell, Jonathan Rigg First page: 186 Abstract: Dialogues in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. This paper proposes ‘ruralization’ as a concept that human geographers are well placed to develop across the rural-urban geography divide and in dialogue with scholars in cognate fields. We understand ruralization as the processual, more-than-residual, and geographically-variegated socio-spatial dynamics of contemporary human engagements with rural land, livelihoods, and lifestyles. Our approach comprises three prominent dynamics of ruralization experienced through residents’ entanglements with rural and urban Southeast Asia: in situ ruralization, extended ruralization, and rural returns. We argue in favor of a rural-urban relationality rather than urban-centered socio-spatial transformation and urge geographers to take seriously the lives and geographies of people in the Global South whose perspectives on urbanization are entangled with ongoing rural dynamics. Our contribution is intended as a corrective to notions of the urbanization of everywhere in a zero-sum relationship with a residual rural, and as a way of demonstrating the importance of human geographical experiences to wider debates, concerns, and conversations. Citation: Dialogues in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-02-24T03:35:21Z DOI: 10.1177/20438206221075818
- Geographies of ruralisation or ruralities' The death and life of a
category-
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Authors: Laurie Parsons, Sabina Lawreniuk First page: 204 Abstract: Dialogues in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. The rural sphere has suffered from underrepresentation in recent years in part due to growing interest in the urban. A perhaps equally important aspect of the decline has been the troubling of the spatial boundaries that define the rural and urban among scholars of mobilities and translocality. Exploring the decline of the rural in relation to these literary works, this commentary interrogates current geographical thinking on spatial categories, positing the concept of ruralities as a means to reinvigorate rural space on its own terms. Citation: Dialogues in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-06-03T07:50:59Z DOI: 10.1177/20438206221102937
- In what sense ruralization'
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Authors: Swarnabh Ghosh First page: 208 Abstract: Dialogues in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. This commentary offers an analysis of Gillen et al.’s (2022) ‘Geographies of ruralization’. Through a reading of the authors’ conceptualization of ‘in-situ’ and ‘extended’ ruralization, I raise two sets of questions. The first pertains to the relationship between ruralization – which the authors conceptualize primarily in terms of rural social reproduction – and transformations in agricultural production and agrarian political economy under contemporary capitalism. The second invites the authors to further elaborate on the historical specificity of the concept of ruralization, the politico-epistemological standpoint of their conceptualization, and the theoretical framework within which the concept is embedded. Citation: Dialogues in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-07-06T06:45:14Z DOI: 10.1177/20438206221102947
- Rural revitalization in China: Towards inclusive geographies of
ruralization-
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Authors: Ningning Chen, Lily Kong First page: 213 Abstract: Dialogues in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. This commentary welcomes Gillen et al.'s geographies of ruralization as an alternative to the urban-centered analysis of socio-spatial transformation in post-reform China. We offer three perspectives to further develop such alternative articulation by drawing on China's most recent geographical experiences of rural revitalization. The first is the “top-down” process of rural revitalization launched by different levels of Chinese state agents and how this is divergent from local needs or embedded in bottom-up engagement. The second is the temporal dimension of ruralization highlighting how uses of the past are implicated in and legitimize the state agenda of rural revitalization. The third directs attention to the entanglement of nature and culture—that is, how a harmonious human–nature approach to rural revitalization is produced in discourse and practice. We argue that these alternative insights offer possibilities of developing more inclusive geographies of ruralization in the Global South and beyond. Citation: Dialogues in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-05-24T05:18:15Z DOI: 10.1177/20438206221102933
- The problem of the urban-rural binary in geography and political ecology
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Authors: Ian G Baird First page: 218 Abstract: Dialogues in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. Geographers have been challenging problematic spatial concepts for decades. Gillen et al. usefully add to this work by disrupting the urban–rural binary in human geography, suggesting that we take people in the Global South more seriously, especially those ‘whose perspectives on urbanization are entangled with ongoing rural dynamics’. They advocate for advancing the concept of relational ruralization. In this commentary, I express my general support for Gillen et al.'s efforts to expose the limitations associated with the urban–rural divide. However, I go somewhat beyond their work to suggest that human geographers should consciously reduce the primacy of the urban–rural binary when conceptualizing space, especially when looking at activities that transcend the urban–rural. There are more productive ways to consider connections. Citation: Dialogues in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-05-23T05:13:50Z DOI: 10.1177/20438206221102953
