Union Géographique Internationale Commission Genre et géographie
Transcription
Union Géographique Internationale Commission Genre et géographie
Union Géographique Internationale Commission Genre et géographie Lettre d’informations No. 57 Novembre 2016 *** Message de la présidente de la commission Cher.es membres de la commission, C’est un honneur d’avoir été nommée à la tête de la commission Genre et géographie de l’UGI pour la période courant de 2016 à 2020. Depuis de nombreuses années, j’ai été inspiré par nos membres et présidents de commission, je ferai de mon mieux pour poursuivre dans cette voie. Le nombre de nos membres continuent de croître, et nos activités ont des effets positifs sur la vie des gens. Je suis enthousiaste à l’idée de travailler durant les quatre prochaines années avec le comité directeur et de soutenir nos activités dans le monde entier. Nous avons prévu un certain nombre de réunions, mais avant d'en discuter, j'aimerais remercier tout particulièrement notre ancienne présidente. Merci à Shirlena Huang Le solide leadership de Shirlena Huang – présidente de 2012 à 2016 – s’est révélé durant cette période à l’occasion de nombreuses activités. La Commission a tenu des réunions à Hambourg et Cologne (2012), Nara et Kyoto (2013), Varsovie, Cracovie, Rondônia et Delhi (2014), Milwaukee et Moscou (2015), Pékin et Barcelone (2016). Durant le mandat de Shirlena, en 2014, la Commission a remporté de manière inaugurale le “Prix d’excellence de la Commission” (‘Commission Excellence Award’) en reconnaissance de nos activités et réalisations pour 2012 et 2013. Ce fut une période de leadership des plus impressionnantes. Merci Shirlena. Nous apprécions grandement ton engagement envers la Commission. Activités planifiées Les manifestations suivantes sont prévues : Séminaire international: Gendering Qualitative Methods: People, Power and Place 12-13 décembre 2016, Manipal University, Manipal, Inde • III Latin-American Seminar on Geography, Gender and Sexualities 16-19 mai 2017, Mexico, Mexique • En juillet 2018, à Auckland Aotearoa en Nouvelle-Zélande.Détails à venir. N’hésitez pas à consulter notre site pour avoir plus d’informations sur nos activités : http://igugender.socsci.uva.nl • 1 Notre thème 2016 - 2020 Notre thème pour les quatre prochaines années est «Un programme permanent pour le genre: Respecter la différence, favoriser le dialogue». Nous continuerons à créer des espaces pour le pluralisme et la différence dans la géographie. Nous pouvons le faire en renforçant et en accroissant l'engagement collaboratif entre les géographes, au-delà des frontières nationales, des limites sous-disciplinaires et des générations. Plus précisément, nous prévoyons de : a) continuer à organiser des conférences et à soutenir des ateliers pour former des géographes féministes et aboutir à une prise de conscience autour des questions de genre et des approches féministes, en particulier dans les pays situés en dehors du «centre anglo-américain»; b) mettre en place un groupe de doctorant.es, de docteur.es et de collègues en début de carrière au sein de la Commission pour encadrer les jeunes chercheurs émergents intéressés par la géographie féministe / féministe; c) Et encourager le dialogue sur l'intersection du genre avec d'autres identités qui jouent un rôle dans l'expérience des lieux, comme l'âge, la classe sociale, l'ethnicité, la sexualité, la capacité et d'autres. Je suis impatiente de travailler avec vous tou.te.s. Chaleureusement, Lynda Johnston, Université de Waikato ([email protected]) 2 Conférence Feminist Geographies and Intersectionality: Places Identities and Knowledges Le Groupe de recherche sur Genre et géographie de l'Université autonome de Barcelone a organisé une conférence, soutenue par la Commission genre de l'UGI, stimulante et très réussie les 14-15 et 16 juillet dernier. Celle-ci a rassemblé 76 chercheur.es de 21 pays (parmi lesquels l’Argentine, la Belgique, le Brésil, le Canada, l’Allemagne, la France, la Grèce, l’Islande, l’Inde, Israël, l’Italie, les Pays-Bas, la Nouvelle-Zélande, le Portugal, Singapour, la Suède, la Turquie, les Etats-Unis et le Royaume-Uni) et proposée trois conférences plénières, douze sessions, une table ronde et une visite guidée de la vieille ville de Barcelone dirigée par Antoni Luna et Rosa Cerarols de l'Université Pompeu Fabra. La Commission a particulièrement apprécié l'excellente organisation et les efforts soutenus des organisatrices. En retour, les organisatrices ont exprimé leur gratitude envers tous les membres pour leur participation et leurs généreuses collaborations. Les participant.es à l’Institut d’études catalanes avant l’excursion pédestre Joos Droogleever Fortuijn (Vice-présidente de l'UGI) de l'Université d'Amsterdam a présenté la première conférence plénière liant la recherche et l'enseignement afin de démontrer pourquoi l'intersectionnalité importe dans tous les environnements d'apprentissage et comment être en prise avec l'intersectionnalité. Hanna Hamdam Saliba (aménageuse urbaine et régionale, Palestine / Israël) s'est concentrée sur les expériences spatiales quotidiennes, les pratiques et les comportements des femmes arabes à Barcelone et Jaffa / Tel Aviv et comment ces femmes font face à diverses structures de pouvoir qui influencent leurs pratiques spatiales dans l'espace urbain. Margarida Queirós do Vale (Université de Lisbonne) a parlé de genrer les villes intelligentes: les espaces-temps et les lieux