Aug 30, 2017 - in the session information, online and index at the back of this book. Day and timeslot. Research Group A
RGS-IBG Annual International Conference, London, 29 August - 1 September 2017
Annual International! Conference 2017! Programme!
" Decolonising geographical knowledges: opening geography out to the !world " 29 August to 1 September 2017! " Royal Geographical Society (with IBG)!
Session codes explained
Looking towards next year…
Session ID Unique identifier for every session at conference – used in the session information, online and index at the back of this book.
Building and room
Day and timeslot
Session title, related sessions (listed by ID) and link to online abstracts
Research Group Affiliations An explanation of Research Group acronyms can be found in Section 11.2 of this book
Day
Timeslot
Building [See map on back cover]
Tu Tuesday
1 0900 to 10:40
RGS RGS-IBG
W Wednesday
2 11:10 to 12:50
Imperial College:
Th Thursday
P 13:10 to 14:25
SAF Sir Alexander Fleming
F
3 14:40 to 16:20
SKE Skempton
4 16:50 to 18:30
SHE/SALC Sherfield (also known as Seminar and Learning Centre, SALC)
Friday
E 18:45 to …
HUX Huxley
Save the dates Tuesday 28 August to Friday 31 August 2018 Cardiff University, Cardiff
Rooms RGS-IBG
Imperial College
Imperial College
AM Ambulatory CR Council Room
SAF - Sir Alexander Fleming Building
DR Drayson Room
G34 Lecture Theatre
SHE/SALC - Sherfield Building/Seminar and Learning Centre
EC Education Centre
119 Room
READ Read Lecture Theatre
FRR Foyle Reading Room
120 Room
PIP Pippard Lecture Theatre
LR Lowther Room
121 Room
1 Room
MH Main Hall
122 Room
2 Room
MQ Marquee/Garden
SKE - Skempton Building
5 Room
MpR Map Room
060a Room.
6 Room
MbR Members’ Room
060b Room
7 Room
NR Nightingale Room
060c Room
8 Room
OT Ondaatje Theatre
064A Room
9 Room
PV Pavilion
064b Room
HUX - Huxley Building
SR Sunley Room
163 Room
340 Room
TR Tea Room
164 Lecture Theatre
341 Room
201 Lecture Theatre
342 Room
Off-site as specified
207 Lecture Theatre 307 Room
Please collect a copy of the programme addendum from the Registration Desk for the latest conference information.
Conference chair: Paul Milbourne (Cardiff University)
[email protected]
Introductory Computer Programming for Geographers Workshop, organised by the Quantitative Methods Research Group, the Geographical Information Science Research Group, and the Software Sustainability Institute Registration from 09.00, starts 10.00, ends 17.00
RGS-IBG Drayson Room
Please note that some session titles have been edited for length in this grid view of the timetable. They appear in full in the main body of the text, in the online programme at www.rgs.org/AC2017Programme, and in the conference app.
Followed by the conference opening drinks reception in the Marquee
RGS-IBG Opening plenary: Decolonizing Geography in Theory and Practice: Critical Indigenous Perspectives. Starts at 18.15, ends 19.30 Ondaatje Theatre
1
Opening plenary panel
Postgraduate Forum Annual Conference Training Symposium (PGF-ACTS) Registration and lunch from 12.00, starts 13.00, ends 17.30
RGS-IBG Education Centre
RGS-IBG Brexit: a geographical conversation, organised by the Economic Geography Research Group and the Political Geography Research Group Ondaatje Theatre Registration and lunch from 12.00, starts 13.00, ends 17.30
Pre-conference events [pre-booking required]
TUES
RGS-IBG Council Room
RGS-IBG Education Centre
RGS-IBG Main Hall
RGS-IBG Marquee
RGS-IBG Ondaatje Theatre
WED
GCYFRG 36 GCYFRG
EGRG 70
SCGRG Critical perspectives on transnational education and knowledge mobilities in the Global South
HERG 102
Author meets critics: Steve Hinchliffe et alPathological Lives: Disease, Space and Biopolitics
RGS-IBG Book Series
Richa Nagar (University of Minnesota, USA)
Antipode Lecture: Retelling Stories, Disrupting ‘the Social’, Relearning the World
100
16:50-18:30
Session 4
Geo 101
Digital Data: Opening up the Weather Archive (see the linked display in the Ambulatory)
69
'Other' Childhoods: 'Other' Childhoods: Economic Geography Writing Successfully Theories, approaches Theories, approaches Research Group AGM for the Journal of and methods (1) and methods (2) Geography in Higher Education
4
‘Avoid an imperialist approach!’ Tensions in ‘Decolonising geographical knowledges’ through the GCRF
Posters 1
66
Raewyn Connell Lily Kong (Singapore (University of Sydney, Management Australia) University, Singapore)
Patricia Noxolo (University of Birmingham, UK)
Urban Studies Journal Lecture: The ideological alignment of smart urbanism in Singapore: critical reflections on a political paradox
68
14:40-16:20
Session 3
Chair's plenary: Decolonizing the Republic of Knowledge: Futures for Social Science
65
13:10-14:25
Plenary
Society and Space Lecture: Flat Out! Decolonising (dance in) Birmingham at a time of austerity
PolGRG 35 DARG, PyGyRG GJRG
Affective Nationalism
3
Geography and Area studies dialogue: Decolonizing Methodologies and South Asia
DARG 34
11:10-12:50
09:00- 10:40
2
Session 2
Session 1
Journal of Geography in Higher Education/HERG Drinks Reception
HERG
Antipode Drinks Reception
From c. 18.30
Evening
6
Treating waste as a resource (1)
7
RGS-IBG Members' Room
RGS-IBG Tea Meet the editors of Room Environment & Planning C: Politics & Space
RGS-IBG Drayson Room Treating waste as a resource (2)
39
Combining Quantitative and Qualitative Data Effectively
PGF
The dynamics of business mobilities
SCGRG, PGF 38
Rethinking justice in city regional food systems planning
FGWG, GJRG 37
11:10-12:50
09:00- 10:40
5
Session 2
Session 1
RGS-IBG ‘Placing’ knowledges Sunley Room in Social and Cultural Geography: Postgraduate Snapshots
RGS-IBG Lowther Room
WED
EnGRG 72
PopGRG
SCGRG Decolonising dance(d) knowledges: interdisciplinary dialogues
SCGRG 106
Residential migration across time and lifecourses (2): international perspectives on trends and their explanations
Reception to recognise Rita Gardner, Director of the RGS-IBG
Population Geography Research Group AGM
PopGRG
Book launch and reception: The Routledge Research Companion to Energy Geographies: an orientation to find your way in a rapidly evolving field
EnGRG
HGRG networking drinks reception
HGRG
From c. 18.30
Evening
GJRG 131
Faith and the ‘practising’ of social justice (2): Postsecular negotiations in rights based arenas
PopGRG 105
Dance and the geographies of (de)coloniality
GFGRG 74
GFGRG mentoring and networking session
67
FGWG
The cultural geographies of new food
GJRG 104
Residential migration across time and lifecourses (1): theorising and evidencing diverse paths
HPGRG 73 History and Philosophy of Geography Research Group AGM
16:50-18:30
Session 4
FGWG 103
Food Localisation as Community-Building
71
14:40-16:20
Session 3
Energy Geographies Faith and the Research Group AGM ‘practising’ of social justice (1): Faith and justice in the city
13:10-14:25
Plenary
Trending Now: The Geographies of Fashion in the Digital Age (2) Intermediaries 43
Trending Now: The Geographies of Fashion in the Digital Age (1) - Fashion Cities
11
42
Sir Alexander Fleming Building, Room 122
RGRG 78
CMRG, PERG 44 CMRG, FGWG
Coastal Resilience across boundaries and disciplines (1)
CMRG
The interdisciplinary field (2): The ‘GoGoGozo’ experience
110
Trending Now: The Geographies of Fashion in the Digital Age (4) - The Future of Fashion
109
CMRG 111 Engaging Stakeholders in Coastal DecisionMaking
DGWG 79
Historical Trajectories Geographies of global Digital Geographies of Change and Disaster (sea)food markets Working Group AGM Risk Management in the Coastal Tropics
12
DGWG
Martin Haigh (Oxford Brookes University, UK)
DGWG 108
Trending Now: The Geographies of Fashion in the Digital Age (3) - Spaces, Systems and Values
FGWG 77 Food Geographies Working Group AGM
HERG
Journal of Geography in Higher Education Lecture: Layering Learning and Teaching for Different Levels of Environmental Consciousness
Geographies of digital Geographies of digital games (1) games (2)
GCYFRG 76
16:50-18:30
Session 4
PyGyRG 107
Decolonising geographies of democracy and participation
75
14:40-16:20
Session 3
Sir Alexander Geographies of Active Geographies of Active Rural Geography The interdisciplinary Fleming Living (1) Living (2) Research Group AGM field (1): positions and Building, framings Room 121
Sir Alexander Fleming Building, Room 120
10
DGWG
13:10-14:25
Plenary
State commemoration Geographies of in a digital world Children, Youth and Families Research Group AGM
DGWG 41
Sir Alexander Power 2.0: New Fleming Digital Geographies Building, Room 119
9
GFGRG
The Costs of Decolonizing the Discipline (2)
GFGRG 40
11:10-12:50
09:00- 10:40
8
Session 2
Session 1
Sir Alexander The Costs of Fleming Decolonizing the Building, Discipline (1) Lecture Theatre G34
WED From c. 18.30
Evening
Political ecology (2): theoretical perspectives and engagement
84
18
Political ecology (1): water, pollution and waste
Urban public space and placemaking (2)
Urban public space and placemaking (1)
Skempton Building, Room 163
83
17
Skempton Building, Room 064b
New and Emerging Research Within the Green Economy
TGRG
Urban Fallism: monuments, iconoclasm and decolonisation (2): Urban Fallism in the Post-Colonial Context
113
Exploring the SocioSpatialities of Urban Goods Mobility (2)
Political ecology (3): energy, climate change and vegetation
115
Geographies of Justice
PGF, RGRG 114
82
RGRG
The post-industrial countryside? (2)
The post-industrial countryside? (1)
RGRG 48
16
81
16:50-18:30
Session 4
TGRG 112
Exploring the SocioSpatialities of Urban Goods Mobility (1)
80
14:40-16:20
Session 3
Urban Fallism: monuments, iconoclasm and decolonisation (1): Urban Fallism in the Post-Colonial Context
47
15
13:10-14:25
Plenary
Politics, language and Politics, language and identity (1) identity (2)
Decolonising geographies: knowledge and power (2)
46
Decolonising geographies: knowledge and power (1)
14
45
13 Transport geographies (2)
11:10-12:50
09:00- 10:40
Transport geographies (1)
Session 2
Session 1
Skempton Building, Room 064a
Skempton Building, Room 060c
Skempton Building, Room 060b
Skempton Building, Room 060a
WED From c. 18.30
Evening
Skempton Building, Room 307
Skempton Building, Lecture Theatre 207
Skempton Building, Lecture Theatre 201
Skempton Building, Lecture Theatre 164
WED 50
19
UGRG
Scar-Cities: Middle East urbanisms between violent environments and disrupted governance (2)
UGRG 53
Scar-Cities: Middle East urbanisms between violent environments and disrupted governance (1)
PERG Examining energy consumption and communities: The social, cultural and political dynamics of energy system transformations (2)
Putting philosophies of geography into practice (2): In teaching
HPGRG 119 Putting philosophies of geography into practice (1): In research
GHWRG, GFGRG
Home futures: towards a critical feminist geography of housing, ageing and health (2) PERG 118
88
87
22
PopGRG
Home futures: towards a critical feminist geography of housing, ageing and health (1)
EGRG
Advancing global production networks research: progress and prospects (2): Panel
GHWRG, 117 GFGRG
Adrian Smith (Queen Mary University of London, UK) 86
16:50-18:30
Session 4
EGRG 116
Advancing global production networks research: progress and prospects (1): Lecture
85
14:40-16:20
Session 3
Examining energy consumption and communities: The social, cultural and political dynamics of energy system transformations (1)
52
13:10-14:25
Plenary
Here Be Dragons Film Geographical Screening perspectives on educational inequalities
21
GHWRG
The Health Millennium Development Goals: Global Strides, Local Meanders
51
Platform Finance (2): Placing Platform Capitalism
11:10-12:50
09:00- 10:40
Platform Finance (1): Geographies of FinTech
Session 2
Session 1 From c. 18.30
Evening
Reimagining Urban Energy Futures (1): Transformative Low Carbon Infrastuctures
25
SALC Building, Pippard Lecture Theatre
Sherfield/ SALC Building, Room 1
Sherfield/ SALC Building, Room 5
Sherfield/ SALC Building, Room 2
24
Sherfield/
EGRG
Transformative Stories: Trauma, Therapeutic Geographies and Hope
For whom and what do we grieve, when and where (1)
GFGRG, 58 SCGRG, PolGRG GHWRG
Communities of Place versus Communities of Interest? exploring implications of digital media for civic and place-based actions (2)
Communities of Place versus Communities of Interest? exploring implications of digital media for civic and place-based actions (1)
27
57
26
Labour and life: Labour and life: changing geographies changing geographies of the workplace (1) of the workplace (2)
EGRG 56
Reimagining Urban Energy Futures (2:) Pathways to Change
EnGRG
Decolonizing Urban Geography: Where have we got to, what next? (2) 55
54
Decolonizing Urban Geography: Where have we got to, what next? (1)
11:10-12:50
09:00- 10:40
23
Session 2
Session 1
Sherfield/ SALC Building, Read Lecture Theatre
WED 13:10-14:25
Plenary
SCGRG, PolGRG For whom and what do we grieve, when and where (3)
93 SCGRG, PolGRG 124 For whom and what do we grieve, when and where (2)
HGRG Decolonising antiquity, the middle ages and empire, colonial-post colonial images, in the modern divide
HGRG 123
Ruling the Land:Empires of Survey and their (Post-)Colonial Geographies
92
Spaces of care and wellbeing
EGRG 122
Labour and life: changing geographies of the workplace (3)
91
Rethinking decolonial and postcolonial knowledges beyond regions (2)
GFGRG
Urban transformation – roundtable discussion
120
16:50-18:30
Session 4
GFGRG 121
Rethinking decolonial and postcolonial knowledges beyond regions (1)
90
Decolonizing Urban Geography: Where have we got to, what next? (3)
89
14:40-16:20
Session 3 From c. 18.30
Evening
Huxley Building, Room 342
Huxley Building, Room 341
Sherfield/ SALC Building, Room 9
TGRG
Listening at the Margins: Thinking, feeling, and doing difference (2)
64
Listening at the Margins: Thinking, feeling, and doing difference (1)
33
HPGRG
Becoming Geography’s others: thinking through antonyms (2)
HPGRG 63
Becoming Geography’s others: thinking through antonyms (1)
32
HERG
Innovative assessment of geography students in Higher Education
HERG 62
Academic literacies: the route to academic success in Geography.
31
Current and emerging Current and Emerging research in transport Research in Transport (1) (2)
TGRG 61
30
Sherfield/ SALC Building, Room 8
HGRG, SCGRG
Valuing heritage in the Valuing heritage in the postcolonial city (1) postcolonial city (2)
HGRG, SCGRG 60
29
Geographies of subalternity and counterhegemonic globalization (2)
SALC Building, Room 7
59
Geographies of subalternity and counterhegemonic globalization (1)
11:10-12:50
09:00- 10:40
28
Session 2
Session 1
Sherfield/
Sherfield/ SALC Building, Room 6
WED 13:10-14:25
Plenary
RGRG Rural Cosmopolitanism: People, Localities and Mobilities (2)
RGRG 130 Rural Cosmopolitanism: People, Localities and Mobilities (1)
99
Non-representational geographies: practices, pedagogies and writing (2)
SCGRG, HPGRG
Educational Landscapes: Nature, Place and Moral Geographies (2)
SCGRG
Emerging Geographies of Everyday Peace
127
98 SCGRG, HPGRG 129 Non-representational geographies: practices, pedagogies and writing (1) s
EnGRG, UGRG
Urban Energy in the Global South (2)
GCYFRG 128
Educational Landscapes: Nature, Place and Moral Geographies (1)
97
Speculative landscapes: art as geographic practice
96
DARG
Donor exit, retreat and transition in a changing international development landscape (2) s
EnGRG, UGRG 126
Urban Energy in the Global South (1)
95
16:50-18:30
Session 4
DARG 125
Donor exit, retreat and transition in a changing international development landscape (1)
94
14:40-16:20
Session 3 From c. 18.30
Evening
RGS-IBG Education Centre
RGS-IBG Main Hall
RGS-IBG Marquee
RGS-IBG Ondaatje Theatre
THURS
Author meets critics The Black Pacific
RACE
The ’battle of the maps’ – (re)imagining geographies of knowledge production
RACE 167
Rachel Pain (Newcastle University, UK)
Matthew Sparke (University of California, Santa Cruz, USA)
133
Progress in Human Geography Lecture: Geotrauma: violence, place and recovery
Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers Lecture: Safe Space Across Borders: From Geopolitical Projection to Refugee Health Protection
TIBG 166
11:10-12:50
09:00- 10:40
132
Session 2
Session 1
Posters 2
200
Abdi Ismail Samatar (University of Minnesota, USA/University of Pretoria, South Africa)
Chair's plenary: Africa’s First Democrats: Decolonizing the Study of Leadership and Democracy
199
13:10-14:25
Plenary
TGRG
Decolonising institutional arrangements: insights from the arts, education, and policy (2)
Area, RACE
Mei-Po Kwan (University of Illinois, USA)
The Brian Hoyle Annual Lecture in Transport Geography: Human Mobility, Individual Context, and Environmental Exposure: A Spatiotemporal Perspective
234
16:50-18:30
Session 4
Area, 235 RACE Decolonising institutional arrangements: insights from the arts, education, and policy (1)
203
Dialogues in Human Geography plenary forum: The Whereabouts of Climate Politics: navigating climate’s human geographies
202
14:40-16:20
Session 3
Conference dinner and reception – 19.45 for 20.00
From c. 18.30
Evening
168
134
136
RGS-IBG Drayson Room
GCYFRG
TGRG 204
DGWG
Decolonising ICT4D Digital for development : Critiques and Reimaginings (2)
DGWG 171
14:40-16:20
Session 3
PERG The role of expert knowledge in socioenvironmental policy and decision making (2)
Geographies of development: positions and critiques
DGWG 239
Geographies of Health Decolonising ICT4D and Wellbeing Digital for Research Group AGM development : Critiques and Reimaginings (3)
Hoyle Drinks Reception
GFGRG Monograph Launch: Women and Sex Tourism Landscapes
267
Social and Cultural Geography Research Group AGM
SCGRG
Book launch and drinks reception: Health Geographies – A Critical Introduction
GHWRG
TGRG
From c. 18.30
Evening
GJRG 266
PGF
Making Injustice visible: crossdisciplinary representational techniques and processes of Spatial & Environmental Injustice and Environmental Conflicts
237
Visualising the Conserved Anthropocene (2)
PERG 238
The role of expert knowledge in socioenvironmental policy and decision making (1)
GHWRG 207
16:50-18:30
Session 4
PGF 236
Vulnerable spaces
QMRG 206
Race, Culture and Equality Working Group AGM
RACE 205
Transport Geography Visualising the Research Group AGM Conserved Anthropocene (1)
13:10-14:25
Plenary
Contextual Quantitative Methods safeguarding: Research Group AGM Approaches to exploitation and abuse of children and young people beyond the home (2)
GCYFRG 170
Decolonising ICT4D Digital for development : Critiques and Reimaginings (1)
137
GJRG
Just air? Spatial injustices, contestation and politicisation of air pollution (2): The politics of air and the dual challenge of air pollution and climate change
GJRG 169
Just air? Spatial injustices, contestation and politicisation of air pollution (1): The struggle for just air: activism in an urban setting
135
Geographies of extinction: exploring the spatio-temporal relations of species and death (2)
11:10-12:50
09:00- 10:40
Geographies of extinction: exploring the spatio-temporal relations of species and death (1)
Session 2
Session 1
RGS-IBG Contextual Sunley Room safeguarding: Approaches to exploitation and abuse of children and young people beyond the home (1)
RGS-IBG Lowther Room
RGS-IBG Council Room
THURS
Sir Alexander Fleming Building, Room 121 Geography’s Technology: Conceptualising technology, technics and the technological (2)
HPGRG 176
Geography’s Technology: Conceptualising technology, technics and the technological (1)
142
A Populist Moment? (2)
175
141
GHWRG
New and Emerging Research within Geographies of Health and Wellbeing (2)
GHWRG 174
New and Emerging Research within Geographies of Health and Wellbeing (1)
140
HPGRG
The question of culture in cultural geographies
GJRG 173
Practising paradox: decolonizing urban geographies from the settler-colonial University
139
Sir Alexander A Populist Moment? Fleming (1) Building, Room 120
Sir Alexander Fleming Building, Room 119
Sir Alexander Fleming Building, Lecture Theatre G34
201
13:10-14:25
Plenary
Health in the buffer zone of EU
GHWRG
UGRG
Geography of Leisure Refractions of the Urban Geography and Tourism State: Viewing Research Group Research Group AGM Governance through AGM the Lens of Major Infrastructure Projects
GLTRG 211
Gender and Feminist Anti-Colonialism and Anti-Colonialism and Geographies the Spaces of Political the Spaces of Research Group AGM Negotiation (1) Political Negotiation (2)
HGRG, PolGRG
Sensing and making sense of ‘nature’ in the context of illness and impairment
GFGRG 210 HGRG, PolGRG 242
Higher Education Research Groups AGM
It started raining: Screening and discussing a film about the fight for housing in Bucharest, Romania (2)
240
16:50-18:30
Session 4
GHWRG 241
It started raining: Screening and discussing a film about the fight for housing in Bucharest, Romania (1)
208
14:40-16:20
Session 3
HERG 209
Reflections on Continuing the parenting/caring and Conversation on working in geography Mental Health in the British Academy
PyGyRG 172
11:10-12:50
09:00- 10:40
138
Session 2
Session 1
RGS-IBG Tea Fuller Geographies Room 2017: ‘Decolonising participatory geographies’
THURS From c. 18.30
Evening
Skempton Building, Room 064b
Skempton Building, Room 064a
Skempton Building, Room 060c
Skempton Building, Room 060b
Skempton Building, Room 060a
Sir Alexander Fleming Building, Room 122
THURS
HERG
The emotional geographies of place: developing effective learning and teaching strategies for fieldwork
PolGRG 181
Political geographies of the event
148
GFGRG, PGF
Innovative Research within Gender & Feminist Geography (2)
GFGRG, PGF 180
Innovative Research within Gender & Feminist Geography (1)
147
Philosophical perspectives on time, space and place
146
Governance, regions and development
179
145
Urban growth and development (1)
Politics: state building and services (2)
178
Politics: state building and services (1)
144
CMRG
Place and Identity: Challenging narratives on the Sea and Blue Growth (2)
Place and Identity: Challenging narratives on the Sea and Blue Growth (1)
CMRG 177
11:10-12:50
09:00- 10:40
143
Session 2
Session 1
CMRG 212
14:40-16:20
Session 3
Everyday nation and complexity (1)
216
CMRG
Everyday nation and complexity (2)
248
Que(e)rying Gender, Tourism and Mobilities (2)
GFGRG, GLTRG
Geographies of heritage and tourism
246
Land use and data
245
Financial geographies: trade, retail and markets
244
Marine Social Sciences: New Solutions to old Challenges?
GFGRG, 247 GLTRG
Que(e)rying Gender, Tourism and Mobilities (1)
215
Urban growth and development (2)
214
Geographies of disaster, risk and fragility
213
16:50-18:30
Session 4
CMRG 243
Coastal and Marine Coastal Resilience Research Group AGM across boundaries and disciplines (2)
13:10-14:25
Plenary From c. 18.30
Evening
Skempton Building, Room 307
Skempton Building, Lecture Theatre 207
Skempton Building, Lecture Theatre 201
Skempton Building, Lecture Theatre 164
Skempton Building, Room 163
THURS
RGRG, FGWG
Celebrating a Everyday livelihoods centenary: On Growth and Form and geography
153 HPGRG, QMRG 186
Creating and Communicating Knowledge, Practices and Values: Exploring the Dynamics of Local Anchors and TransLocal Communities (2)
EGRG
Brexit and the Future of Agriculture, Food and Rural Society (2)
EGRG 185
Creating and Communicating Knowledge, Practices and Values: Exploring the Dynamics of Local Anchors and TransLocal Communities (1)
152
EGRG
Advancing global production networks research: progress and prospects (4)
RGRG, FGWG 184
Brexit and the Future of Agriculture, Food and Rural Society (1)
151
EnGRG
Energy Learning and Social Change
EGRG 183
Advancing global production networks research: progress and prospects (3)
150
Changing Norms in the Energy System
EnGRG 182
11:10-12:50
09:00- 10:40
149
Session 2
Session 1 13:10-14:25
Plenary
RGRG, FGWG 251
DGWG
RGRG What is rural? Ensuring a fair deal for rural communities (2): Challenging poverty and marginalisation
RGRG 253 What is rural? Ensuring a fair deal for rural communities (1): The digital challenge
221
The globally emerging Large Urban Developments (LUDs) and the future of cities
TGRG 252
Everyday Mobilities and Climatic Events
220
Brexit and the Future Digital Power, of Agriculture, Food Decolonising Life: and Rural Society (3): Platforms and Place Panel Discussion
219
Advancing global production networks research: progress and prospects (6)
EGRG
Towards a poststructuralist political economy
249
16:50-18:30
Session 4
EGRG 250
Advancing global production networks research: progress and prospects (5)
218
Between Geographic Knowledge and Experience
217
14:40-16:20
Session 3 From c. 18.30
Evening
Sherfield/ SALC Building, Room 5
Sherfield/ SALC Building, Room 2
Sherfield/ SALC Building, Room 1
Sherfield/ SALC Building, Pippard Lecture Theatre
Sherfield/ SALC Building, Read Lecture Theatre
THURS
189
156
TGRG, GIScRG
Putting Transport on the Map(2)
TGRG, GIScRG 191
Putting Transport on the Map(1)
158
Mortgage markets and the financialization of home in the Global South
EGRG
190
157
Geography beyond the West: Understanding the Urbanisation in China
Migrant Leisure Spaces and Community Wellbeing
Understanding urban everyday risks through methodological innovations
GLTRG
Networks of Knowledge: Communicating Geographical Knowledge in the Long Nineteenth Century (2)
HGRG
Networks of Knowledge: Communicating Geographical Knowledge in the Long Nineteenth Century (1)
HGRG 188
Postcolonial theory and the reinterpretation of ‘natural’ disasters (2)
155
187
Postcolonial theory and the reinterpretation of ‘natural’ disasters (1)
11:10-12:50
09:00- 10:40
154
Session 2
Session 1 13:10-14:25
Plenary
EGRG
FGWG Food and power: Decolonising food systems and food research
TGRG, GIScRG 258
Financialisation in the Global South (2): Low-Income Economies and Regions
EGRG 257
Putting Transport on the Map (3): Workshop
226
EnGRG, PGF Energy Geographies Postgraduate Research
PGF 256
Financialisation in the Global South (1): Emerging Economies and Regions
225
Fieldwork Experiences of Decolonising Geographical Knowledges
224
Historical Geographies of Mobility and Knowledge (2)
HPGRG, PopGRG
Contesting Smart Cities (2)
254
16:50-18:30
Session 4
HPGRG, 255 PopGRG
Historical Geographies of Mobility and Knowledge (1)
223
Contesting Smart Cities (1)
222
14:40-16:20
Session 3 From c. 18.30
Evening
Sherfield/ SALC Building, Room 9
Sherfield/ SALC Building, Room 8
Sherfield/ SALC Building, Room 7
Sherfield/ SALC Building, Room 6
THURS
PopGRG, PGF 195 EnGRG
Postgraduate Geographies of Contributions to work(ing) in the lowPopulation Geography carbon economy Research
162
More-than-human geographies of empathy (2): empathy in caring practices
194
161
More-than-human geographies of empathy (1): empathy with uncharismatic others
Systems of (auto)mobility: Continuities, disruptions and futures (2): (Auto)mobility technologies, infrastructures, identities and ontologies
193
Systems of (auto)mobility: Continuities, disruptions and futures (1): (Auto)mobility planning, policies and advocacy
160
192
159 Destabilising Knowledges of Refugee Reception, Settlement and Integration (2)
11:10-12:50
09:00- 10:40
Destabilising Knowledges of Refugee Reception, Settlement and Integration (1)
Session 2
Session 1 13:10-14:25
Plenary
PolGRG, PGF
260
Emerging voices in political geography: fragments from our research
259
16:50-18:30
Session 4
261
GCYFRG
Political ecologies of austerity: Conservation and park management in an age of austerity
RGRG 262 New and Emerging Rural Researchers
230
More-than-human Playing, listening, geographies of engaging and taking empathy (3): empathy action with children in future ecologies
229
Teaching Mobilities: Teaching Mobilities: Practice, Pedagogies, Practice, Pedagogies, Power (1) Power (2)
228
Destabilising Knowledges of Refugee Reception, Settlement and Integration (3)
227
14:40-16:20
Session 3 From c. 18.30
Evening
Huxley Building, Room 342
Huxley Building, Room 341
Huxley Building, Room 340
THURS
DARG
Decolonising urban transport studies (2)
UGRG, TGRG
Re-theorising change through longitudinal research in the global South (2)
UGRG, 198 TGRG
Decolonising urban transport studies (1)
165
PolGRG
Politics of the Everyday in Urban Transformations in China (1)
DARG 197
Re-theorising change through longitudinal research in the global South (1)
164
Humanitarian Energy Geographies – The Space for Renewables in Energy Access for Refugees
EnGRG 196
11:10-12:50
09:00- 10:40
163
Session 2
Session 1 13:10-14:25
Plenary
UGRG
SCGR G
A geography of small things: geographies of architecture beyond the high rise (2)
SCGR G
(Re)Engaging Geographies of Religions, Faith and Spiritualties
264
Politics of the Everyday in Urban Transformations in China (3): Making urban China
SCGRG 265
A geography of small things: geographies of architecture beyond the high rise (1)
233
Learning from the South: Applying Social Theory & Practices in both the North and South
232
16:50-18:30
Session 4
EnGRG 263
Politics of the Everyday in Urban Transformations in China (2): Energy, water, food
231
14:40-16:20
Session 3 From c. 18.30
Evening
RGS-IBG Council Room
RGS-IBG Education Centre
RGS-IBG Main Hall
RGS-IBG Ondaatje Theatre
FRI
PERG
Consumer to Citizens: Reconfiguring the human factor in energy (2)
PERG 300
Consumer to Citizens: Reconfiguring the human factor in energy (1)
270
SCGRG
Geographies of the body and technology (2): technologies of embodiment
DGWG 299
Geographies of the body and technology (1): objects and subjects
269
Mary Gilmartin (National University of Ireland, Maynooth, Ireland)
Sarah Keenan (Birkbeck, University of London, UK)
298
268 Political Geography Lecture: Decolonising migration
11:10-12:50
09:00- 10:40
Social and Cultural Geography Lecture: From Historical Chains to Derivative Futures: Land Title Registries as Time Machines
Session 2
Session 1
Planning and Environment Research Group AGM
16:50-18:30
Session 4
GLTRG, PyGyRG Unsettling tourism knowledges
PolGRG 362 Alternative narratives of Mashriq and Maghreb; the politics of situated, practiced and indigenous knowledges
DGWG The Museum of Contemporary Commodities: creative propositions and provocations on the heritages of datatrade-place-value (2)
DGWG 361
The Museum of Contemporary Commodities: creative propositions and provocations on the heritages of datatrade-place-value (1)
331
Tariq Jazeel (University College London, UK)
Singapore Journal of Tropical Geography Lecture: Singularity. A manifesto for incomparable geographies
330
14:40-16:20
Session 3
PERG 332
Postgraduate Forum Business Meeting
Posters 3
329
Juanita Sundberg (The University of British Columbia, Canada)
Chair's plenary: The politics of solidarity and decolonial possibilities
328
13:10-14:25
Plenary
Closing drinks reception in the Marquee
18:45
Evening
272
Sir Alexander Fleming Building, Room 119
Sir Alexander Fleming Building, Lecture Theatre G34
RGS-IBG Drayson Room
Researcher Trauma: dealing with traumatic research content and places (2)
GHWRG
Author meets critics Reappraising Livingstone's The Geographical Tradition after a quarter of a century
GHWRG 305
Researcher Trauma: dealing with traumatic research content and places (1)
275
Decolonizing Land/Water: Critical Settler and Indigenous Perspectives on land/water governance
304
274 HPGRG, RACE
Exploring brands and being (2): coproducing understandings of place
303
Wiley: Join our Publishing Sessions on Maximising Impact and Peer Review
Exploring brands and being (1): elision with literal and figurative landscapes
273
HGRG
13:10-14:25
Plenary 14:40-16:20
Session 3
After Urban Creative Economies
337
Decolonisation and Relationships of Accountability (1)
336
Terra Femme: Early Film Travelogues by Women
DARG 335 Developing Areas Research Group AGM
EnGRG
TGRG, DGWG
Food geographies: production and supply chains
367
Decolonisation and Relationships of Accountability (2)
366
Mobile lives in the digital age: implications, challenges and opportunities
365
Energy poverty and vulnerability: developing a global perspective (2)
EnGRG 364
Energy poverty and vulnerability: developing a global perspective (1)
PyGyRG 334 Participatory Geographies Research Group AGM
HGRG 363
16:50-18:30
Session 4
New and Emerging Locating the limits to Research in Historical financialisation Geography (3): Spaces of Knowledge Making
HGRG 333
New and Emerging Historical Geography Research in Historical Research Group Geography (2): AGM Performed Historical Spaces
HERG 302
New and Emerging Research in Historical Geography (1): Historic Environments
HGRG 301
11:10-12:50
09:00- 10:40
271
Session 2
Session 1
RGS-IBG Making the Slow Sunley Room University Inclusive
RGS-IBG Lowther Room
FRI From c. 18.30
Evening
Skempton Building, Room 060c
Skempton Building, Room 060b
309
310 Resource Temporalities (1)
280
Experiencing the digital
Politics, migration and Politics, migration and citizenship (1) citizenship (2)
279
Skempton Building, Room 060a
Where Next for the Ethical Market? (2): consumption perspectives
GJRG
Decolonising WildLife: Critical Geographies of Rewilding (2)
GJRG 308
Where Next for the Ethical Market? (1): production perspectives
278
Decolonising WildLife: Critical Geographies of Rewilding (1)
277 PyGyRG, RGRG 307 PyGyRG, RGRG
Sir Alexander Fleming Building, Room 122
Sir Alexander Fleming Building, Room 121
SSQRG
Gay Male Urban Spaces after Grindr & Gentrification (1): Intersecting Urban Geographies of Sexuality & Inequality
SSQRG 306
11:10-12:50
09:00- 10:40
276
Session 2
Session 1
Sir Alexander Fat Sexy Spaces Fleming Building, Room 120
FRI 14:40-16:20
Session 3 16:50-18:30
Session 4
Geographies of Justice Research Group AGM
Emerging Geographies of Religions, Spiritualities, and Faith (2)
373
343 Emerging Geographies of Religions, Spiritualities, and Faith (1)
Geographies of activism and protest
372
Housing, community and development (2)
371
Mobility and transport justice (2): power and participation
Resource Temporalities (2)
342
Housing, community and development (1)
341
Decolonising Nature in the Anthropocene: emerging conceptualisations of nature & their challenges GJRG 370
Mobility and transport justice (1): framing and scope
340
Decolonising WildLife: Critical Geographies of Rewilding (3)
GJRG 339 PyGyRG, RGRG 369
DARG
SSQRG
Teaching Geographies of Gender and Sexualities
SSQRG 368
Gay Male Urban Spaces after Grindr & Gentrification (2): Rethinking Gay Urban Geographies
SSQRG 338 Space, Sexualities and Queer Research Group AGM
13:10-14:25
Plenary 18:45
Evening
Skempton Building, Lecture Theatre 207
Skempton Building, Lecture Theatre 201
Skempton Building, Lecture Theatre 164
Skempton Building, Room 163
Skempton Building, Room 064b
FRI
GFGRG
Geographies of Safe Space (2): Spaces of refuge, shelter and contact
PolGRG 315
Geographies of Safe Space (1): Spaces of embodiment, identity and education
285
EnGRG
Governance, energy and injustice (2)
EnGRG 314
Governance, energy and injustice (1)
284
PolGRG
Muslim women’s geographies – decolonizing discourses, rewriting everyday lives (2)
SCGRG 313
Muslim women’s geographies – decolonizing discourses, rewriting everyday lives (1)
283
Innovative Methods within Geographic Research (2)
PGF
Diversity Matters within Educational Contexts: Interdisciplinary Perspectives
PGF 312
Innovative Methods within Geographic Research (1)
282
11:10-12:50
09:00- 10:40 311
Session 2
Session 1 13:10-14:25
Plenary
PGF
376
Problematizing colonial modernity: geographies of universalism and pluriversalism (2): Which decolonial geographies?