- Beyond the rural–urban aporia
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Authors: Arnisson Andre Ortega First page: 223 Abstract: Dialogues in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. In a more interconnected world, how do we come to grip with interrelationships and connectivities that cut across long-held spatial categories, such as the rural and the urban' Amidst the uneven emphasis on urban theorization, there must be ways of theorizing the relationalities from vantage points beyond the “urban.” Gillen et al.'s article is a well-written piece that provides an important contribution to efforts that aim to theorize beyond the rural–urban divide. For this commentary, I discuss its theoretical gains and potential for analysis. However, I also express my hesitation towards the use of an umbrella term (“ruralization”) that is anchored upon a problematic rural–urban binary. Perhaps a way to move forward is to take on a postcolonial suggestion that pushes for what Leitner and Sheppard call a theoretical “ecosystem of possibilities,” which encourages more theoretical conceptualizations from diverse voices, while drawing from various contextual realities and multiple “constitutive outsides” beyond the “rural” or “urban.” Citation: Dialogues in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-05-26T03:39:17Z DOI: 10.1177/20438206221102948
- Beyond binaries' Spatial possibilities in Southeast Asia
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Authors: Jamie Gillen, Tim Bunnell, Jonathan Rigg First page: 227 Abstract: Dialogues in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. The thoughtful and incisive responses to our article push us to address the central tension in our conceptualization of ruralization, which concerns how it both unsettles and reproduces binary thinking. On the one hand, we draw upon work in Southeast Asia that confounds binary mappings of urban versus rural space and associated divisions of labour in ways that redress the intellectual preponderance of the urban and urbanization. On the other hand, by proposing ruralization to do this, we arguably entrench a new variant of the binary (ruralization vs. urbanization). To address this tension, our response to the commentaries focuses on the ways in which they engage with the rural–urban binary. The conclusion briefly comments on the tricky pathways to theorize in step with the voices, practices, and imaginations of people in the Global South. Citation: Dialogues in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-07-01T06:33:39Z DOI: 10.1177/20438206221108773
- The distribution of non-sense and the cultivation of the
less-than-sensible-
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Authors: Klaus Dodds First page: 252 Abstract: Dialogues in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. Ben Gerlofs’ article on the transgressive qualities of humour reminds us that it humour is a deadly serious business. Getting it wrong can be costly, even fatal. Comedians and humourists have along with journalists and academics been targeted by regimes and individuals who don’t care for interventions that expose either the nonsensical nature of regimes and/or assault cultural and religious norms. In this short intervention, some comments are offered about the popular geopolitics of humour and laughter alongside a discussion about future directions. Citation: Dialogues in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-02-02T05:31:09Z DOI: 10.1177/20438206221075713
- The distorted mirrors of humor
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Authors: Leticia Neria First page: 256 Abstract: Dialogues in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. Research on humor has generated many different perspectives. Among them is a discussion of how humor acts to cause discomfort. Humor as a means of expression also appears in specific spaces and moments. The study of these spaces and moments, what is expressed through humor, the humorous mechanisms chosen by a collectivity, and who this collectivity may be, are broad-spectrum phenomenological issues that deserve further inquiry. Citation: Dialogues in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-03-24T04:26:51Z DOI: 10.1177/20438206221088387
- Humour, for whom'
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Authors: Philip Kirby First page: 260 Abstract: Dialogues in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. This commentary reflects on the gender politics of the case studies examined in Ben Gerlofs’ excellent article, ‘Deadly Serious: Humor and the Politics of Aesthetic Transgression’. In addition, it considers the innate difficulties of studying an entity (humour) that diverse disciplines have found impossible to completely define. Citation: Dialogues in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-02-02T05:30:31Z DOI: 10.1177/20438206221075696
- Does humor need to be serious to be taken seriously': Commentary on
Ben A. Gerlofs; #x201C;Deadly Serious: Humor and the politics of aesthetic transgression”-