du féminisme, thème principal d'un projet qui utilise des méthodes innovantes pour étudier les aspects socio-économiques des usages quotidiens de l'espace et du temps chez les hommes et les femmes. Les présentations des participant.es ont porté sur différents thèmes montrant l'attention portée à l'intersectionnalité concernant différentes identités et domaines: l'enseignement et l'apprentissage, l'activisme, la théorie intersectionnelle, les sexualités, les masculinités, les religions, les migrations, les méthodologies et les mobilités, le travail et le contrat sexuel. Ils ont exploré les identités et les 3 représentations (au sens large de droits humains, de la citoyenneté, de la justice environnementale et du droit au logement, à l’aménagement et aux choix politiques) et reflète ce qui est moins considéré en lien avec les droits de la personne – les sexualités et les politiques queers, la cityenneté, la justice environnementale et le droit au logement. La conférence a particulièrement attiré l'attention sur les théories et les méthodologies pour leur potentiel heuristique et sur des thèmes moins étudiés comme la religion. *** La commission genre au congrès de l’UGI à Beijing du 22 au 25 août 2016 La Commission a soutenue plusieurs sessions au Congrès, à la fois indépendamment et conjointement avec les commissions de géographie politique et de géographie urbaine. En outre, des membres ont présenté des communications dans des sessions organisées par d'autres commissions, par exemple, la Commission d'histoire de la géographie. Les thèmes récurrents portaient sur les migrations, l'emploi et la situation économique des femmes, la conciliation entre travail et vie familiale, les corps genrés, la prise d’autonomie (empowerment) dans les sphères publiques et privées, et genrer les droits. Elles concernaient à la fois les milieux urbains et ruraux. La représentation régionale était diversifiée, avec de nombreuses présentations de géographes asiatiques, en particulier de l'Inde et de Singapour. Parmi les présentations qui ont cassé les codes académiques, on compte une présentation sous forme poétique et une autre sur une recherche collaborative conduite par deux étudiants de Téhéran sur les perceptions et les expériences des jeunes femmes en matière de harcèlement sexuel dans l’air urbaine de Téhéran. La réunion de la Commission genre a eu lieu le 24 août, a été dirigée par la présidente de la Commission, Shirlena Huang et suivi par d’ancien.nes et nouveaux membres. Un sujet phare a été le développement de Yes! initiative de soutien aux jeunes chercheur.es débutant.es, présentée conjointement par les responsables en charge de ce groupe de travail Kamalini Ramdas (Université nationale de Singapour) et Milena Janiec Grygo (Université du Sud de la Floride). Le groupe de travail réalise actuellement un sondage auquel on peut accéder à l'adresse suivante : https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/JYSYFQ8. L'objectif est d'utiliser le groupe de travail pour construire une plate-forme de mise en réseau, de partage et de mentorat par les pairs, qui connecterait aussi aux ressources des géographes féministes en poste qui peuvent être des mentors et des allié.es pour les géographes féministes en début de carrière. Pour en savoir plus à propos de YES!, veuillez contacter les deux responsables : Caroline Faria ([email protected]) ou Kamalini Ramdas ([email protected]). *** Remise de prix à Maria Dolors Garcia Ramon de l’Université autonome de Barcelone En reconnaissance de sa contribution substantielles aux travaux locaux et internationaux en géographie du genre, Maria Dolors Garcia Ramon a reçu deux prix majeurs. Lors de la cérémonie de clôture du Congrès de l'UGI à Beijing en août, le prix d'honneur lui a été décerné pour son activité académique et son implication. Il s'agit notamment de son rôle de secrétaire à la fondation de la Commission en 1988, d’initiatrice du groupe genre de son université qui a engagé et encouragé de nombreu.ses spécialistes du genre dont certain.es sont maintenant des collègues. Elle a accueilli de nombreux visiteur.es internationaux et organisé des conférences internationales sur le genre. Ses recherches sur le travail et 4 l'identité des femmes en milieu rural ont été soutenues, tout comme ses études sur l'histoire des femmes exploratrices. Ce fut une opportunité offerte par l’UGI de célébrer ses contributions et son amitié. En octobre, elle a été récompensée du Prix Vautrin-Lud, également connu sous le nom de «prix Nobel de géographie». Fondé en 1990, il distingue des géographes reconnu.es et est décerné au Festival international de géographie qui se tient chaque année à Saint-Dié des Vosges en France. Maria Dolors devient la quatrième femme géographe lauréate de ce prix. *** Le numéro 69 de Feminististisches Geo-rundmail daté d’octobre 2016 fournit une série d’études détaillées concernant la recherche sur les «Mobilités liées à la santé», dont certaines en allemand et en anglais. Il comprend également un compte-rendu de la réunion de géographie féministe qui s’est tenue à l’université de Bonn et un hommage à la vie de Doreen Massey et à son rôle central dans les séminaires de lecture intitulés “Doreen Massey Reading Weekends” qui ont été centraux dans le développement des approches féministes dans la géographie allemande. Liens vers la lettre d’informations : http://ak-geographie-geschlecht.org/category/georundmail/ *** Nouveaux ouvrages Chant, Sylvia and McIlwaine, Cathy (2016) Cities, Slums and Gender in the Global South: Towards a Feminised Urban Future. London: Routledge. 