EnGRG New Energy Spaces – Conceptualizing the geographical political economy of energy transitions (2)
EnGRG 377 New Energy Spaces – Conceptualizing the geographical political economy of energy transitions (1)
348
Panel discussion: Unsettling Carbon Sally Eden’s Society Environmental Publics
347
Finding futures for waterways (2): Communities, mobilities and changing lifestyles
374
16:50-18:30
Session 4
HGRG 375 HGRG, PolGRG
Problematizing colonial modernity: geographies of universalism and pluriversalism (1): Classes, genders ad universals
346
Teaching as a postgraduate: How to Maximise the Available Opportunities
345
Finding futures for waterways (1): Cultural heritage and hidden histories
344
14:40-16:20
Session 3 From c. 18.30
Evening
Sherfield/ SALC Building, Room 1
Sherfield/ SALC Building, Pippard Lecture Theatre
Sherfield/ SALC Building, Read Lecture Theatre
Skempton Building, Room 307
FRI 316
286
(en) Countering change, (dis) Assembling placeness (1)
HPGRG
319
Author meets critics The home-migration nexus: theory, research, prospects
289
PopGRG
Negotiating Brexit: migrant spatialities and identities in a changing Europe (2): Politics of Mobility, Citizenship and Belonging
PopGRG 318
Negotiating Brexit: migrant spatialities and identities in a changing Europe (1): Transnational mobility, materiality and emotion
288
TGRG
Transport, Sustainable Cities and Transit Oriented Development (2): linked with more social development and sustainability
TGRG 317
Transport, Sustainable Cities and Transit Oriented Development (1): Urban development and sustainability
287
The Future of the Bunker // The Bunker of the Future (1): new uses and meanings for the 20th century's abandoned bunkers
11:10-12:50
09:00- 10:40
Opening Geography Out to Fashion Worlds
Session 2
Session 1 13:10-14:25
Plenary
SCGRG (en) Countering change, (dis) Assembling placeness (3)
HPGRG 381 (en) Countering change, (dis) Assembling placeness (2)
352
PopGRG ‘Trump-etting’ Population Geography in Brexit and US Presidential Election Debates?
PopGRG 380
Negotiating Brexit: migrant spatialities and identities in a changing Europe (3): Everyday Relations, Integration and Securities
351
The role and significance of consultants in planning and development
UGRG
The Future of the Bunker // The Bunker of the Future (3): In the Ruins of the Cold War Bunker: John Beck in conversation with Luke Bennett, Kathrine Sandys and Kevin Booth
378
16:50-18:30
Session 4
TGRG 379
Transport, Sustainable Cities and Transit Oriented Development (3): promotion and methods - how it works
350
The Future of the Bunker // The Bunker of the Future (2): materialising contemporary anxieties and desires in 21st century bunker building
349
14:40-16:20
Session 3 18:45
Evening
EGRG 384
Geographies of mobility and creativity: impacts, identities, inequalities (2)
324
Soundscapes and Wellbeing (1): Performing Soundscapes of Wellbeing
GJRG, PolGRG
Soundscapes and Wellbeing (2): Everyday Soundscapes of Wellbeing
386
Court Geographies
GLTRG 385
357
356
294
Geographies of mobility and creativity: impacts, identities, inequalities (1)
Against Decolonising Geography, For Epistemic Knowledge
383
Authors meet critics - The porous city Money and Finance after the Crisis: Critical Thinking for Uncertain Times (eds. Brett Christophers, Andrew Leyshon and Geoff Mann)
355
Clarence Glacken’s Traces on the Rhodian Shore at 50: Nature, Culture and ‘Western Thought’
354
Different and Diverse Knowledges of (Rural) Food Access and Security (2)
FGWG, RGRG
16:50-18:30
Session 4
FGWG, RGRG 382
Different and Diverse Knowledges of (Rural) Food Access and Security (1)
353
14:40-16:20
Session 3
Tourism and Geographies of Risk
TGRG
13:10-14:25
Plenary
Can Smart Mobility be Can Smart Mobility be Inclusive Mobility? (1) Inclusive Mobility? (2)
TGRG 323
293
Sherfield/ SALC Building, Room 7
Counter-mapping: Theories, Tools, and Tropes
322
292
DARG
Decolonising Drug Policy Debates
HPGRG 321
(Post-)colonial knowledge and the making of contemporary Asian urbanism
Sherfield/ SALC Building, Room 8
FGWG
Food in Urban Africa (2): Nutrition and governance
The 'commons and borderland' of geography and anthropology
291
Food in Urban Africa (1): Changing foodways and everyday lives
FGWG 320
11:10-12:50
09:00- 10:40
290
Session 2
Session 1
Sherfield/ SALC Building, Room 6
Sherfield/ SALC Building, Room 5
Sherfield/ SALC Building, Room 2
FRI From c. 18.30
Evening
Huxley Building, Room 342
Huxley Building, Room 341
Sherfield/ SALC Building, Room 9
FRI 325
295
GLTRG
Geographies of cruise tourism: Navigating the field(s) of inquiry (2)
GLTRG 327
Geographies of cruise tourism: Navigating the field(s) of inquiry (1)
The Hydrosocial Cycle in Postcolonial Times
GCYFRG
Constructing the higher education student: understanding spatial variations (2)
GCYFRG 388
360
359
297
DGWG
Workshop: Spatial Urban Analytics and Crowdsourced Geographic Information for Smarter Cities (2)
GIScRG
16:50-18:30
Session 4
GIScRG 387
Workshop: Spatial Urban Analytics and Crowdsourced Geographic Information for Smarter Cities (1)
358
14:40-16:20
Session 3
Constructing the higher education student: understanding spatial variations (1)
UGRG 326
13:10-14:25
Plenary
Creative Digital technologies: Technologies and the Digital methods as City influences on research design in geography
296
Governance, shadow states and the positioning of civil society in processes of devolution (2)
11:10-12:50
09:00- 10:40
Governance, shadow states and the positioning of civil society in processes of devolution (1)
Session 2
Session 1 18:45
Evening
Website moccguide.net
MUSEUM OF CONTEMPORARY COMMODITIES
Twitter @moccofficial
24-27 AUG
Instagram @moccguidemikayla
MoCC EXHIBITION, 10-4 PM An art-geography research and exhibition project investigating the deep links between data, trade, place and values that shape our everyday lives. Open to the public. RGS-IBG Pavilion Gallery 1 Kensington Gore, Kensington, London SW7 2AR, UK
Valuing the things we buy today as the heritage of tomorrow
Fri 25 AUG DATA WALKSHOP, 10-12.30 PM A rapid group ethnography event exploring the immediate surroundings of the Royal Geographical Society (with IBG) with data activist Alison Powell, LSE.
CONVERSATION EVENT, 2-4pm Our future heritage: curating contemporary commodity culture With V&A Senior Curator Corinna Gardner, Bristol Cultural Geographer Merle Patchett and Bristol Music Sociologist Lee Marshall.
HELLO NICE VISITOR! In this museum we are all the curators.
30 AUG - 01 SEP EXHIBITION REASSEMBLE, 10-5 PM Aspects of MoCC will be reassembled in the foyer and open for delegates at the RGS-IBG Annual Conference. MoCC sessions will be held on Friday 1st September.
SUPPORTED BY THE DIGITAL GEOGRAPHIES WORKING GROUP
Contents 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22.
Welcome to the Society Welcome from the Chair of Conference, Sarah Radcliffe Recognition of Rita Gardner, Director Registration and general information Eating, drinking and recycling at the RGS-IBG and Imperial College Local transport Plenaries and sponsored sessions Workshops and discussions Art/media exhibitions and screenings Receptions Research and Working Group AGMs Learn more about the Society Exhibitors and advertisers Posters Instructions to session Chairs Building directions and information Sessions – Tuesday 29 August Sessions – Wednesday 30 August Sessions – Thursday 31 August Sessions – Friday 1 September Index of authors, chairs and convenors Index of Research and Working Group affiliated sessions
1. From the Director
Tuesday 29 August 2017
Dear colleague, I would like to extend a very warm welcome to all of you to the Society and to this year’s conference in London. This is a really important time for us to come together as geographers, given all that is happening in the UK and the world more generally. The wide range of sessions and events over the next few days promise to be stimulating, challenging, enjoyable and I hope also inspiring. The papers we will hear, and the debates and conversations we engage in, particularly those related to the conference theme, are critical to the health and future of our discipline, to its institutions, and to us, as its scholars and practitioners. This conference is, however, just one moment for the discipline. These conversations and debates cannot and will not end here, and I hope you will join us at the Society in committing to continuing these and enacting change in the months and years to come. This organisation exists for one purpose only - to advance geography. We can only do that by being inclusive of difference, respecting diversity, and fully recognising and addressing inequalities of the present as well as the past. I would like to thank Sarah Radcliffe for the intellectual leadership and enthusiasm she has brought to the conference in her role as Chair – in selecting the theme and the plenary speakers. I would also like to specifically recognise the Research and Working Groups and session organisers who have critically engaged with the conference theme, notably the RACE Working Group, and their commitment to advance our collective thinking and practices. Most of all, thank-you to all of you - whether you are presenting, convening, chairing or simply attending – for your contributions, your energy and your commitment to be here. You are the conference! In the past few months, since I made the decision to step down as Director of the Society, I have been reflecting on the Society, on geography, and on the many changes that have taken place over the last 21 years. I was appointed Director in 1996, just after the merger of the RGS and IBG. That merger was a significant moment in our disciplinary history, and has had lasting effects for the discipline as a whole and for the Society. It provided an impetus for change, and in the last two decades, with enormous support from the academic community and many others, the Society has indeed changed. It will continue to do so in the coming years, responding to the issues and needs of the discipline and the time. The annual conference was a mainstay of the IBG; it remains so for the RGS-IBG. Elements have changed: it has more than doubled in size; it is no longer held in early January (in rooms with little heating!); it is now (largely) centrally organised. But much also remains the same: the Chair, now elected by the Society’s Fellowship, selects a theme; Research Groups play a key role in developing and organising sessions; and, importantly, it remains a time and a space for geographers from across the world to discuss and debate geography, to share ideas about what it is, and aspirations for what it should be. Next year’s conference will be held in Cardiff. We encourage you to discuss ideas with the conference organising team and the elected chair, Paul Milbourne, before the theme and format are set. For some of you this will be your first visit to the Society; for others you have been here many times before. I’d encourage all of you, while you are here, to take just a little time to find out more about the Society’s work within and beyond the academy. This includes changes that we have made, our future plans and current Strategy, and most importantly opportunities for you to get involved and to help shape this work.
As an organisation, our work – much of it delivered in partnership with the academic community - reaches a wide variety of audiences. In addition to our activities related to research and higher education, our work ranges from supporting school teachers with resources and professional development events drawing on the latest research, to the Ambassadors programme that enthuses young people about the value of studying geography at university; from opportunities for personal development through fieldwork, to connecting community groups with the Society’s historic collections and encouraging reinterpretation and enrichment of these; from engaging and enthusing the wider public with geography through Discovering Britain, a programme of street exhibits and geographical walks, to the advocacy and lobbying we do to secure the recognition, position and funding of geography in schools and higher education, and increasingly its recognition by employers through the accreditation Chartered Geographer. Many of you are Fellows, and the Society extends a sincere thank you for your support – it makes a real difference. Fellowship also gives you a voice and vote in the Society; this matters too. For those of you who are not Fellows, please consider joining us and supporting our work, advancing geography in the academy and beyond. I look forward to meeting many of you over the next few days, and wish you a productive and enjoyable conference.
Dr Rita Gardner CBE Director
2.
Welcome from the RGS-IBG Chair of Conference, Sarah Radcliffe
Welcome to the 2017 annual conference, hosted by the RGS-IBG in London. In a year of horrific displays of intolerance and hatred - as well as outstanding acts of solidarity and support - I offer a particular welcome to international students, scholars and visitors, and to participants who have been targets of neglect and exclusion. In my role as Conference Chair, I sought to identify a conference theme that would encourage conversations across the discipline about our research as well as our teaching, professional position and the impacts of geography. Building on the potential for this conference to provide an arena and catalyst for ideas and projects, I hoped to spark reflection and debates around how geography can contribute to the transnational and globespanning processes and exclusions that affect us all, although in diverse and unequal ways. Decolonising, for Māori intellectual Linda Tuhiwai Smith, means “a long-term process involving the bureaucratic, cultural, linguistic and psychological divesting of colonial power” (Tuhiwai Smith 2010: 33).1 Despite the end of formal colonial rule, our understandings of the world – about space, environment, nature, economy, democracy, cities, education, culture, and so on – often unconsciously and implicitly reflect enduring colonial legacies. The theme of 'Decolonising Geographical Knowledges' draws attention to geography's relation to privilege for some and exclusion of others, and invites us to think about how opening geography to the world provides an opportunity to discuss ways of doing geography differently. The opportunity to do geography creatively has generated a broad and innovative 1
Tuhiwai Smith L 2010 Decolonizing Methodologies. London, Zed Books.
range of responses from the RGS-IBG Research and Working Groups and other networks. For instance I am delighted by the span of decolonial discussions covered by journalsponsored and research group sessions throughout the conference. To mention one example, the Race, Culture and Equality Working Group has organised two sessions on 'Decolonising institutional arrangements: insights from the arts, education, and policy', which bring together a range of critical voices from within and beyond the academy, and which are also sponsored by Area. The rich programme additionally reflects the enthusiasms and energies of scholars and Research Groups beyond the conference theme. In parallel to the conference, the RGS-IBG journal Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers is publishing its first 'Themed Intervention' on Decolonising Geographical Knowledges, bringing together diverse perspectives.2 The 2017 Conference opens on Tuesday evening with a panel of North American First Nation and Indigenous scholars talking about 'Decolonising Geography in Theory and Practice.' Panellists include Sarah Hunt and Michelle Daigle (University of British Columbia, Canada), Deborah McGregor (York University Canada), Jay Johnson (University of Kansas, USA), and Melanie Yazzie (University of New Mexico, USA). The conversations begun on Tuesday will be developed further in a session on 'Decolonizing Land/Water: Critical Settler and Indigenous Perspectives on land/water governance’. The lunchtime plenary sessions during the rest of the week include on Wednesday, Raewyn Connell (University of Sydney, Australia) speaking on 'Decolonising the Republic of Knowledge: Futures for Social Science'; on Thursday, Abdi Ismail Samatar (University of Minnesota, USA/University of Pretoria, South Africa) speaking on 'Africa's First Democrats: decolonising the study of leadership and democracy'; and on Friday, Juanita Sundberg (University of British Columbia, Canada), speaking on ‘The politics of solidarity and decolonial possibilities’. Each talk will be followed by a short response from disciplinary experts, leaving time for questions and general discussion with the aim of bringing conference participants into the broad conversation about decolonising geography, a conversation that will hopefully continue in the specialized sessions and panels, and beyond the conference. The conference will welcome around 1,600-plus participants who will contribute to around 380 themed sessions. The conference programme also includes sessions for post-graduate students and early career researchers. None of this would have been possible without the sterling work of the RGS-IBG staff especially Catherine Souch and Sarah Evans, who have worked so hard to ensure the conference runs smoothly. The energy and hard work of convenors, presenters and discussants and others has also made the conference what it is too, so thank you. I hope you each have a stimulating and enjoyable Conference, and welcome a chance to talk to you.
Sarah Radcliffe, University of Cambridge Chair of the RGS-IBG Annual International Conference 2017
2
Radcliffe S A 2017 Decolonising geographical knowledges Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers doi: 10.1111/tran.12195; Jazeel T 2017 Mainstreaming geography’s decolonial imperative Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers doi: 10.1111/tran.12200; Daigle M and Sundberg J 2017 From where we stand: unsettling geographical knowledges in the classroom Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers doi: 10.1111/tran.12201; Noxolo P 2017 Decolonial theory in a time of the re-colonisation of UK research Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers doi: 10.1111/tran.12202; Legg S 2017 Decolonialism Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers doi: 10.1111/tran.12203.
3.
Recognition of Rita Gardner, Director
Dear conference delegates, As recently announced, Dr Rita Gardner will be retiring from her role as Director of the Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British Geographers) (RGS-IBG) in March 2018. The timing of Rita’s departure is such that our 2017 Annual International Conference is an appropriate moment for the academic community to celebrate her contributions and to thank her for the service she has provided to the Society and the wider geographical community. Her fundamental role in shaping the landscape of geography in the UK over the last 21 years merits our collective vote of thanks, as she looks forward to spending time beyond the Society. Rita has led the Society with passion and intellect during her time as Director. The ESRC International Benchmark Review in 2013 identified that ‘The RGS-IBG is a most significant dimension of the institutional capacity of UK human geography and is unequalled in any other country. It is an extraordinary disciplinary resource’. This is an achievement which has been aided fundamentally by Rita’s commitment and drive to secure and develop the discipline and practice of Geography during her tenure as Director. Rita’s role in developing and supporting the academic discipline of Geography is bound in part to the history of this conference. Following years of intensive (and often contested) discussion, the RGS and IBG merged in 1995. The two bodies voted to come together on equal terms to chart a new course for geography, joining different UK geographical communities with complementary activities, but distinct cultures and histories. Rita’s appointment as Director of the Society came in August 1996, shortly after the merger, and she started the ongoing process of binding together the varied interest groups across the new RGS-IBG, and repositioning the status of Geography in the UK, at a time when the subject faced competition and threats as a discipline in school, and its potential was not always widely appreciated by employers. Rita has led three strategic plans which have aimed to foster a vibrant discipline, to open up the organisation to broader audiences across the UK, to enhance support for geographers in the workplace and in government, and to develop the Society as the professional body for the discipline. It is a mark of her long-standing commitment that we can now see the fruits of early activities that she led. To give just one example from many, the ‘Action Plan for Geography’ (2006-2011) laid the foundations for the protection of the position of geography at school and university. It is because of the advocacy work at Government level, which Rita led, that Geography has a strong place in the school curriculum, alongside the professional practice supported by the Education team. This is placed alongside the support given by the Society to the hundreds of undergraduate Geography Ambassadors who have made school visits, and, in 2017-2018, the allocation of significant scholarships (in partnership with the Department of Education) for the training of specialist teachers in schools and colleges. Over the 21 years since her appointment, Rita, working with the trustees, staff and the geographical community, has also led a programme of long term and ongoing activity that engaged directly with the legacies of colonial power within the discipline and its institutions. As Rita herself would recognise, this is an essential and ongoing project, but key milestones along the way have been the investment in Unlocking the Archives and projects such as Crossing Continents – Connecting Communities and Hidden Histories of Exploration. These activities signalled the intention of the Society to critically interrogate its colonial past and address ways to enable all geographers to feel ‘at home’ in the Society. Under Rita’s leadership, the Society has also been at the heart of attempts to promote the position and leadership of women in the discipline. Prior to becoming Director, in 1992 Rita herself was
elected as the Society’s first woman Honorary Secretary. The next RGS-IBG strategic plan, initiated by Rita, will continue this commitment to securing a diverse and inclusive ethos, where all who identify as geographers can thrive. Given that the Society has raised over £30 million to invest in projects, grants and capital development during the period that Rita has been Director, it is not possible to provide a comprehensive accounting of everything she has achieved. What is important to recognise is that having Rita as a champion for the discipline has enabled the academic community to work with the Society to develop initiatives from policy engagements to new field research programmes, and to establish the RGS-IBG as the ‘go-to’ centre of expertise and advice, from where the community can get sound support, have projects championed, students trained and our professional practice supported. The Annual International Conference has more than doubled in size, the tradition of the IBG research groups is flourishing, and we are supported by an expanded grants programme, including a major collaborative field research programme. Rita has been a magnificent champion for Geography. She has created a widely recognised, multi-dimensional modern learned society for geography and geographers. Her strong and effective advocacy skills have ensured that geography’s position has been enhanced, and at the end of her tenure the RGS-IBG is a world leading institution – a centre for geography dedicated to advancing the discipline, and understanding and addressing some of the most pressing challenges in the world today. To celebrate Rita’s contributions, the conference will be hosting a drinks reception on Wednesday evening, 30 August, from 6.45 pm in the Members’ room. Please do join us.
Nicola Thomas
Adrian Smith
Honorary Secretary
Vice-President
Research and Higher Education, RGS-IBG
4. Registration and general information 4.1. Registration Registration will be in the foyer of the RGS-IBG on Exhibition Road and open from: x 10.00 to 20:00 on Tuesday 29 August x 8:00 to 20:00 on Wednesday 30 August & Thursday 31 August x 8:00 to 15:00 on Friday 1 September Information desks will be located in the foyer of the RGS-IBG on Exhibition Road (8:00 to 20:00 daily) and in the foyer of the Sir Alexander Fleming Building (8:30 to 17:00 daily).
4.2. Programme venues Parallel sessions will take place at five venues: the RGS-IBG building (RGS), and four buildings at Imperial College London; the Sir Alexander Fleming Building (SAF), Skempton Building (SKE), the Sherfield Building (SHE, also known as the Seminar and Learning Centre or SALC), and the Huxley Building (HUX). Buildings and their entrances are clearly marked on the map on the back cover of this programme book. Additional information on how to find rooms is available in the conference app, online, and in hard copy handouts at the conference information desks.
4.3. Medical, emergencies and security First Aid assistance will be available from the information desks in the foyer of the RGS-IBG and the Sir Alexander Fleming building at Imperial College. For more serious emergencies delegates are advised to go to one of the local hospitals; the Chelsea and Westminster Hospital, Fulham Road, or St Mary’s Hospital, Paddington. The emergency phone number in the UK is 999. Urgent messages may be left with the RGS-IBG Registration Desk: +44 (0) 20 7591 3027 (leave a voice message out of hours). We encourage you to keep your personal possessions with you and to be aware of security at all times. Bags and coats can be left with the security staff at the cloakroom at the RGSIBG for safe keeping but we advise you to leave your travelling bag at your accommodation if possible. Given heightened security concerns in London, bags may be checked for their contents on entry into and out of buildings. When at the conference venue, please wear your delegate badge at all times. Delegates not wearing a badge will not be admitted to the buildings and will not be able to attend any sessions or events or receive refreshments. There are no scheduled tests of the fire alarm during the conference. In the event of a fire alarm, please make your way to the nearest emergency exit. From there, staff will direct you to the nearest assembly point. If an alarm sounds, everyone must evacuate immediately.
4.4. Staff and volunteers Staff and conference volunteers can be identified by their red coloured lanyards. Please do not hesitate to ask them for assistance at any time.
4.5. Conference planning committee Members of the Conference planning committee can be contacted via the Registration desk at RGS-IBG: Chair of the Conference
Sarah Radcliffe
Head of Research and Higher Education at the RGS-IBG
Catherine Souch
Conference organisers
Sarah Evans and Alex Jackman
Press and media
Caitlin Watson
4.6. Acknowledgements We would like to thank Bryant Longley and Stephanie Wyse for the conference database and online programme software, and all staff at the RGS-IBG supporting this event.
4.7. Photography We will be taking photographs for press and future publicity purposes. If you do not wish to be included in these images, please ask to speak to a member of the press team at the Registration Desk. If you have any queries, contact 020 7591 3019 or email E:
[email protected]
4.8. Computers, email access and technical help Wi-Fi hotspots have been set up to cover the entire ground floor of the RGS-IBG building, with the wireless network name “Annual Conference 2017”. No login is required. Session rooms at Imperial College will have internet access for the presenter's PC. Beyond that, there is no free internet access. Delegates requiring Wi-Fi access at Imperial College London may: x
x
Connect via Eduroam: Delegates working at participating Higher Education institutions across the UK, Europe and a number of other countries are encouraged to register for Eduroam, which will enable them to connect to the Imperial College London network for free. Purchase temporary Wi-Fi access: Voucher codes for Wi-Fi access will be available from the conference helpdesks at RGS-IBG and SAF upon payment of a small fee (£3).
A small number of computers and printers will be available for delegates in the Foyle Reading Room (FRR, on the basement floor of the RGS-IBG, accessible via the staircase by Registration). The Foyle Reading Room will be open from 8:15 to 19:00 on each day of the Conference, closing at 17:00 on Friday. Laptop and mobile device charging stations can be found in the Ambulatory and the Foyle Reading Room. For technical help with Wi-Fi, altering your presentation and any other matters, staff will be available. Each presentation room will have a data projector and a facility for PowerPoint, including a laptop. Please bring your presentation on a USB memory stick, and do not plug your own laptop into the projector in any room. Please arrive 20 minutes before the session starts to upload your presentation. Files will be removed from computers each night. There will be AV technicians around to help. If you have any problems please call 0207 591 3027 (or just 3027 if using an internal phone in the RGS-IBG) and someone will be sent to help you. For help at Imperial please call this number and/or visit the help desk in SAF. We will contact Imperial AV staff, and request that they come and help. Session rooms are equipped with PCs. If you need to convert your presentation from Mac to PC format prior to your session, or need help outside the time of your session, please visit the Registration Desk at the Society.
4.9. Other facilities at the RGS-IBG Please ask the Registration Desk at the RGS-IBG reception if you would like a private space for prayer, for breastfeeding/baby changing, or for other reasons. Quiet space can also be made available for interviews and phone calls with the press/media.
4.10. Banks and bureau de change There are a number of banks at South Kensington and High Street Kensington. There are ATM machines inside South Kensington Underground Station and outside the Student Union shop and canteen at Imperial College (accessed through the Main Entrance to Imperial College). There are bureau de change facilities next door to Knightsbridge Underground Station and at the Post Office at Knightsbridge.
4.11. Child care / crèche Child care facilities are offered by the OFSTED approved company, Little Hens Childcare. Crèche bookings must be made in advance. Any enquiries about the crèche should be directed to the Registration Desk at the RGS-IBG Reception.
5.
Eating, drinking and recycling at the RGS-IBG and Imperial College
5.1. Eating and drinking Tea and coffee Tea, coffee and water will be available all day at the RGS-IBG from 8:00 each morning, from serving points in the Main Hall and Marquee. Tea and coffee will also be provided in the foyer of the Sir Alexander Fleming, and close to session rooms in the Sherfield Building at Imperial College during the morning and afternoon breaks. Please follow signs to your nearest location. Delegates are encouraged to reuse water bottles and to refill them in the RGS-IBG Ambulatory (in the corridor by the Drayson Room – look for signs) or at the table in the Map Room.
Lunch Lunch is included in the delegate fee and is available at the RGS-IBG upon presentation of a lunch ticket (tickets are provided in your plastic name tag pouch and are a different colour each day). Lunch will be available for collection at the Marquee and Main Hall between 11.45 and 14.30 each day. Lunch includes a boxed meal, fresh fruit, a bread roll and a bottle of water per person. Delegates are encouraged to make use of all of the available space including the Marquee, the Terrace, the garden, as well as in Hyde Park and Kensington Gardens opposite, weather permitting. Blankets are available from the Marquee for those who wish to sit in the RGSIBG garden.
Special diets If you have informed the conference organisers of special dietary requests during registration, please make yourself known to a member of the catering staff who will show
you where to pick up your special meal in the Marquee. All special meals are labelled with the delegate’s name. If you have any problems, please visit the Registration desk.
Drinks receptions Unless specifically marked “invitation only”, delegates are invited to join any advertised drinks receptions.
Conference bar A pay bar will be available in the Map Room from 17:30 each day.
Conference reception and buffet dinner The conference reception and buffet dinner will take place at the RGS-IBG on Thursday 1 September, commencing 20:00. Please do not arrive earlier than 19:45. Entrance will be from the Main Hall. Special diets that have been advised in advance will be catered for. This is a ticketed event. Please see the Registration desk if you have any questions.
5.2. Recycling We are committed to reducing the resources used in the Conference by sourcing supplies and food locally, using recycled and recyclable materials, and reducing, reusing and recycling conference materials to every extent possible. We urge all delegates to recycle discarded materials and to help us in our efforts to sort materials. Our caterers Lodge Catering recycle 100% of their food waste. Please do not contaminate the recycling by mixing food with recyclable materials! Please refill water bottles. Refilling stations are available in the RGS-IBG Ambulatory (the corridor by the Drayson Room – look for signs) or at the table in the Map Room and at Imperial.
6.
Local transport
Plan your travel in London using the Transport for London website: W: http://tfl.gov.uk T: 0343 222 1234 Oystercards or contactless cards are the cheapest way to travel on all public transport in London. A refundable deposit is required for the Oystercard (available from London Underground stations with staffed ticket offices). You cannot use cash on London buses, but you can use Oystercards or credit and debit cards with a contactless payment facility, indicated by this logo:
Underground (tube) The Society is close to the following underground stations (see back cover) x x x x
South Kensington High Street Kensington Knightsbridge Gloucester Road
(District, Circle & Piccadilly Lines) (Circle & District Lines) (Piccadilly Line) (District, Circle & Piccadilly Lines)
Buses and bicycles The following buses all stop close to the Society. Ask at the Registration Desk for directions to the correct bus stop.
x x x
Number 9 Number 10 Number 52
(between Aldwych and Hammersmith, via Piccadilly) (between Kings Cross and Hammersmith, via Oxford St) (between Victoria and Willesden)
You can make short journeys using the Santander Cycles Hire scheme. Follow the instructions at the self-service bicycle docking stations located around central London. There are docking stations located close to the Society at: the Royal Albert Hall on Kensington Gore, near the Science Museum on Exhibition Road, in Hyde Park, and on Queens’ Gate. W: https://tfl.gov.uk/modes/cycling/santander-cycles
Airport transfers For London Heathrow, take the Piccadilly Line from/to South Kensington Station. Allow at least an hour for this journey. Alternatively take the Heathrow Express from London Paddington, a journey of about 15 minutes (departures every 15 minutes) or the Heathrow Connect from London Paddington, a journey of about 30 minutes (departures every 30 minutes). For London Gatwick airport, take the Gatwick Express from London Victoria Station, a journey of about 30 minutes. There is also a coach service from London Victoria Station. For London Stansted airport, take the Stansted Express from London Liverpool St Station, a journey of about 45 minutes. There is also a coach service from London Liverpool St Station. For London Luton airport, take the shuttle bus from London Victoria Coach Station, a journey of about 65 minutes. Alternatively, you can take a train from either London St Pancras Station or London Bridge Station to Luton Airport Parkway and then catch a shuttle bus to the airport, a journey of about 30-45 minutes. Pre-booking transfers online can attract discounts.
7.