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Authors: Jennifer L. Fluri First page: 264 Abstract: Dialogues in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. This commentary engages with Gerlofs’ (2022) article on the humor and politics of aesthetic transgression. It is intended not as a critique of Gerlofs’ work but rather to generate additional discussion about his approach to examining humor and aesthetics, and with the hope of additional discussion and debate about how to study humor in human geography. I also ask, does humor need to be serious to be taken seriously as a category of analysis' Can we view humor's dynamism and incongruities as an opportunity to push against and beyond binaries and categorizations' Does humor in its enactment challenge the very idea of categorization or congruent analyses and shouldn’t that be something we celebrate rather than attempt to control and contain' Citation: Dialogues in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-04-18T02:41:45Z DOI: 10.1177/20438206221088384
- Taking humor seriously
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Authors: Verónica Crossa First page: 268 Abstract: Dialogues in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. Understanding humor on its own terms is not an easy task. This commentary responds to Ben Gerlofs's (2022) article, “Deadly serious: Humor and the politics of aesthetic transgression,” by highlighting some of the important contributions made in his article and drawing out the empirical richness of his discussion. In doing so, I hope to discuss some of the ways in which humor has been analyzed in the geographical literature as well as potential gaps that remain to be addressed. Citation: Dialogues in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-03-18T07:32:15Z DOI: 10.1177/20438206221088388
- Ammunition, not a ride: Humor, human geography, and the fragile
absurdities of power-
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Authors: Ben A Gerlofs First page: 272 Abstract: Dialogues in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. In this author's response, I close this forum on the spatiality and political utility of humor by responding to a superb set of critical commentaries – for which I am extremely grateful – in three parts, with the sobering contemporary reality of the comedian-president facing down a brutal invasion serving as a critical, conjunctural point of entry. First, humor can be, as the commentators highlight in different ways, extremely serious business. Second, context matters. And, third, there's a great deal more work to be done. In each of these areas, I respond to some of the many significant issues and questions raised by the commentators that remain for the study of humor, both within geography and as a matter of interdisciplinary inquiry. Citation: Dialogues in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-05-26T03:39:45Z DOI: 10.1177/20438206221102954
- Montage space: Borderlands, micronations, terra nullius, and the
imperialism of the geographical imagination-
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Authors: James Riding, Carl T Dahlman First page: 278 Abstract: Dialogues in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. This article extends work in human geography on thinking space relationally and topological space, arguing for a relational conceptualization of space that employs montage in small seemingly confined spaces to tell big relational stories. Empirically it explores a micronation projected onto watery western Balkan no-man's [sic] land and reveals an exploitation of Balkan history and geography that underpins perceptions of the southeast European peninsula. Liberland is a new right-libertarian unofficial country that claims a disputed tract of middle Danube riverbank in a contested riverine borderscape between Croatia and Serbia, where the fantasy geography of emptiness and terra nullius reappears in a new imperial present. The hackneyed performances that self-proclaimed micronations undertake to legitimize themselves are placed alongside a relational story of regional cultural landscape and more-than-human geographies in this fluvial political–ecological borderland in order to undermine alt-right libertarianism, Balkanism, and imperialism. Citation: Dialogues in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-05-24T05:17:57Z DOI: 10.1177/20438206221102597
- Planting flags in water
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Authors: Natalie Koch First page: 302 Abstract: Dialogues in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. In this commentary, I respond to James Riding and Carl Dahlman's article, Montage space: borderlands, micronations, terra nullius, and the imperialism of the geographical imagination. I build on their arguments about ‘more-than-dry landscapes’ to consider how the relationship between fluid and non-fluid landscapes sheds light on the construction and contestation of political space. To do so, I offer additional examples of how people plant flags in water, shedding light on the political implications of how physical territories are imagined, claimed, and sometimes, simply created at the fluid/non-fluid interface. Citation: Dialogues in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-06-21T05:12:28Z DOI: 10.1177/20438206221108770
- Where is Liberland' Ideology and power beyond territory