5 姜蘭虹 and 宋郁玲性別/Chiang, Lan Hung (Nora) and Yu-Ling (Cathy) Song (2017 社會與 空間讀本 (eds)Gender, Society and Space :Selected Translations. Taipei, Taiwan: Tonsan. ----. 2016. The Carpetbaggers of Kabul and Other American-Afghan Entanglements: Intimate Development, Geopolitics and the Currency of Gender and Grief. Athens, GA: University of Georgia Press (available January 15, 2017). Gibson, K., D.B. Rose and R. Fincher 2015 (eds) Manifesto for Living in the Anthropocene New York: Punctum Books 155p. Harcourt, W, and Ingrid Nelson, 2015. Practicing Feminist Political Ecologies: Moving beyond the ‘Green Economy. London, Zed Books: Jupp. Eleanor, Jessica Pykett and Fiona M. Smith (eds). 2017. Emotional States: Sites and Spaces of Affective Governance. London: Routledge, London. Longhurst, Robyn. 2017: Skype: Bodies, Screens, Space. Routledge: London. Merrill, Heather Spaces of Danger. Culture and Power in the Everyday. University of Georgia Press. 2015. Murnaghan, AM, and Shillington, L. (eds) .2016 Children, Nature, Cities. Abingdon, UK: Routledge Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4724-5317-4. Raju, Saraswati, and S. Jatrana (eds) 2016. Women Workers in Urban India, Cambridge University Press, Tyner, Judith. 2015. Stitching the World: Embroidered Maps and Women’s Geographical Education. New York: Routledge. Worth, Nancy and Claire Dwyer (eds). 2016 . Identities and Subjectivities. Singapore: Springer. This edited collection, Volume 4 in the series on Geographies of Children and Young People includes a number of chapters that have a gender focus and set in diverse contexts. The table of contents can be accessed from the Springer website -- http://link.springer.com/referencework/10.1007%2F978-981-287023-0 Les articles dans des revues The Canadian Geographer/Le Géographie Canadien 60 (2)2016 includes a theme section with x articles addressing issues of mental health in academia in contemporary North American. See below for individual items. The Professional Geographer 2016 (early view) has a focus section on feminist research and knowledge . See below for individual papers. Alette, Willis, Seamus Prior and Siobhan Canavan. 2016. “Spaces of dissociation: The impact of childhood sexual abuse on the personal geographies of adult survivors.” Area 48(2): 206-12. 6 Aparecido de Souza, 2016. “Farda e gênero: Valores e atitudes na polícia militar do Paraná.”10.5212/Rlagg.7.i2.0001 * Note – all entries listed as Rlagg are from Revista Latino-americana de Geografia e Gênero Aparecida Esteves Mendes, Andréa and Maria Luiza Milani. 2016. “Inserção da mulhrr negra Brasileira no mercado de trabalgo no period de 1980-2010.” 10.5212/Rlagg. v.7.i2.0011. Awumbila, Mariama, Joseph Kofi Teye, and Joseph Awetom Yaro. 2016. “Of silent maids, skilled gardeners and careful madams.” Gendered dynamics and strategies of migrant domestic workers in Accra, Ghana.” Geojournal DOI 10.1007/s10708-016-9711-5 Bartolomeu Costa, Felizado and José Sterza Justo 2016. “Imigração e relações de gênero: Subjetividades emergentes ou em recomposição? 10.5212/Rlagg.v.7.i2.0003 Baylina Ferre, Mireia and Maria Rode de Zarate. 2016. “New visual methods for teaching intersectionality from a spatial perspective in geography.” Journal of Geography in Higher Education 40(4): 608-620. Becher,Caroline and Jó Klansovicz. 2016. “Mulheres camponesas e od desafios do acesso às politicas públicas para igualdade de gênero.” Rlaff v.7.i2.0009. Benach, N. Garcia-Ramon M.D. and Tort, J. 2016. “Sobre l’evolució del pensament geogràfic a Catalunya” , Treballs de la Societat Catalana de Geografia, Juny, no.81.,pp.223-234. Berckmans, Isabel, Marcela Losantos Velasco and Gerrit Lootsa. 2016. “Why can’t you change? Stories of parents and street education about adolescent girls in street situations.” Children’s Geographies 14(5): 513-26. Berg, Lawrence D., Edward H. Huijbens and Henrik Gutzon Larsen (2016). “Producing anxiety in the neoliberal university.” The Canadian Geographer/Le Géographie Canadien 60 (2): 168-80. Brickell, K. 2017. ‘Violence Against Women and Girls in Cambodia’, in K, Brickell, K and S. Springer, (eds.) Handbook of Contemporary Cambodia London:Routledge. 294-305. Burgos- Suárez , Lucelly Carolina, Rafaek Ortiz-Pech abd Lilian Albornoz-Mendoza. 2016. ‘Situación del Rezago Educativo en Yucatán, México con Enfoque de Género (1990-2010) 10.5212/Rlagg.v.7.i2.0005 Blidon Marianne, « Moving to Paris! Gays and lesbians paths, experiences and projects », in The Routledge Research Companion to Geographies of Sex and Sexualities, Browne K., Brown G. (ed), London, Routledge, 2016, pp. 201-212. Blidon Marianne, « Espace urbain », in Encyclopédie critique du genre, Rennes J. (dir.), Paris, La découverte, 2016, pp. 242-251. Caretta. Martina Angela and Yvonne Riaño. 2016. “Feminist participatory methodologies in geography: Creating spaces of inclusion.” Qualitative Research 16(3): 258-66. Castree. Noel. 2016. A tribute to Doreen Massey (3 January, 1944-11 March, 2016.” Progress in Human Geography 40 585-92. 7 Chant, Sylvia. 2016. “Women, girls and world poverty: Empowerment, equality or essentialism?, International Development Planning Review, 38 (1): 1-24. ----. 2016. “Galvanising girls for development? Critiquing the shift from ‘smart’ to ‘smarter economics’.” Progress in Development Studies,.16 (4): 314-28. ----. 