Plenaries and sponsored sessions
To view the full abstracts and further information for each plenary speaker, please visit W: www.rgs.org/AC2017Plenaries. *For location information, please refer to the key on the inside front cover. Day
Session
Time
Location*
Tuesday 29 August
Opening plenary: ‘Decolonizing Geography in Theory and Practice: Critical Indigenous Perspectives’. Panellists: Deborah McGregor, Sarah Hunt, Jay T. Johnson, Melanie Yazzie [session 1]
18.15
RGS-OT
Wednesday 30 August
Society and Space Lecture: ‘Flat Out! Decolonising (dance in) Birmingham at a time of austerity’, Patricia Noxolo [session 34]
11.10
RGS-OT
Chair's plenary: ‘Decolonizing the Republic of Knowledge: Futures for Social Science’, Raewyn Connell. Discussant: Kiran Asher [session 65]
13.10
RGS-OT
Day
Session
Time
Location*
Wednesday 30 August
Urban Studies Journal Lecture: ‘The ideological alignment of smart urbanism in Singapore: critical reflections on a political paradox’, Lily Kong [session 68]
14.40
RGS-OT
GEO: Geography and Environment Panel: ‘Digital Data: Opening up the Weather Archive’. Panellists: Georgina Endfield, Lucy Veale, Sarah Davies, Philip Brohan, Clive Walmsley, Kathryn Summerwill, Hayley Cotterill [session 69]
14.40
RGS-EC
Economic Geography, Journal of Economic Geography, and Environment and Planning A: Lecture: ‘Global production networks and the political economy of contemporary capitalism’, Adrian Smith [session 85]
14.40
SKE-164
‘Decolonizing Urban Geography: Where have we got to, what next? (3): The Future of Urban Studies: Views through India’, Aromar Revi [session 89, linked to a series of sessions on this theme (23 & 54)]
14.40
SHE-RD
Antipode Lecture: ‘Retelling Stories, Disrupting ‘the Social’, Relearning the World’, Richa Nagar [session 100]
16.50
RGS-OT
Author meets critics: Steve Hinchliffe, Nick Bingham, John Allen and Simon Carter ‘Pathological Lives: Disease, Space and Biopolitics’. Panellists: Jamie Lorimer, Deborah Dixon, Andrew Barry, Ann Kelly, Bronwyn Parry, Stephen Hinchliffe, Nick Bingham [session 101]
16.50
RGS-EC
Journal of Geography in Higher Education Lecture: ‘Layering Learning and Teaching for Different Levels of Environmental Consciousness’, Martin Haigh [session 107]
16.50
SAF-G34
Economic Geography, Journal of Economic Geography, and Environment and Planning A Panel: ‘Advancing global production networks research: progress and prospects’. Panellists: Henry Yeung, Stephanie Barrientos, Ben Derudder, Alex Hughes, Gavin Bridge [session 116]
16.50
SKE-164
Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers Lecture: ‘Safe Space Across Borders: From Geopolitical Projection to Refugee Health Protection’, Matthew Sparke. Discussant: Jo Sharp [session 132]
09.00
RGS-OT
Thursday 31 August
Day
Session
Time
Location*
Thursday 31 August
Author meets critics: Robbie Shilliam - ‘The Black Pacific: Anti-Colonial Struggles and Oceanic Connections’. Panellists: Robbie Shilliam, Andrew Baldwin, Brad Coombes, Kehinde Andrews [session 133]
09.00
RGS-EC
Progress in Human Geography Lecture: ‘Geotrauma: violence, place and recovery’, Rachel Pain [session 166]
11.10
RGS-OT
Chair's plenary: ‘Africa’s First Democrats: Decolonizing the Study of Leadership and Democracy’, Abdi Ismail Samatar. Discussant: Joshua Inwood [session 199]
13.10
RGS-OT
Dialogues in Human Geography plenary forum: ‘The Whereabouts of Climate Politics: navigating climate’s human geographies’. Panellists: Harriet Bulkeley, Robyn Dowling, Andrew Jones, Heather Lovell, Matthew Paterson [session 202]
14.40
RGS-OT
‘Decolonising institutional arrangements: insights from the arts, education, and policy (1)’, organised by the Race, Culture and Equality Working Group and sponsored by Area [session 203]
14.40
RGS-EC
The Brian Hoyle Annual Lecture in Transport Geography: ‘Human Mobility, Individual Context, and Environmental Exposure: A Spatiotemporal Perspective’, Mei Po Kwan [session 234]
16.50
RGS-OT
‘Decolonising institutional arrangements: insights from the arts, education, and policy (2)’, organised by the Race, Culture and Equality Working Group and sponsored by Area [session 235]
16.50
RGS-EC
Social and Cultural Geography Lecture: ‘From Historical Chains to Derivative Futures: Land Title Registries as Time Machines’, Sarah Keenan [session 268]
09.00
RGS-OT
Author meets critics: Paolo Boccagni – ‘The home-migration nexus: theory, research, prospects’. Panellists: Jørgen Carling, Lauren Wagner, Melissa Fernández Arrigoitia, Marco Antonsich, Louise Meijering [session 189]
09.00
SALC-1
Political Geography Lecture: ‘Decolonising migration’, Mary Gilmartin [session 298]
11.10
RGS-OT
Friday 1 September
Day
Session
Time
Location*
Friday 1 September
Author meets critics: David Livingstone ‘Reappraising Livingstone's The Geographical Tradition after a quarter of a century’. Panellists: David Livingstone, Ruth Craggs, Federico Ferretti, Avril Maddrell, Fiona Smith, Michiel van Meeteren, John Wylie [session 304]
11.10
SAF-G34
Chair's plenary: ‘The politics of solidarity and decolonial possibilities’, Juanita Sundberg. Discussant: Mark Jackson [session 328]
13.10
RGS-OT
Singapore Journal of Tropical Geography Lecture: ‘Singularity. A manifesto for incomparable geographies’, Tariq Jazeel [session 330]
14.40
RGS-OT
Authors meet critics - Brett Christophers, Andrew Leyshon and Geoff Mann (eds.) – ‘Money and Finance after the Crisis: Critical Thinking for Uncertain Times’. Panellists: Brett Christophers, Andrew Leyshon, Gary A. Dymski, Paul Langley, Karen P.Y. Lai, Yuval Millo, Ismael Ertürk [session 355]
14.40
SALC-6
8.
Workshops and discussions
Day
Session
Time
Location
Tuesday 29 August
Brexit: a geographical conversation (prebooking required)
13.00
RGS-OT
Postgraduate Forum Annual Conference Training Symposium (PGF-ACTS) (prebooking required)
13.00
RGS-EC
Introductory Computer Programming for Geographers Workshop (pre-booking required)
10.00
RGS-DR
Meet the editors of Environment & Planning C: Politics & Space
09.00
RGS-TR
Gender and Feminist Geographies Research Group mentoring and networking session [session 67]
13.10
RGS-TR
Writing Successfully for the Journal of Geography in Higher Education [session 70]
14.40
RGS-CR
Fuller geographies [session 138]
09.00
RGS-TR
Reflections on parenting/caring and working in geography [session 172]
11.10
RGS-TR
Wednesday 30 August
Thursday 31 August
Day
Session
Time
Location
Thursday 31 August
Continuing the Conversation on Mental Health in the British Academy [session 201]
13.10
RGS-TR
Friday 1 September
Wiley: ‘Join our Publishing Sessions on Maximising Impact and Peer Review’: Peer Review: The good, the challenging, and the rewarding (11.15-11.45)
11.15
RGS-SR
Wiley: ‘Join our Publishing Sessions on Maximising Impact and Peer Review’: Maximising the Impact of your research (12.00-12.30)
12.00
RGS-SR
9.
Art/media exhibitions and screenings
We are delighted to welcome a number of art and media exhibitions and film screenings to this year’s conference. There is more information available at: www.rgs.org/AC2017ArtExhibitions. Day
Exhibition
Location
Thursday 24 – Sunday 27 August
Museum of Contemporary Commodities
Pavilion, RGS-IBG
Throughout conference
Museum of Contemporary Commodities
RGS - Entrance
A deluge of documentary weather data [accompanies Digital Data – session 69]
RGS-AM
Globe [accompanies Here Be Dragons Film Screening – session 21]
RGS-EC
Wednesday 30 August
‘Here Be Dragons Film Screening’ (Wednesday session 1) [session 21]
SKE-207
Thursday 31 August
It started raining: Screening and discussing a film about the fight for housing in Bucharest, Romania (Thursday sessions 3 & 4) [sessions 208 & 240]
SAF-G34
Friday 1 September
Terra Femme: Early Film Travelogues by Women (Friday session 3) [session 335]
RGS-DR
10. Receptions In addition to the conference programme the following receptions will take place (all located at RGS-IBG unless otherwise specified). More details at www.rgs.org/AC2017Receptions: Day
Reception
Time
Location
Tuesday 29 August
Opening drinks reception
19.30
RGS-Mq
Day
Reception
Time
Location
Wednesday 30 August
Antipode Lecture Drinks Reception
18.45
RGS-Mq
Journal of Geography in Higher Education/Higher Education Research Group Drinks Reception
18.45
RGS-CR
Historical Geography Research Group Networking Drinks Reception
18.45
RGS-LR
Book launch and reception: The Routledge Research Companion to Energy Geographies: an orientation to find your way in a rapidly evolving field [session 131]
18.45
RGS-SR
Reception to recognise Rita Gardner, Director of the RGS-IBG
18.45
RGS-MbR
Conference dinner and reception (prebooking required)
20.00
RGS-MH
Hoyle Drinks Reception
18.45
RGS-CR
Book launch and drinks reception: Health Geographies – A Critical Introduction [session 266]
18.45
RGS-LR
Monograph Launch: Women and Sex Tourism Landscapes [session 267].
18.45
RGS-DR
Closing drinks reception
18.15-19.30
RGS-Mq
Thursday 1 September
Friday 2 September
11. Research and Working Group AGMs 11.1. About the Research and Working Groups The Society’s Research and Working Groups bring together active researchers and those with a professional interest in a particular aspect of geography and related disciplines. They organise seminars, conferences, workshops, reading weekends, and much more. Many Groups hold their AGMs at the Annual Conference, and all delegates are encouraged to join and attend. The Research Groups also sponsor a number of sessions at the conference, as noted by acronyms (listed in the table below).The full list of these is in the Research Groups Index at the end of this Programme Book, and can be viewed in the online programme at www.rgs.org/AC2017Programme. Joining a Research or Working Group enables you to: x
network with colleagues with similar research interests
x
keep up to date with the latest research in your specialised field
x
receive information on conferences, workshops and funding opportunities
There are two ways to join a RGS-IBG Research or Working Group: x
For RGS-IBG members, inform the Society of any number of Groups that you wish to join (email
[email protected] or pick up a form from the Registration Desk).
x
For non-RGS-IBG members, contact the Chair / Membership Officer of Group(s) you are interested in and request to become a member (visit the Group’s own website for more details).
Joining a Group is free. To find out more, please ask at the Registration Desk, or visit: W: www.rgs.org/ResearchGroups
E:
[email protected]
11.2. Research and Working Group AGMs You are warmly encouraged to attend and find out more about Research Group activities. Please note that not all of the Society’s Research Groups hold their AGMs at the Annual Conference. Research Group AGM
Code
Day
Time
Room
Biogeography Research Group
BRG
Not holding AGM at AC2017
British Society for Geomorphology
BSG
Not holding AGM at AC2017
Carceral Geography Working Group
CGWG
Not holding AGM at AC2017
Climate Change Research Group
CCRG
Not holding AGM at AC2017
Coastal and Marine Research Group
CMRG
Thursday
13.10
SAF-122
Developing Areas Research Group
DARG
Friday
13.10
RGS-DR
Digital Geographies Working Group
DGWG
Wednesday
13.10
SAF-122
Economic Geography Research Group
EGRG
Wednesday
13.10
RGS-CR
Energy Geographies Research Group
EnGRG
Wednesday
13.10
RGS-SR
Food Geographies Working Group
FGWG
Wednesday
13.10
SAF-120
Gender and Feminist Geography Research Group
GFGRG
Thursday
13.10
SAF-120
Geographical Information Science Research Group
GIScRG
Not holding AGM at AC2017
Geographies of Children, Youth and Families Research Group
GCYFRG
Wednesday
13.10
SAF-119
Geographies of Health and Wellbeing Research Group
GHWRG
Thursday
13.10
RGS-DR
Geographies of Justice Research Group
GJRG
Friday
13.10
SAF-121
Geography of Leisure and Tourism Research Group
GLTRG
Thursday
13.10
SAF-121
Higher Education Research Group
HERG
Thursday
13.10
SAF-119
Historical Geography Research Group
HGRG
Friday
13.10
RGS-LR
History and Philosophy of Geography Research Group
HPGRG
Wednesday
13.10
RGS-DR
Participatory Geographies Research Group
PyGyRG
Friday
13.10
RGS-SR
Research Group AGM
Code
Day
Time
Room
Planning and Environment Research Group
PERG
Friday
13.10
RGS-CR
Political Geography Research Group
PolGRG
Not holding AGM at AC2017
Population Geography Research Group
PopGRG
Wednesday
18.45
RGS-DR
Postgraduate Forum Business Meeting
PGF
Friday
13.10
RGS-EC
Quantitative Methods Research Group
QMRG
Thursday
13.10
RGS-SR
Race, Culture and Equality Working Group
RACE
Thursday
13.10
RGS-LR
Rural Geography Research Group
RGRG
Wednesday
13.10
SAF-121
Social and Cultural Geography Research Group
SCGRG
Thursday
18.45
RGS-SR
Space, Sexualities and Queer Research Group
SSQRG
Friday
13.10
SAF-120
Transport Geography Research Group
TGRG
Thursday
13.10
RGS-CR
Urban Geography Research Group
UGRG
Thursday
16.50
SAF-121
12. Learn more about the Society Building tour and introduction to the conference – Tuesday 29 August at 17.00 Join an informal tour of the building with an introduction to the Society’s work and the annual conference. It will start at 17.00 from the Registration Desk and last 30 minutes. The tour is especially suitable for international delegates and those attending the conference for the first time. RSVP to
[email protected] or you can just turn up on the day.
Learn more and get involved – each day of conference Check out the posters about our work in the Exhibition Road entrance of the Society. If you’d like to learn more, Dr Stephanie Wyse will be available in the RGS-IBG Tea Room during the morning break each day (10:40 to 11:10) to answer questions and share more information about different aspects of our work. x x x
Learn more about getting involved in the Society’s future; through membership and other ways to work with us (Wednesday 30 August) Resources, networks and CPD: support and opportunities for your and your departments (Thursday 31 August) Professional recognition: for you (CGeog) and your teaching (undergraduate programme accreditation) (Friday 1 September)
13. Exhibitors and advertisers The publishers’ exhibition is a wonderful opportunity to browse through the latest journal and book publications. Some of the exhibitors have provided advertisements in this programme book. Exhibitor stands may be found in the Map Room and the Pavilion. We are delighted to welcome the following exhibitors to AC2017: In the publishers' exhibition x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x
Berghahn Books Edward Elgar Harvard University Press Liverpool University Press Oxford University Press PM Press Policy Press Routledge, Taylor and Francis Group Rowman and Littlefield SAGE Springer and Palgrave Macmillan The Geographical Association The MIT Press Wiley (Map Room) Zed Books
In this programme book and conference app x x x x x x x x x
Edward Elgar PM Press Policy Press Routledge, Taylor and Francis Group SAGE Springer and Palgrave Macmillan University of Toronto Press Wiley Zed Books
14. Posters Posters will be on display in the Main Hall on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday. Poster authors have been requested to stand near their posters for questions during the coffee breaks and lunchtimes on their session day. View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/
15. Instructions to session Chairs Thank you for agreeing to chair a session at the conference. Before the session begins we recommend that you: x Check the programme book addendum (updated daily, collect at Registration/Reception) and the conference website/app for the latest running order in
your session. If there are any last minute changes we will try to notify you before the session. x Arrive at the room 20 minutes before the session is due to start – your presenters have been asked to do the same. x Check your room for a ‘Chair’s kit’. This contains details of your closest evacuation route, any announcements, and cards you can hold up to warn speakers before they run out of time. Contact Registration or a helpdesk if your Chair’s Pack is missing. x Check that the AV is working (PC, projector, internet connection). Call Registration (+44 207 591 3027) or visit a helpdesk if you need an AV technician to visit your room. x Check that all the speakers have arrived and have uploaded their presentations to the PC. Please encourage them to sit towards the front of the room. During the session, we encourage you to sit at the front of the room where you can make eye contact with both the audience and the speaker. Please ensure that you: x Start promptly and only make a very brief introduction of each speaker (name, institution and paper title). A session of 1 hour 40 minutes allows 5 speakers 20 minutes each, which must include questions – please do not over-run. x Keep speakers to their allocated time (over-running presentations is the most common complaint we receive in conference feedback). You can use the cards in the Chair’s Kit to aid this – ‘5 minutes to go’, ‘2 minutes to go’ and ‘Please stop now’. These can be an effective way to manage a session. If a speaker fails to turn up, we suggest you use the extra time for discussion, rather than allowing the other speakers extra time to present. For questions or discussion, please encourage those who speak to state their name and affiliation when asking a question. Occasionally we may have left some announcements on the speakers’ table. Please ensure that these are read out to the delegates in your session. In the event of a fire alarm or other emergency, please follow signs to your nearest evacuation point and follow any instructions of staff. For other emergencies, contact Reception (+44 207 591 3027) or visit the information desk / helpdesk in your building. First aiders are available at these locations.
16. Building directions and information A map showing the location of the buildings used in the conference is on the back cover of this book. Additional directions and floorplans are available on the conference website – www.rgs.org/AC2017Venue - in the conference app, and in printed form from the Registration Desk. A conference helpdesk is located in the foyer of the Sir Alexander Fleming Building, and each building also has its own helpdesk (with Imperial College staff) near its main entrance. If you have questions, please ask. Please ask for staff assistance to use the lifts at RGS-IBG. The RGS-IBG Council Room is the only room with conference sessions that does not have step-free access (some Imperial College London lecture theatres will have stepped seating, but seats are available at doorlevel). If you need assistance to find or gain access to a particular room, please ask at the Registration desk or at a helpdesk.
Getting to session rooms at the RGS-IBG Ondaatje Theatre: x x
From Registration, walk down the corridor past the Cloakroom. The Ondaatje Theatre is in front of you.
Council Room: x x x x x
From Registration, walk down the corridor past the Cloakroom. Upon reaching the Ondaatje Theatre, turn right and walk to the stone staircase. Go up the stone staircase to the first floor. Go past the entrance to the Ondaatje Theatre balcony, and through the doors to a small corridor. The Council Room is on your left.
Drayson Room: x x x x
From Registration, walk down the corridor past the Cloakroom. Upon reaching the Ondaatje Theatre, turn left and go up the short staircase, turning right up the stairs. At the top of the stairs, walk straight ahead past the two large wall maps. The Drayson Room is at the end of the corridor (the Ambulatory) on your left.
Sunley Room: x x x x
From Registration, walk down the corridor past the Cloakroom. Upon reaching the Ondaatje Theatre, turn left and go up the short staircase, turning right up the stairs. At the top of the stairs, turn left and walk straight ahead. The Sunley Room is on your right (before you go into the large hall with the wooden floor).
Education Centre: x x x x
From Registration, walk down the corridor past the Cloakroom. Upon reaching the Ondaatje Theatre, turn left and go up the short staircase, turning right up the stairs. At the top of the stairs, turn left and walk straight ahead, and keep going past the Sunley Room, into the Main Hall (the larger space with the wooden floor). The entrances to the Education Centre are on your left.
Lowther Room: x x x x x x
From Registration, walk down the corridor past the Cloakroom. Upon reaching the Ondaatje Theatre, turn left and go up the short staircase, turning right up the stairs. At the top of the stairs, turn left and walk straight ahead, and keep going past the Sunley Room, into the Main Hall (the larger space with the wooden floor). Walk the length of the Main Hall to the staircase at the far end (on the left). Go all the way up the stairs. At the top of the stairs, turn right. The Lowther Room is in front of you.
A floor plan for RGS-IBG is shown overleaf.
RGS-IBG floor plan
Getting to buildings at Imperial College The most direct access between RGS-IBG and Imperial College is to turn right out of the Society’s main entrance, walk straight down Exhibition Road, crossing Prince Consort Road and continuing down Exhibition Road past the main entrance to Imperial College (a large glass atrium) Then a bit further down, turn right into Imperial College Road (marked by construction work and boarding for the Dyson School of Design and Engineering). Buildings are signposted from there. Short directions are given below, from Exhibition Road. Sir Alexander Fleming Building (SAF)*: x x
Turn right into Imperial College Road, and walk ahead. The entrance to SAF will be on your left, opposite the Queen’s Lawn on your right (approx. 6 min from RGS-IBG)
Skempton Building (SKE): x x
Turn right into Imperial College Road, and walk ahead. The entrance to SKE will be on your right, just before you reach the Queen’s Lawn (approx. 6 min from RGS-IBG).
Sherfield Building (also known as SALC) *: x x
Turn right into Imperial College Road, and walk ahead. At the Queen’s Lawn, turn right and walk around two sides of the lawn to the opposite corner diagonally from where you started. You will be at the entrance to SHE/SALC (approx. 8 min from RGS-IBG).
Huxley Building (HUX): x x
x x
Turn right into Imperial College Road, and walk ahead. At the Queen’s Lawn, turn right and walk around two sides of the lawn to the opposite corner diagonally from where you started. You will be at the entrance to SHE/SALC (approx. 8 min from RGS-IBG). Enter the Sherfield Building and use the stairs or lift to access the second floor. Exit the Sherfield Building onto the outdoor covered walkway. Follow the signs to the Huxley Building (approx. 10 min from RGS-IBG).
Buildings marked with * after their name will have tea and coffee served in foyers during the breaks – please follow signs and see section 5.1. Additional directions and floorplans are available on the conference website – www.rgs.org/AC2017Venue - in the conference app, and in printed form from the Registration Desk.
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17. Sessions – Tuesday 29 August 13.00-17.30 RGS-OT Affiliation
13.00-17.30 RGS-EC Affiliation
10.00-17.00 RGS-DR
Brexit: a geographical conversationv [pre-booking required] View programme online: www.rgs.org/AC2017TuesdayWorkshops
EGRG, PolGRG
PGF-ACTS [pre-booking required] View programme online: www.rgs.org/AC2017PGFACTS
PGF
Introductory Computer Programming for Geographers Workshop [pre-booking required] View programme online: www.rgs.org/AC2017TuesdayWorkshops
Affiliation
QMRG, GIScRG
1
Opening plenary: Decolonizing Geography in Theory and Practice: Critical Indigenous Perspectives View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/1
18.15-19.30 RGS-OT Convenors
Sarah Hunt, Michelle Daigle (University of British Columbia, Canada)
Chair
Michelle Daigle (University of British Columbia, Canada)
1
Water Justice: Mother Earth Water Walks and decolonizing practice – Deborah McGregor (York University, Canada)
2
Ontologies of Indigeneity: spatialities of Indigenous thought & praxis – Sarah Hunt (University of British Columbia, Canada)
3
Decolonisation as a transition discourse: gazing toward the horizon to glimpse the pluriverse – Jay T. Johnson (University of Kansas, USA)
4
Water is Life: Decolonization in The Age of Extraction – Melanie Yazzie (University of New Mexico, USA)
Opening drinks reception in the Marquee 19.30-20.30 Abbreviations for Research and Working Groups can be found in the list of AGMs in section 11. 2 and the Research Groups Index at the back of this programme book.
Globe returns to the RGS - IBG globe www.qmul.ac.uk/globe/ Globe is a collaborative filmic and sculptural project developed by Janetka Platun, Leverhulme artist in residence in Geography and Drama at Queen Mary University of London. Globe explores questions of home and migration in East London, challenging perceptions of home territory and geographical boundaries. Throughout the conference Globe will be on display in the Education Centre. If you would like to hear more about the project please join us for our presentation and screening:
Wednesday 30 A u g u s t 2017, Session 1 (09:00 - 10:40), SKE-207: Here Be Dragons – film screening and discussion Janetka Platun (Queen Mary University of London, UK) Kavita Datta (Queen Mary University of London, UK) Olivia Sheringham (Queen Mary University of London, UK)
Wed
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
Evening 18:45–
18. Sessions – Wednesday 30 August 2 W1 | RGS-OT
Geography and Area studies dialogue: Decolonizing Methodologies and South Asia View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/2
Affiliation
DARG
Convenors
Raksha Pande (Newcastle University, UK), Raihana Ferdous (Durham University, UK)
Chair
Raihana Ferdous (Durham University, UK)
1
Geography and Area studies dialogue: Decolonizing Methodologies and South Asia – Zahra Hussain (Durham University, UK), Emma Mawdsley (University of Cambridge, UK), Meghna Gupta (Independent Scholar and Filmmaker), Mark Griffiths (Northumbria University, UK)
3 W1 | RGS-EC
Affective Nationalism View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/3
Affiliation
PolGRG
Convenors
Marco Antonsich, Michael Skey (Loughborough University, UK)
Chair
Marco Antonsich (Loughborough University, UK)
1
Panel Discussion – Angharad Closs Stephens (Swansea University, UK), Divya P. Tolia-Kelly (Durham University, UK), Peter Merriman (Aberystwyth University, UK), Shanti Sumartojo (RMIT University, Australia), Marco Antonsich (Loughborough University, UK)
4 W1 | RGS-CR
'Other' Childhoods: Theories, approaches and methods (1) See also: 36 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/4
Affiliation
GCYFRG
Convenor and chair
Nadia von Benzon (Lancaster University, UK)
1
‘Don’t blame the children, blame the environment’: Realizing childhood in an Urduspeaking Bihari community in Bangladesh – Jiniya Afroze (Open University, UK)
2
The relationships between ‘disfigured’ children and young people’s fashioned bodies and their everyday constructions of identity – Catherine Wilkinson (Edge Hill University, UK)
3
The Effects of Economic Crisis on Ghanaian Transnational Families: Towards New Perspectives on Transnational Childhood and Social Reproduction – Michael Boampong (Birkbeck, University of London, UK)
4
The effects of neighbourhood norms on child wellbeing in Malta – Bernadine Satariano (Durham University, UK)
Wed
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
Evening
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
5 W1 | RGS-LR
18:45–
Rethinking justice in city regional food systems planning View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/5
Affiliation
FGWG, GJRG
Convenor and chair
Richard J. Nunes (University of Reading, UK)
1
Urban agriculture, social participation and planning in times of crisis: lessons from Granada, Spain – Fiorella Russo Cardozo, Alberto Mataran Ruiz (University of Granada, Spain), Jose Maria Lopez Medina (University of Sevilla, Spain)
2
Local collectives, community economy and autonomous food systems: the case of the Free Café (Groningen, NL) – Ciska Ulug, Elen-Maarja Trell (University of Groningen, The Netherlands)
3
Bridging Food Commons and Planning: Exploring a Dialogue between Food Communities and Socio-spatial Strategies Through Cases from İstanbul and Berlin – Caner Murat Dogancayir, Tuba Cekic (Yildiz Technical University, Turkey)
4
Austerity Retail: re-producing the food regime or decolonising food practices? – Lopamudra P. Saxena, Chiara Tornaghi (Coventry University, UK)
6 W1 | RGS-SR
‘Placing’ knowledges in Social and Cultural Geography: Postgraduate Snapshots View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/6
Affiliation
SCGRG, PGF
Convenors
Phil Emmerson (University of Birmingham, UK), Maddy Thompson (Newcastle University, UK)
Chair
Phil Emmerson (University of Birmingham, UK)
1
Making Hidden Spaces Visible: Understanding the Place and Home-Making Practices of Migrant Domestic Workers in Singapore – Laura Antona (London School of Economics and Political Science, UK)
2
The journeys of objects from Sri Lanka to Australia – Charishma Ratnam (University of New South Wales, Australia)
3
Walk this way: location, localness and research dissemination at site – Gwilym Lawrence (University of Manchester, UK)
4
Imagining through the Archive: Animal Rights Histories in the UK – Catherine Oliver (University of Birmingham, UK)
5
Using geo-egocentric maps to explore identities of young British second generation Muslims – Laura Kapinga (University of Groningen, The Netherlands)
6
Tangible Representations of Intangible Heritage – Amy Van Allen (University of Leicester, UK)
7
Drawing to discover: researching historical cultures of geology and creativity – Frances Rylands (University of Exeter, UK)
Wed
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
Evening
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
7 W1 | RGS-DR
Treating waste as a resource (1) See also: 39 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/7
Convenor and chair
Les Levidow (Open University, UK)
18:45–
1
Internalising shit: The urban political ecologies of wastewater recycling in Southern California – Joseph Williams (Durham University, UK)
2
KraalD: plastic re-use strategy – Katarina Dimitrijevic (Goldsmiths, University of London, UK)
3
Co-designing waste solutions with local communities – Aiduan Borrion, Sarah Bell (University College London, UK)
4
Waste Treatment for Resource Recovery: Multiple Configurations and Scalings – Les Levidow (Open University, UK)
W1 | RGS-TR
Meet the editors of Environment & Planning C: Politics & Space View abstracts online: http://bit.ly/2u1pVfx
8 W1 | SAF-G34
The Costs of Decolonizing the Discipline (1) See also: 40 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/8
Affiliation
GFGRG
Convenors
Abigail H. Neely, Patricia Lopez (Dartmouth College, USA)
Chair
Abigail H. Neely (Dartmouth College, USA)
1
Extending Western views of the social world: home gardening, Eastern Europe and unequal knowledge production – Petr Jehlicka (Open University, UK)
2
Fearful Fieldwork: De-colonializing the Discipline Begins with Confronting our Imaginings of Safety and Risk in the ‘Dark Continent’ – Dacia Douhaibi (York University, Canada)
3
Teko’a: a place to be who we are as a people - envisioning decolonization through the Guaraní concept of territory – Bettina Escauriza (Independent Artist and Scholar)
4
Decolonizing Within: Reflections from Hawaiʻi – Kathryn Besio (University of Hawai'i, USA)
5
Unsettling pedagogies: Affect and inheritance in the classroom – Naomi Millner (University of Bristol, UK)
9 W1 | SAF-119
Power 2.0: New Digital Geographies View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/9
Affiliation
DGWG
Convenors and chairs
Kate Symons (University of Edinburgh, UK), George Jaramillo (Glasgow School of Art, UK)
1
Sonic cartographies of voluntary geographic information: listening to new representations of the city – Daniela Ferreira, Daniel Paiva (Universidade de Lisboa, Portugal)
Wed
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
Evening
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
18:45–
2
Government on the blockchain? The case study of Estonia and its pioneering of nascent technologies – Nicholas Robinson (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
3
Economising social capital? Social networking sites and the double commodification of social relations – Jonas Koenig (HafenCity University, Germany)
4
Subprime Language: The Value of Words in an Age of Linguistic Capitalism, Digital Advertising and Fake News – Pip Thornton (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK), John Morris (University College London, UK)
5
BitBarista – Instantiation of Distributed Autonomous System – short demonstration – Ella Tallyn (University of Edinburgh, UK)
6
GeoAid – Exploring Smart Contracting for Humanitarian Aid Distribution – short demonstration – Bettina Nissen, Shaune Oosthuizen (University of Edinburgh, UK), Brett Matulis (University of Leicester, UK)
10 W1 | SAF-120
Trending Now: The Geographies of Fashion in the Digital Age (1) - Fashion Cities See also: 42, 77, 109 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/10
Convenors
Taylor Brydges (Uppsala University, Sweden), Brian Hracs (University of Southampton, UK), Mariangela Lavanga (Erasmus University Rotterdam, The Netherlands)
Chair
Brian Hracs (University of Southampton, UK)
1
Digital Disruption Downunder: Desk-top case studies of emerging fashion designers from New Zealand; innovation and collaboration in an uncertain world – Tania Allan-Ross, Tracy Kennedy (Otago Polytechnic, New Zealand)
2
Cultural and Creative Industries in Peripheral Areas: A Study of the South/Limburg Area – Anouk Duivenvoorden, Marina Gertsberg (Maastricht University, The Netherlands), Rachel A. J. Pownall (Maastricht University/Tilburg University, The Netherlands)
3
Illusions of Realism; A Fashion Democracy? – Chrissy Hilton-Gee (Southampton Solent University, UK)
4
Fashion industry in London: production network and inner-city geography – Galina Gornostaeva (Westminster Business School, UK)
11 W1 | SAF-121
Geographies of Active Living (1) See also: 43 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/11
Convenors
Louise Meijering, Gerd Weitkamp (University of Groningen, The Netherlands)
Chair
Gerd Weitkamp (University of Groningen, The Netherlands)
1
Purposeful leisure? Reframing the commute – Debbie Hopkins (University of Oxford, UK), Sandra Mandic, Janet Stephenson (University of Otago, New Zealand)
2
The rise of run-commuting – Simon Cook (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
3
Green exercise and everyday life: learning from recreational runners in the UK and Finland – Russell Hitchings (University College London, UK), Jarkko Bamberg (University of Tampere, Finland), Alan Latham (University College London, UK)
Wed 4
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
Evening
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
18:45–
Tracing the routes and routines of recreational runners – Mattias Qviström (Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Sweden)
12 W1 | SAF-122
Historical Trajectories of Change and Disaster Risk Management in the Coastal Tropics View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/12
Affiliation
CMRG, PERG
Convenors
Emily Wilkinson (Overseas Development Institute, UK), Carole White (University of East Anglia, UK)
Chair
Emily Wilkinson (Overseas Development Institute, UK)
1
Blame, Responsibility and Agency: “Disaster Justice” and the state in the Philippines – Greg Bankoff (University of Hull, UK)
2
Traditional Knowledge and Disaster Relief: the Cart Before the Course? – Michele Fulcher (Royal Anthropological Institute, UK)
3
History and hazard: Tracing historical roots of hazard exposure in Vanuatu – Clare Shelton, Johanna Forster, Carole White (University of East Anglia, UK)
4
Climate Risk Management in the Caribbean Al Rumson – Alexander Rumson (Cranfield University, UK)
5
Living between coastal hazards and steep slopes: colonial history and exposure in Dominica, Caribbean – Carole White, Johanna Forster, Clare Shelton (University of East Anglia, UK)
6
Evaluating changes in the people's perception of multiple hazards in Dominica, Caribbean – Martin Parham (University of Portsmouth, UK)
13 W1 | SKE-060a
Transport geographies (1) See also: 45 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/13
Chair
Lucy Mahoney (Transport for London, UK)
1
Public Transport for Whom? The Israeli Case – Eran Feitelson (Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel)
2
Gender and spatial aspects of the time use over the life course in the context of postsocialism – Lucie Pospíšilová, Petra Špačková, Tereza Kůsová (Charles University, Czech Republic)
3
Micropolitics of the mundane: Finding the ‘public’ in Bengaluru’s women bus conductors – Morgan Campbell (Rutgers University, USA)
4
Young adults’ disaffection for driving license: A disruption in the system of automobility? – Patrick Rerat (University of Lausanne, Switzerland)
5
Daily mobility in Prague during post-socialist time: life in suburbia and gender differences – Petra Špačková, Lucie Pospíšilová (Charles University, Czech Republic)
Wed
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
Evening
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
14 W1 | SKE-060b
Decolonising geographies: knowledge and power (1) See also: 46 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/14
Chair
Keith Lilley (Queen's University Belfast, UK)
18:45–
1
Alfred Parsons’ Encounters with Japan – Akiko Nambu (University of Exeter, UK)
2
Súil Eile/an-other-thinking: epistemic decolonization, border thinking and Irish higher education – Simon Warren (National University of Ireland, Galway, Ireland)
3
Decolonizing home in hearts of empire: storytelling and testimony to open British imperial geographies to an indigenous world – Iain MacKinnon (Coventry University, UK)
4
Transformations of modern/colonial higher education: cartographies of domination and re(dis)order – Dalene Swanson (University of Stirling, UK), Suming Khoo (National University of Ireland, Galway, Ireland), Karen Pashby (Manchester Metropolitan University, UK), Mostafa Gamal, Emma Guion Akdağ (University of Stirling, UK)
5
Vocal supporters of imperialism in an anti-colonial world – the Ulster Solemn League and Covenant and grassroots Unionism – Jonathan Cherry (Dublin City University, Ireland), Arlene Crampsie (University College Dublin, Ireland)
6
Global citizenship vs global competency: the ‘great escape’ or a wolf in sheep’s clothing? – Dalene Swanson, Mostafa Gamal (University of Stirling, UK)
15 W1 | SKE-060c
Politics, language and identity (1) See also: 47 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/15
Chair
Harriet Hawkins (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
1
Han Suyin and Anthony Burgess: Linguistic Geographies in the Literature of Decolonisation – Richard Steadman-Jones (University of Sheffield, UK)
2
Mediating the nation/state: offshore, onshore and multi-layered border practices in Matsu – Ling-I Chu (National Taiwan University, Taiwan)
3
“A Welsh Valhalla”: Narrating the Nation through Cardiff’s Memorial Landscapes – Mark Rhodes (Kent State University, USA)
4
(Re)Placing home under a dual transition: a case study into the subjectivities and mobilities of international immigrant students – Paolo Boccagni (Università di Trento, Italy)
5
Educator perceptions of language law efficacy in Galicia, Spain – Kathryn Hannum (Kent State University, USA)
16 W1 | SKE-064a
The post-industrial countryside? (1) See also: 48 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/16
Affiliation
RGRG
Convenor and chair
Darren Smith (Loughborough University, UK)
1
Gentrification in an Artists’ Colony as a Post-industrial Rural Space: The Case of SintMartens-Latem, Belgium – Ryo Iizuka (Shumei University, Japan)
Wed
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
Evening
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
18:45–
2
When post-industrial and newly industrialising countrysides collide – Alison Caffyn (Cardiff University, UK)
3
Rural gentrification and the post-industrial complexion of the British countryside – Chloe Kinton, Darren Smith (Loughborough University, UK), Martin Phillips (University of Leicester, UK)
4
Student housing in the rural context – Shenjing He (University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong)
5
Discussant – Paul Milbourne (Cardiff University, UK)
17 W1 | SKE-064b
Urban public space and placemaking (1) See also: 83 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/17
Chair
Eveleigh Buck-Matthews (Coventry University, UK)
1
Twin paths in agglomeration: Tracking the evolution of historical geographies in Turkey’s film exhibition, 1970-2016 – Özlem Öz (Boğaziçi University, Turkey), Kaya Ozkaracalar (Bahcesehir University, Turkey)
2
Everyday conviviality in Public Open Spaces: A Socio-Spatial Inquiry in Bradford City – Farnaz Ganji (University of Sheffield, UK)
3
Geotagging, Social Media, and Spatial Performance Among Urban Artists – Evan Carver (University of Washington, USA)
4
Doing Geography, Undoing “Art”: A Feminist Exploration into the everyday geographies of socially engaged art – Nian Paul (Jawaharlal Nehru University, India)
5
Racial and Ethnic Spatial Segregation in Thirty Large Cities/Metropolitan Areas in America: Implications for Similarly Large Cities in Europe – Mamadi Corra (East Carolina University, USA)
6
A geographical reading of the public discussion upon the North West London Eruv – Maria Luisa Caputo (Pantheon-Sorbonne University, France)
18 W1 | SKE-163
Political ecology (1): water, pollution and waste See also: 84, 115 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/18
Chair
Maria Rusca (King’s College London, UK)
1
Embodied SO2 emissions inside China – Rui Huang (Nanjing Normal University, China), Klaus Hubacek (University of Maryland, USA)
2
Contested Urban Waste: Garbage Collectors, Local Practices and Global Policies – Wael Salah Fahmi (Helwan University, Egypt)
3
Effect of Idol Immersion on Water Quality of Hussain Sagar Lake of Hyderabad City (India) – Venugopal Rao Cheeti, Venkatesham Elukapally, Rakesh Gandra (Osmania University, India)
4
An interdisciplinary political ecology of drinking water quality – Maria Rusca (King’s College London, UK), Giuliana Ferrero (UNESCO-IHE, The Netherlands)
5
River ontologies: knowing and managing freshwater systems in Aotearoa New Zealand – Karen Fisher, Meg Parsons (University of Auckland, New Zealand)
6
Human health risk assessment of arsenic species – Hifza Rasheed, Paul Kay, Yun Yun Gong (University of Leeds, UK)
Wed
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
Evening
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
19 W1 | SKE-164
18:45–
Platform Finance (1): Geographies of FinTech See also: 50 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/19
Convenors
Chris Muellerleile (Swansea University, UK), Desiree Fields (University of Sheffield, UK)
Chair
Desiree Fields (University of Sheffield, UK)
1
Mapping Innovation Networks in the Financial Industry: Geographies of the Blockchain in Fintech – David Bieri, Simone Franzi (Virginia Tech School of Public and International Affairs, USA), Daniel Simundza (Virginia Tech Global Forum on Urban and Regional Resilience, USA)
2
Hatching the egg, populating the hive: creating a fertile FinTech ecosystem in Brussels, Belgium – Reijer P. Hendrikse, Michiel van Meeteren (Brussels University, Belgium), David Bassens (Free University of Brussels, Belgium)
3
Constructing the digital farmer: smallholder development in the fintech era – Sally Brooks (University of York, UK), Daniela Gabor (University of the West of England, UK)
4
Platforming Market Space: Towards a geography of informational exchange – Chris Muellerleile (Swansea University, UK)
There is no session 20.