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Authors: Amaël Cattaruzza First page: 307 Abstract: Dialogues in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. In response to James Riding and Carl Dahlman's thought-provoking article, I wish to question the link between the self-proclaimed micronation Liberland and the territory of Gornja Siga. Indeed, if we consider that the real location of Liberland is in cyberspace, and not on the small terra nullius stuck on the banks of the Danube, at the Croatian-Serbian border, the reflection refers to other ‘geographical imaginaries’, putting forward the libertarian ideology of the protagonists, and the articulation between militant networks and technologies, which make possible the emergence of this ‘private state’ without a proper territory. Would the claim of Gornja Siga be then only the territorial camouflage of a political movement ‘off-ground’' Citation: Dialogues in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-06-16T05:49:26Z DOI: 10.1177/20438206221108771
- The state of water
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Authors: Rachael Squire First page: 312 Abstract: Dialogues in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. This brief response to Riding and Dahlman's compelling paper offers two reflections that seek to build on their rich analysis of the complex geographies and geopolitics of Liberland. Firstly, it explores how the ‘restless river’ might be further enlivened as an actor within this intriguing context. It then digs further into the non-human complexities of the project by suggesting that the animals of Liberland warrant further attention. In doing so, it seeks to add additional complexity to the challenge of rethinking ‘traditional ways’ of writing about disputed territories and to shed further light on the violence associated with ascriptions of ‘terra nullius’. Citation: Dialogues in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-06-10T06:36:57Z DOI: 10.1177/20438206221107024
- Legitimizing land grabs in a digital age
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Authors: Michelle Ann Miller First page: 316 Abstract: Dialogues in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. In this commentary, I respond to Riding and Dahlman’s call to counter land grabs rooted in terra nullius claims. While this cyber-spatial montage provides a richly layered account of the representational dynamics and performative practices of a self-proclaimed country, I argue that the authors’ more-than-human theorization dilutes rather than sharpens their critical edge. Landscapes and natural resources have certain materialities that shape their governance, but Riding and Dahlman's invocation of ‘more-than-human geographies of responsibility against alt-right libertarianism, Balkanism, and imperialist imaginaries’ downplays the onus of responsibility on humans to prevent land grabs and mitigate their socioecological consequences. Citation: Dialogues in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-06-16T05:49:44Z DOI: 10.1177/20438206221108772
- Montage space: Extra scenes
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Authors: James Riding, Carl Dahlman First page: 321 Abstract: Dialogues in Human Geography, Ahead of Print. In this author's reply, we outline the four commentaries on our article and consider them as interpretations of the same relational story: part of the montage. By intersplicing the four commentaries with extra scenes from ‘Montage Space’, we explore again the riverine, more-than-dry, and more-than-human that both Koch and Squire choose to take downstream, the human land grab that Miller recenters, and the paradox existing between the material geography of a disputed river island and the proclamation of a virtual state, which Catarruza identifies. The four critical engagements with ‘Montage Space’ work to add depth to our own exposition of a squelchy island space and the strange creation of a new state in this contested borderscape, where statehood was violently imposed onto a space deemed to be empty and characterless rather than a vital part of a territorial dispute and a wetland biosphere reserve. Citation: Dialogues in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-06-20T03:44:54Z DOI: 10.1177/20438206221107026
- The cyclical nature of spectacular and slow state violence
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Authors: Jessie H. Clark First page: 326 Abstract: Dialogues in Human Geography, Ahead of Print.
Citation: Dialogues in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-02-08T10:15:49Z DOI: 10.1177/20438206221075703
- Debt here, there and everywhere
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Authors: Christopher Harker First page: 337 Abstract: Dialogues in Human Geography, Ahead of Print.
Citation: Dialogues in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-01-24T12:29:42Z DOI: 10.1177/20438206221075698
- “Oceanic stories as method”
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Authors: Mae Miller-Likhethe First page: 341 Abstract: Dialogues in Human Geography, Ahead of Print.
Citation: Dialogues in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-05-11T07:23:27Z DOI: 10.1177/20438206221074461
- Response: On the politics of oceanic knowledge production
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Authors: Laleh Khalili First page: 354 Abstract: Dialogues in Human Geography, Ahead of Print.
Citation: Dialogues in Human Geography PubDate: 2022-04-20T06:21:32Z DOI: 10.1177/20438206221094673
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