2016. Von Feminisierten Zu Feministischen Städten? Gender, Frauen und Urbanisierung im 21. Jahrhundert (From ‘feminised’ to ‘feminist’ cities? Gender, women and urbanisation in the 21st century), Frauen Solidarität, 137, (3):7--9. (http://www.frauensolidaritaet.org/fs_137) ----. 2016. “Female household headship as an asset? Interrogating the intersections of urbanisation, gender and domestic transformations, in Caroline Moser (ed.) Gender, Asset Accumulation and Just Cities: Pathways to Transformation. London: Routledge. 21-39. Chiswell, Hannah. 2016. “As long as you are easy on the eye: reflecting on issues of positionality and researcher safety during farmer interviews.” Area 48(2): 229-35. Choi, Andrea. 2016. “Equity, race, and whiteness in Canadian geography.” The Canadian Geographer/Le Géographie Canadien 60 (3): 369-80. Christian, Jenna, Lorraine Dowler and Dana Cuomo. 2016. “Fear, feminist geopolitics, and the hot and the banal.” Political Geography 54:64-72. Christie, Maria Elise, Mary Parks and Michael Mulvaney. 2016. “Gender and local soil knowledge: Linking farmers’ perceptions of soil fertility in two villages in the Philippines.” Singapore Journal of Tropical Geography 37 (1) : 6-24. Choi, Andrea. 2016. “Equity, race, and whiteness in Canadian geography.” The Canadian Geographer/Le Géographie Canadien 60 (3): 369-80. Clark, Jessie Hanna. 2016.”The ‘life’ of the state: Social reproduction and geopolitics in Turkey’s Kurdish question.” Annals of the American Association of Geographers 106 (5): 1176-93. Coddington, Kate 2016. “Voice under scrutiny: Feminist methods, anticolonial response and new methodological tools.” The Professional Geographer DOI: 1080/00330124.2016,1208512. Connell, John and Margaret Walton Roberts. 2016. “What about the workers? The missing geographies of health care.” Progress in Human Geography 40(2): 158-76. Cookson, Tara Patrcia. “Working for inclusion? Conditional cash transfer, rural women, and the reproduction of inequality. “ Antipode 48(5): 1127-1205. Conradson, David. 2016. “Fostering student mental health through supportive learning communities.” The Canadian Geographer/ Le Géographie Canadien 60(3): 239-44. De Freitas, Bruno, Maria Beatriz Junquieria Bernades, 2016. “A geografia dialogando comas ciênias naturals e as artes para a comprensão interdisciplinar e critica acerca de questões de gero no contexto contemporâneo. Rlagg v.7 12.0007. England, Marcia. 2016. “Being open in academia: A personal narrative of mental illness and disclosure.” The Canadian Geographer/ Le Géographie Canadien 60(3):226-31. 8 Eriksen, C. 2016. "Research ethics, trauma and self-care: Reflections on disaster geographies." Australian Geographer, Published online 16 September 2016. doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00049182.2016.1230001. Eriksen, C. 2016. "Cultures and Disasters: Understanding Cultural Framings in Disaster Risk Reduction F. Krüger, G. Bankoff, T. Cannon, B. Orlowski and E.L.F. Shipper. PB - Routledge , London and New York, 2015, xv + 282 pp, ISBN 978 0 415 74560 4 (Geographical Research Vol. 54 (2):226-27. http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1745-5871.12184/epdf Eriksen, C. and G. Simon. 2016. "The affluence-vulnerability Interface: Intersecting scales of risk, privilege and disaster." Environment and Planning A. Open access http://epn.sagepub.com/content/early/2016/09/20/0308518X16669511.refs Eriksen, C., and G. Waitt. 2016. "Men, masculinities and wildfire: Embodied resistance and rupture." In Men, Masculinities and Disaster, edited by E. Enarson and B. Pease, 69-80. New York: Routledge. Eriksen, C., G. Waitt, and C. Wilkinson. 2016. "Gendered dynamics of wildland firefighting in Australia." Society and Natural Resources Vol. 29 (11):1296-1310. Evans, Alice. 2016.” The decline of the male breadwinner and persistence of the female carer: Exposure, interests, and micro-macro interventions.” Annals of the American Association of Geographers 106 (5): 1135-51. Fluri, J.L. “Feminist political geography.” In The Wiley-Blackwell Companion to Political Geography (eds. J. Agnew, V. Mamadouh, A.Secor, and J. Sharp. Wiley-Blackwell, 237-47. ----. “States of (in)security, corporeal geographies and the elsewhere war.” Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 32:795-814. Fluri, J.L, P.S.B. Jackson, and D. Paudel. 2015. “A new development technology: South Asian biometrics and the promise of state security and economic opportunities.” Geography Compass 9/10: 534-49. Fluri, J.L. and R. Lehr, R. 2015 “The Currency of Grief: 9/11 deaths, Afghan lives, and intimate intervention” in P.J. Lopez and K.A. Gillespie (Eds.) Economies of Death: logics of killable life and grievable death. Routledge. 14-36. Fontenele de Souza and Inez Sampaio Nery. 2016, “A sexualidade de mulher na relaçao conjugal violenta.” 10.5212/Rlagg v. 7.12.0012. Gallagher, Aisling. 2015. “Do babies matter?” Gender and family in the Ivory Tower.” (book review) Children’s Geographies 13(1): 128-29. Garcia-Ramon, Maria Dolors, Ana Maria Porto, Isabel Salamaña y Montserrat Villarino. 2016. “Mujeres Rurales professonales en Cataluña y Galicia.” DOI: 10 . 7203/ saitabi 64.7263 Garcia Ramon, M.D., B. Estevez Villarino (2015). “Hegemonía académica angloamericana y neoliberalismo: las lenguas de la geografía” in Horacio Capel Geografo, Universitat de Barcelona, 253274 Gibson-Graham, J.K. 2015 “Ethical economic and ecological engagements in real(ity) time: Experiments 9 with living differently in the Anthropocene” Conjunctions: Transdisciplinary Journal of Cultural Participation 2,1: 44-71. ----. 