21 W1 | SKE-207
Here Be Dragons Film Screening View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/21
Convenor
Janetka Platun (Queen Mary University of London, UK)
Chairs
Kavita Datta, Olivia Sheringham (Queen Mary University of London, UK)
1
Globe: Here Be Dragons - Film Screening and Discussion – Kavita Datta, Olivia Sheringham, Janetka Platun (Queen Mary University of London, UK)
22 W1 | SKE-307
Scar-Cities: Middle East urbanisms between violent environments and disrupted governance (1) See also: 53 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/22
Affiliation
UGRG
Convenor and chair
Nathan Marom (Interdisciplinary Center (IDC) Herzliya, Israel)
1
Securitizing urban electricity supply: a political ecology perspective on Jordanian and Lebanese cases – Eric Verdeil (Sciences Po, France)
2
Dynamics of Disruption and Stewardship of Water Networks in the Syrian Civil War – Timothy Liptrot (Oberlin College, Ohio, USA)
3
‘Occupation Ecologies’: An Urban Political Ecology Perspective on Israel/Palestine – Nathan Marom (Interdisciplinary Center (IDC) Herzliya, Israel)
Wed
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
23
Evening 18:45–
W1 | SHE-RD
Decolonizing Urban Geography: Where have we got to, what next? (1): Starting Somewhere See also: 54, 89 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/23
Convenor and chair
Jennifer Robinson (University College London, UK)
1
Fragmentary Urbanization – Views from Urban and Rural Brazil – Johanna Hoerning (University of Technology (TU) Berlin, Germany)
2
Tensions and challenges in the research on post-socialist cities – Slavomíra Ferenčuhová (Masaryk University, Czech Republic)
3
Comparative urbanism takes a regional turn: Art biennials and city-making – Julie Ren (London School of Economics and Political Science, UK)
4
Provincialising Precarity: Re-conceptualising Urban Squatting in Contemporary Europe – Alex Vasudevan (University of Oxford, UK)
24 W1 | SHE-PIP
Reimagining Urban Energy Futures (1): Transformative Low Carbon Infrastuctures See also: 55 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/24
Convenors
Stefan Bouzarovski (University of Manchester, UK), Håvard Haarstad (University of Bergen, Norway)
Chair
Ralitsa Hiteva (University of Sussex, UK)
1
Towards transformative low-carbon urban reconfigurations: a relational ontology – Stefan Bouzarovski (University of Manchester, UK), Håvard Haarstad (University of Bergen, Norway)
2
How do local energy initiatives contribute to reimagining sustainable urban futures? – Mustafa Hasanov (University of Groningen, The Netherlands)
3
Urban renewable energy transitions: local financial innovations for just and transformative development – Paris Hadfield (University of Melbourne, Australia)
4
Bridging concepts: applying a geography of energy transition to the empirics of urban solar uptake – Siddharth Sareen (University of Bergen, Norway)
5
Unfair transitions? A preliminary examination of low-carbon energy pathways in the EU from a domestic energy vulnerability perspective – Sergio Tierado-Herrero (RMIT University, Australia)
6
Discussant – Bas Van Heur (Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium)
25 W1 | SALC-1
Labour and life: changing geographies of the workplace (1) See also: 56, 91 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/25
Affiliation
EGRG
Convenors
Adam Badger, Philip Crang, Katy Lawn (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
Chair
Philip Crang (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
Wed
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
Evening 18:45–
1
The workplace and the dispersal of work – Lizzie Richardson (Durham University, UK)
2
Digital work-lives and creative labour: reconsidering MOMs and MODs (‘Mobile Optimised Mothers / Dads’) – Al James (Newcastle University, UK)
3
New homeworking geographies: re-making work ‘places’ through freelance working – Annabelle Wilkins, Darja Reuschke (University of Southampton, UK)
4
Assembling the Maker’s experience at Fablab Torino – Samantha Cenere (Polytechnic University of Turin, Italy)
5
The digital workplace: click-work and Amazon’s Mechanical Turk – Adam Badger (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
26 W1 | SALC-2
Communities of Place versus Communities of Interest? exploring implications of digital media for civic and placebased actions (1) See also: 57 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/26
Convenors
Sebastian Weise, Geoff Vigar, Moozhan Shakeri (Newcastle University, UK)
Chair
Geoff Vigar (Newcastle University, UK)
1
Belgrade blog — digital story telling as a counter-history – Nela Milic (University of Arts London, UK)
2
Virtual communitas 2.0, digital ‘place-making’ and the techne of ‘‘becoming’ – Anita McKeown (Independent Researcher)
3
Civic technologies for a local food web – Sebastian Prost (Newcastle University, UK)
4
The geographies of online consultations: The example from a local plan – Sebastian Weise (Newcastle University, UK)
27 W1 | SALC-5
Transformative Stories: Trauma, Therapeutic Geographies and Hope View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/27
Affiliation
GFGRG, GHWRG
Convenors and chairs
Jo Little (University of Exeter, UK), Lia Bryant (University of South Australia, Australia)
1
‘Where Sophie’s story went next’: the banal geographies of public trauma tales – Hester Parr (University of Glasgow, UK)
2
Carved from the rock experiences of our daily lives – poetry, the home and wellbeing for other worlds – Julia Zielke (University of Liverpool, UK)
3
The power of the displaced interview: stor(e)ying as therapeutic practice – Jennifer Owen (Cardiff University, UK)
4
Bodymapping as therapeutic storytelling? Reflections on care ethics and emotion work – Ruth Evans (University of Reading, UK)
5
Methodologies for researching geographies of trauma and recovery – Lia Bryant (University of South Australia, Australia), Jo Little (University of Exeter, UK)
Wed
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
Evening
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
28 W1 | SALC-6
Geographies of subalternity and counterhegemonic globalization (1) See also: 59 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/28
Convenors
Kristin Kjaeras, Tarje Wanvik (University of Bergen, Norway)
Chair
Kristin Kjaeras (University of Bergen, Norway)
18:45–
1
Liminal citizenship: xenophobic spatialization and the space of commons between gentrification and the refugees’ crisis. The case of Tempelhofer Feld in Berlin – Daniele Valisena (Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden)
2
An introduction to the everyday: understanding the reproduction of capitalism in the daily life of the (connected) rurban – Lorena Melgaço (University of Birmingham, UK)
3
Maker networks as spaces of counterhegemonic politics? – Benedikt Schmid (University of Luxembourg, Luxembourg)
4
Differently ‘Precarious’: Counter-mapping the Newly-Hegemonic Logic of Reactionary Immunization – Alessandro Tiberio (University of California, Berkeley, USA)
29 W1 | SALC-7
Valuing heritage in the postcolonial city (1) See also: 60 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/29
Affiliation
HGRG, SCGRG
Convenors
Mark Boyle, Andrew McClelland (National University of Ireland, Maynooth, Ireland)
Chair
Mark Boyle (National University of Ireland, Maynooth, Ireland)
1
Using Public Participation Geographical Information System (PPGIS) methods to capture dissonant heritages in Derry-Londonderry – Andrew McClelland, Mark Boyle (National University of Ireland, Maynooth, Ireland)
2
Heritage, legacy and the construction of ‘black’ identity in Liverpool – Andrew Davies (University of Liverpool, UK)
3
Querying urban built heritage in Asia’s world city – elite expatriates, cosmopolitan identities and Hong Kong’s colonial-era built environment – Zahid Mughal (Keele University, UK)
4
On the Urban High Seas: (Re)Discovering Heritage and the Postcolonial City – Susan Mains (University of Dundee, UK)
30 W1 | SALC-8
Current and emerging research in transport (1): Understanding Mobility and its Implications See also: 61 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/30
Affiliation
TGRG
Convenors
Deborah Mifsud (University of Malta, Malta), Clare Woroniuk (Newcastle University, UK)
Chair
Deborah Mifsud (University of Malta, Malta)
Wed
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
Evening 18:45–
1
Understanding the relationship between local urban environments and cycling: what are the limitations of current academic thinking? – Samuel Nello-Deakin, Marco Brommelstroet (University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands)
2
Flight paths as layers of the three-dimensional urban fabric: global-local transport flows and the urbanisation of airspace above London and the South East – Evan McDonough (University of Luxembourg, Luxembourg)
3
Sustainable Aviation; Assessing the viability of a novel compensation scheme for those worst affected by airport operations to help facilitate aviation growth – Jonathan Keen, Callum Thomas (Manchester Metropolitan University, UK)
4
Airport as a home. Autoethnography of “home-making” at London Heathrow airport – Veronika Zuskacova (Masaryk University, Czech Republic)
31 W1 | SALC-9
Academic literacies: the route to academic success in Geography. Sharing examples of embedding study skills in learning and teaching View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/31
Affiliation
HERG
Convenors and chairs
Sonja Rewhorn, Wendy Garner (University of Chester, UK)
1
Drawing out the key information – encouraging active and confident reading of the Geography literature – Sonja Rewhorn (University of Chester, UK)
2
Embedding Academic Literacies as a Postgraduate Teaching Assistant: Challenges and Opportunities – Greg Philip Thomas (Aberystwyth University, UK)
3
Delivering Embedded Academic Skills Teaching to Large Groups – Natacha Harding (University of Winchester, UK)
4
Academic Skills Development within the Context of Geographical Enquiry – Wendy Garner (University of Chester, UK)
5
Discussion
32 W1 | HUX-341
Becoming Geography’s others: thinking through antonyms (1): Being In Opposition See also: 63 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/32
Affiliation
HPGRG
Convenor and chair
Robert Shaw (Newcastle University, UK)
1
The Opposite of Opposition: Unravelling the Complexity of Local Support for Environmental Harm – Christos Zografos (John Hopkins University, USA / Pompeu Fabra University Public Policy Centre, Spain)
2
Beyond oppositional narratives: destabilizing the ‘coherent’ subject of resistance within the UK’s asylum system – Sarah Hughes (Durham University, UK)
3
Rich City:Poor City – Cat Button (Newcastle University, UK)
4
How is the personal political? Psychoanalysis, radical politics, and trauma – Jesse Proudfoot (Durham University, UK)
Wed
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
Evening
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
33 W1 | HUX-342
18:45–
Listening at the Margins: Thinking, feeling, and doing difference (1) See also: 64 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/33
Convenors
Michele Lobo (Deakin University, Australia), Helen Wilson (University of Manchester, UK), Kaya Barry (Griffith University, Australia)
Chairs
Michele Lobo (Deakin University, Australia), Helen Wilson (University of Manchester, UK)
1
Listening and relaying responsibility: Entangling ‘Lore’ and ‘Lure’ in Darwin, Australia – Michele Lobo (Deakin University, Australia)
2
Listening with all your self: nonverbal methods for working with children’s emotions – Elizabeth Gagen (Aberystwyth University, UK)
3
Spatialising the In-Between: Listening-to the embodied sharing of breath in everyday encounters, Belfast – Ciara Merrick (University of Bristol, UK)
4
And then the sea came back – engaging climate change through sound – Anja Kanngieser (University of Wollongong, Australia), Polly Stanton (RMIT University, Australia)
5
Theatre as a ‘risky’ way of listening to participant and researcher needs – Michael Richardson (Newcastle University, UK)
Society snapshots Learn more about our work
While you’re at the conference, why not find out more about the work the Society does, and the support it provides for students, postgraduates and researchers
If you’d like to learn more, Dr Stephanie Wyse will be available in the RGS-IBG Tea Room during the morning break each day (10:40 to 11:10) to answer questions and share more information about different aspects of our work.
Building tour and introduction to the conference – Tuesday 29 August at 17:00 Join an informal tour of the building with an introduction to the Society’s work and the annual conference. It will start at 17.00 from the Registration Desk and last 30 minutes. The tour is especially suitable for international delegates and those attending the conference for the first time. RSVP to
[email protected] or you can just turn up on the day. Learn more and get involved
Working at the interface of schools and higher education. Funding for research Research Groups and other networks Advocacy for Geography Research on the Collections
Learn more about being involved in the Society’s future; through membership and other ways to work with us (Wednesday 30 August)
Resources, networks and CPD: support and opportunities for you and your departments (Thursday 31 August)
Professional recognition: for you (CGeog) and your teaching (undergraduate programme accreditation) (Friday 1 September)
Find out more
If you can’t make these times but would like to know more please visit the Registration Desk W www.rgs.org/rhed E
[email protected]
The Royal Geographical Society (with IBG) is the UK’s learned society and professional body for geography. Founded in 1830, we are a world centre for geography supporting research, education, expeditions and fieldwork, and informed enjoyment of our world. Membership of the Society is open to all. W www.rgs.org
Wed
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
Evening
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
34
18:45–
W2 | RGS-OT
Society and Space Lecture: Flat Out! Decolonising (dance in) Birmingham at a time of austerity View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/34
Convenor and chair
Alex Vasudevan (University of Oxford, UK)
1
Flat Out! Decolonising (dance in) Birmingham at a time of austerity – Patricia Noxolo (University of Birmingham, UK)
35 W2 | RGS-EC
"Avoid an imperialist approach!" Tensions in ‘Decolonising geographical knowledges’ through the Global Challenges Research Fund View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/35
Affiliation
DARG, PyGyRG, GJRG
Convenors
Samantha Staddon, Simon Shackley (University of Edinburgh, UK)
Chair
Samantha Staddon (University of Edinburgh, UK)
1
Panel discussion – Katie Willis (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK), Rachel Pain (Newcastle University, UK), Bhaskar Vira (University of Cambridge, UK)
36 W2 | RGS-CR
'Other' Childhoods: Theories, approaches and methods (2) See also: 4 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/36
Affiliation
GCYFRG
Convenors
Nadia von Benzon (Lancaster University, UK)
Chair
Catherine Wilkinson (Edge Hill University, UK)
1
Misunderstanding, stigmatisation and who is responsible for street children – Gemma Pearson (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
2
Educating otherwise: unschooling as social movement or domestic lassitude? – Nadia von Benzon (Lancaster University, UK)
3
Childhood and the Child Labour Debates in Bolivia – Christopher Willman (Open University, UK)
4
Discovering the ‘Other’ in Suburbia: Mapping as a way-finding process within Shaun Tan’s Tales from Outer Suburbia – Amy Mulvenna (University of Manchester, UK)
37 W2 | RGS-LR
The dynamics of business mobilities View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/37
Convenors
Jonathan V. Beaverstock (University of Bristol, UK), Lucy Budd (Loughborough University, UK), James Faulconbridge (Lancaster University, UK), Donald Hislop (Loughborough University, UK)
Chair
Donald Hislop (Loughborough University, UK)
1
Japanese expatriates’ locational adjustment, preferences and networking in the EU – Rolf Schlunze (Ritsumeikan University, Japan)
Wed
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
Evening
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
18:45–
2
Skilled (Re-)Migrants in Multinational Companies: Transnational Careers, Networks and Mobility – Philip Mueller (University of Osnabrück, Germany)
3
Expatriates between corporate strategies and personal preferences in glocal socio-spatial patterns – Sakura Yamamura (University of Hamburg, Germany)
4
International business travel in a post-Brexit world: threats and opportunities – Jonathan V. Beaverstock (University of Bristol, UK)
5
Demanding business travel: the evolution of business practice – James Faulconbridge (Lancaster University, UK)
38 W2 | RGS-SR
Combining Quantitative and Qualitative Data Effectively View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/38
Affiliation
PGF
Convenors
Tim Fewtrell (Loughborough University, UK), Daniel Casey (University of Sheffield, UK)
Chair
Tim Fewtrell (Loughborough University, UK)
1
Multi-Methods Research & Housing in Multiple Occupation – Andreas Culora (Loughborough University, UK)
2
Mixing Methods: Reflecting on my PhD Analysis – Heather Piggott (University of Manchester, UK)
3
Mapping residential mobility using qualitative and quantitative GIS – Caitlin Buckle (University of New South Wales, Australia)
4
Constructing Data Visualisations: combining the qualitative and quantitative to map aesthetic responses to heritage landscapes – Isabel Williams (Newcastle University, UK)
5
Places, faces and prices of social change – Julien Migozzi (University of Grenoble Alpes, France)
39 W2 | RGS-DR
Treating waste as a resource (2) See also: 7 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/39
Convenor and chair
Les Levidow (Open University, UK)
1
The moral economics of (re)valuing waste food – Charlie Spring, Mags Adams (University of Salford, UK)
2
Business models for sustainability in food waste management in the food retail industry: key driving factors – Victoria Wood (Harper Adams University, UK)
3
Finding clean food in dirty places: the messy politics of eating from bins – Mike Foden (University of Sheffield, UK)
4
Discussion
Wed
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
Evening
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
40 W2 | SAF-G34
The Costs of Decolonizing the Discipline (2) See also: 8 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/40
Affiliation
GFGRG
Convenors
Abigail H. Neely, Patricia Lopez (Dartmouth College, USA)
Chair
Patricia Lopez (Dartmouth College, USA)
1
18:45–
Panel discussion – Emma Jane Lord (Wageningen University, The Netherlands), Treva Ellison, Mona Domosh (Dartmouth College, USA), Beatriz Bustos (University of Chile, Chile), Léonie Newhouse (Max Planck Institute for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity, Germany), Abigail H. Neely (Dartmouth College, USA)
41 W2 | SAF-119
State commemoration in a digital world View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/41
Affiliation
DGWG
Convenor and chair
Shanti Sumartojo (RMIT University, Australia)
1
#Anzac: Digital, Cloud Commemoration and the Centenary of the First World War – Tom Sear (University of New South Wales, Australia)
2
Between ‘Then and Now’ – An Exploration of Commemorative First World War Photography – David Harvey (University of Exeter, UK), James Wallis (University of Exeter / University of Brighton, UK)
3
Mediatised Performative Commemoration from London to Berlin – Samuel Merrill (Umeå University, Sweden)
4
Memory sites, emplacement and digital materialities – Shanti Sumartojo (RMIT University, Australia)
42 W2 | SAF-120
Trending Now: The Geographies of Fashion in the Digital Age (2) - Intermediaries See also: 10, 77, 109 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/42
Convenors
Taylor Brydges (Uppsala University, Sweden), Brian Hracs (University of Southampton, UK), Mariangela Lavanga (Erasmus University Rotterdam, The Netherlands)
Chair
Taylor Brydges (Uppsala University, Sweden)
1
Circuits, Seasons and Spaces: How independent fashion designers strategically practice mobility within Canada’s fashion system – Taylor Brydges (Uppsala University, Sweden), Brian Hracs (University of Southampton, UK)
2
Chilean fashion bloggers: the transmission belt between consumers, branding agencies and the global retail industry – Arturo Arriagada (Universidad Adolfo Ibáñez, Chile)
3
Fashion and New Forms of Urban Symbolism: an Analysis of London as an ‘Ideal Type’ of Fashion City – Patrizia Casadei (Università degli Studi di Trento, Italy), Luciana Lazzeretti (Università degli Studi di Firenze, Italy)
Wed
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
Evening
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
18:45–
4
The Future of Fashion Past. Can digitalization of fashion in the past influence the fashion of today? – Tamara Sturtz-Filby (Bath Spa University, UK)
5
Rethinking Contemporary Fashion Media Through Deathly Fashions: Unraveling the Dynamics of the Fashion Image – Charlotte Dwyer (University of Utrecht/University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands)
43 W2 | SAF-121
Geographies of Active Living (2) See also: 11 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/43
Convenors
Louise Meijering, Gerd Weitkamp (University of Groningen, The Netherlands)
Chair
Louise Meijering (University of Groningen, The Netherlands)
1
Equalizer – a tool for equal and including activity places – Karin Book, Elisabeth Hogdahl (Malmö University, Sweden)
2
How Granny got her groove back: Promoting and facilitating active living in a broken city – Kris Vavasour (New Zealand Broadcasting School at Ara Institute of Canterbury, New Zealand)
3
Weather to worry? Impact of weather conditions on e-bike use by high school students in the Netherlands – Gerd Weitkamp (University of Groningen, The Netherlands)
4
Connecting the dots: piloting a mixed-methods approach to explore mobility practices of stroke survivors – Louise Meijering, Gerd Weitkamp (University of Groningen, The Netherlands)
44 W2 | SAF-122
Geographies of global (sea)food markets: influences of consumer behaviour on sustainability and justice in the Global South View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/44
Affiliation
CMRG, FGWG
Convenors
Carole White (University of East Anglia, UK), Emma McKinley (Cardiff University, UK), Tavis Potts (University of Aberdeen, UK)
Chair
Carole White (University of East Anglia, UK)
1
The changing seafood landscape, putting socially responsible seafood on the sustainability agenda – Alex Caveen, Libby Woodhatch (Seafish)
2
Economics or ethics? Pay gaps between domestic and international fishers – Estelle Jones (Marine Scotland), Kate Botterill (Edinburgh Napier University, UK), Cornilius Chikwama (Marine Scotland), Tim Gray (Newcastle University, UK)
3
How can market States help stop illegal fishing in the Global South - an EU perspective – Sophie Nodzenski (Environmental Justice Foundation)
4
How can the seafood supply chain drive change towards increased responsibility? – Quentin Marchais (ClientEarth)
5
How the Marine Conservation Society (MCS) through the Good Fish Guide (GFG) has influenced UK consumers to promote sustainable practices in seafood supply chains and policy in seafood production – Bev O'Kane (Marine Conservation Society)
Wed
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
Evening
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
45 W2 | SKE-060a
Transport geographies (2) See also: 13 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/45
Chair
Lucy Mahoney (Transport for London, UK)
18:45–
1
A new method to segment populations in transport geography: Bayesian statistical approach – Sal Lampkin, Stewart Barr, Laura Dawkins (University of Exeter, UK)
2
Emerging post-car transport infrastructure materialities in the Czech Republic? – Daniel Seidenglanz (Masaryk University, Czech Republic)
3
A survey-based cluster analysis of urban mobility among older adults – Eric Boschmann (University of Denver, USA)
4
Does the built environment reduce BMI? – Kees Maat (Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands)
5
Building and testing an evaluation model of the impact of cycling infrastructure – Esther Anaya Boig, Audrey de Nazelle (Imperial College London, UK), Thomas Goetschi (University of Zurich, Switzerland), Regine Gerike (TU Dresden, Germany), Livia Pierotti (Imperial College London, UK), Sonja Kahlmeier (University of Zurich, Switzerland), Tom Cole-Hunter (Colorado State University, USA), Mark Nieuwenhuijsen (ISGlobal, Spain), Luc Int Panis (Hasselt University, Belgium), David Rojas (ISGlobal, Spain), Ione Avila (ISGlobal, Spain)
46 W2 | SKE-060b
Decolonising geographies: knowledge and power (2) See also: 14 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/46
Chair
Alan Lester (University of Sussex, UK)
1
Anti-imperialism or new imperialism? Examining the production and content of the World Map/Karta Mira 1:2,500,000 – Christian Lotz, Charlotte Gohr (Herder Institute, Germany)
2
Territoriality of Negation: The Emerging of Bi-National State Solution for Israel-Palestine – Yosef Jabareen (Technion - Israel Institute of Technology, Israel)
3
Reaping Respect for the River: An Environmental History of the St. Mary’s River and its Peoples, 14 000 ybp. to present – Colin Elder (University of Kent, UK)
4
Listening with ‘more than ears’: new critical methodologies – Laura Roberts (University of Queensland, Australia)
6
The League of Nations; global information procurement, prodution, contemporary ‘western imagery and concepts of colonial - post colonial landscapes – Thomas S. Carhart (University of Freiburg, Germany)
47 W2 | SKE-060c
Politics, language and identity (2) See also: 15 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/47
Chair
Kath Browne (University of Brighton, UK)
1
The alternative rural space. The essential others – Angel Paniagua (CSIC, Spain)
Wed
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
Evening
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
18:45–
2
Resisting safe space: interrogating heteroactivism against LGBT safe schools programs in Australia, Canada and Great Britain – Kath Browne (University of Brighton, UK), Catherine Nash (Brock University, Canada), Andrew Gorman-Murray (Western Sydney University, Australia)
3
Civic engagement and political participation in French Guiana and the United States – Clara Rachel Eybalin Casseus (Independent Researcher)
4
Donald Trump’s 2016 Presidential Election Campaign: Populism, Anti-Establishment, and Anti-Globalist Politics – Isabel Airas (University of Cambridge, UK)
5
Temporalities and Affect: The affective lives and politics of the white working-class – Jay Emery (University of Leicester, UK)
48 W2 | SKE-064a
The post-industrial countryside? (2) See also: 16 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/48
Affiliation
RGRG
Convenor and chair
Darren Smith (Loughborough University, UK)
1
Land and Elites: Farming in the post-industrial countryside – Lee-Ann Sutherland (James Hutton Institute, UK)
2
Food production and networks – Damian Maye (University of Gloucestershire, UK)
3
Using resilience thinking to support sustainable post-Brexit UK agriculture' – Helena Howe, Malcolm Ross (University of Sussex, UK)
4
Discussant – Darren Smith (Loughborough University, UK)
There is no session 49.