2016 “’Optimism’, place and the possibility of transformative politics” in W. court ed. The Palgrave Handbook of gender and Development: Critical Engagements in Feminist Theory and Practice New York: Palgrave Macmillan pp.359-363. ----. 2016 “Building community economies: Women and the politics of place” reprinted in W. Harcourt ed. The Palgrave Handbook of Gender and Development: Critical Engagements in Feminist Theory and Practice New York: Palgrave Macmillan. 287-311. ----. 2016 “’After’ area studies?: Place-based knowledge for our time.” Environment and Planning D: Society and pace (forthcoming). DOI:10.1177/0263775816656523 Gibson-Graham, J.K., J. Cameron and S. Healy 2016 “Commoning as a post-capitalist politics” in A. Amin and P. Howell eds Releasing the Commons London and New York: Routledge Press. 192-212. ----. 2015 “Ekonomiyi Geri Almaya Yönelik Performatif Pratikler”, (‘Performative Practices for Taking Back the Economy’, Translated: Remziye Alparslan), Demokratik Modernite11: 56-59. Gibson-Graham, J.K., A. Hill and L. Law, 2016 “Re-embedding economies in ecologies: Resilience building in more than human communities” Building Information (forthcomimg) http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09613218.2016.1213059 Gieseking, Jen Jack. 2016. “Crossing over into neighborhoods of the body: Urban territories, borders, and emotion: Queer bodies in New York City.” Area 48(3):262-70. Goerisch, Denise. 2016.”’Doing good work’: Feminist dilemmas of volunteering in the field.” The Professional Geographer DOI: 10.1080/00330124.2016.1208511 Gonçalves, Josiane Peres, Viviane de Souza Correia de Carvalho. 2016. “Estudo de representaçõeses sociais de professors homens de Mato Grosso do Sul sobre o trabalho realizado com Crianças.” 10.5212.Rlagg v.7.12.0006. Greed, Clara. 2015. “Taking women’s bodily functions into account in urban planning and sustainability.” In: 21st International Sustainability Development Research Society (ISDRS) Conference, The Tipping Point: Vulnerability and Adaptive Capacity, Geelong, Australia, 10-12 July 2015. Available from: http://eprints.uwe.ac.uk/25927 ----. 2015. “Gender equality and developing world toilet provision. In: A. Coles, L. Gray, and J. Momsen, eds. Routledge Handbook of Gender and Development. pp. 272-281 (London: Routledge) Available from:http://eprints.uwe.ac.uk/24030 ----. 2014 Public toilet provision, from: http://eprints.uwe.ac.uk/24598 gender and menstruation.ech2o. Available 10 Gökarıksel, Banu and Sara Smith “Making America Great Again”?: The Fascist Body Politics of Donald Trump.” Political Geography. 54: 79-81. Harris, Catherine and Gill Valentine. (in press). “Encountering difference in the workforce: Superficial contact, underlying tensions, and group rights.” Tijdschrift voor Economische en Sociale Geografie DOI:10.1111tesg 12197 Harris Leila (in press) “Theorizing gender, difference and Inequality in relation to water access and politics.:” In C. Ashcraft and T. Mayer (eds) The Politics of Freshwater: Access, Conflict, and Identity Routledge, Earthscan. Harris, Leila. et al. 2015. "Women talking about water: Feminist subjectivities and Intersectional understandings." Canadian Women’s Studies Journal, Les Cahiers de la Femme 30(2/3): 15-24. ----. 2015. "Foreword: A quarter century of knowledge and change: pushing feminism, politics and ecology in new directions, in S. Buechler and A. Hanson. A Political Ecology of Women, Water and Global Environmental Change, Routledge, London, UK xix-xxiii.". ---- 2015. “Hegemonic waters and rethinking natures otherwise” In. Practicing Feminist Political Ecologies: Moving beyond the ‘Green Economy W. Harcourt and I. Nelson. London, Zed Books: 157-181. Hawkins, Roberta, Karen Falconer Al-Hindi, Pamela Moss, and Leslie Kern, 2016. “Practicing collective biography.” Geography Compass 10(1):165-78. Hiemstra, Nancy. 2016. “Periscoping as a feminist methodological approach for research the seemingly hidden.” The Professional Geographer DOI:10.1080/003301124.2016.1208514 Hiemstra, Nancy and Emily Bilio. 2016. “ Introduction to focus section: Feminist Research and knowledge production.” The Professional Geographer DOI 10.1080/00330124.2016.1208103 Holloway, Sarah L. and Helena Pimlott-Wilson. 2016. “New economy, neoliberal state and professional parenting: mothers’ labour market engagement and state support for social reproduction in class differentiated Britain.” Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 41(4):376-88. Hsieh, Yu-Chieh. 2016. “The significance of subtle ways: Navigating femininities in high schools in Taiwan.” Children’s Geographies 14(6):731-44. Jacks, Lucy.2016. “Experiencing exclusion and reacting to stereotypes: Navigating borders of the migrant body.” Area 48(3): 292-99. Jackson, Peter, Walter Spiess and Farhana Sultana. (In press) Eating/Drinking//Surviving. International Year of Global Understanding (IYGU) Series. Springer, Netherlands. Johnston, Lynda. 2016. “Gender and sexuality: Gender queer geographies.” Progress in Human Geography. 40(5): 668-78. 11 ----. “Gender and sexuality II: Activism.” Progress in Human Geography ----.2016: Gender and sexuality 10.1177/0309132516659569 II: Activism Progress in Human Geography 1-9 DOI: Johnston, Lynda and Robyn Longhurst, . 2016: Trans(itional) geographies: bodies, binaries, places and spaces, in Gavin Brown and Kath Browne (eds) The Routledge Research Companion to Geographies of Sex and Sexualities, Routledge: Oxon and New York, pp. 45-54. Kaplan, D. and J. Mapes. 2016. “Where are the women? Accounting for discrepancies in female doctorates in U.S. geography.” The Professional Geographer 67(3): 427-35. Kitchen, Rob. 2016. “Geographers Matter: Doreen Massey (1944-2016). Social and Cultural Geography 17(6):813-17. Ma, Agatha and Kyoko Kusakabe. 2015. “Gender analysis of fear and mobility in the context od ethnic conflict in Kayah State, Myanmar.” Singapore Journal of Tropical Geography DOI: 10.1111sjtg12119. Lahiri-Dutt, Kuntala. 2015. “The feminisation of mining.” Geography Compass 9: 532-41. Little, Jo. 2016. “Understanding domestic violence in rural spaces: A research agenda, Progress in Human Geography doi: 10,1177/03091325. Lyon, Sarah Tad Mutersbaugh and Holly Worthen. 2016. “The triple burden: the impact of time poverty on women’s participation in coffee producer organizational governance in Mexico. “Agriculture and Human Values. Published online June 28, 2016. Maclean, Kate. 2016. “Sanity, ‘madness’ and the academy. The Canadian Geographer/Le Géographie Canadien 60 (2): 181-91. Mattingly, Doreen J. 2016. A Feminist in the White House: Midge Costanza, the Carter Years, and America’s Culture Wars. New York: Oxford University Press. ----. 2015. “The limited power of female appointments: Abortion and domestic violence policy in the Carter administration,” Feminist Studies, 41 (3): 538 - 65. Mattingly, Doreen J. and Jessica Nare. 2014. “’A rainbow of women’: Diversity and unity at the 1977 U.S. International Women’s Year Conference,” Journal of Women's History, 26 (2): 88-112. Mattingly, Doreen J. and Ashley Boyd. 2013 “Midge Costanza and the First White House meeting on federal discrimination against gays and lesbians: Politics, identity, and risk-taking” Journal of Lesbian Studies 17: 365-379. Mazali, Rela. 2016. “Speaking of Guns: Launching gun control discourse and disarming security guards in a militarized society,” International Feminist Journal of Politics. 10.1080/14616742.2016.1147874. DOI: ----. 2016. “Complicit Dissent, Dissenting Complicity: A Story and its Context,” in: Ghada Ageel ed., Apartheid in Palestine: Hard Laws and Harder Experiences, University of Alberta Press, 2016, pp. 129-148. 12 ----. 2015. “Silahlardan Soz Etmisken: Militarize Bir Toplumda Silah Denetimi Soylemini Dolasima Sokmak Ve Guvenlik Guclerini Silahsizlandirmak,” Kultur ve Siyasette Feminist Yaklasimlar, trans. Elif Benici, Irem Az, Sayi 25 (Subat 2015), pp. 16-34. [Turkish version of “Speaking of Guns”] McKenna. Katherine. 2016. “The geopolitics of birth.” Area 48(3): 285-91. McKinnon, K., M. Carnegie, K. Gibson and C. Rowland, 2016 “Gender Equality and Economic Empowerment in the Solomon Islands and Fiji: a Place-based Approach.” Gender, Place and Culture (forthcoming).http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/0966369X.2016.1160036 Meah, Angela, 2016, “Extending the contested spaces of the modern kitchen.” Geography Compass 10 (2): 41-55. Merrill. Heather and Lisa Hoffman 2015 “In Other Wor(l)ds: Situated Intersectionality in Italy," 77-100, in Heather Merrill and Spaces of Danger. Culture and Power in the Everyday. University of Georgia Press. Militz, E. and C. Schurr, 2016. “ Affective nationalism: Banalities of belonging in Azerbaijan.” Political Geography 54: 54-63. Mountz, Alison. 2016. “Women on the edge: Workplace stress at universities in North America.” The Canadian Geographer/ Le Géographie Canadien 60 (2)205-218. Mukheree, Sanjukta. 2016. “Troubling positionality: Politics of ‘studying up’ in transnational contexts.” The Professional Geographer DOI:10.1080/6033012.20161208509 Mullings, B, Peake, L. and Parizeau, K. 2016 “Cultivating an Ethic of Wellness in Geography”, The Canadian Geographer, 60 (2): 161-67. Murnaghan, AM, and Shillington, L. (eds) .2016) Children, Nature, Cities. Abingdon, UK: Routledge Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4724-5317-4. Newbury. J. and K. Gibson, 2016. “Post-industrial pathways for a ‘single industry resource town’: a community economies approach” in I. Vaccaro, K. Harper and S. Murray eds The Anthropology of Disconnection: Ethnographies of Post-industrialism London and New York: Routledge Press.183-204. Nirmal, Padini. .2016. Being and knowing differently in living worlds: Rooted networks and relational webs in indigenous geographies. In Wendy Harcourt (ed.), The Palgrave Handbook on Gender and Development: Critical engagements in feminist theory and practice. New York: Palgrave. 232-250. Njeri, Mary 2016. “Ubuntu nests and the emergence of an African metropolis.” Singapore Journal of Tropical Geography DOI:10.1111 sjtg12173 Nunn, Neil. 2016. “Emotional and relational approaches to masculine knowledge.” Social and Cultural Geography DOI10. 1080/14649365.2016.1180705 Oza, Rupa. 2016. “The entanglements of transnational feminism and area studies.” Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 34(5):836-42. Parizeau, Kate Laura Shillington, Roberta Hawkins, Farhana Sultana, Alison Mountz, Beverley Mullings and Linda Peake. 2016. “Breaking the silence: A feminist call to action.” The Canadian Geographer/Le Géographie Canadien 60 (2) 192-204, 13 Parker, Brenda. 