50 W2 | SKE-164
Platform Finance (2): Placing Platform Capitalism See also: 19 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/50
Convenors
Chris Muellerleile (Swansea University, UK), Desiree Fields (University of Sheffield, UK)
Chair
Chris Muellerleile (Swansea University, UK)
1
Time is Money! Venture Capital Investment and Accessibility – Katja Bringmann (University of Antwerp, Belgium)
2
Crowd Cash and the City: tracing the emergence of the crowd as a financial subject and its reimagining of urban development – Joseph Daniels (University of Nottingham, UK)
3
Placing platform finance – Andrew Leyshon (University of Nottingham, UK), Paul Langley (Durham University, UK)
4
Automated Landlord: Disrupting a financial backwater and securing market order – Desiree Fields (University of Sheffield, UK)
Wed
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
Evening
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
51
18:45–
W2 | SKE-201
The Health Millennium Development Goals: Global Strides, Local Meanders View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/51
Affiliation
GHWRG
Convenor and chair
Anthonia Onyeahialam (Aberystwyth University, UK)
1
A GIS-based Micro-level Exploration and Mapping of Malaria Risk in Surulere LGA, Lagos State – Chinyere O. Oraukwu, Nna Oscar Uluocha, Ademola Omojola (University of Lagos, Nigeria)
2
Rolling Back, Rolling Forward the Malaria MDG: Insights from fieldnotes and data of an Insider Outsider – Anthonia Onyeahialam (Aberystwyth University, UK)
3
Emigration of Health Professionals: An Impediment for achieving Health Millennium Development Goals in the Developing Countries – Muyiwa Abejide (University of Ibadan, Nigeria)
4
Weight of infectious diseases such as malaria in the mortality burden, health transition or cumulative risk? – Assane Niang Gadiaga, Catherine Linard (University of Namur, Belgium)
52 W2 | SKE-207
Geographical perspectives on educational inequalities View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/52
Affiliation
PopGRG
Convenors and chairs
Helen Packwood (University of St Andrews, UK), Bozena Wielgoszewska (University of Edinburgh, UK)
1
Education and aspiration in remote rural areas: preliminary findings from research in Lesotho, India and Laos – Nicola Ansell (Brunel University, UK)
2
Laboured learning. Investigating challenged localities through a geography of vocational education systems – Karin Larsen (Centre for Regional and Tourism Research, Denmark)
3
The Role of Inter-Regional Migration in Achieving Social and Economic Success for Graduates on “New” Career Pathways – Bozena Wielgoszewska (University of Edinburgh, UK)
4
Accumulating “Cultural Capital with Taiwanese Characteristics”: The Shaping of Middleclass Identity in China – Yen-Fu Lai (National Taiwan University, Taiwan)
5
Investigating an ‘Inconspicuous Apartheid’: Secondary Schooling, Disadvantage and Place in the Glasgow City Region – Keith Kintrea (University of Glasgow, UK)
6
Schools, scales and the importance of place – Helen Packwood (University of St Andrews, UK)
53 W2 | SKE-307
Scar-Cities: Middle East urbanisms between violent environments and disrupted governance (2) See also: 22 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/53
Affiliation
UGRG
Convenor and chair
Nathan Marom (Interdisciplinary Center (IDC) Herzliya, Israel)
1
Heating scarcity: natural gas and the politics of unjust energy transition in Istanbul – Elvan Arik (Triangle (UMR 5206), Lyon, France)
Wed
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
Evening
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
18:45–
2
From a “global” to a “scar” city: Politics of fear and everyday life in Istanbul – Mine Eder (Boğaziçi University, Turkey), Özlem Öz (Boğaziçi University, Turkey)
3
Remaking Istanbul through Old & New Wounds: Governance, Infrastructure & the Visions of Empire – Ryan Centner (London School of Economics and Political Science, UK)
4
Disrupted Urbanism in the Time of Political Rupture in Diyarbakir – Muna Guvenc (University of Pittsburgh, USA)
54 W2 | SHE-RD
Decolonizing Urban Geography: Where have we got to, what next? (2): Shaping the future of Urban Studies: Debating approaches to the urban See also: 23, 89 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/54
Convenor and chair
Jennifer Robinson (University College London, UK)
1
Building urban knowledge for action with others – Myfanwy Taylor (University College London, UK)
2
For a World City Archipelago Metageography – David Bassens (Free University of Brussels, Belgium)
3
Decolonizing Methods: How to un-think something you don’t know you’re thinking? – Monika Streule (ETH Zürich, Switzerland)
4
Mobile Urbanism from Below: exploring Afro-Christian churches as scale-makers and place-makers in European mid-sized cities – Luce Beeckmans (Ghent University, Belgium)
5
Experiencing regularization and the meanings of everyday life under neoliberalisation Changing perspective in critical urban studies?– Marianne Morange (Paris Diderot University, France)
55 W2 | SHE-PIP
Reimagining Urban Energy Futures (2:) Pathways to Change See also: 24 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/55
Affiliation
EnGRG
Convenors
Stefan Bouzarovski (University of Manchester, UK), Håvard Haarstad (University of Bergen, Norway)
Chair
Vanesa Castán Broto (University College London, UK)
1
Messy paths towards sustainable urban mobility futures – Ivana Suboticki (Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Norway)
2
Imagining path-breaking events for African cities – Jesse Hoffman (Utrecht University, the Netherlands), Megan Davies, Holle Wlokas, Mark Swilling (Stellenbosch University, South Africa), Maarten Hajer (Utrecht University, the Netherlands)
3
Platform Politics with Urban Living Laboratories: The Making of Smart Cities as Alternatives to Urban Energy Future – Lindsay Mai, Harriet Bulkeley (Durham University, UK), Simon Marvin (University of Sheffield, UK)
4
Discussant – Andy Stirling (University of Sussex, UK)
Wed
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
56
Evening 18:45–
W2 | SALC-1
Labour and life: changing geographies of the workplace (2) See also: 25, 91 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/56
Affiliation
EGRG
Convenors
Adam Badger, Philip Crang, Katy Lawn (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
Chair
Philip Crang (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
1
Researching the rhythms of working life – Dawn Lyon (University of Kent, UK)
2
Art/Work: Ignacio Uriarte’s art and the experience of boredom in administrative labour – Katy Lawn (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
3
Lunch break – working lunch: an ethnographic study in German canteens – Christine Wenzl (University of Bonn, Germany)
4
The workplace geographies and aesthetic labour of DJs in South East England – Nina Willment (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
5
Creative labour as service work: live music entertainment in leisure venues – Anjeline De Dios (Lingnan University, Hong Kong)
57 W2 | SALC-2
Communities of Place versus Communities of Interest? exploring implications of digital media for civic and placebased actions (2) See also: 26 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/57
Convenors
Sebastian Weise, Geoff Vigar, Moozhan Shakeri (Newcastle University, UK)
Chairs
Sebastian Weise, Moozhan Shakeri (Newcastle University, UK)
1
Re-imagined communities: the role of digital technology in community narrative formation – Austin Toombs, Toby Lowe (Newcastle University, UK)
2
Participatory Media: Creating Spaces for Storytelling inNeighbourhood Planning – Jen Manuel, Geoff Vigar, Tom Bartindale, Rob Comber (Newcastle University, UK)
3
Ambient participation? Social media as platform spaces for commentary, debate and anxieties around urban transformation – Scott Rodgers (Birkbeck, University of London, UK), Susan Moore (University College London, UK), Andrea Ballatore (Birkbeck, University of London, UK)
4
Round table and discussion
Wed
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
Evening
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
58
18:45–
W2 | SALC-5
For whom and what do we grieve, when and where: The geopolitics of diverse experiences of death, bereavement and remembrance: human and non-human (1) See also: 93, 124 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/58
Affiliation
SCGRG, PolGRG
Convenors
Ruth Evans (University of Reading, UK), Beth Greenhough (University of Oxford, UK), Philip Howell (University of Cambridge, UK), Avril Maddrell (University of Reading, UK), Katie McClymont (University of the West of England, UK)
Chair
Katie McClymont (University of the West of England, UK)
1
Making sense of family deaths in urban Senegal: contexts and comparisons – Jane McCarthy (Open University, UK), Ruth Evans, Sophie Bowlby (University of Reading, UK), Joséphine Wouango (University of Liege, Belgium)
2
Unequal ‘Dignified Deaths’ in Los Angeles: the Politics of Disparate Griefs – Carrie Ryan (University of Oxford, UK)
3
Understanding the non-material difficulties of Chinese “ShiDu” families—a cultural perspective – Fei Fang (University of York, UK)
4
Outer space as a landscape of female grief in works of popular cinema – Courtney Stephens (Independent Filmmaker)
5
Choosing between ‘good death’ and ‘good grief’: gender, the State and Muslim deathscapes in Britain and France – Alistair Hunter (University of Edinburgh, UK)
59 W2 | SALC-6
Geographies of subalternity and counterhegemonic globalization (2) See also: 28 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/59
Convenors
Kristin Kjaeras, Tarje Wanvik (University of Bergen, Norway)
Chair
Tarje Wanvik (University of Bergen, Norway)
1
Subaltern Maritime Networks, Counter-Hegemonic Spatialities and Contested Articulations of the Political: the ‘Global’ Indian Seafarers Strike of 1939 – David Featherstone (University of Glasgow, UK)
2
Contradictory production of alternative urban development: Subaltern geographies of urban densification and housing in Oslo, Norway – Kristin Kjaeras (University of Bergen, Norway)
3
Wildfire politics - Understanding Métis pragmatism through the case of the Fort McMurray wildfire – Tarje Wanvik (University of Bergen, Norway)
Wed
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
Evening
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
60
18:45–
W2 | SALC-7
Valuing heritage in the postcolonial city (2) See also: 29 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/60
Affiliation
HGRG, SCGRG
Convenors
Mark Boyle, Andrew McClelland (National University of Ireland, Maynooth, Ireland)
Chair
Andrew McClelland (National University of Ireland, Maynooth, Ireland)
1
Conservation and commemoration: lessons from Moore Street, Dublin – Mark Scott, Arthur Parkinson (University College Dublin, Ireland)
2
Dublin’s Georgian Core and the Challenges of Contemporary Heritage – Philip Lawton (National University of Ireland, Galway, Ireland)
3
The contested identities in the postcolonial Incheon City, South Korea – Je-Hun Ryu (Korea National University of Education, Korea)
4
Discussant – Gerry Kearns (National University of Ireland, Maynooth, Ireland)
61 W2 | SALC-8
Current and Emerging Research in Transport (2): Travel Behaviour, accessibility, equity and planning See also: 30 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/61
Affiliation
TGRG
Convenors
Deborah Mifsud (University of Malta, Malta), Clare Woroniuk (Newcastle University, UK)
Chair
Clare Woroniuk (Newcastle University, UK)
1
Determinants of Travel Behaviour for Older People in Malta – Deborah Mifsud, Maria Attard (University of Malta, Malta), Stephen Ison (Loughborough University, UK)
2
The Use of Spatial Microsimulation to Profile Railways Passengers – Eusebio Odiari, Mark Birkin, Susan Grant-Muller, Nick Malleson (University of Leeds, UK)
3
Transport Investment and Social Justice in Beijing, China – Mengqiu Cao, Robin Hickman (University College London, UK)
4
More than just riding without a ticket? Defining, mapping and exploring the policy of farefree public transport – Wojciech Kębłowski (Université libre de Bruxelles, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium)
5
Aerotropolis concept: transferability from the Global North to the Global South – Anna Carolina Correa, Paul Timms, David Milne (University of Leeds, UK)
62 W2 | SALC-9
Innovative assessment of geography students in Higher Education View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/62
Affiliation
HERG
Convenors
Nina Morris, Hazel Christie, Jacob Barber (University of Edinburgh, UK)
Chair
Jacob Barber (University of Edinburgh, UK)
Wed
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
Evening
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
18:45–
1
Dialogic feed-forward assessment: re-energising the undergraduate essay – Jennifer Hill, Harry West (University of the West of England, UK)
2
Using assessed blogs to develop research skills – Nina Morris, Hazel Christie, Jacob Barber (University of Edinburgh, UK)
3
Aligning the how with the what: Conferences as a disruptive, authentic assessment technique for professionalising graduates – Michael Horswell (University of the West of England, UK)
4
Innovative assessment for the social-media-savvy generation – Harng Luh Sin (National University of Singapore, Singapore)
5
Student video production as technologically engaged learning – Sam Kinsley (University of Exeter, UK)
63 W2 | HUX-341
Becoming Geography’s others: thinking through antonyms (2): Constructing Opposites See also: 32 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/63
Affiliation
HPGRG
Convenor
Robert Shaw (Newcastle University, UK)
Chair
Jesse Proudfoot (Durham University, UK)
1
Tracking Wildlife in the Taxidermy Museum: Environmental Knowledge, Animal Agency and an ‘Ecology in Between’ – Karen Jones (University of Kent, UK)
2
On the ‘day’ of Everyday Life – Robert Shaw (Newcastle University, UK)
3
If you’re not on the list, you’re not getting in: contemplating designation and expulsion in the context of natural heritage – Frances Rylands (University of Exeter, UK)
4
The Nonhuman of and within the Human? An embodied geography of compulsivity – Diana N.M. Beljaars (Cardiff University, UK)
64 W2 | HUX-342
Listening at the Margins: Thinking, feeling, and doing difference (2) See also: 33 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/64
Convenors
Helen Wilson (University of Manchester, UK), Michele Lobo (Deakin University, Australia), Kaya Barry (Griffith University, Australia)
Chair
Michele Lobo (Deakin University, Australia)
1
Listening through solicited diaries (as ‘ethnographic devices’) – Julius Baker (University of Sussex, UK)
2
Listening to laughter with care: non-representational differences and the politics of beingwith – Phil Emmerson (University of Birmingham, UK)
3
Building an Uncertain Ethics? Rehearsing more-than human world-making across difference – Suzanne Hocknell (University of Exeter, UK)
4
Discussant – Helen Wilson (University of Manchester, UK)
RGS-IBG Postgraduate Forum at AC2017
Image credit: Rob Johns
Postgraduate Forum Annual Conference Training Symposium (PGF-ACTS) - Tuesday 29 August 13.00-17.00, RGS-IBG Education Centre (pre-booking required) Sessions sponsored by the Postgraduate Forum are marked with ‘PGF’ in the programme grid Postgraduate Forum Business Meeting— Friday 1 September, 13.10, RGS-IBG Education Centre—all welcome! Follow @PGF_RGSIBG on Twitter for live tweets during the conference. The conference hashtag is #RGSIBG17
www.pgf.rgs.org
Wed
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
Evening
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
65
18:45–
WP | RGS-OT
Chair's plenary: Decolonizing the Republic of Knowledge: Futures for Social Science View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/65
Convenor and chair
Sarah Radcliffe (University of Cambridge, UK)
1
Decolonizing the Republic of Knowledge: Futures for Social Science – Raewyn Connell (University of Sydney, Australia)
2
Discussant – Kiran Asher (University of Massachusetts, USA)
There will be an exhibition of posters in the Main Hall on Wednesday 30 August. Poster presenters have been asked to stand by their posters in the tea breaks and in this lunchtime session.
66 WP | RGS-MH
Posters 1 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/66
1
The spatial dynamics of car-sharing in Frankfurt, Germany – Anne Scholz (University of Surrey, UK)
2
Pre- and Post-disaster risk of Human Trafficking? Exploring mobility governance through PAR – Ayushman Bhagat (Durham University, UK)
3
Distribution of secondary forest soil meso-micro fauna community in different physiognomy of Changbai Mountains, China – Xiuqin Yin, Xinchang Kou, Chen Ma (Northeast Normal University, China)
4
Kicking like a girl? Geographies of femininities within female football – April Moores (University of Portsmouth, UK)
5
Re-branding youth citizenship in the UK: challenging ‘globalisation of indifference’ in the post-Brexit landscape – Mohsen Gul (University of Nottingham, UK)
WP | RGS-CR
Economic Geography Research Group AGM
WP | RGS-SR
Energy Geographies Research Group AGM
WP | RGS-DR
History and Philosophy of Geography Research Group AGM
Wed
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
67
Evening 18:45–
WP | RGS-TR
Gender and Feminist Geographies Research Group mentoring and networking session View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/67
Affiliation
GFGRG
Convenors and chairs
Katherine Brickell (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK), Ailie Tam (University of East Anglia, UK), Heather Jeffrey (University of Bedfordshire, UK), Eveleigh Buck-Matthews (Coventry University, UK)
WP | SAF-119
Geographies of Children, Youth and Families Research Group AGM
WP | SAF-120
Food Geographies Working Group AGM
WP | SAF-121
Rural Geography Research Group AGM
WP | SAF-122
Digital Geographies Working Group AGM
Lunch will be served in the Main Hall and Marquee at the RGS-IBG. You will find a ticket for lunch in your name badge. If you have requested a special diet, please go to the Marquee. Please help us with recycling by separating food waste and not contaminating the recycling bins. Please come to the Registration Desk if you have questions and/or there are any problems.
Open Access
The place to publish your OPEN ACCESS Geographical and Environmental Research • Read the very latest OA Papers • High standard, rigorous peer review of your article • Immediate open access • Articles published under Creative Commons Licenses EDITORS Gail Davies, University of Exeter, UK Anson Mackay, University College London, UK
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blog.geographyandenvironment.com
Digital Data: Opening up the Weather Archive
Read the latest Open Collection:
Sponsored by Geo Convened by: Georgina Endfield (The University of Liverpool, UK) Lucy Veale (The University of Liverpool, UK) Sarah Davies (Aberystwyth University, UK)
Geo welcomes proposals for publishing collections of papers on a specific theme. Authors should contact the appropriate Editor to discuss their ideas.
Wednesday 30 August 2017, Session 3 (14:40 – 16:20) Dealing with the Deluge of Historical Weather Data: The Example of the TEMPEST (Tracking Extremes of Meteorological Phenomena Experienced in Space and Time) Database Lucy Veale et al. 2017 Geo: Geography and Environment doi: 10.1002/geo2.39
Visualising the global environmental: new research directions Guest edited by Sebastian Grevsmühl
www.geographyandenvironment.com @GeoOpenAccess
@RGS_IBGhe
Wed
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
Evening
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
68
18:45–
W3 | RGS-OT
Urban Studies Journal Lecture: The ideological alignment of smart urbanism in Singapore: critical reflections on a political paradox View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/68
Convenor and chair
Jon Bannister (Manchester Metropolitan University, UK)
1
The ideological alignment of smart urbanism in Singapore: critical reflections on a political paradox – Lily Kong (Singapore Management University, Singapore)
69 W3 | RGS-EC
Digital Data: Opening up the Weather Archive View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/69
Affiliation
Geo: Geography and Environment
Convenors
Georgina Endfield, Lucy Veale (University of Liverpool, UK), Sarah Davies (Aberystwyth University, UK)
Chair
Simon Naylor (University of Glasgow, UK)
1
TEMPEST: Tracking Extremes of Meteorological Phenomena in Extent across Space and Time – Lucy Veale, Georgina Endfield (University of Liverpool, UK), Sarah Davies (Aberystwyth University, UK)
2
Data rescue, visualisation and the power of crowd sourcing – Philip Brohan (Met Office Hadley Centre, UK)
3
Policy applications for historic weather data – Clive Walmsley (Natural Resources Wales, UK)
4
Curating weather histories – Kathryn Summerwill, Hayley Cotterill (University of Nottingham, UK)
70 W3 | RGS-CR
Writing Successfully for the Journal of Geography in Higher Education View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/70
Affiliation
HERG
Convenors
Derek France (University of Chester, UK), Jennifer Hill (University of the West of England, UK), Sonja Rewhorn (University of Chester, UK)
Chair
Derek France (University of Chester, UK)
71
Food Localisation as Community-Building View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/71
W3 | RGS-LR Affiliation
FGWG
Convenor and chair
Les Levidow (Open University, UK)
1
Two Local Food Projects in North West England – Mark Stein (University of Salford, UK)
2
Community food-growing projects in London: Internal and external drivers of citizen participation – Elizabeth Bos (Coventry University, UK)
Wed
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
Evening
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
18:45–
3
London’s food localisation as community-building – Les Levidow (Open University, UK)
4
Building a solidarity network in allotment gardening against urban gentrification – Kaneez Hasna (University of Oxford, UK)
72 W3 | RGS-SR
Faith and the ‘practising’ of social justice (1): Faith and justice in the city See also: 104 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/72
Affiliation
GJRG
Convenors
Louise Waite (University of Leeds, UK), Hannah Lewis (University of Sheffield, UK)
Chair
Louise Waite (University of Leeds, UK)
1
A Theology of Social Care: Muslims and Sikhs serving London’s homeless – William Barylo (EHESS, France)
2
Faith in Foodbanks? Theology, ethics, and politics in the UK food aid landscape – Andrew Williams (Cardiff University, UK), Paul Cloke (University of Exeter, UK), Jon May, Liev Cherry (Queen Mary University of London, UK)
3
Local Postures of Listening: Preliminary Musings from an Ethnographic Case Study of FBO Work in Edinburgh – Christopher Medland (University of Edinburgh, UK)
4
Faith-based engagements with forced migration: the case of humanitarian corridors to Italy – Susanna Trotta (Independent scholar)
5
Postsecular ethics of the “enlightened city” – Justin Beaumont (Independent Scholar)
73 W3 | RGS-DR
Residential migration across time and lifecourses (1): theorising and evidencing diverse paths See also: 105 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/73
Affiliation
PopGRG
Convenors
Nissa Finney (University of St. Andrews / ESRC Centre on Dynamics of Ethnicity (CoDE), UK), David McCollum (University of St Andrews, UK)
Chair
Nissa Finney (University of St. Andrews / ESRC Centre on Dynamics of Ethnicity (CoDE), UK)
1
Temporalities and spatialities of Eastern European migration and settlement in Scotland – Sergei Shubin (Swansea University, UK)
2
Polish Migration, Whiteness, and Migration Decision-Making Over Time – William Shankley (University of Manchester, UK)
3
Moving through space and time: Using qualitative GIS to map residential migration over the lifecourse – Caitlin Buckle (University of New South Wales, Australia)
4
Short and long-term effects of union dissolution on residential mobility and housing – Julia Mikolai, Hill Kulu (University of St Andrews, UK)
Wed 5
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
Evening
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
18:45–
How are Intergenerational Transfers Constructed and Transmitted Across Time and Space? The Case of International Migration from a Gender, Life Course and Human Wellbeing Perspective – Katie Wright (University of East London, UK)
74 W3 | RGS-TR
Dance and the geographies of (de)coloniality See also: 106 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/74
Affiliation
SCGRG
Convenor and chair
Sofie Narbed (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
1
Tracing a Decolonial Practice for Dance Research – Melissa Blanco (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK), Anamaria Tamayo-Duque (Loughborough University, UK)
2
Dodges and Sweeps: a Look at the Positionality of Capoeira in the “Contemporary” Dance World – Cristina Rosa (University of Roehampton, UK)
3
Appreciating choreography at the Confluence: Looking at the work of Sheron Wray and Robert Hylton – Funmi Adewole (De Montfort University, UK)
4
Moving geographies: An Oral History Art Installation of the Afroecuadorian dances of Bomba and Marimba – Maria Gabriela López Yánez (Goldsmiths, University of London, UK)
75 W3 | SAF-G34
Decolonising geographies of democracy and participation View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/75
Affiliation
PyGyRG
Convenor and chair
Helen Pallett (University of East Anglia, UK)
1
Decolonising the collective: towards new visions of representation – Doerthe Rosenow (Oxford Brookes University, UK)
2
The challenges of the ‘post-liberal’ turn in the Plurinational State of Bolivia – Anna Laing (University of Sussex, UK)
3
Towards decentred and emergent governance for ‘community resilience’: The view from post-war Sri Lanka – Martin Mulligan (RMIT University, Australia)
4
The right to the knowledge: urban movements and decolonisation of the spatial planning process – Tomasz Sowada (Adam Mickiewicz University, Poland)
5
Migrant women and participatory social research: decolonising geographies of participation – Tracey Reynolds (University of Greenwich, UK), Umut Erel, Erene Kaptani (The Open University, UK), Maggie O'Neill (University of York, UK)
76 W3 | SAF-119
Geographies of digital games (1) See also: 108 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/76
Affiliation
DGWG
Convenor and chair
Nick Rush-Cooper (Durham University, UK)
1
Introduction – Nick Rush-Cooper (Durham University, UK)
Wed
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
Evening
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
18:45–
2
Heroes without organs? A Deleuze-Guattarian approach to understanding digital corporeality in computer games – Carl Olsson (Lund University, Sweden)
3
Real cities, imagined ruins: encounters with abandoned places in video games – Emma Fraser, Clancy Wilmott (University of Manchester, UK)
4
Playbour and the Cuteness Factor – Joyce Goggin (University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands)
5
Towards a Virtual Sense of Place: Exploring ‘Walking Simulator’ Video Games – Jack Lowe (Queen Mary University of London, UK)
77 W3 | SAF-120
Trending Now: The Geographies of Fashion in the Digital Age (3) - Spaces, Systems and Values See also: 10, 42, 109 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/77
Convenors
Taylor Brydges (Uppsala University, Sweden), Brian Hracs (University of Southampton, UK), Mariangela Lavanga (Erasmus University Rotterdam, The Netherlands)
Chair
Mariangela Lavanga (Erasmus University Rotterdam, The Netherlands)
1
Permanent Pop-Up Shops? Dispelling the Myth of Temporality Through a Case Study of Fashion Pop-Up Shops in Boxpark, Shoreditch – Elizabeth Wright (University of Southampton, UK)
2
Journeys of an exceptional material: fur in contemporary geographies of fashion – Felix Mueller (Leibniz Institute for Research on Society and Space (IRS), Germany)
3
An expensive, confusing and ineffective suit of armour: Assessing the intellectual property protection system available for fashion designers in the digital era – Alice Janssens, Mariangela Lavanga (Erasmus University Rotterdam, The Netherlands)
4
Geographies of Knowledge and Decision-Making within Online Multinational Fashion Retailers - Virtual Stores, Virtual Communities, Virtual Decisions? – Steve Wood (University of Surrey, UK), Iain Watson, Christopher Teller (Surrey Business School, UK)
78 W3 | SAF-121
The interdisciplinary field (1): positions and framings See also: 110 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/78
Convenors
Chris Perkins (University of Manchester, UK), Sybille Lammes (University of Warwick, UK), Jana Wendler (University of Manchester, UK)
Chair
Sybille Lammes (University of Warwick, UK)
1
Framing the field: conceptualizing interdisciplinary field encounters – Chris Perkins (University of Manchester, UK)
2
Interdisciplinarity in drought research: experimenting with combining narratives and modelling – Mel Rohse, Rosie Day, Anne Van Loon, Sally Rangecroft (University of Birmingham, UK), Eugine Makaya (National University of Science and Technology, Zimbabwe)
3
Practising interdisciplinarity from near and far; physical space, personal relations and disciplinary affiliations – Samantha Staddon (University of Edinburgh, UK)
4
Here, today, now: locating and articulating improvisation within contemporary geographic research – Gwilym Lawrence (University of Manchester, UK)
Wed
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
Evening
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
5
Thinking Ecologies: drawing cross-disciplinary encounters in contested wetland landscapes – Sage Brice (University of Bristol, UK)
79
Engaging Stakeholders in Coastal Decision-Making View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/79
W3 | SAF-122
18:45–
Affiliation
CMRG
Convenors
Emma McKinley (Cardiff University, UK), Carole White (University of East Anglia, UK), Celine Germond-Duret (Liverpool John Moores University, UK)
Chair
Tim Stojanovic (University of St Andrews, UK)
1
Supporting sustainable management of UK Marine Protected Areas – Jenny Oates, Sarah Young (WWF, UK)
2
Community Voice Method - a values-based approach to engaging stakeholders in marine resource management in the UK. – Peter Richardson (Marine Conservation Society)
3
The varying economic impacts of Marine Spatial Planning across different geographical scales – a Q methodology study in the UK – Madeleine Gustavsson, Karyn Morrissey (University of Exeter, UK)
4
Community preferences for marine renewable energy in Washington; Evidence from a choice experiment – Keila Meginnis (University of Manchester, UK)
80 W3 | SKE-060a
Exploring the Socio-Spatialities of Urban Goods Mobility (1) See also: 112 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/80
Affiliation
TGRG
Convenors
Tim Schwanen, Debbie Hopkins (University of Oxford, UK)
Chair
Debbie Hopkins (University of Oxford, UK)
1
Visualising Carrier Journeys: Understanding the Impacts of Last-Mile Logistics Operations on the Urban Streetscape – Sarah Wise, Martin Zaltz-Austwick (University College London, UK), Oliver Bates, Adrian Friday (Lancaster University, UK), Fraser Mcleod (University of Southampton, UK), Julian Allen (University of Westminster, UK), Tolga Bektas (University of Southampton, UK), Maja Piecyk, Marzena Piotrowska (University of Westminster, UK), Tom Cherrett, Thuba Nguyen (University of Southampton, UK)
2
The Economics of Sustainable Last Mile E-Commerce – Ivan Cardenas, Wouter Dewulf (University of Antwerp, Belgium)
3
Exploring the Relationship Between Urban Form and Freight Trip Generation – Jorge Gil, Ivan Sanchez-Diaz (Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden)
4
Logistics Development and Postindustrial Urbanization: The Emergence of New BlueCollar Places in Urban Regions – Nicolas Raimbault (Luxembourg Institute of Socio-Economic Research, Luxembourg)
5
Instant Deliveries: New Jobs and New Questions for Cities – Laetitia Dablanc, Neila Saidi (University of Paris-East, France)
Wed
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
Evening
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
81
18:45–
W3 | SKE-060c
Urban Fallism: monuments, iconoclasm and decolonisation (1): Urban Fallism in the Post-Colonial Context See also: 113 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/81
Convenors
Sybille Frank, Mirjana Ristic (TU Darmstadt, Germany)
Chair(s)
Sybille Frank (TU Darmstadt, Germany)
1
Defacement and Multisensory Bodily Engagements with Commemorative Markers in South Africa – Sabine Marschall (University of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa)
2
Deep Inscription: #RhodesMustFall and the University of Cape Town – Nick Shepherd (Aarhus University, Denmark)
3
“Remembrance not Reverance”: Urban Fallism, Race, and the Struggle over Confederate Monuments in New Orleans – Mary Niall Mitchell (University of New Orleans, USA)
82 W3 | SKE-064a
New and Emerging Research Within the Green Economy View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/82
Affiliation
PGF, RGRG
Convenors
Tim Fewtrell (Loughborough University, UK), Daniel Casey, Robert Hardie, Bowy Den Braber (University of Sheffield, UK)
Chairs
Daniel Casey, Bowy Den Braber (University of Sheffield, UK)
1
Estimating the scale of the US green economy and green jobs at the dawn of the age of Trump – Lucien Georgeson, Mark Maslin (University College London, UK), Martyn Poessinouw (KMatrix Ltd)
2
Corporate Water Stewardship: New governance structures towards a Green Transformation? – Nora Lanari (Coventry University, UK)
3
Procedural justice in low carbon living for lower-income households: An Australian case study – Edgar Liu, Bruce Judd (University of New South Wales, Australia)
4
Grabbing green? From global discourses to institutional implementation of the green economy in Tanzania – Jill Tove Buseth (Norwegian University of Life Sciences, Norway)
5
Discussion
83 W3 | SKE-064b
Urban public space and placemaking (2) See also: 17 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/83
Chair
Ryan Centner (London School of Economics and Political Science, UK)
1
Affective Relations of Bodies and Aircraft Noise: The Constitution of an airport’s Planning Process on the Ground – Mor Shilon (Technion - Israel Institute of Technology, Israel)
2
Ordinary life and the production of uneven urban waterscapes: A praxeology of Lilongwe water supply – Maria Rusca (King’s College London, UK)
3
The communicational dimensions of place – beyond existing theories – Jacek Kotus, Michal Rzeszewski (Adam Mickiewicz University, Poland)
Wed
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
Evening 18:45–
4
Urban Afterlives: Buenos Aires, An Adjusted City – Ryan Centner (London School of Economics and Political Science, UK)
5
Re-imagining Cairo’s Historic Districts: Sanitisation of the Bazaar, and the Right to Public Spaces – Wael Salah Fahmi (Helwan University, Egypt)
84 W3 | SKE-163
Political ecology (2): theoretical perspectives and engagement See also: 18, 115 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/84
Chair
Andrew Newsham (School of Oriental and African Studies, UK)
1
From extraction to the stock market: The cycle of a commodity under the planetary urbanisation process and its spatial unevenness – Francisco Vergara Perucich (University College London, UK / Universidad Católica del Norte, Chile)
2
Factors influencing Indigenous engagement in Australian water markets: Preliminary findings from a NSW case study – Lana Hartwig (Griffith University, Australia)
3
Assessing and Managing Climate-Related Risks in the Tana Basin, Kenya – Rhosanna Jenkins (University of East Anglia, UK)
4
Exploring social activism: Unwanted extractive industry in New South Wales, Australia – Mark-Stanton Bailey (Griffith University, Australia)
5
Contesting the metaphysics underlying accounts of "socio-nature" in urban political ecology – Andrew Newsham (SOAS, University of London, UK)
85 W3 | SKE-164
Economic Geography, Journal of Economic Geography, and Environment and Planning A – Advancing global production networks research: progress and prospects (1): Lecture: Global production networks and the political economy of contemporary capitalism See also: 116, 150, 183, 218, 250 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/85
Affiliation
EGRG
Convenors
Neil M. Coe, Henry Yeung (National University of Singapore, Singapore)
Chair
Henry Yeung (National University of Singapore, Singapore)
1
Global production networks and the political economy of contemporary capitalism – Adrian Smith (Queen Mary University of London, UK)
Wed
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
Evening
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
86
18:45–
W3 | SKE-201
Home futures: towards a critical feminist geography of housing, ageing and health (1) See also: 117 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/86
Affiliation
GHWRG, GFGRG
Convenors
Karen West (Aston University, UK), Sheila Peace (Open University, UK), Melissa Fernández Arrigoitia (Lancaster University, UK)
Chairs
Karen West (Aston University, UK), Sheila Peace (Open University, UK)
1
The Lived Experiences of Caring for People with Dementia in their own Homes – Samantha Wilkinson (Manchester Metropolitan University, UK), Lucy Perry-Young, Kristian Pollock (University of Nottingham, UK), Cheryl Travers (Loughborough University, UK), Justine Schneider (University of Nottingham, UK)
2
Feelings at home: towards an emotional geography of the UK’s first older women’s cohousing – Melissa Fernández Arrigoitia (Lancaster University, UK), Karen West (Aston University, UK), Sheila Peace (Open University, UK)
3
Age and engagement in community-led housing – Yael Arbell (University of Leeds, UK)
4
The temporality of “home”- Reflecting on the experience of older people ageing and dying in their own dwelling – Renske Visser (University of Bath, UK)
5
Re-making home alone: experiencing widowhood during retirement abroad – Rebekah Miller (University of Edinburgh, UK)
87 W3 | SKE-207
Examining energy consumption and communities: The social, cultural and political dynamics of energy system transformations (1) See also: 118 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/87
Affiliation
PERG
Convenors
Frances Fahy (National University of Ireland, Galway, Ireland), Stephen Axon (Liverpool John Moores University, UK)
Chair
Frances Fahy (National University of Ireland, Galway, Ireland)
1
Resisting the transformation: geo-political dynamics of nuclear communities in France after Fukushima – Teva Meyer (University of Paris VIII, France)
2
Energy Biographies: exploring the intersections between lives, practices and contexts – Mary Greene (National University of Ireland, Galway, Ireland)
3
An empirical analysis of energy saving measures from a household perspective – Veronique Vasseur (Maastricht University, The Netherlands)
4
Analyzing the impact of sufficiency measures in urban neighbourhoods – Ann-Kathrin Hess (University of Basel, Switzerland)
Wed
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
88
Evening 18:45–
W3 | SKE-307
Putting philosophies of geography into practice (1): In research See also: 119 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/88
Affiliation
HPGRG
Convenor and chair
Sam Kinsley (University of Exeter, UK)
1
Performance, theory and economy in geography – Lizzie Richardson (Durham University, UK)
2
Transdisciplinarity and Translation – Keith Harris (University of Washington, USA)
3
Combining post-human, participatory and situated philosophies of geography: a humble research practice? – Samantha Saville (Aberystwyth University, UK)
4
Disruptive interventions: Art practice and the generation of politically complex cultural geographies – Veronica Vickery (University of Exeter, UK)
5
Critical Realism, Spatial Relations and Social Science Research – Alan Patterson (Sheffield Hallam University, UK)
89 W3 | SHE-RD
Decolonizing Urban Geography: Where have we got to, what next? (3): The Future of Urban Studies: Views through India See also: 23, 54 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/89
Convenor and chair
Jennifer Robinson (University College London, UK)
1
The Future of Urban Studies: Views through India – Aromar Revi (Indian Institute of Human Settlements (IIHS), India)
2
A global urban geography? Reflections from 15 years of 'southern' urban scholarship – Charlotte Lemanski (University of Cambridge, UK)
3
Unlearning urban geography – Colin McFarlane (Durham University, UK)
4
Postcolonial urban futures – Ayona Datta (King’s College London, UK)
5
Learning from Chennai: Ethnographic theorisations from one particular city – Pushpa Arabindoo (University College London, UK)
90 W3 | SHE-PIP
Rethinking decolonial and postcolonial knowledges beyond regions (1) See also: 121 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/90
Affiliation
GFGRG
Convenors
Kiran Asher (University of Massachusetts, USA), Priti Ramamurthy (University of Washington, USA)
Chair
Kiran Asher (University of Massachusetts, USA)
1
Round Table – Rajni Palriwala (University of Delhi, India), Francine Rossone de Paula (Universidade Federal Fluminense, Brazil), Lisa Armstrong (Smith College, Northampton, USA), Priti Ramamurthy (University of Washington, USA), Yvonne Underhill-Sem (University of Auckland, New Zealand), Lindsay Naylor (University of Delaware, USA)
Wed
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
91
Evening 18:45–
W3 | SALC-1
Labour and life: changing geographies of the workplace (3) See also: 25, 56 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/91
Affiliation
EGRG
Convenors
Adam Badger, Philip Crang, Katy Lawn (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
Chair
Philip Crang (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
1
Labour and life in the workplace geographies of eastern England’s food and warehouse sectors – Ben Rogaly (University of Sussex, UK)
2
Work(ing) dynamics of networking among migrants employed in hospitality and food production – Peter Lugosi (Oxford Brookes University, UK), Hania Janta, Barbara Wilczek (University of Surrey, UK)
3
Changing workplace geographies: restructuring warehouse employment in the Oslo region – David Jordhus-Lier (University of Oslo, Norway), Anders Underthun (Oslo and Akershus University, Norway), Kristina Zampoukos (Mid Sweden University, Sweden)
4
Places of labour or love? Geographies of low-paid eldercare work in Vancouver and Shanghai – Kendra Strauss (Simon Fraser University, Canada), Feng Xu (University of Victoria, Canada)
5
Conflict in a green and ‘ethical’ workplace – Lynne Pettinger (University of Warwick, UK)
92 W3 | SALC-2
Ruling the Land: Empires of Survey and their (Post-)Colonial Geographies View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/92
Affiliation
HGRG
Convenors
Keith Lilley (Queen's University Belfast, UK), Alan Lester (University of Sussex, UK)
Chair
Stephen Legg (University of Nottingham, UK)
1
Surveying the Transition to Free Labour from the Colonial Office – Alan Lester, Kate Boehme (University of Sussex, UK)
2
“So as an accurate representation can be formed”: regimes of knowledge and governmentality in the imperial city – Peter Mitchell (University of Sussex, UK)
3
Surveying empires: archaeologies of colonial cartography and the GTS in West Bengal – Keith Lilley, Siobhan McDermott (Queen’s University Belfast, UK), Rajat Sanyal, Sharmistha Chaterjee (University of Calcutta, India)
4
Walking with the subaltern Pundits in the ‘Making of Mountains out of a Mole Hill’ – M. Satish Kumar (Queen's University Belfast, UK), Bishnupriya Basak (University of Calcutta, India)
Wed
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
93
Evening 18:45–
W3 | SALC-5
For whom and what do we grieve, when and where: The geopolitics of diverse experiences of death, bereavement and remembrance: human and non-human (2) See also: 58, 124 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/93
Affiliation
SCGRG, PolGRG
Convenors
Ruth Evans (University of Reading, UK), Beth Greenhough (University of Oxford, UK), Philip Howell (University of Cambridge, UK), Avril Maddrell (University of Reading, UK), Katie McClymont (University of the West of England, UK)
Chair
Beth Greenhough (University of Oxford, UK)
1
Extinction and death as leitmotifs in the work of Friedrich Ratzel – Ian Klinke (University of Oxford, UK)
2
Emotional methodologies for climate change action – Jo Hamilton (University of Reading, UK)
3
Cadaverous spaces: the more-than-human geopolitics of death and killing in veterinary education – Megan Donald (University of Glasgow, UK)
4
Road Kill – Kate Rigby, Owain Jones (Bath Spa University, UK)
5
The Shattering World, The Finite Community – Paul Harrison (Durham University, UK)
94 W3 | SALC-6
Donor exit, retreat and transition in a changing international development landscape (1): The (geo)politics of donor transtions See also: 125 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/94
Affiliation
DARG
Convenors
Emma Mawdsley, Bhaskar Vira, Shashi Singh (University of Cambridge, UK)
Chair
Bhaskar Vira (University of Cambridge, UK)
1
Donor ‘Retrenchment’: place, power, and possibility within the ‘new politics of distribution’ – Liam O'Brien (University of St Andrews, UK)
2
From donor-recipient to strategic partner: the complexities of re-engineering development partnerships – Emma Mawdsley, Bhaskar Vira, Shashi Singh (University of Cambridge, UK)
3
African-European development cooperation in the age of postcolonial geographical thinking – Fabrice Banon, Mickael Houngbedji (Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany)
4
Evaluation of the exit from budget support – Magdalena Orth (German Institute for Development Evaluation, Germany)
Wed
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
Evening
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
95 W3 | SALC-7
Urban Energy in the Global South (1) See also: 126 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/95
Affiliation
EnGRG, UGRG
Convenors
Jon Phillips, Federico Caprotti (King's College London, UK)
Chair
Jon Phillips (King's College London, UK)
18:45–
1
South Africa’s energy nexus: Energy security, climate change mitigation and capital expansion – Vasna Ramasar (Lund University, Sweden)
2
The urban experience of sixty years of energy transition: the changing ‘energy underclass’ in Cape Town – Stephen Essex (Plymouth University, UK), Jiska de Groot (University of Cape Town, South Africa)
3
Socialism after oil: Urban energy use and inequality in Cuba’s special period – Gustav Cederlöf (King's College London, UK)
4
Local and national dynamics in expanding energy systems – An institutionalist perspective on urban energy transition in Arequipa, Peru – Alena Israel, Mathias Jehling (Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany)
5
Uneven electricity infrastructure in Rio de Janeiro’s favelas as assemblage – Francesca Pilo (University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands)
96 W3 | SALC-8
Speculative landscapes: art as geographic practice View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/96
Convenors
Liz Orton (Artist), Sophy Rickett (London College of Communication/ University of the Arts London, UK)
Chair
Sophy Rickett (London College of Communication/ University of the Arts London, UK)
1
Under the Pavement Lies the Beach – Richard Nicholson (None)
2
Longest and Darkest of Recollections: Material Connections – Liz Orton (Artist)
3
The Curious Moaning of Kenfig Burrows – Sophy Rickett (London College of Communication/ University of the Arts London, UK)
4
Constructed Landscapes: On Decolonising Space and Place – Dafna Talmor (Southampton Solent University, UK)
97 W3 | SALC-9
Educational Landscapes: Nature, Place and Moral Geographies (1) See also: 128 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/97
Affiliation
GCYFRG
Convenors
Sarah Mills, Jo Hickman Dunne (Loughborough University, UK)
Chair(s)
Sarah Mills (Loughborough University, UK)
1
Debunking the myth: The Geographies of Outdoor Education and The Outward Bound Trust – Jo Hickman Dunne (Loughborough University, UK)
Wed
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
Evening 18:45–
2
The instrumental use of nature in the representations of the world produced for young people: decolonising geographical knowledge for children – Anne-Cecile Ott (École Normale Supérieure de Paris, France)
3
Are we really learning? Forest School programmes from the perspective of children – Helena Pimlott-Wilson, Janine Coates (Loughborough University, UK)
4
A Sense of Nature in Neutra’s School Landscapes – Sarah Sheridan (Dublin Institute of Technology, Ireland)
5
Unpacking nature(s) through the ‘drop’s journey’: Young people’s representation of food, water and energy – Sophie Hadfield-Hill, Cristiana Zara (University of Birmingham, UK), Joe Hall (University of Northampton, UK), Peter Kraftl (University of Birmingham, UK)
98 W3 | HUX-341
Non-representational geographies: practices, pedagogies and writing (1): Reflections on Non-Representational Geographies See also: 129 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/98
Affiliation
SCGRG, HPGRG
Convenor
Andrew Maclaren (University of Aberdeen, UK)
Chair
Keith Halfacree (Swansea University, UK)
1
Introducing the expanded community of non-representational geographers and geographies – Andrew Maclaren (University of Aberdeen, UK)
2
Researching and Writing Non-Representationally – Reflections from a Geography of Street Performances in Taipei, Taiwan – Xin Wei Andy Tan (National University of Singapore, Singapore)
3
Hansel and Gretel as a tale for today: exploring ecologies of narrative within nonrepresentational work – Rachel Hunt (Durham University, UK)
4
Theatre Methods for Embodied, Lively Co-Production – Ruth Raynor (Newcastle University, UK)
99 W3 | HUX-342
Rural Cosmopolitanism: People, Localities and Mobilities (1): Migration, Mobility and Diverse Rural Communities See also: 130 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/99
Affiliation
RGRG
Convenors
Rhys Dafydd Jones, Michael Woods (Aberystwyth University, UK)
Chair(s)
Michael Woods (Aberystwyth University, UK)
1
Precarious Rural Cosmopolitanism: Negotiating Globalization, Migration and Diversity in Irish Small Towns – Michael Woods (Aberystwyth University, UK)
2
“Small is (not always) beautiful.” Exploring immigration governance in three small towns in Italy – Roberta Marzorati, Michela Semprebon (University of Milan Bicocca, Italy), Paola Bonizzoni (Università degli Studi di Milano, Italy)
3
An Analysis of Migration and Return Migration as Drivers as Rural Cosmopolitanism in Benue State, Nigeria – Godwin O. Ikwuyatum (University of Ibadan, Nigeria)
4
Precarious sacred spaces: religious diversity in the countryside – Rhys Dafydd Jones (Aberystwyth University, UK)
A Deluge of Documentary Weather Data A display curated by Lucy Veale, Georgina Endfield and Sarah Davies Throughout the conference, Ambulatory, RGS-IBG (by Drayson Room)
George Simpson taking meteorological observations in the Antarctic © National Meteorological Library and Archive, MET/4/1/28/BAE (1910-1913)
Weather features prominently in the RGS-IBG collections. Meteorological instruments were essential items of equipment for many expedition teams, as were published guides instructing their accurate use. Many teams collected scientific data on extremes of weather around the world and also provided accounts of their direct experience of living through particular events in diaries or letters home. The display features a range of items relating to the meteorological investigations of the Terra Nova expedition 1910-13, led by Captain Robert Falcon Scott. We also explore extreme weather events in the UK, and draw on primary archival materials from other archives used in our own AHRC funded project on the history of extreme weather events. Case 1: Volcano Weather: The Krakatoa eruption of 1883 Case 2: British Extremes: The ‘Big Wind’ of 5-6 January 1839 Case 3: Expedition weather: The Terra Nova’s meteorological research The display accompanies the Geo: Geography and the Environment sponsored session Digital Data: Opening up the Weather Archive, Wednesday 30 August, Session 3 (14:40-16:20).