2016. “The feminist geographer as killjoy: Excavating gendered urban power relations.” The Professional Geographer DOI: 10.1080/00330124.2016.120513. Peake, Linda. 2015. “The twenty-first century quest for feminism and the global urban.” International Journal of Urban and Regional Research DOI:10.1111 /1468-2427. Peake, Linda and Beverley Mullings, B 2016. “Critical reflections on mental and emotional distress in the academy. ACME 15 (2): 253-284. Peake, Linda and Beverly Mullings. 2016, “Cultivating an ethic of wellness in Geography.” The Canadian Geographer/Le Parizeau, K., Shillington, L., Hawkins, R., Sultana, F., Mountz, A., Mullings, B., and Peake, L. 2016.“Breaking the silence: A feminist geography call to action”, The Canadian Geographer, 60 (2): 192204. DOI: 10.1111/cag.12265 Pinheiro da Silvam Reijane, 2016, “Imigrantes Goianas na Irlanda: Agências e Interpretações.” 10.5212/Rlagg.v.7.i2.0004 Radcliffe, Sarah A. 2016 “The Difference Indigeneity Makes: Socio-natures, knowledges and contested policy,” in M Raftopoulos & M Coletta (eds.) Provincializing Nature: Multidisciplinary Approaches to the Politics of the Environment in Latin America. pp.161-185 ILAS Book Series, London. Rauta Petarly, Renata. 2016. “Economia solidária e feminista: apontamentos sobre a representação do trabalho doméstico pelas mulheres de Araguaína.” TO 10,5212/Rlagg v.7.12.o0009 Radcliffe, Sarah A. 2015 ‘Gender and Postcolonialism,’ in A. Coles, L. Gray & J. Momsen (eds.) The Routledge Handbook of Gender and Development. pp.161-185 Routledge. Raju, Saraswati. 2015 Women and work in India: Simultaneous geographies in Basile E., B. Harriss-White and C. Lutringer (ed.) Mapping India's Capitalism: Old and New Regions, UK: Palgrave Macmillan, Raju,Saraswati and D. Bose. 2016. Women workers in urban India and the cities’ in S. Raju and S. Jatrana (eds) Women Workers in Urban India, Cambridge University Press, pp. 36- 66. Raju. Saraswati, and S. Jatrana. 2016 ‘Setting the backdrop’ in S. Raju and S. Jatrana (eds) Women Workers in Urban India, Cambridge University Press, pp. 1-35. Ramdas, Kamalini. 2016, “Feminist care ethics: Becoming area.” Environment and Planning D, 843-49. Ramdas, Kamalini. 2016. “Feminist care ethics, becoming area.” Environment and Planning D Society and Space. 34 843-49. Robbins, Paul and Sara Smith. (forthcoming) “Baby bust: Towards Political Demography.” Progress in Human Geography. (early view). Rocheleau, Dianne and Padini Nirmal. .2016. “Culture”. In William A. Gleason, J, Adamson, and D Pellow. (eds.). Keywords for Environmental Studies. New York: New York University Press.50-55. 14 Rocheleau, Dianne and Padini Nirmal. .2015..”Feminist political ecologies: Grounded, networked and rooted on earth. In R. Baksh, and W. Harcourt. (eds.). The Oxford Handbook of Transnational Feminist Movements. New York: Oxford University Press. 793-814. Rocheleau, Dianne, and Padini Nirmal. .2015. “Gender and environment: Feminist thought, politics and practice. In V. Robinson, and D. Richardson, D. (eds.). Introducing Gender and Women's Studies. London: Palgrave Macmillan. 255-274. Rose, Damaris, Lisa Dillon and Marianne Caron.2016. “Lives of their own, a place of their own? The living arrangements on ‘business girls’ in early twentieth century Canadian cities.” British Journal of Canadian Studies 29(2): 225-48. Ruez, Derek. 2016. “Working to appear: The plural and uneven geographies of race, sexuality and the local state in Sydney, Australia.” Environment and Planning D: Society and Space. 34, 282-30 Salamanña I. M. Baylina, M.D. Garcia-Ramon. A. Porto, A. VIillarino M., 2016. “Dones, trajectòries de vida i noves ruralitats” Documents d’Anàlisi Geografica, 62-3,. 661-61. Schurr, Carolin. 2016. “From geopolitics to bioeconomies: The ART of (re)producing white futures in Mexico’s surrogacy market. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space Senard-Gagnon, Laurence. 2016. “Everyone is fed, bathed, asleep and I have made it through another day: Problematizing, accommodating resilience, and care in the neoliberal university.” The Canadian Geographer/Le Géographie Canadien 60 (2) 219-25. Shillington, L and A.M. Murnaghan. 2016. “Queering ecological of childhood “Urban political ecologies and children’s geographies” , International Journal of Urban and Regional Research DOI: 10.1111/14682427.12339 Shillington, L. (2015) ‘Birds are for the girls’: children’s media landscape and the emotional geographies of urban natures, in T. Skelton, C. Dwyer, C. and N Worth (eds).Geographies of Children and Young People: Volume 4: Geographies of Identities and Subjectivities. Springer Reference. Silva, Joceli Maria, Marcio Jose Ornat. 2016. “Geografia feminist no Brasil nos anos 80, sim senhor! Uma etrevista com Rosa Ester Rossini.” 10.5212/Rlagg v.7.12.0013. Silva, Joice de Souza Freitas and Almiralava Ferraz Gomes. 2016. “Inserção de Mulheres no Patrulhamento de Rodovias: Um estudo no Interior Baiano 10.5212/Rlagg.v.7.i2.0002 Silva dos Santos, Nayara, Helga Midori Iwamoto, Airto Cardoso Cançado, Gisland Ferreira Barbosa, Wladecy Rodrigues. 2016 . “Mulheres e desenvolvimento: o papel das mulheres no desenvolvimento do Território da Codadania do Jalapão TO 10.5212/Rlagg v,7.120008. Slack, Jeremy. 2016. “Captive bodies: migrant kidnapping and deportation in Mexico.” Area 48(3) 27177. Smith, E. Phyu. 2016. “To build a home: The material cultural practices of Karen refugees across borders.” ). Area 48(3): 278-84. 15 Smith, Nathan W. Swanson and Banu Gökariksel. 