Wed
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
100
Evening 18:45–
W4 | RGS-OT
Antipode Lecture: Retelling Stories, Disrupting "the Social", Relearning the World View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/100
Convenor
Andrew Kent (Antipode)
Chair
Tariq Jazeel (University College London, UK)
1
Retelling Stories, Disrupting "the Social", Relearning the World – Richa Nagar (University of Minnesota, USA)
101 W4 | RGS-EC
Author meets critics: Steve Hinchliffe, Nick Bingham, John Allen and Simon Carter - Pathological Lives: Disease, Space and Biopolitics View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/101
Affiliation
RGS-IBG Book Series
Convenor and chair
Jamie Lorimer (University of Oxford, UK)
1
Introduction – Jamie Lorimer (University of Oxford, UK)
2
Panel discussion – Deborah Dixon (University of Glasgow, UK), Andrew Barry (University College London, UK), Ann Kelly, Bronwyn Parry (King’s College London, UK)
3
Authors’ responses – Stephen Hinchcliffe (University of Exeter, UK), Nick Bingham (Open University, UK)
102 W4 | RGS-CR
Critical perspectives on transnational education and knowledge mobilities in the Global South View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/102
Affiliation
SCGRG
Convenors
Johanna Waters (University of Oxford, UK), Maggi Leung (Utrecht University, The Netherlands)
Chair
Maggi Leung (Utrecht University, The Netherlands)
1
Resisting ‘brain drain’: Philippine public nursing schools and return service agreements – Maddy Thompson (Newcastle University, UK)
2
Transnational education and identity (trans)formation: international branch campus as a transnational social space to explore identity – Kris Hyesoo Lee (University of Oxford, UK)
3
International students from developing countries in Switzerland: motivations and transnationalism – Ibrahima Guisse, Claudio Bolzman (University of Applied Sciences and Arts Western, Switzerland)
4
Teaching and Learning on the Move: Israeli and Global Higher Education Policies and Trends – Nitza Davidovitch, Margarita Belichenko (Ariel University, Israel)
5
Using geography to decolonise knowledge in transnational collaborative teaching and research projects – Lene Møller Madsen (University of Copenhagen, Denmark), Hanne Kirstine Adriansen (Aarhus University, Denmark)
Wed
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
103 W4 | RGS-LR
Evening 18:45–
The cultural geographies of new food View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/103
Affiliation
FGWG
Convenors
Jonas House (University of Sheffield, UK), Alexandra Sexton (King's College London, UK)
Chair
David Evans (University of Sheffield, UK)
1
Insects are not ‘the new sushi’: Theories of practice and the acceptance of novel foods – Jonas House (University of Sheffield, UK)
2
Making a difference? Sustainable food innovation between alternative food networks and start-ups – Tanja Schneider (University of St Gallen, Switzerland)
3
Community Supported Agriculture in the UK: Promising novelty or peripheral niche? – Ian Humphrey (University of Sheffield, UK)
4
Tradition, protest and social positioning: The relocation of traditional Palestinian foods in restaurants in Israel – Liora Gvion (Kibbutzim College of Education, Israel)
5
The biopolitics of edibility: Making ‘meat’, ‘milk’ and ‘eggs’ for the post-Anthropocene – Alexandra Sexton (King's College London, UK)
104 W4 | RGS-SR
Faith and the ‘practising’ of social justice (2): Postsecular negotiations in rights based arenas See also: 72 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/104
Affiliation
GJRG
Convenors
Louise Waite (University of Leeds, UK), Hannah Lewis (University of Sheffield, UK)
Chair
Hannah Lewis (University of Sheffield, UK)
1
Lost in Translation? An Analysis of Christian engagement in the restorative justice movement – Yutaka Osakabe (University of Aberdeen, UK)
2
Postsecular partnerships and Environmental Activism. Can they go together? – Derk Harmannij (University of Exeter, UK)
3
‘Rescue’ and rights: mapping postsecular anti-trafficking positions – Hannah Lewis (University of Sheffield, UK), Louise Waite, Emma Tomalin (University of Leeds, UK)
4
‘The Good Samaritan didn’t ask to see a passport first’: the challenge of reconciling faith and the provision of services to trafficking victims within a ‘hostile environment’ on migration – Gayle Munro (University College London, UK)
5
Operating under the radar: An empirical study examining the challenges faced by faith based anti-trafficking organisations in the Middle East – Leah Edwards (University of Sheffield, UK)
Wed
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
105
Evening 18:45–
W4 | RGS-DR
Residential migration across time and lifecourses (2): international perspectives on trends and their explanations See also: 73 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/105
Affiliation
PopGRG
Convenors
Nissa Finney (University of St. Andrews / ESRC Centre on Dynamics of Ethnicity (CoDE), UK), David McCollum (University of St Andrews, UK)
Chair
David McCollum (University of St Andrews, UK)
1
What are the causes of changing internal migration rates in developed economies? – Tony Champion (Newcastle University, UK), Ian Shuttleworth (Queen's University Belfast, UK)
2
Is spatial mobility on the wane? An analysis using an innovative longitudinal approach – David McCollum, Annemarie Ernsten, Albert Sabater, Allan Findlay, Glenna Nightingale (University of St Andrews, UK), Nissa Finney (University of St. Andrews / ESRC Centre on Dynamics of Ethnicity (CoDE), UK), Zhiqiang Feng (The University of Edinburgh, UK)
3
Understanding declining address changing rates in Northern Ireland, 1981-2011: A decomposition approach – Brad Campbell, Ian Shuttleworth (Queen's University Belfast, UK)
4
Temporal and spatial dynamics of residential mobility and neighbourhood change: the case of Riga, Latvia – Zaigo Krisjane, Elina Apsite-Berina, Māris Bērziņš, Baiba Svane (University of Latvia, Latvia)
106 W4 | RGS-TR
Decolonising dance(d) knowledges: interdisciplinary dialogues See also: 74 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/106
Affiliation
SCGRG
Convenor and chair
Sofie Narbed (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
1
Round Table – Melissa Blanco (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK), Anamaria TamayoDuque (Loughborough University, UK), Cristina Rosa (University of Roehampton, UK), Funmi Adewole (De Montfort University, UK), Maria Gabriela López Yánez (Goldsmiths, University of London, UK)
107 W4 | SAF-G34
Journal of Geography in Higher Education Annual Lecture: Layering Learning and Teaching for Different Levels of Environmental Consciousness View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/107
Affiliation
HERG
Convenor and chair
Derek France (University of Chester, UK)
1
Layering Learning and Teaching for Different Levels of Environmental Consciousness – Martin Haigh (Oxford Brookes University, UK)
Wed
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
Evening
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
108
18:45–
W4 | SAF-119
Geographies of digital games (2) See also: 76 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/108
Affiliation
DGWG
Convenor and chair
Nick Rush-Cooper (Durham University, UK)
1
The performative construction of videogame landscapes – Phil Jones, Tess Osborne (University of Birmingham, UK)
2
Never Alone: Exploring the notions of participation, creativity, and situated community through the development of the first digital world game – Ladan Cockshut (Teesside University, UK)
3
Ethical challenges on the use of games for data collection: the case of participant observation – Vevila Dornelles (University of the West of England, UK)
4
Geopolitical Futures in Videogame Spaces – Megan Rose O'Kane (Queen's University, Belfast, UK)
5
Gaming with the south? Cultural economy and the global production networks of videogames in Chile – Sebastián Andrés Baeza Gonzalez (The University of Manchester, UK)
109 W4 | SAF-120
Trending Now: The Geographies of Fashion in the Digital Age (4) - The Future of Fashion See also: 10, 42, 77 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/109
Convenors
Taylor Brydges (Uppsala University, Sweden), Brian Hracs (University of Southampton, UK), Mariangela Lavanga (Erasmus University Rotterdam, The Netherlands)
Chair
Brian Hracs (University of Southampton, UK)
1
Undergoing transformation: activating the power of design through technology – Susan Dillon (Sheffield Hallam University, UK)
2
The influence of geographies on slow fashion- A study on analyzing challenges for slow fashion in the future – Karan Khurana (EiTEX, Bahir Dar University, Ethiopia), Marco Ricchetti (Sustainability-lab.net)
3
Investigating ethical fashion networks in Asia – Rimi Khan (The University of Melbourne, Australia)
4
The democratic geographies of wearer as designer, radicalising the fashion event through the Citizen Stylist® project – Margo Barton (Otago Polytechnic, New Zealand)
5
Do ’Open Source’ and ’Circular Economy’ strategies imply a more ethical fashion industry? – Julia Schaak (Heart_of_Code e.V, Germany)
Wed
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
Evening
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
110 W4 | SAF-121
18:45–
The interdisciplinary field (2): The ‘GoGoGozo’ experience See also: 78 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/110
Convenors
Chris Perkins (University of Manchester, UK), Sybille Lammes (University of Warwick, UK), Jana Wendler (University of Manchester, UK)
Chair
Chris Perkins (University of Manchester, UK)
1
Moments of interdisciplinary encounter: GoGoGozo – Sybille Lammes (University of Warwick, UK), Jana Wendler (University of Manchester, UK), Sam Hind (University of Warwick, UK), Clancy Wilmott (University of Manchester, UK), Alex Gekker (University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands), Chris Perkins (University of Manchester, UK)
2
Playfields: experimentation across disiplines in a playful fieldwork app prototype – Jana Wendler (University of Manchester, UK), Sybille Lammes (University of Warwick, UK), Clancy Wilmott (University of Manchester, UK), Sam Hind (University of Warwick, UK), Alex Gekker (University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands), Chris Perkins (University of Manchester, UK)
3
Negotiating interdisciplinary learning journeys - the student perspective – Chris Perkins (University of Manchester, UK)
4
Discussion Forum
111 W4 | SAF-122
Coastal Resilience across boundaries and disciplines (1) See also: 212 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/111
Affiliation
CMRG
Convenor and chair
Emma McKinley (Cardiff University, UK)
1
Climate, Heritage and Environment of Reefs, Islands and Headlands (CHERISH): understanding climate, risk and the remote heritage of the Irish Sea zone – Sarah Davies (Aberystwyth University, UK), Toby Driver (Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historic Monuments of Wales, UK), Anthony Corns (Discovery Programme Ireland: Centre for Archaeology and Innovation, Ireland), Archie Donovan (Geological Survey of Ireland, Ireland)
2
The resilience of coastal communities in the context of land-use change: transboundary governance in Quintana Roo, Mexico – Edward Hind-Ozan (Cardiff University, UK)
3
Blue Opportunities from the Future: looking across the land-coast-sea divide to explore long-term options for sustainable growth – Irene Lorenzoni, Sophie Day, Trevor Tolhurst, Martin Johnson (University of East Anglia, UK), Katherine Kennedy (Blue Consulting)
4
Increasing resilience to coastal change: the contribution of visualizations to decision making – Jackie Zavala (University of East Anglia, UK)
5
Do Marine Protected Areas Support Coastal Resilience through the Provision of Ecosystem Services? A Case Study from the North East of Scotland – Tavis Potts (University of Aberdeen, UK)
Wed
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
112
Evening 18:45–
W4 | SKE-060a
Exploring the Socio-Spatialities of Urban Goods Mobility (2) See also: 80 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/112
Affiliation
TGRG
Convenors
Debbie Hopkins, Tim Schwanen (University of Oxford, UK)
Chair
Tim Schwanen (University of Oxford, UK)
1
Understanding a Tension in Urban Goods Mobility Between Relatively Stable and More Rapid Change by Exploring Dynamics Between Consumer, Retailer and Logistic Provider – Ian Jones, Greg Marsden, Tony Whiteing (University of Leeds, UK)
2
Emergence of the Urban Layer in CEP Distribution Networks – Joris Beckers, Ann Verhetsel (University of Antwerp, Belgium)
3
Urban Logistics Centres (ULC): What Are The Most Efficient Models? – Daniele Patier, Florence Toilier (Urban planning, Economics Laboratory, France)
4
Reconceptualising Socio-Spatial Delivery Practices as a Key for Effective Sustainable Urban Freight Measures – Daniela Paddeu (University of Cagliari, Italy), Graham Parkhurst (University of the West of England, UK)
5
Innovations for Energy Demand Reduction in Urban Goods Mobility – Debbie Hopkins, Tim Schwanen (University of Oxford, UK)
113 W4 | SKE-060c
Urban Fallism: monuments, iconoclasm and decolonisation (2): Urban Fallism in the Post-Colonial Context See also: 81 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/113
Convenors
Sybille Frank, Mirjana Ristic (TU Darmstadt, Germany)
Chair
Mirjana Ristic (TU Darmstadt, Germany)
1
The Limits of Iconoclasm: The Fate of Tsarist Monuments in Revolutionary Russia and the Early Soviet Union, 1917-1927 – Aaron Cohen (California State University, USA)
2
Webs of Identity and Memory: “Urban Fallism” on the Site of Dublin’s Nelson’s Pillar, 1759-2003 – Derek Boetcher (University of Florida, USA)
3
What should we do with the “Bandeirante” in São Paulo’s public space? – Renato Cymbalista (University of Sao Paolo, Brazil)
4
Discussion
114 W4 | SKE-064a Chair 1
Geographies of Justice View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/114 Agatha Herman (Cardiff University, UK)
Is there a social gradient in the long-term impacts of flooding? – Donald Houston (University of Portsmouth, UK), Alan Werritty (University of Dundee, UK), Tom Ball (University of Winchester, UK), Andrew Black (University of Dundee, UK), Amy Tavendale (Scottish Environment Protection Agency, UK)
Wed
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
Evening 18:45–
2
Social Innovation and Restorative Justice: Mobile courts in Pakistan – Sundus Wasai (Shaheed Benazir Bhutto Women University, Pakistan), Abid Mehmood (Cardiff University, UK), Muhammad Nouman (Institute of Management Sciences, Pakistan)
3
An Unfair Climate for Change: Understanding Climate Justice in the Anthropocene – Saurabh Thakur (Jawaharlal Nehru University, India)
4
Public views on climate change and energy efficiency in post-socialist perspective – Irina Kuznetsova (University of Birmingham, UK), Polina Ermolaeva (Kazan Federal University, Russia)
115 W4 | SKE-163
Political ecology (3): energy, climate change and vegetation See also: 18, 84 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/115
Chair
Mark Welford (Georgia Southern University, USA)
1
A burning issue: producing charcoal in sub-Saharan fuelscapes – Christoph Bergmann, Marcus Nuesser, Maike Peterson (Heidelberg University, Germany)
2
Vegetation dynamics in the forest-savanna ecotone: A platform for identifying adaptable tree species under a changing climate – Francis Adesina (Obafemi Awolowo University, Nigeria), Folasade Oderinde (Tai Solarin University of Education, Nigeria)
3
The changing role of trees in the agroforestry landscape of northern Nigeria – Janet E. Nichol, Muhammad Usman, Charles Wong (Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong)
4
Changes in tropical bird species composition near Mindo appear to be driven by climate change and deforestation – Mark Welford (Georgia Southern University, USA)
5
Engagement for resilience in indigenous communities – A. T. Marsh (The New Zealand Institute for Plant & Food Research Limited, New Zealand)
6
“The Jam At Jerry’s Rocks”: Decolonizing Geography by Examining The Ways Lumberjacks Mapped Liminal Experience Onto the Landscape Through Song – Scott Swan (Florida State University, USA)
116 W4 | SKE-164
Economic Geography, Journal of Economic Geography, and Environment and Planning A – Advancing global production networks research: progress and prospects (2): Panel See also: 85, 150, 183, 218, 250 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/116
Affiliation
EGRG
Convenors
Neil M. Coe, Henry Yeung (National University of Singapore, Singapore)
Chair
Neil M. Coe (National University of Singapore, Singapore)
1
Panel – Henry Yeung (National University of Singapore, Singapore), Stephanie Barrientos (University of Manchester, UK), Alex Hughes (Newcastle University, UK), Ben Derudder (Ghent University, Belgium), Gavin Bridge (Durham University, UK)
Wed
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
117
Evening 18:45–
W4 | SKE-201
Home futures: towards a critical feminist geography of housing, ageing and health (2) See also: 86 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/117
Affiliation
GHWRG, GFGRG
Convenors
Melissa Fernández Arrigoitia (Lancaster University, UK), Karen West (Aston University, UK), Sheila Peace (Open University, UK)
Chair
Melissa Fernández Arrigoitia (Lancaster University, UK)
1
Home futures for Millennials living with their parents in Toronto – Nancy Worth (McMaster University, Canada)
2
Meanings of home for older couples and spouse caregivers – Manik Gopinath, Caroline Holland, Sheila Peace (Open University, UK)
3
Disabling spaces and spatial strategies: exploring the home geographies of people with dementia and their carers – Phevos Kallitsis, Dia Soilemezi (University of Portsmouth, UK)
4
Future proofing the home, or aging, posthuman style – Wanda Katja Liebermann (Florida Atlantic University, USA)
118 W4 | SKE-207
Examining energy consumption and communities: The social, cultural and political dynamics of energy system transformations (2) See also: 87 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/118
Affiliation
PERG
Convenors
Frances Fahy (National University of Ireland, Galway, Ireland), Stephen Axon (Liverpool John Moores University, UK)
Chair
Frances Fahy (National University of Ireland, Galway, Ireland)
1
Taking it to the street: the variegated spatialities of community energy transitions – Gerald Taylor Aiken (University of Luxembourg, Luxembourg)
2
Solidarity or selfishness? A critique of decentralised ownership in Europe – Anne Schiffer (Leeds Beckett University, UK)
3
Challenging Business as-Usual? The Problematic Institutionalisation of Community Renewable Energy in the UK – Audley Genus, Marfuga Iskandrova (Kingston University, UK)
4
Perspectives on the social, political and cultural dynamics of energy: developing a collective agenda for the social science and humanities – Rosie Robison (Anglia Ruskin University, UK), Chris Foulds (University of East Anglia, UK)
5
ENERGISE: Establishing a European Network for Research Good Practice and Innovation for Sustainable Energy – Frances Fahy (National University of Ireland, Galway, Ireland)
Wed
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
119
Evening 18:45–
W4 | SKE-307
Putting philosophies of geography into practice (2): In teaching See also: 88 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/119
Convenor
Sam Kinsley (University of Exeter, UK)
Chair
Lizzie Richardson (Durham University, UK)
1
Thinking media through the urban: Practicing geography beyond classroom and discipline – Scott Rodgers (Birkbeck, University of London, UK)
2
Teaching critical GIS historically – Matthew Wilson (Harvard University, USA / University of Kentucky, USA)
3
‘Geography is what Geographers do’: a Wittgensteinian reprieve – Pauline Couper (York St John University, UK)
4
Theory generation in the classroom – Sam Kinsley (University of Exeter, UK)
120 W4 | SHE-RD Convenor and chair
Urban transformation – roundtable discussion View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/120 Joe Painter (Durham University, UK)
1
Introduction to the Urban Transformations Portfolio – Michael Keith (University of Oxford, UK)
2
Urban Transformation – roundtable discussion – Colin McFarlane (Durham University, UK), Beth Perry (University of Sheffield, UK), Jennifer Robinson (University College London, UK), Seth Schindler (University of Sheffield, UK), Fran Tonkiss (London School of Economics and Political Science, UK)
121 W4 | SHE-PIP
Rethinking decolonial and postcolonial knowledges beyond regions (2) See also: 90 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/121
Affiliation
GFGRG
Convenors
Kiran Asher (University of Massachusetts, USA), Priti Ramamurthy (University of Washington, USA)
Chair
Priti Ramamurthy (University of Washington, USA)
1
Round Table – Kiran Asher (University of Massachusetts, USA), Juanita Sundberg (University of British Columbia, Canada), Gokben Demirbas (University of Glasgow, UK), Chandan Reddy (University of Washington, USA), Sumi Madhok (London School of Economics and Political Science, UK), Ashwini Tambe (University of Maryland, USA)
Wed
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
Evening
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
122 W4 | SALC-1 Chair
18:45–
Spaces of care and wellbeing View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/122 Michael Hardman (University of Salford, UK)
1
Care Farming and the Rise of Green Therapy in Cities: A Critical Exploration of Practice in the UK – Michael Hardman, Michelle Howarth, Graeme Sherriff, Candace James (University of Salford, UK)
2
Transforming safe spaces into phobic places and back again: Exploring therapeutic (relationships to) landscapes for panic disorder sufferers – Candela Sanchez (University of Edinburgh, UK)
3
Shoots and Leaves: Exploring the impact and sustainability of civil society community sustainable place-making projects working in deprived urban places in the UK – Sam Ramsden (University of Hull, UK)
4
Vegan geographies: transformations in Sydney’s foodscapes – Andrew McGregor, Donna Houston, Tasmin-Lara Dilworth (Macquarie University, Australia)
5
Urban sexual geographies, queer citizenship and the socio-economic status of LGBTIQs in Vienna – Karin Schoenpflug (IHS Vienna, Austria), Christine M. Klapeer (University of Bayreuth, Germany)
123 W4 | SALC-2
Decolonising antiquity, the middle ages and empire, colonialpost colonial images, in the modern divide View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/123
Affiliation
HGRG
Convenors and chairs
Thomas S. Carhart, Raimar Kory (University of Freiburg, Germany)
1
An Introduction to the relevance for colonial and post colonial image production of anthropological-archaeological thought – Raimar Kory (University of Freiburg, Germany)
2
‘Romans’ vs ‘Barbarians’ in the Rhine area during the 5th century: how dietary analysis modify our view on cultural colonization processes. – Margaux Depaermentier (University Freiburg IAW, Germany)
3
How the West Was Won: ‚Germanic Colonization’ Processes in the Post-Roman World? A Geoarchaeological Analysis to Detect Social Adaptation in a Changing Political Environment in Alsace (France) – Michael Kempf (University of Freiburg, Germany)
4
'Frankish Colonisation‘ of 'Alemannia‘ in Early Merovingian Times? A Critical Assessment of 19th century scientific paradigms in Archaeological Research – Michael Werner (University of Freiburg, Germany)
5
Decolonizing Borderlands: Historical US-Museums and Displays of Minorities in 19th Century American Southwest – Alexander Schwanebeck (University of Cologne, Germany)
6
Transformation processes in late Roman and early Anglo-Saxon England. How colonizing paradigms were used in the research of Material Culture – Clara Henrike Buetje (University of Freiburg, Germany)
7
A closing word to the session with a comment to academic and popular Images of Roman provincial culture, governance for the modern period colonialism discourse – Thomas S. Carhart (University of Freiburg, Germany)
Wed
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
124
Evening 18:45–
W4 | SALC-5
For whom and what do we grieve, when and where: The geopolitics of diverse experiences of death, bereavement and remembrance: human and non-human (3) See also: 58, 93 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/124
Affiliation
SCGRG, PolGRG
Convenors
Ruth Evans (University of Reading, UK), Beth Greenhough (University of Oxford, UK), Philip Howell (University of Cambridge, UK), Avril Maddrell (University of Reading, UK), Katie McClymont (University of the West of England, UK)
Chair
Ruth Evans (University of Reading, UK)
1
Deathscapes and Diversity: Planning for minorities' and migrants' bodily remains, ritual and remembrance practice – Avril Maddrell (University of Reading, UK), Yasminah Beebeejaun (University College London, UK), Katie McClymont (University of the West of England, UK), Mathijssen Brenda (University of Reading, UK), Danny McNally (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
2
‘The stream of the ghosts’: loss, death and the more-than-human in a landscape of urban change – Sophie Hadfield-Hill, Cristiana Zara (University of Birmingham, UK)
3
Giulio Regeni. Towards a Radical Use of Memory – Franco Palazzi (The New School for Social Research, New York, USA), Michela Pusterla (none)
4
Discussant – James Sidaway (National University of Singapore, Singapore)
125 W4 | SALC-6
Donor exit, retreat and transition in a changing international development landscape (2): Donor transition and CSOs: implications for financing, voice and impact See also: 94 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/125
Affiliation
DARG
Convenors
Emma Mawdsley, Bhaskar Vira, Shashi Singh (University of Cambridge, UK)
Chair
Emma Mawdsley (University of Cambridge, UK)
1
Self-financing in the wake of donor retreat – Hannah Smith (Coventry University, UK)
2
Donor retreat and the changing responsibilities of civil society organisations – Sarah Peck (The University of Sheffield, UK)
3
Donor Involvement in Social Protection: The entrance and exit strategy for Lesotho’s Child Grants Program – Roeland Hemsteede (University of Dundee, UK)
4
Panel and audience discussion – Emma Mawdsley (University of Cambridge, UK)
Wed
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
126
Evening 18:45–
W4 | SALC-7
Urban Energy in the Global South (2) See also: 95 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/126
Affiliation
EnGRG, UGRG
Convenors
Jon Phillips, Federico Caprotti (King's College London, UK)
Chair
Federico Caprotti (King's College London, UK)
1
Electric hybrids: emerging forms of energy transition in southern cities – Sylvy Jaglin (Paris-Est Créteil Val-de-Marne University, France), Eric Verdeil (Sciences Po, France)
2
Tensions in the transition: The politics of electrcity distribution in South Africa – Lucy Baker (University of Sussex, UK)
3
Knowledge politics and the co-production of urban energy governance – Jon Phillips (King's College London, UK)
4
Energy access, conflict and sustainable development in Mozambique: a multiscalar analysis – Vanesa Castán Broto (University College London, UK), Idalina Baptista (University of Oxford, UK), Joshua Kirshner (University of York, UK)
127 W4 | SALC-8
Emerging Geographies of Everyday Peace View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/127
Convenors
Ciara Merrick, Harry Bregazzi (University of Bristol, UK)
Chair
Ciara Merrick (University of Bristol, UK)
1
‘No justice, no peace’? – Deconstruction and the promise of peace – Harry Bregazzi (University of Bristol, UK)
2
Creating Alternative Realities After Conflict: Transboundary community-based conservation in the Balkans Peace Park – Teresa Lappe-Osthege (University of Sheffield, UK), Michael Rainsborough (King’s College London, UK)
3
Simplicity Beyond Complexity: Everyday peace in post-peace agreement Befast – Eric Lepp (University of Manchester, UK)
4
Towards a Spatialized Understanding of Reconciliation – Eleanor Harrowell (Coventry University, UK)
128 W4 | SALC-9
Educational Landscapes: Nature, Place and Moral Geographies (2) See also: 97 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/128
Affiliation
SCGRG
Convenors
Sarah Mills, Jo Hickman Dunne (Loughborough University, UK)
Chair
Jo Hickman Dunne (Loughborough University, UK)
1
Character Nation: Mapping the Moral Geographies of Education – Sarah Mills (Loughborough University, UK)
Wed
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
Evening 18:45–
2
“Aesthetics is bosh; all you need is a little beautification”: historical geographies of amenity, education, and the CPRE – Francesca Church (University of Reading, UK)
3
Scales of childhood roaming within the ‘educational landscape’ of the National Park – Ria Dunkley (University of Glasgow, UK), Thomas Aneurin Smith (Cardiff University, UK)
4
'The performers seek unity on many levels’: teaching the environmental entanglement of humans and non-humans through the starling murmuration – Andy Morris (Open University, UK)
129 W4 | HUX-341
Non-representational geographies: practices, pedagogies and writing (2): Considering the practices, pedagogies and writing of non-representational geographies See also: 98 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/129
Affiliation
SCGRG, HPGRG
Convenor and chair
Andrew Maclaren (University of Aberdeen, UK)
1
Panel Session – Ben Anderson (Durham University, UK), Hayden Lorimer (University of Glasgow, UK), Keith Halfacree (Swansea University, UK), Helen Wilson (University of Manchester, UK), Ruth Raynor (Newcastle University, UK)
130 W4 | HUX-342
Rural Cosmopolitanism: People, Localities and Mobilities (2): Cultures, Practices and Representations See also: 99 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/130
Affiliation
RGRG
Convenors
Rhys Dafydd Jones, Michael Woods (Aberystwyth University, UK)
Chair(s)
Rhys Dafydd Jones (Aberystwyth University, UK)
1
Cosmopolitan Farming: Gentrification of Agriculture in the Global North – Lee-Ann Sutherland (James Hutton Institute, UK)
2
The Countryside between Idyll and Cosmopolis in Contemporary British Television – Esther Peeren (University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands)
3
First Prize: Cosmopolitanism? Chinese Slot Machines in the Ghanaian Periphery – AnnChristin Hayk (University of Trier, Germany)
4
Faith Schools, Difference and Community Cohesion: Ruralising the Debate – Peter Hemming (Cardiff University, UK)
Reception to recognise Rita Gardner
Rita Gardner, Director of the RGS-IBG, will be retiring in March 2018 after 21 years in the role. To celebrate Rita’s contributions, there will be a drinks reception on Wednesday 30 August, from 18.45 in the Members’ room. For further information please ask at the Registration Desk. Please do join us.
www.rgs.org/AC2017
Wed
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
Evening 18:45–
WE | RGS-MQ
Antipode Drinks Reception Follows session 100
WE | RGS-MbR
Reception to recognise Rita Gardner, Director of the RGS-IBG
WE | RGS-CR
Journal of Geography in Higher Education/Higher Education Research Group Drinks Reception Follows session 107
WE | RGS-LR
HGRG networking drinks reception
131 WE | RGS-SR
Book launch and reception: The Routledge Research Companion to Energy Geographies: an orientation to find your way in a rapidly evolving field View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/131
Affiliation
EnGRG
Convenors
Stefan Bouzarovski (University of Manchester, UK), Vanesa Castán Broto (University College London, UK)
WE | RGS-DR
Population Geography Research Group AGM
Royal Geographical Society (with IBG) Scholarly Publications Join us! Conference Sessions and Lecture
Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers Lecture Safe Space Across Borders: From Geopolitical Projection to Refugee Health Protection Matthew Sparke (University of Washington, USA) Discussants: Robina Mohammad (National University of Singapore, Singapore) Jo Sharp (University of Glasgow, UK)
Thursday 31 August 2017, Session 1 (09:00 – 10:40) Convened by: Simon Naylor (University of Glasgow, UK) Robyn Dowling (University of Sydney, Australia) Adrian Bailey (Hong Kong Baptist University, Hong Kong) Jo Little (University of Exeter, UK)
Area and RGS-IBG Race, Culture and Equality Working Group co-sponsored workshops
Digital Data: Opening up the Weather Archive Sponsored by Geo Convened by: Georgina Endfield (The University of Liverpool, UK) Lucy Veale (The University of Liverpool, UK) Sarah Davies (Aberystwyth University, UK)
Wednesday 30 August 2017, Session 3 (14:40 – 16:20) Visit the associated exhibition, ‘A deluge of documentary weather data’, in the Ambulatory.
@GeoOpenAccess
Author Meets Critics – RGS-IBG Book Series
Decolonising institutional arrangements: insights from the arts, education, and policy
Pathological Lives: Disease, Space and Biopolitics
Thursday 31 August 2017, Session 3 (14:40 – 16:20) Part 1 Session 4 (16: 50 – 18:30) Part 2
Steve Hinchliffe et al.
Convened by: Margaret Byron (University of Leicester, UK) James Esson (Loughborough University, UK) Anja Kanngieser (University of Wollongong, Australia) Peter Kraftl (University of Birmingham, UK) Patricia Noxolo (University of Birmingham, UK)
Convened by: Jamie Lorimer (University of Oxford, UK)
Wednesday 30 August 2017, Session 4 (16:50 – 18:30) www.rgsbookseries.com For information on the full range of RGS-IBG activities visit:
www.rgs.org @RGS_IBGhe
Thurs
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
Evening 18:45–
19. Sessions – Thursday 31 August 132 Th1 | RGS-OT
Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers Lecture: Safe Space Across Borders: From Geopolitical Projection to Refugee Health Protection View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/132
Affiliation
TIBG
Convenors
Simon Naylor (University of Glasgow, UK), Robyn Dowling (University of Sydney, Australia), Adrian Bailey (Hong Kong Baptist University, Hong Kong), Jo Little (University of Exeter, UK)
Chair
Simon Naylor (University of Glasgow, UK)
1
Safe Space Across Borders: From Geopolitical Projection to Refugee Health Protection – Matthew Sparke (University of California, Santa Cruz, USA)
2
Discussant – Jo Sharp (University of Glasgow, UK)
133 Th1 | RGS-EC
Author meets critics - The Black Pacific View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/133
Affiliation
RACE
Convenor and chair
Parvati Raghuram (The Open University, UK)
1
Author Meets Critics: Robbie Shilliam The Black Pacific: Anti-Colonial Struggles and Oceanic Connections – Andrew Baldwin (Durham University, UK), Brad Coombes (University of Auckland, New Zealand), Kehinde Andrews (Birmingham City University, UK)
134 Th1 | RGS-CR
Geographies of extinction: exploring the spatio-temporal relations of species and death (1) See also: 168 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/134
Convenors
Ben Garlick (York St John University, UK), Kate Symons (University of Edinburgh, UK)
Chair
Kate Symons (University of Edinburgh, UK)
1
Geographies of Extinction: The ‘miserable tale’ of the ospreys of Loch an Eilein – Ben Garlick (York St John University, UK)
2
Extant/Extinct – Sue Ruddick (University of Toronto, Canada)
3
Nine lives down: Love, loss and longing in Scottish wildcat conservation – Charlotte Wrigley (Queen Mary University London, UK)
4
Entangled Extinction in Galápagos – Daisy Sutcliffe (University of Glasgow, UK)
5
Nature, the British Empire and the near mass extinction of birds – Merle Patchett (University of Bristol, UK)
Thurs
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
135
Evening 18:45–
Th1 | RGS-LR
Just air? Spatial injustices, contestation and politicisation of air pollution (1): The struggle for just air: activism in an urban setting See also: 169 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/135
Affiliation
GJRG
Convenors
Anneleen Kenis (KU Leuven, Belgium), Maarten Loopmans (University of Leuven, Belgium)
Chair
Anneleen Kenis (KU Leuven, Belgium)
1
On the strategic omission of environmental justice in a struggle for urban air quality – Maarten Loopmans (University of Leuven, Belgium)
2
Air as an agent of social exclusion: interfacing the boundaries of home – Stefan Bouzarovski (University of Manchester, UK)
3
Passive, reactive and participatory governance of the air: three approaches under scrutiny – Nicola Da Schio, Bas Van Heur (Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium)
4
Tracking Neoliberal Natures: Delhi’s Air and Emergent Political Forms – Rohit Negi, Prema Srigyan (Ambedkar University Delhi, India)
136 Th1 | RGS-SR
Contextual safeguarding: Approaches to exploitation and abuse of children and young people beyond the home (1) See also: 170 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/136
Affiliation
GCYFRG
Convenors
Jenny Lloyd, Carlene Firmin (University of Bedfordshire, UK)
Chair
Carlene Firmin (University of Bedfordshire, UK)
1
Finding a place for geography within work on child sexual exploitation – Jenny Lloyd (University of Bedfordshire, UK)
2
A secure place: care and control of complex and vulnerable children – Caroline Andow (University of Winchester, UK), Ben Byrne (Surrey County Council, UK)
3
Learning from case reviews – a contextual approach – Joanne Walker, Elizabeth Ackerley (University of Bedfordshire, UK)
4
Young Research Advisors – how and why? – K Walker (Independent), K Howard (Independent), K Hitchcock (Independent), C Hamilton (Independent), A Rodgers (Independent)
Thurs
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
137
Evening 18:45–
Th1 RGS-DR
Decolonising ICT4D - Digital for development : Critiques and Reimaginings (1): Realities and impossibilities See also: 171, 207 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/137
Affiliation
DGWG
Convenors
Julia Verne (University of Bonn, Germany), Dorothea Kleine (University of Sheffield, UK)
Chair
Julia Verne (University of Bonn, Germany)
1
A Brief Critical Analysis Of Social Media Use By Development NGOs: Empowering & Connecting People? – Anand Sheombar (Manchester Metropolitan University, UK)
2
Invited or Claimed Spaces of Participation? Technology, power and social change in international development cooperation – Thomas Tufte (University of Leicester, UK)
3
Iconographies of care in #givingtoindia: Online visualizations of diaspora-centred development philanthropy – Jen Dickinson (University of Winchester, UK)
4
Digital Creativity, Solidarity and Othering 2.0: Doing ICT4D-related “sustainable development” research in the global North – Rita Afonso (Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Brazil), Dorothea Kleine (University of Sheffield, UK)
138 Th1 | RGS-TR
Fuller Geographies 2017: ‘Decolonising participatory geographies’ View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/138
Affiliation
PyGyRG
Convenors
Sophie Wynne-Jones (Bangor University, UK), Michael Kesby (University of St Andrews, UK), Sam Halvorsen (University of Cambridge, UK)
Chair
Sophie Wynne-Jones (Bangor University, UK)
1
Resisting the colonial gaze: Being decolonial when woman and black – Lioba Hirsch (University College London, UK)
2
Decolonising without recolonising?: practising reparative historical geographies in rural heritage sites – Susanne Seymour (University of Nottingham, UK), Lisa Robinson (Bright Ideas Nottingham, UK)
3
Decolonising whilst also defending norms: paradoxes, challenges, strategies? – Michael Kesby (University of St Andrews, UK)
139 Th1 | SAF-G34
Practising paradox: decolonizing urban geographies from the settler-colonial University View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/139
Affiliation
GJRG
Convenors
Libby Porter (RMIT University, Australia), Tod Jones (Curtin University, Australia)
Chair
Libby Porter (RMIT University, Australia)
1
Mercenary, missionary or misfit? Academic engagements with decolonization research agendas – Tod Jones, Shaphan Cox (Curtin University, Australia)
Thurs
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
Evening 18:45–
2
Aboriginal Sydney: towards a decolonising disposition – Gabrielle Russell-Mundine, Juanita Sherwood, Michael Johnston (University of Sydney, Australia)
3
Being decolonised? Embedded within (Aboriginal) Redfern in inner Sydney, Australia – Wendy Shaw (University of New South Wales, Australia)
4
India’s urban planning curriculum: hegemony of colonialism? – Asmita Bhardwaj (Ansal University, India)
5
Decolonising Curricula: Reflective Experiences from Aotearoa – Lena Henry, Dory Reeves (University of Auckland, New Zealand)
6
‘Indigenising’ urban geography in Australia: trends and dilemmas for decolonial practice – Libby Porter (RMIT University, Australia)
140 Th1 | SAF-119
New and Emerging Research within Geographies of Health and Wellbeing (1) See also: 174 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/140
Affiliation
GHWRG
Convenors
Gareth Griffith (University of Bristol, UK), Sarah Bell (University of Exeter, UK), Samuel Strong (University of Cambridge, UK)
Chair
Gareth Griffith (University of Bristol, UK)
1
Green space benefits for health and well-being: A life-course approach for urban planning, design and management – Mick Lennon, Mark Scott, Owen Douglas (University College Dublin, Ireland)
2
Occupied with classification: Which occupational classification scheme better predicts health outcomes? – Emily Eyles, David Manley, Kelvyn Jones (University of Bristol, UK)
3
Objective and Subjective Emotional Patterns Throughout Urban Space – an Aggregative Approach – Yonatan Schvimer, Noam Shoval (Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel)
4
Biosocial perspectives on health and place: an investigation of the stress pathway – Lucy Prior, David Manley, Kelvyn Jones (University of Bristol, UK)
141 Th1 | SAF-120
A Populist Moment? (1) See also: 175 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/141
Convenors
Ben Anderson, Oliver Belcher (Durham University, UK)
Chair
Oliver Belcher (Durham University, UK)
1
Between a populist moment and a long-term populist political culture – Nick Clarke (University of Southampton, UK)
2
Investments of desire and fascist regimes – Cheryl Gilge (University of Washington, USA)
3
Demographic fantasies and fever dreams: Populism and panic – Sara Smith (University of North Carolina, USA)
4
Nationalist Atmospheres and the ‘Brexit’ Revolt – Angharad Closs Stephens (Swansea University, UK)
Thurs 5
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
Evening 18:45–
(Post) Brexit Futures and the Intensities of Everyday Populism – Ben Anderson (Durham University, UK), Helen Wilson (University of Manchester, UK)
142 Th1 | SAF-121
Geography’s Technology: Conceptualising technology, technics and the technological (1): Subjects / Spaces / Mediations See also: 176 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/142
Affiliation
HPGRG
Convenors
Tom Keating, Andrew Lapworth, Nina Williams (University of Bristol, UK)
Chair
Tom Keating (University of Bristol, UK)
1
Towards a critical geography of smart outdoor advertising: mediation, excess and mechanisms of compatibilisation – Thomas Dekeyser (University of Southampton, UK)
2
Technology as Neoenvironment – Agostino Cera (University Basilicata, Italy)
3
The Geopolical Spaces of Computational Systems – Maria Dada (Durham University, UK)
4
Discussant – James Ash (Newcastle University, UK)
143 Th1 | SAF-122
Place and Identity: Challenging narratives on the Sea and Blue Growth (1) See also: 177 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/143
Affiliation
CMRG
Convenors
Celine Germond-Duret (Liverpool John Moores University, UK), Emma McKinley (Cardiff University, UK), Carole White (University of East Anglia, UK)
Chair
Tim Acott (University of Greenwich, UK)
1
Challenging the placelessness of the sea: identifications with the water world – Jon Anderson, Lyndsey Stoodley (Cardiff University, UK)
2
The “placeness” of the sea: Evidence from coastal communities and implications for management – Kira Gee (Helmholtz Zentrum Geesthacht, Germany)
3
Musters and Migration: Identity formation at sea – Elizabeth Alexander (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
4
Place and mobility in seafarer identity: a case of amphibious belongings? – Sophie Yarker (Aberystwyth University, UK)
5
Towards an ontology of placefulness: Mapping research on place and identity at sea – Celine Germond-Duret (Liverpool John Moores University, UK), Basil Germond (Lancaster University, UK)
Thurs
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
144
Evening 18:45–
Th1 | SKE-060a
Politics: state building and services (1) See also: 178 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/144
Chair
Jiska de Groot (University of Cape Town, South Africa)
1
Unequal Cities: A Study based on functional classification of Selected Cities of Telangana State, India – L. Ashok Kumar Lonavath, V. Karunakar, V. Satish Kumar, K. Sanjay Naik (Osmania University, India)
2
Public Health Strategies and Place Histories: (Post)colonial Obstacles to International Public Health Strategies in the Caribbean and the Pacific – Marisa Wilson (University of Edinburgh, UK), Amy McLennan (University of Oxford, UK)
3
Providing Sustainable Healthcare In and Out of the Hospital: Boundaries of Responsibility and their Spatio-Temporal Effects – Stanley Blue, Noel Cass (Lancaster University, UK)
4
Opening geography out to Nigerians: issues and challenges – Adamu Ibrahim Kabuga (Federal College of Education Kano, Nigeria)
145 Th1 | SKE-060b
Urban growth and development (1) See also: 214 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/145
Chair
A.J. Jacobs (East Carolina University, USA)
1
East-Central European cities within transnational companies' networks in 2013 - graph theory to measure integration – Natalia Zdanowska (Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne, France)
2
Shifting Locations in the European Motor Vehicle Industry: Impacts on Belgium’s Urban Regions – A.J. Jacobs (East Carolina University, USA)
3
The Embodied Impact of Immigrant Guest Workers on the Urban Demography of Dubai City – Fayez Mohamed Elessawy (United Arab Emirates University, United Arab Emirates)
4
The social hinterland of port expansion and activities: Port of Gothenburg, Sweden – Jerry Olsson, Anders Larsson (University of Gothenburg, Sweden)
5
Urban growth regime in post-developmental state: the emergence of informal factories in Gimpo, South Korea – HaeRan Shin, Sangwon Chae (Seoul National University, South Korea)
146 Th1 | SKE-060c Chair
Philosophical perspectives on time, space and place View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/146 James (Jim) Norwine (Texas A&M University, USA)
1
Anthropo-System Theory – Lionel Hirep (Laboratoire Espace-DEV-BIORECA, French West Indies University, France)
2
21st Century Environmentalism: Solution to Postmodernity’s Crisis of Meaning? – John Davenport (Missouri Southern State University, USA), Brent Hedquist, James (Jim) Norwine (Texas A&M University, USA), Michael Bruner (Humboldt State University, USA), Michael Preda (Midwestern State University, USA), Allen Ketcham (Independent scholar)
3
Chronofabric: Temporality of Transport Infrastructures – Robert Osman, Ondrej Mulicek (Masaryk University, Czech Republic)
Thurs 4
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
Evening 18:45–
Geography, basic element of philosophy and Method and paradigm of realism – Mohammadreza Shahidipak (Islamic Azad University, Iran)
147 Th1 | SKE-064a
Innovative Research within Gender & Feminist Geography (1) See also: 180 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/147
Affiliation
GFGRG, PGF
Convenors
Heather Jeffrey (University of Bedfordshire, UK), Eveleigh Buck-Matthews (Coventry University, UK)
Chair
Eveleigh Buck-Matthews (Coventry University, UK)
1
Young Men’s Careful and Careless Drinking Geographies – Samantha Wilkinson (Manchester Metropolitan University, UK)
2
‘Hey man, how’re you?’: visceral geographies, masculinities and gay men’s Grindr conversations – Carl Bonner-Thompson (Newcastle University, UK)
3
Everyday sexisms and the ethics of research – Morag Rose (University of Sheffield, UK)
4
Cycling London: An Intersectional Feminist Perspective – Tiffany Lam (London School of Economics, UK)
5
“The last marriage of the animate and inanimate”: women, the suburbs and patriarchal tyranny in contemporary Western fiction – Kirsty Edwards-Capes (Brunel University, UK)
148 Th1 | SKE-064b
Political geographies of the event View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/148
Affiliation
PolGRG
Convenors
Alan Ingram, Andrew Barry (University College London, UK)
Chair
Alan Ingram (University College London, UK)
1
Temporary Media Ecologies of Emergency Events – Nat O'Grady (University of Southampton, UK)
2
Engaging History and Event: Developing a Latent Understanding – Vanessa Schofield (Durham University, UK)
3
Ephemeral Fixtures: Convergence spaces, conferences, and protests' positioning in social movement mobilization – Cristina Temenos (University of Manchester, UK)
4
‘Applying’ speculative philosophy: towards an empirical geography of Badiou’s events – Antoine Paccoud (Luxembourg Institute of Socio-Economic Research, Luxembourg)
5
Assembling eventful politics and writing their eventful accounts: political geographies of bauxite mining in South-east India – Narendra Killada (University of Oxford, UK)
Thurs
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
149 Th1 | SKE-163
Evening 18:45–
Changing Norms in the Energy System View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/149
Affiliation
EnGRG
Convenors
Ross Gillard (University of York, UK), Niall Kerr (University of Edinburgh, UK), Imogen Rattle, James Van Alstine (University of Leeds, UK)
Chairs
Ross Gillard (University of York, UK), Imogen Rattle (University of Leeds, UK)
1
The anatomy of shifting renewable energy: a global perspective – Itay Fischhendler (Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel), Christoff Kotzé (Free University, Berlin, Germany)
2
Shifting landscape norms in the UK’s low carbon transition – Pip Roddis (University of Leeds, UK)
3
Systems of transport provision, energy consumption and need satisfaction: making the connections – Giulio Mattioli, Julia Steinberger, Andrew Brown (University of Leeds, UK)
4
Tall tales, small change: narrative policy analysis and spatial constructions of energy norms in the Land of the Long White Cloud – Ian Bailey (Plymouth University, UK), Tor Håkon Jackson Inderberg (Fridtjof Nansen Institute, Norway)
5
The energy-climate nexus in East Africa: the politics of hydrocarbon extraction and climate compatible development in Kenya and Uganda – James Van Alstine (University of Leeds, UK), Ross Gillard (University of York, UK)
150 Th1 | SKE-164
Economic Geography, Journal of Economic Geography, and Environment and Planning A – Advancing global production networks research: progress and prospects (3): Global production networks: general debates See also: 85, 116, 183, 218, 250 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/150
Affiliation
EGRG
Convenors
Neil M. Coe, Henry Yeung (National University of Singapore, Singapore)
Chair(s)
Henry Yeung (National University of Singapore, Singapore)
1
Bringing Capital Back In: A classical political economy approach to GPN research – Dongheon Lee (University College London, UK)
2
Global Production Networks, Strategic Coupling and the Remaking of City-Regions – Neil M. Coe (National University of Singapore, Singapore), Jana Kleibert (Leibniz Institute for Research on Society and Space, Germany), Karen P.Y. Lai (National University of Singapore, Singapore)
3
From a Swim Lane Diagram to Global Production Networks: Developing a task based approach within networks via an analysis of the UK space sector – Chloe Billing, John Bryson (University of Birmingham, UK)
4
The Global Production Networks Approach and International Business Studies: Mutual Interests, Underlying Tensions, Complementarities and Future Directions – Mike Crone (Sheffield Business School, UK)
Thurs
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
Evening
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
151
18:45–
Th1 | SKE-201
Brexit and the Future of Agriculture, Food and Rural Society (1) See also: 184, 219 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/151
Affiliation
RGRG, FGWG
Convenors
Gareth Enticott (Cardiff University, UK), Damian Maye (University of Gloucestershire, UK)
Chair
Damian Maye (University of Gloucestershire, UK)
1
Identifying emergent patterns in EU-intra trade of animals and meat products post-Brexit – Allan Butler (Royal Agricultural University, UK)
2
Structural agricultural change in New Zealand: experiences managing conflicts arising from effects of productivist agriculture on freshwater recreation resources and activities – Nick Taylor (Taylor Baines and Associates), Mike Mackay (Lincoln University, New Zealand), Harvey Perkins (University of Auckland, New Zealand)
3
Professional Identity and Rural Migration: examining the international migration of veterinary surgeons to the UK – Gareth Enticott (Cardiff University, UK)
4
The future of rural areas after Brexit: community resilience and cooperative relations as tools for the future – Javier Serrano (University of Valencia, Spain), Damian Maye (University of Gloucestershire, UK), Javier Esparcia (University of Valencia, Spain)
152 Th1 | SKE-207
Creating and Communicating Knowledge, Practices and Values: Exploring the Dynamics of Local Anchors and TransLocal Communities (1) See also: 185 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/152
Affiliation
EGRG
Convenors
Taylor Brydges (Uppsala University, Sweden), Brian Hracs (University of Southampton, UK), Rhiannon Pugh (Uppsala University, Sweden), Suntje Schmidt (Leibniz Institute for Research on Society and Space, Germany)
Chair
Brian Hracs (University of Southampton, UK)
1
Night markets in London: forming cultural scenes and transforming place – Paz Concha (London School of Economics and Political Science, UK)
2
Communicating digital non-use in online settings: Practices, spaces and legitimacy – Johan Jansson (Uppsala University, Sweden)
3
Hipster Hotspots: The role of local anchors in the trans-local cultural scenes of London and Amsterdam – Charlotte Campbell (University of Southampton, UK)
4
Universities as “local anchors” within strategies to support economic development and business growth – Rhiannon Pugh (Uppsala University, Sweden), Nicola Ronan (Lancaster University, UK)
5
Discussant – Suzanne Reimer (University of Southampton, UK)
Thurs
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
153 Th1 | SKE-307
Evening 18:45–
Celebrating a centenary: On Growth and Form and geography View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/153
Affiliation
HPGRG, QMRG
Convenors
David Unwin (Birkbeck, University of London, UK), Alan Werritty (University of Dundee, UK)
Chair
David Unwin (Birkbeck, University of London, UK)
1
Introduction to On Growth and Form – David Unwin (Birkbeck, University of London, UK), Michael Batty, Stephen Marshall (University College London, UK)
2
Shaping geographic enquiry – D’Arcy Thompson’s On Growth and Form – Alan Werritty (University of Dundee, UK)
3
Beyond physical form: geocomputational approaches to map projections – Chris Brunsdon (University of Liverpool, UK)
4
Evolution and Transformation in Cities: Re-evaluating Patrick Geddes and D’Arcy Wentworth Thompson – Michael Batty (University College London, UK)
154 Th1 | SHE-RD
Postcolonial theory and the reinterpretation of ‘natural’ disasters (1) See also: 187 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/154
Convenor and chair
Gemma Sou (University of Manchester, UK)
1
Postcolonial Politics and the Affect Economy: Resisting and Perpetuating Violence Through Graphic Representations of Hurricane Katrina – Dominic Davies (University of Oxford, UK)
2
Can Disaster-Affected People Speak? Silence and Silencing in the Wake of Typhoon Haiyan – Liezel Longboan (University of Manchester, UK)
3
Embodied Uncertainty: living with complexity and natural hazards – Christine Eriksen (University of Wollongong, Australia), Victoria Sword-Daniels (University College London, UK), Emma Hudson-Doyle (Massey University, New Zealand)
4
Decolonising Development: Reconfiguring Local Needs and Concerns – Gemma Sou (University of Manchester, UK)
155 Th1 | SHE-PIP
Networks of Knowledge: Communicating Geographical Knowledge in the Long Nineteenth Century (1) See also: 188 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/155
Affiliation
HGRG
Convenors
Innes Keighren (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK), Benjamin Newman (Royal Holloway, University of London / Royal Geographical Society (with IBG), UK)
Chair
Innes Keighren (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
1
Amateur geography: correspondences on discoveries in the Naval Chronicle – Yannan Ding (University of Oxford, UK)
Thurs
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
Evening 18:45–
2
Communicating geography in and beyond the pages of the Royal Geographical Society’s journal c. 1830–c. 1900 – Benjamin Newman (Royal Holloway, University of London / Royal Geographical Society (with IBG), UK)
3
Negotiating print cultures: Élisée Reclus and the publisher Hachette – Federico Ferretti (University College Dublin, Ireland)
4
‘…with “confidential” underlined seven times…’: managing and mediating knowledge at the Royal Geographical Society, 1880–1914 – Peter Martin (University of Oxford, UK)
5
Animated photographs—putting the world before you – Jan Faull (Royal Holloway, University of London / Royal Geographical Society (with IBG), UK)
156 Th1 | SALC-1
Understanding urban everyday risks through methodological innovations View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/156
Convenors
Hayley Leck, Maria Rusca (King’s College London, UK)
Chair
Hayley Leck (King's College London, UK)
1
Understanding urban transformations: a coevolutionary framework underpinned by reflexivity and discourse contestation – Alejandro Barcena (King's College London, UK)
2
Urban Africa Risk Knowledge - Setting the Agenda – Mark Pelling (King's College London, UK), David Dodman (International Institute for Environment and Development, UK), Hayley Leck, Maria Rusca (King’s College London, UK)
3
Understanding risk to the urban built environment in data-poor regions – Faith Taylor, James Millington, Bruce Malamud (King's College London, UK)
4
A contribution to city-wide risk knowledge in a data sparse environment-Ibadan city study – Ibidun Adelekan, Ezebunwa Nwokocha, Femi Olaniyan (University of Ibadan, Nigeria)
5
Citizen science water quality and WASH related risk monitoring for building resilience in Karonga Town, Malawi – Elijah Wanda, Mtafu Manda, Orton Msiska, James Kushe, Chris Mphande, Dominic Kamlomo, Jean Kaunda (Mzuzu University, Malawi)
6
Testing innovative methodologies for urban health research in data poor environments: Insights from Karonga Town, Malawi – Donald Brown (University College London, UK), Tamara Phiri (Mzuzu University, Malawi), Wisdom Bwanali (Urban Resource Centre), Mtafu Manda (Mzuzu University, Malawi)
157 Th1 | SALC-2
Geography beyond the West: Understanding the Urbanisation in China View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/157
Convenors
Jianquan Cheng (Manchester Metropolitan University, UK), Qiyan Wu (East China Normal University, China), Tim Edensor (Manchester Metropolitan University, UK)
Chair
Jianquan Cheng (Manchester Metropolitan University, UK)
1
Spatial (re)production and middle class remaking: Jiaoyufication in Nanjing, China – Qiyan Wu (East China Normal University, China), Tim Edensor, Jianquan Cheng (Manchester Metropolitan University, UK)
Thurs
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
Evening 18:45–
2
Regional dual-nuclei theory: definitions, measurements and models – Jianquan Cheng (Manchester Metropolitan University, UK), Yuqi Lu, Yu Chen, Cheng Jin, Ping Dong (Nanjing Normal University, China), Rong Huang (Manchester Metropolitan University, UK)
3
Do electric bicycles contribute to sustainable transport in a less developed city of China? Implications for urbanization – Jianquan Cheng (Manchester Metropolitan University, UK), Baoqing Hu (Guangxi Teachers Education University, China), Rong Huang (Manchester Metropolitan University, UK)
4
Environmental injustice: Inequities in perceived environmental health risks and interventions in a fast developing country – Jianquan Cheng (Manchester Metropolitan University, UK), Qiyan Wu (East China Normal University, China)
158 Th1 | SALC-5
Putting Transport on the Map: Advancements in Mapping and Visualising Sustainable Transport Systems (1) See also: 191, 226 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/158
Affiliation
TGRG, GIScRG
Convenors
Robin Lovelace, Craig Morton (University of Leeds, UK)
Chair
Craig Morton (University of Leeds, UK)
1
Re-projected cities, urban form and accessibility: lessons from Bogotá, Colombia – Orlando Sabogal Cardona (Universidad Tecnológica de Pereira, Colombia), Daniel Oviedo Hernández (University College London, UK)
2
Accessibility patterns and urban mobility, comparisons among many periods of time – Orlando Sabogal Cardona (Universidad Tecnológica de Pereira, Colombia), Diego Alexander Escobar Garcia (Universidad Nacional de Colombia, Colombia), Juan David Hincapié Zea (Universidad Tecnológica de Pereira, Colombia)
3
Navigating multi-modal public transport: mixed-scale and mixed-space information to support complex journeys – Lucas Godfrey, William Mackaness (University of Edinburgh, UK)
4
The propensity to cycle tool: from conception in the clouds to implementation on the ground – Robin Lovelace (University of Leeds, UK)
159 Th1 | SALC-6
Destabilising Knowledges of Refugee Reception, Settlement and Integration (1) See also: 192, 227 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/159
Convenors
Erica Pani (Queen Mary University of London, UK), Martina Manara (London School of Economics and Political Science, UK)
Chair
Jonathan Darling (The University of Manchester, UK)
1
A Collective Sigh of Relief: Local Responses to the "Refugee Crisis” – Susanne Bygnes (University of Bergen, Norway)
2
Refugees’ Integration into Local Housing Markets: Insights From Two German Case Studies – Stefanie Föbker (University of Bonn, Germany), Francesca Adam (RWTH Aachen University, Germany)
3
To Bid Or Not To Bid? The Value of Refugee Reception in Italy – Erica Pani (Queen Mary University of London, UK), Martina Manara (London School of Economics and Political Science, UK)
Thurs
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
Evening 18:45–
4
Experiences of Syrian Refugee Place-Making in the Netherlands – Rik Huizinga, Bettina van Hoven (University of Groningen, The Netherlands)
5
“If I Lose My Language I Will Lose Myself”: Integration and Belonging of Refugees in Glasgow – Sophie Shuttleworth (University of Glasgow, UK)
160 Th1 | SALC-7
Systems of (auto)mobility: Continuities, disruptions and futures (1): (Auto)mobility planning, policies and advocacy See also: 193 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/160
Convenors
Brendan Doody, Debbie Hopkins (University of Oxford, UK)
Chair
Brendan Doody (University of Oxford, UK)
1
Drivery: Automobility and non-metropolitan urbanism in the Indian Himalayas – Bhoomika Joshi (Yale University, USA)
2
Automobility policies from an urban transport development process perspective – Clemence Cavoli (University College London, UK)
3
Emerging automobilities: Mexico’s car dependence and where it is going – Priscilla Connolly (Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana-Azcapotzalco, Mexico)
4
Planning for urban de-automobilization: Case studies from North America, Europe, and Asia – Esther Zipori, Maurie Cohen (New Jersey Institute of Technology, USA)
161 Th1 | SALC-8
More-than-human geographies of empathy (1): empathy with uncharismatic others See also: 194, 229 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/161
Convenors
Megan Donald (University of Glasgow, UK), Christopher Bear, Richard Gorman (Cardiff University, UK)
Chair
Megan Donald (University of Glasgow, UK)
1
Estranged companions: Bedbugs, beagles and ethico-epistemics beyond the body – Eva Giraud (Keele University, UK), Greg Hollin (University of Leeds, UK)
2
On feeling like an eel – Katherine Jones (University of the West of England, UK)
3
A feeling for the microorganism: Exploring tactics for sensing microbiomes – Beth Greenhough, Jamie Lorimer (University of Oxford, UK)
4
The relational subject? Rehearsing more-than human living together – Suzanne Hocknell (University of Exeter, UK)
5
Caring for crickets: empathy and welfare in edible insect production – Christopher Bear (Cardiff University, UK)
Thurs
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
162 Th1 | SALC-9
Evening 18:45–
Postgraduate Contributions to Population Geography Research View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/162
Affiliation
PopGRG, PGF
Convenors
Charlotte Bolton, Andreas Culora (Loughborough University, UK), Catherine Waite (University of Northampton, UK)
Chairs
Charlotte Bolton, Andreas Culora (Loughborough University, UK)
1
Reflecting on Ethics and Positionality: Evidence from Refugee Families in the UK – Hoayda Darkal (Plymouth University, UK)
2
Students and Higher Education: identities versus welfare and policies – Marina Anastasio (London Metropolitan University, UK)
3
Population changes and labour market accounts in Syria 1994-2004 – Ayham Rezk (Newcastle University, UK)
4
Discussant – Gemma Catney (University of Liverpool, UK)
163 Th1 | HUX-340
Humanitarian Energy Geographies – The Space for Renewables in Energy Access for Refugees View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/163
Affiliation
EnGRG
Convenors
Jonathan Cloke (Loughborough University, UK), Alison Mohr (University of Nottingham, UK), Sarah Rosenberg-Jansen (University of Oxford / Practical Action, UK), Jamie Cross (University of Edinburgh, UK), Long Seng To (University College London, UK)
Chair
Sarah Rosenberg-Jansen (University of Oxford / Practical Action, UK)
1
Humanitarian Energy – Setting the scene. Moving Energy Initiative Presentation – Owen Grafham (Chatham House, UK)
2
Refugee voices: emerging research from Jordan, Kenya and Burkina Faso – Sarah Rosenberg-Jansen (University of Oxford / Practical Action, UK)
3
ESRC Humanitarian Energy research programme – Charlotte Ray (University of Edinburgh, UK)
4
Low Carbon Energy for Development Network – experience with humanitarian energy – Jonathan Cloke (Loughborough University, UK), Alison Mohr (University of Nottingham, UK), Long Seng To (University College London, UK)
5
Practitoner Presentation – Brian McSorley (Oxfam, UK), Raffaella Bellanca (Mercy Corps, UK)
Thurs
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
164
Evening 18:45–
Th1 | HUX-341
Re-theorising change through longitudinal research in the global South (1) See also: 197 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/164
Affiliation
DARG
Convenors
Katherine Gough (Loughborough University, UK), Jonathan Rigg (National University of Singapore, Singapore)
Chair
Katherine Gough (Loughborough University, UK)
1
Going back to move forward: Revisiting and learning from fieldwork sites across the longue durée – Peter M. Ward (University of Texas at Austin, USA)
2
From events to the longue durée: Disentangling the textures of longitudinal change in Asia – Jonathan Rigg (National University of Singapore, Singapore)
3
Ordinary lives, remarkable stories: Understanding change through longitudinal research in Colombia – Katherine Gough (Loughborough University, UK)
4
Friendship, time and space: Longitudinal research and the capturing of change – Tracey Skelton (National University of Singapore, Singapore)
5
I’ve done a cohort study by mistake – Ben Page (University College London, UK)
165 Th1 | HUX-342
Decolonising urban transport studies (1) See also: 198 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/165
Affiliation
UGRG, TGRG
Convenors
Wojciech Kębłowski (Université libre de Bruxelles, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium), Tauri Tuvikene (Tallinn University, Estonia), Astrid Wood (Newcastle University, UK)