2016. “Territory, bodies and borders” (Guest edited Smith, Sara. 2016 . “Intimacy and angst in the field. Gender, Place and Culture. 23:134-146. . ----. 2015. “Religious identity and gender on the edges of the nation: the Leh district of India’s Jammu and Kashmir state.” In Stanley D. Brunn (Ed). The Changing World Religion Map: Sacred Places, Identities, Practices and Politics. New York: Springer. Chapter 13.5.). Smith, Sara and Mabel Gergan. “Life, love, and activism on the forgotten margins of the nation-state. In Matt Benwell and Peter Hopkins (Eds). Children, young people and critical geopolitics. London: Ashgate. 91-106. Smith, Sara, Banu Gökarıksel, and Nathan Swanson. 2016 “Introduction: Territory, Bodies, and Borders,” Area, 48: 258-261. 219-25. Sultana, Farhana, Chandra T. Mohanty and Sarah Miraglia, 2016, “Gender Equity, Citizenship, and Public Water in Bangladesh” in Making Public in a Privatized World, David McDonald (Ed.) Zed Books: UK: 149164. ----(Forthcoming) , "Gender and Water in a Changing Climate: Challenges and Prospects" Water Security Across the Gender Divide, Christiane Fröhlich, Giovanna Gioli, Francesca Greco, Roger Cremades (Eds.) Springer: The Netherlands ----. 2016, "Reflexivity" In The International Encyclopedia of Geography: People, the Earth, Environment, and Technology , Douglas Richardson (Ed.), Wiley-Blackwell and the Association of American Geographers. ----. 2015, "Justice" In Companion to Political Geography , Second Edition, John Agnew, Virginie Mamadouh, and Anna Secor and Joanne Sharp (Eds.), Wiley-Blackwell, UK. 127-140. ----. 2015, "Emotional political ecology" In The International Handbook of Political Ecology , Raymond Bryant (Ed.), Edward Elgar Publishing, UK. 633-645. ----. 2015, "The Human Right to Water: Critiques and Conditions of Possibility" WIREs Water . 2,(2): 97105 (with Alex Loftus). ----. 2015, "Rethinking Community and Participation in Water Governance" In The Routledge Handbook of Gender and Development , Anne Coles, Leslie Gray and Janet Momsen (Eds.), Routledge, London.261272. Swanson, Nathan W. 2016.”Embodying Tahrir: Bodies and geopolitics in the 2011 Egyptian uprising.” Area 48(3): 300-307. Thornbrush, Mary. 2016. “Introduction to the Special Issue of Gender and Geoethics in the Geosciences” International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 13(4). doi:10.3390/ijerph13040398 Veleda da Silva, Susana Maria; Almeida Andressa, and Marilia Lopes, 2016. “A vulnerabilidade das mulheres nos municípios da Aglomeração Urbana do Sul (AUSUL) no estado do Rio Grande do Sul. 16 Boletim Gaúcho de Geografia (BGG) 43 http://seer.ufrgs.br/index.php/bgg/article/view/57938/37975 (1). Available at Silva, J., M. Ornat, S. Veleda da Silva, B. Costa, M. Silva and A. Ratts. 2016. A. Geografia e diversidade: gênero, sexualidades, etnicidades e racialidades. Revista da ANPEGE. 12, (18) Available at Veleda da Silva, Susana Maria; Andressa Almeida, and Marilia Lopes, 2016. “A vulnerabilidade das mulheres nos municípios da Aglomeração Urbana do Sul (AUSUL) no estado do Rio Grande Sul. Boletim de Gaúcho de Geografia, 4 (1). Available at http://seer.ufrgs.br/index.php/bgg/article/view/57938/37975 Veleda da Silva, Susana Maria and Andresss Almeida, 2015. A inserção de mulheres na indústria de Construçäo naval e offshore em Rio Grande.” Revista Pegado, 16(2) Dossiê "Trabalho, Gênero e Território. Available at http://revista.fct.unesp.br/index.php/pegada/article/view/3920 Waitt, Gordon and Susannah Clement. 2016. “Women drinking alcohol: Assembling a perspective from a Victorian country town, Australia.” Gender, Place and Culture 23(8):1121-34. Waitt, Gordon and Theresa Harada. 2016. “Parenting, car, and the family car.” Social and Cultural Geography 17(8):1079-1100. Walter, Bronwen. 2014l “Placing Irish women within and beyond the British Empire” in D.J. MacPherson and M.J> Hickman M.J. (eds) New perspectives on Irish women in the diaspora Manchester University Press. Whitson, Risa. 2016. “Paiting pictures of ourselves: Researcher subjectivity in the practice of feminist reflexivity.” The Professional Geographer DOI:10.1080/00330124.2016.1208510 Wimark, Thomas. 2016. “Migration motives of gay men in the new acceptance era” A cohort study from Malmö, Sweden.” Social and Cultural Geography 17(5): 603-22. Windhorst, Eric and Alson Williams. 20916.” Bleeding at the roots: Post-secondary student mental health and nature affiliation.” The Canadian Geographer/Le Géographie Canadien 60 (2)232-38. Worth, Nancy. 2016. “Feeling precarious: Millenial women and work.” Environment and Planning D Society and Space 34: 601-16. Worthen, Holly. 2015). “Indigenous women’s political participation: Gendered Labor and Collective Rights Paradigms in Mexico. “ Gender and Society, 9 (6) 914–936. Lyon, Sarah, Tad Mutersbaugh and Holly Worthen (2016)The triple burden: the impact of time poverty on women’s participation in coffee producer organizational governance in Mexico. Agriculture and Human Values. Published online June 28, 2016. Yeoh, Brenda S.A., Mann Platt, Choon Yen Khoo, Theodora Lam and Grace Baey. 2016. “Indonesian dormestic workers and the (unmaking) of transnational livelihood s and provisional futures.” Social and ultu ral Geography DOI10. 1080/14649365.2016.1185800 Zebracki, Martin. 2016. “Homonormativities Queer Micropublics: An Emotional Geography of Sexual Citizenship.” Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers. DOI:1111tesg12190. 17