Chair
Wojciech Kębłowski (Université libre de Bruxelles, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium)
1
Planetary Geographies of Urban Transport – Tim Schwanen (University of Oxford, UK)
2
Politicizing the technical: geographies of transport interventions in Dehradun, India – Gaurav Mittal (National University of Singapore, Singapore)
3
Decoding an Urban Myth: An Inquiry into the Socio-Economics of Van Number 4 in Beirut – Petra Samaha (American University of Beirut, Lebanon), Amer Mohtar (Independent Architect and Urban Designer)
4
Do urban transport systems support individual capabilities? Examining Bogotá's bus rapid transit system from the perspective of peripheries – Giovanni Vecchio (Politecnico di Milano, Italy)
5
Discussant – Karen Lucas (University of Leeds, UK)
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Thurs
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
Evening
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
166
18:45–
Th2 | RGS-OT
Progress in Human Geography Lecture: Geotrauma: violence, place and recovery View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/166
Convenor
Pauline McGuirk (University of Wollongong, Australia)
Chair
Nina Laurie (University of St Andrews, UK)
1
Geotrauma: violence, place and recovery – Rachel Pain (Newcastle University, UK)
167 Th2 | RGS-EC
The ’battle of the maps’ – (re)imagining geographies of knowledge production View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/167
Affiliation
RACE
Convenors
Ashley William Gunter (University of South Africa, South Africa), Parvati Raghuram (Open University, UK), Clare Madge (University of Leicester,UK), Paul Prinsloo (University of South Africa, South Africa), Bart Rienties (Open University, UK)
Chair
Ashley William Gunter (University of South Africa, South Africa)
1
(Re) considering and (re) imagining urban planning curriculum in South African Higher Education – Lauren Andres, Lorena Melgaço (University of Birmingham, UK)
2
In-community learning as postcolonial pedagogy – the broader significance of guerrilla gardening by urban Maori – Brad Coombes (University of Auckland, New Zealand)
3
Curricula as contested and contesting spaces: Geographies of longing, resistance and discomfort – Paul Prinsloo (University of South Africa, South Africa)
4
Power, politics and push-back in feminist classrooms – Kiran Asher, Lezlie Frye (University of Massachusetts, USA)
5
De-colonisation of the curriculum, the construction of knowledge in the global south – Dianne Long, Ashley William Gunter (University of South Africa, South Africa)
168 Th2 | RGS-CR
Geographies of extinction: exploring the spatio-temporal relations of species and death (2) See also: 134 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/168
Convenors
Ben Garlick (York St John University, UK), Kate Symons (University of Edinburgh, UK)
Chair
Kate Symons (University of Edinburgh, UK)
1
Panel Discussion – Sue Ruddick (University of Toronto, Canada), Owain Jones (Bath Spa University, UK), Kate Symons (University of Edinburgh, UK), Merle Patchett (University of Bristol, UK), Daisy Sutcliffe (University of Glasgow, UK), Ben Garlick (York St John University, UK), Charlotte Wrigley (Queen Mary University London, UK), Kate Rigby (Bath Spa University, UK)
Thurs
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
Evening
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
169
18:45–
Th2 | RGS-LR
Just air? Spatial injustices, contestation and politicisation of air pollution (2): The politics of air and the dual challenge of air pollution and climate change See also: 135 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/169
Affiliation
GJRG
Convenors
Anneleen Kenis (KU Leuven, Belgium), Maarten Loopmans (University of Leuven, Belgium)
Chair
Anneleen Kenis (KU Leuven, Belgium)
1
How a large-scale citizen science project managed to combine scientific rigour, policy influence and deep citizen engagement by measuring ambient air quality in Antwerp – Suzanne Van Brussel (Ghent University, Belgium), Huib Huyse (KU Leuven, Belgium)
2
The politics of small particles: following PMs and their mobilities – Gordon Walker, Barbara Maher (Lancaster University, UK)
3
The politics of science and the media: the controversy on record air pollution in Oxford Street and other debates on bad air in London – Anneleen Kenis (KU Leuven, Belgium)
4
Breathing Modernity: Politicising Air (Pollution) in China-Africa Development Cooperation – Han Cheng (University of Cambridge, UK)
170 Th2 | RGS-SR
Contextual safeguarding: Approaches to exploitation and abuse of children and young people beyond the home (2) See also: 136 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/170
Affiliation
GCYFRG
Convenors
Jenny Lloyd, Carlene Firmin (University of Bedfordshire, UK)
Chair
Jenny Lloyd (University of Bedfordshire, UK)
1
Routes to safety - contextual safeguarding on bus networks – Carlene Firmin (University of Bedfordshire, UK)
2
‘She doesn’t have to get in the car…” – Sarah Lloyd (University of Huddersfield, UK)
3
Childhood Sexuality Institutionalised – Korinna McRobert (University of Applied Sciences, Potsdam, Germany)
4
Discussion panel
171 Th2 | RGS-DR
Decolonising ICT4D - Digital for development : Critiques and Reimaginings (2): Changing economic patterns - new inequalities See also: 137, 207 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/171
Affiliation
DGWG
Convenors
Julia Verne (University of Bonn, Germany), Dorothea Kleine (University of Sheffield, UK)
Chair
Dorothea Kleine (The University of Sheffield, UK)
Thurs
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
Evening 18:45–
1
Development or Divide? Information and Communication Technologies in commercial small-scale farming in East Africa – Peter Dannenberg (Universität zu Köln, Germany), Madlen Krone (University of Cologne, Germany)
2
Cuba 2.0.: Can the Internet reboot the Cuban economy? – Ilona Brannen (University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands)
3
Selling accountability? – Digital technologies between data capture and “development” – Christiane Tristl (Goethe University Frankfurt, Germany)
4
Corporations Left to Other Peoples’ Devices: A Political Economy Perspective on the Big Data Revolution in Development – Laura Mann (University of Oxford, UK)
172 Th2 | RGS-TR
Reflections on parenting/caring and working in geography View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/172
Convenors and chairs
Jennie Middleton (University of Oxford, UK), Emma Street (University of Reading, UK)
173
The question of culture in cultural geographies View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/173
Th2 | SAF-G34 Affiliation
HPGRG
Convenors
Mitch Rose (Aberystwyth University, UK), John Wylie (University of Exeter, UK)
Chair
Mitch Rose (Aberystwyth University, UK)
1
Panel discussion – Mitch Rose (Aberystwyth University, UK), John Wylie (University of Exeter, UK), Deborah Dixon (University of Glasgow, UK), Derek McCormack (University of Oxford, UK), Tariq Jazeel (University College London, UK), Gillian Rose (Open University, UK)
174 Th2 | SAF-119
New and Emerging Research within Geographies of Health and Wellbeing (2) See also: 140 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/174
Affiliation
GHWRG
Convenors
Sarah Bell (University of Exeter, UK), Samuel Strong (University of Cambridge, UK), Gareth Griffith (University of Bristol, UK)
Chair
Samuel Strong (University of Cambridge, UK)
1
Measuring nature’s impact on health: A volunteering case study – Valentine Seymour (University College London / Extreme Citizen Science (ExCiteS) Research Group, UK)
2
Affective spaces, and urban gardening places. The role of food, body and place on mental health in the city – Senjuti Manna, Richard J. Nunes, Aileen Ho (University of Reading, UK)
3
All Right?: A proactive approach to community wellbeing after disaster – Kris Vavasour (New Zealand Broadcasting School at Ara Institute of Canterbury, New Zealand)
Thurs
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
Evening 18:45–
4
Museopathy: cross-disciplinary approaches to the role of museums in supporting health, wellbeing and recovery – Nuala Morse (University of Manchester / University College London, UK), Linda Thomson, Helen Chatterjee (University College London, UK)
5
Reflections on the therapeutic potential of the research interview – Annabelle Edwards (Lancaster University, UK)
175 Th2 | SAF-120
A Populist Moment? (2) See also: 141 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/175
Convenors
Ben Anderson, Oliver Belcher (Durham University, UK)
Chair
Oliver Belcher (Durham University, UK)
1
Trump the Caudillo – Kate Maclean (Birkbeck, University of London, UK)
2
Pipeline Populism: American environmentalism and its attachments to land – Kai Bosworth (University of Minnesota, USA)
3
Cruel Hope: holding on to the promise of a good life in Cairo – Harry Pettit (London School of Economics and Political Science, UK)
4
How to Avoid “Populism” and Its Redundancy – Murray Low, Carl Truedsson (London School of Economics and Political Science, UK)
5
Cliff Edges: Rethinking Precarity and Neo-Fascism in the 'European' Refugee Crisis – Alessandro Tiberio (University of California, Berkeley, USA)
176 Th2 | SAF-121
Geography’s Technology: Conceptualising technology, technics and the technological (2): Technicity See also: 142 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/176
Convenors
Tom Keating, Andrew Lapworth, Nina Williams (University of Bristol, UK)
Chair
Andrew Lapworth (University of Bristol, UK)
1
Transindividual Potential in the Technicity of Performance – J. D. Dewsbury (University of Bristol, UK)
2
Maliciously corrupting spaces of the (non)object – Andrew Dwyer (University of Oxford / Cyber Security CDT, UK)
3
Algorithmic Infrastructure – Nick Lally (Uniersity of Wisconsin-Madison, USA)
4
Discussant – Sam Kinsley (University of Exeter, UK)
Thurs
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
177
Evening 18:45–
Th2 | SAF-122
Place and Identity: Challenging narratives on the Sea and Blue Growth (2) See also: 143 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/177
Affiliation
CMRG
Convenors
Celine Germond-Duret (Liverpool John Moores University, UK), Emma McKinley (Cardiff University, UK), Carole White (University of East Anglia, UK)
Chair
Celine Germond-Duret (Liverpool John Moores University, UK)
1
Sense of place and cultural ecosystem services: Understanding relational associations between land and sea in the context of inshore fisheries – Tim Acott (University of Greenwich, UK), Julie Urquhart (Imperial College London, UK)
2
Symbols of resilience: Place meanings and contestations over fishing as part of place identity – Carole White (University of East Anglia, UK)
3
Participatory dumpsites or marginalised knowledges? Balancing MPAs, fisheries and disposal stakeholders – Jeremy Evans (University of Brighton, UK)
4
Blue energy: Marginality, identity and engagement at the coast – Stephen Axon (Liverpool John Moores University, UK), Duncan Light, Anya Chapman (Bournemouth University, UK)
178 Th2 | SKE-060a
Politics: state building and services (2) See also: 144 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/178
Chair
Michael Hardman (University of Salford, UK)
1
Tapping the Vote: Elections, Decentralisation and Water Services in Kenya – Johanna Koehler (University of Oxford, UK)
2
A comprehensive framework for understanding coproduction of water and sanitation services – Luisa Moretto (Université Libre de Bruxelles, Belgium), Jacques Teller (Université de Liège, Belgium)
3
High Tech Urban Growing as a Tool to Tackle Food Insecurity: Critically Exploring Global Practice – Michael Hardman, Richard Armitage, Simon Cryer, Mags Adams (University of Salford, UK), Lindsay Laidlaw (Manchester City Council, UK)
4
Food for the city: access to energy and the gender dynamics affecting street-food vendors in South Africa – Jiska de Groot (University of Cape Town, South Africa), Nthabiseng Mohlakoana, Hans Bresers (University of Twente, The Netherlands)
5
Land subsidence in Jakarta, Indonesia: A critical juncture analysis – Thanti Octavianti, Katrina Charles (University of Oxford, UK)
179 Th2 | SKE-060b Chair 1
Governance, regions and development View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/179 Merryn Thomas (Cardiff University, UK)
New arts of rent: Mobilising geographical rent for development – Nick Lewis, Richard Le Heron (University of Auckland, New Zealand)
Thurs
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
Evening 18:45–
2
Legitimacy in regional governance – Yasmine Willi, Marco Puetz (Swiss Federal Research Institute WSL, Switzerland)
3
A review of the new secondary education curriculum for geography in Nigeria – Abiodun Ogunboye (Adeyemi College of Education Ondo, Nigeria)
4
Using role-play to explore energy perceptions in the US and UK – Merryn Thomas, Nick Pidgeon (Cardiff University, UK), Tristan Partridge, Barbara Herr Harthorn (University of California, Santa Barbara, USA)
180 Th2 | SKE-064a
Innovative Research within Gender & Feminist Geography (2) See also: 147 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/180
Affiliation
GFGRG, PGF
Convenors
Heather Jeffrey (University of Bedfordshire, UK), Eveleigh Buck-Matthews (Coventry University, UK)
Chair
Heather Jeffrey (University of Bedfordshire, UK)
1
The mother as flaneure- sensory stories mapping maternal landscapes- an enquiry through interactive documentary – Rosie Reed Hillman (University of the West of England, UK)
2
The Female Chiefs of Vanuatu – Llewellyn Toulmin (Fellow of the Explorers Club, USA)
3
Consideration of the generational and spatial impacts on the attitude towards Female Genital Mutilation (FGM) across Somali communities in Britain – Mina Nakai (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
4
Abortion Beyond Borders: The Political Geography of Reproductive Rights – Sydney Calkin (Durham University, UK)
5
The “Nature” of the Prophetess – Tristan Sturm (Queen's University Belfast, UK)
6
'Rewriting their fate’: Agential practices amongst widowed women in Nepal – Suzy Solley (Queen Mary University of London, UK)
181 Th2 | SKE-064b
The emotional geographies of place: developing effective learning and teaching strategies for fieldwork View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/181
Affiliation
HERG
Convenors and chairs
David Simm (Bath Spa University, UK), Alan Marvell (University of Gloucestershire, UK)
1
Using critical reflexivity to enrich observational fieldwork in deprived urban neighbourhoods – John H. McKendrick (Glasgow Caledonian University, UK)
2
“Where I can flow from within.” Place and emotion in university student learning in a Forest School – Duncan Reavey (University of Chichester, UK)
3
Enacting accountable fieldwork in the global South: lessons from a researcher with a disability – Amita Bhakta, Julie Fisher, Brian Reed (Loughborough University, UK)
4
AWESOME: a new teaching model for Events studies in Higher Education and the use of geopsychology in the implementation of the model – Fotios Vasileiou (GSM London, UK)
Thurs 5
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
Evening 18:45–
The emotional geographies of place: developing effective learning and teaching strategies for international fieldwork – Alan Marvell (University of Gloucestershire, UK), David Simm (Bath Spa University, UK)
182 Th2 | SKE-163
Energy Learning and Social Change View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/182
Affiliation
EnGRG
Convenors
Heather Lovell (University of Tasmania, Australia), Vanesa Castán Broto (University College London, UK)
Chair
Vanesa Castán Broto (University College London, UK)
1
Energy learning in off-grid regions – the role of practitioners and community organisers – Carmen Dienst, Julia Terrapon-Pfaff, Willington Ortiz, Marie-Christine Gröne (Wuppertal Institute for Climate, Environment and Energy GmbH, Germany)
2
From Global Kinds of Knowledge to Frontline Struggles: Labour Environmentalism and the Fight for Energy Democracy – Franziska Christina Paul (University of Glasgow, UK)
3
Learning, societal benefits and energy smart meters in the home – Dan van der Horst (The University of Edinburgh, UK)
4
The need for people’s participation in renewable energy transitions: learning from the European fight for community ownership – Anne Schiffer (Leeds Beckett University, UK)
5
The University as an enabler of social learning for local sustainable energy: exploring the impacts of public engagement through a UK higher education course – Andrew Reeves (De Montfort University, UK)
6
Learning from policy failure in the energy sector – Heather Lovell (University of Tasmania, Australia)
183 Th2 SKE-164
Economic Geography, Journal of Economic Geography, and Environment and Planning A – Advancing global production networks research: progress and prospects (4): Global production networks: conceptualizing strategic coupling See also: 85, 116, 150, 218, 250 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/183
Affiliation
EGRG
Convenors
Neil M. Coe, Henry Yeung (National University of Singapore, Singapore)
Chair
Neil M. Coe (National University of Singapore, Singapore)
1
Deliberative practices, negotiation and compromise in strategic coupling – Crispian Fuller (Cardiff University, UK)
2
Mega infrastructural projects, changing global production networks? Perspectives on the EU-China transcontinental railway – Kean Lim (University of Nottingham, UK)
3
Enterprise expansion and globalization under the framework of global production networks: A case study of Midea Group in China – Yutian Liang, Zhaoxuan Lou, Yi Liu (Sun Yat-Sen University, China)
Thurs
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
Evening
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
184
18:45–
Th2 | SKE-201
Brexit and the Future of Agriculture, Food and Rural Society (2) See also: 151, 219 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/184
Affiliation
RGRG, FGWG
Convenors
Gareth Enticott (Cardiff University, UK), Damian Maye (University of Gloucestershire, UK)
Chair
James Kirwan (University of Gloucestershire, UK)
1
Fishing for Leave: What can the inshore fishers of Cornwall hope for from Brexit? – James Kirwan, Dilshaad Bundhoo (University of Gloucestershire, UK)
2
Assessing the impact of Brexit on the resilience of Scotland’s Soft Fruit Sector – Giles O'Donovan (University of Aberdeen, UK)
3
Dairy farming and Brexit: a market and regulatory perspective – Damian Maye, Mauro Vigani, James Kirwan (University of Gloucestershire, UK)
4
Prognosticating the Future of the Alternative Food Sector and Rural Development in Cheshire post- Brexit; thoughts from the Local Enterprise Partnership and Alternative Food Networks – Henry Sidsaph (University of Chester, UK)
185 Th2 | SKE-207
Creating and Communicating Knowledge, Practices and Values: Exploring the Dynamics of Local Anchors and TransLocal Communities (2) See also: 152 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/185
Affiliation
EGRG
Convenors
Taylor Brydges (Uppsala University, Sweden), Brian Hracs (University of Southampton, UK), Rhiannon Pugh (Uppsala University, Sweden), Suntje Schmidt (Leibniz Institute for Research on Society and Space, Germany)
Chair
Taylor Brydges (Uppsala University, Sweden)
1
Trans-local anchors in the digital age: Exploring the impact of digital technology on the fashion industry through a case study of Toronto Fashion Week – Taylor Brydges (Uppsala University, Sweden), Brian Hracs (University of Southampton, UK)
2
Exploring the strategies of fashion weeks’ organizers in second-tier fashion capitals; a longitudinal study on the Amsterdam Fashion Week – Mariangela Lavanga (Erasmus University Rotterdam, The Netherlands)
3
Anchoring international academic projects into local knowledge creation processes – Johanna Hautala (University of Turku, Finland)
4
Discussant – Atle Hauge (Eastern Norway Research Institute, Norway)
Thurs
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
186 Th2 | SKE-307 Chair
Evening 18:45–
Everyday livelihoods View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/186 Karenjit Clare (University of Cambridge/The University of Sheffield, UK)
1
"Real adaptation versus realities of adaptation? Insights from semi-arid, drought-prone regions in Karnataka, India – Ritwika Basu, Chandni Singh (Indian Institute for Human Settlements, India)
2
"Tracing the 'metabolism of the everyday' amongst the urban poor in Cape Town, South Africa – Suraya Scheba (University of Cape Town, South Africa)
3
Spatial stratification of urban life standards: a study of the west zone region of Hyderabad city, Telangana state, India – K. Sanjay Naik, V. Karunakar, V. Satish Kumar, L. Ashok Kumar Lonavath (Osmania University, India)
4
The more things change, the more they stay the same? Insights from Longitudinal Research on Rural Livelihoods in Sierra Leone – Jerram Bateman, Tony Binns, Etienne Nel (University of Otago, New Zealand)
187 Th2 | SHE-RD
Postcolonial theory and the reinterpretation of ‘natural’ disasters (2) See also: 154 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/187
Convenor and chair
Gemma Sou (The University of Manchester, UK)
1
Dominant Narratives of Community Participation in Post-disaster Recovery: Critical insights from a community-driven housing reconstruction project in Nepal – Christie Lam (Osaka University, Japan)
2
Postcolonial Disasters and Everyday Remakings: the 2010 Haiti Earthquake at the Crossroads of Perspectives – Kasia Mika (Royal Netherlands Institute of Southeast Asian and Caribbean Studies, The Netherlands)
3
The impact of natural hazards on African American religious/spiritual culture in New Orleans - coping strategies and interpretations – Maria Elisabeth Thiele (Leipzig University, Germany)
188 Th2 | SHE-PIP
Networks of Knowledge: Communicating Geographical Knowledge in the Long Nineteenth Century (2) See also: 155 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/188
Affiliation
HGRG
Convenors
Benjamin Newman (Royal Holloway, University of London / Royal Geographical Society (with IBG), UK), Innes Keighren (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
Chair
Benjamin Newman (Royal Holloway, University of London / Royal Geographical Society (with IBG), UK)
1
Gendered networks of knowledge: propertied women, landscape improvement and agrarian ‘science’, 1760–1860 – Briony McDonagh (University of Hull, UK)
2
Knowledge, networks and natural history: Charlotte Wheeler-Cuffe’s Burma 1900–1903 – Nuala C. Johnson (Queen's University Belfast, UK)
Thurs
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
Evening 18:45–
3
British botanical network in the Pacific: naval surgeons and their correspondence with the Kew – Hana Oh (University of Oxford, UK)
4
Cartographic exchanges: anthropometric and racial maps in the early twentieth century – Heather Winlow (Bath Spa University, UK)
5
John Arrowsmith’s cartographies of Australia and their circuits of distribution in the mid19th century – Johanna Skurnik (University of Turku, Finland)
189 Th2 | SALC-1
Migrant Leisure Spaces and Community Wellbeing View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/189
Affiliation
GLTRG
Convenors
Jaeyeon Choe, Janet Dickinson (Bournemouth University, UK)
Chair
Jaeyeon Choe (Bournemouth University, UK)
1
Challenging negative perceptions of everyday leisure spaces in a superdiverse neighbourhood – Goran Vodicka (University of Sheffield, UK)
2
“Living for the Weekend”: The role of cricket clubs in the community integration of skilled migrants in Australia – Catherine Waite (University of Northampton, UK)
3
Freedom, Care and Compassion in Urban Green Spaces – a capability framework for the enhancement of community wellbeing – Alma Clavin (Bath Spa University, UK)
4
Leisure Opportunities and Well-being of Latin American Immigrant Women in Spain – Paola Vizcaino-Suarez (Autonomous University of the State of Mexico, Mexico)
5
Border Crossing and Securitization in the Time of Terror: Experiences of Canadian Dual Citizens – Pooneh Torabian, Heather Mair (University of Waterloo, Canada)
190 Th2 | SALC-2
Mortgage markets and the financialization of home in the Global South View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/190
Affiliation
EGRG
Convenor and chair
Marieke Krijnen (Orient-Institut Beirut, Lebanon)
1
“Application declined: Your score is too low”: How mortgage markets remake the SouthAfrican class structure – Julien Migozzi (University of Grenoble Alpes, France)
2
The financialization of the social housing market in Brazil: An historical institutional view – Anthony Boanada-Fuchs (University of Sao Paulo, Brazil)
3
Who is afraid of Lari Depreciation? Foreign currency household debt in Georgia – Ia Eradze (University of Kassel, Germany)
4
On the financialisation and affordability of housing in the Global South: From political economy to system dynamics. Contrasting cases from cities in India – Jaime Royo-Oli, Shailaja Fennell (University of Cambridge, UK), Anthony Boanada-Fuchs (University of Sao Paulo, Brazil), Geoffrey Payne (World Bank)
5
The crisis that was a boom: Emerging mortgage markets in Lebanon – Marieke Krijnen (Orient-Institut Beirut, Lebanon)
Thurs
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
191
Evening 18:45–
Th2 | SALC-5
Putting Transport on the Map: Advancements in Mapping and Visualising Sustainable Transport Systems (2) See also: 158, 226 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/191
Affiliation
TGRG, GIScRG
Convenors
Robin Lovelace, Craig Morton (University of Leeds, UK)
Chair
Robin Lovelace (University of Leeds, UK)
1
Spatial visualisation to engage policy stakeholders in the development of a spatial typology of car use – Ian Phillips, Jillian Anable (University of Leeds, UK), Sally Cairns (TRL, UK), Paul Emmerson (Transport Research Laboratory), Tim Chatterton (University of the West of England, UK)
2
Collaborative mapping as a tool to enhance minibus systems in the Global South – Clemence Cavoli (University College London, UK), Joaquin Romero de Tejada (None)
3
Privacy-preserving socioeconomic attribute enrichment for mapping of passively-derived OD matrices – Yuanying Zhao, Jacek Pawlak, John Polak (Imperial College London, UK)
4
The Effect of Spatial Arbitrage in Fuel Prices over the Geographical Structure of Northern Ireland’s Car Fleet – Craig Morton, Robin Lovelace, Ian Phillips (University of Leeds, UK)
192 Th2 | SALC-6
Destabilising Knowledges of Refugee Reception, Settlement and Integration (2) See also: 159, 227 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/192
Convenors
Erica Pani (Queen Mary University of London, UK), Martina Manara (London School of Economics and Political Science, UK)
Chair
Martina Manara (London School of Economics and Political Science, UK)
1
Refugee Mobility and the Politics of Urbanism – Jonathan Darling (University of Manchester, UK)
2
Local Impacts of Global Wars: The Complexities and Incoherencies of the Refugee Experience in Ecuador – Soledad Alvarez-Velasco (King's College London, UK)
3
Refugee Settlement and Integration in Rural and Regional Australia – Kate Hurst (National University of Singapore, Singapore)
4
Electricity and Power in Refugee Camps: Mobilising Space in the Palestinian Camps of Beirut – Alex Mahoudeau (King's College London, UK)
5
Refugee Camps: Between Temporary Reception and Semi-Permanent Urban Spaces – Lucas Oesch (University of Luxembourg, Luxembourg)
Thurs
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
193
Evening 18:45–
Th2 | SALC-7
Systems of (auto)mobility: Continuities, disruptions and futures (2): (Auto)mobility technologies, infrastructures, identities and ontologies See also: 160 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/193
Convenors
Brendan Doody, Debbie Hopkins (University of Oxford, UK)
Chair(s)
Debbie Hopkins (University of Oxford, UK)
1
Consuming privacy: the enduring appeal of personal automobility and the automotive industry – Peter Wells (Cardiff University, UK)
2
The miracle of the road: The affective atmospheres of Europe’s roads – Michael O'Regan (Bournemouth University, UK)
3
Anticipation, automation and navigation – Sam Hind (University of Warwick, UK)
4
Car charisma – Brendan Doody (University of Oxford, UK)
5
Automobility: where does ontology take us? – Tim Schwanen (University of Oxford, UK)
194 Th2 | SALC-8
More-than-human geographies of empathy (2): empathy in caring practices See also: 161, 229 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/194
Convenors
Megan Donald (University of Glasgow, UK), Richard Gorman, Christopher Bear (Cardiff University, UK)
Chair
Richard Gorman (Cardiff University, UK)
1
Empathy for eidolons: Learning person-centred care in the more-than-human geographies of simulated human patient pedagogies – Aileen V Ireland (University of Stirling, UK)
2
Empathy interventions to incubate more-than-human caring within formal and informal education settings – Harriet Smith, Hanna Sjogren, Shruti Desai (Goldsmiths, University of London, UK)
3
Sculpting Dinah with the blunt tools of the historian – Tracy McDonald (McMaster University, Canada)
4
Befriending beyond the Archive: Animals, Activism, and Archives – Catherine Oliver (University of Birmingham, UK)
5
Cities as more-than-human habitat through everyday actions of curiosity, care, and empathy – Cecily Maller (RMIT University, Australia)
Thurs
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
195 Th2 | SALC-9
Evening 18:45–
Geographies of work(ing) in the low-carbon economy View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/195
Affiliation
EnGRG
Convenors
Will Eadson (Sheffield Hallam University, UK), Aidan While (The University of Sheffield, UK)
Chair
Will Eadson (Sheffield Hallam University, UK)
1
Decarbonised spatial divisions of labour? Placing work in geographies of just decarbonisation – Aidan While (University of Sheffield, UK), Will Eadson (Sheffield Hallam University, UK)
2
Trajectories of greening: regional development and geographies of work in the green economy – David Gibbs (University of Hull, UK), Kirstie O'Neill (London School of Economics and Political Science, UK)
3
Fostering the green economy to counter long-term economic disadvantage: Strategies, changing job markets, and reputational change in Hull and Bremerhaven – Jeremy Moulton (University of Hull, UK), Winfried Osthorst (Hochschule Bremen, Germany), Andrew E. G. Jonas, Rudi Wurzel (University of Hull, UK)
4
Working from home and the low carbon economy – Samuel Hampton (University of Oxford, UK)
196 Th2 | HUX-340
Politics of the Everyday in Urban Transformations in China (1) See also: 231, 263 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/196
Affiliation
PolGRG
Convenors
Saska Petrova, Alison Browne, Harriet Larrington-Spencer (University of Manchester, UK)
Chair
Alison Browne (University of Manchester, UK)
1
Would the “Online Public Voice” Influence Chinese Government Policy Making? A Case Study on the Online News Discussion’s Impact on the Disaster Policy of Tianjin Explosion – Zipeng Li (University of Edinburgh, UK)
2
The politics and depoliticization of air in Chinese cities – Yueming Zhang (University of Birmingham, UK)
3
Healing Nature: Green Living and the Politics of Hope in Hong Kong – Loretta Ieng Tak Lou (University of Oxford, UK)
4
Working women in urban China: their gender roles and economic potentials in the transforming Chinese society – Alexandra Jingsi Ni (University of Turku, Finland)
5
From source to sip? An Institutional Analysis of China's urban tap water provision system – Xiaoyang Zhang (University of Essex, UK)
Thurs
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
197
Evening 18:45–
Th2 | HUX-341
Re-theorising change through longitudinal research in the global South (2) See also: 164 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/197
Affiliation
DARG
Convenors
Katherine Gough (Loughborough University, UK), Jonathan Rigg (National University of Singapore, Singapore)
Chair
Jonathan Rigg (National University of Singapore, Singapore)
1
Young people’s perspectives on their own lifecourses: Responding to economic change and social policy in Lesotho and Malawi – Nicola Ansell (Brunel University, UK)
2
‘The families give so much, we give so little’: The ethics of research reciprocity in Young Lives, a 15-year international study of childhood poverty – Gina Crivello (University of Oxford, UK), Vanessa Rojas Arangoitia (Group for the Analysis of Development (GRADE), Peru), Yisak Tafere (Young Lives, Ethiopia), Uma Vennam (Sri Padmavati Mahila Visvavidyalayam (Women’s University), India), Vu Thi Thanh Huong (Vietnamese Academy of Social Sciences (VASS))
3
Failed plans: Filipino perceptions of development in an era of global migration – Deirdre McKay (Keele University, UK)
4
‘Leaving no one behind’: Why ideas matter – Alice Evans (University of Cambridge, UK)
5
Discussant – David Simon (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK/Mistra Urban Futures)
198 Th2 | HUX-342
Decolonising urban transport studies (2) See also: 165 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/198
Affiliation
UGRG, TGRG
Convenors
Wojciech Kębłowski (Université libre de Bruxelles, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium), Tauri Tuvikene (Tallinn University, Estonia), Astrid Wood (Newcastle University, UK)
Chairs
Tauri Tuvikene (Tallinn University, Estonia)
1
Geographies of Informal Public Transport Practices: A socioǦǦspatial Analysis of Practices from Beirut and Naples – Hala El Moussawi (Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium)
2
“Everyday” as exploitation: Informal transport workers in Tanzania – Matteo Rizzo (SOAS, University of London, UK)
3
Pushing back against ‘modern’ transport planning in a socialist state: The micromobilities of motorbike taxi drivers in Hanoi, Vietnam – Sarah Turner (McGill University, Canada)
4
Infrastructure as a developer of the interactions between states, markets and individualized subjects – Elena Trubina (Ural Federal University, Russia)
5
Discussant – Astrid Wood (Newcastle University, UK)
Geography from Routledge
Save 20% at our booth, or by ordering online and entering promo code HJT05 at check out. Routledge... think about it www.routledge.com/geography
Thurs
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
199
Evening 18:45–
ThP | RGS-OT
Chair's plenary: Africa’s First Democrats: Decolonizing the Study of Leadership and Democracy View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/199
Convenor and chair
Sarah Radcliffe (University of Cambridge, UK)
1
Africa's First Democrats: Decolonizing the Study of Leadership and Democracy – Abdi Ismail Samatar (University of Minnesota, USA/University of Pretoria, South Africa)
2
Discussant – Joshua Inwood (Pennsylvania State University, USA)
There will be an exhibition of posters in the Main Hall on Thursday 31 August. Poster presenters have been asked to stand by their posters in the tea breaks and in this lunchtime session.
200 ThP | RGS-MH
Posters 2 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/200
1
Biodiversity of Mount Abu Wildlife Sanctuary, Rajasthan, India – Kumar Kartikeya (M.L.V Government College Bhilwara Rajasthan, India)
2
The Dynamics Response of The of Betula ermanii Population and Climate Change on Different Slopes Aspect of North Slope㸪 㸪Changbai Mountains – Huiqing Liu (Northeast Normal University, China)
3
When meanings change and monuments stay: reframing the narrative of the “Monument to the Fallen Miners” – Daniel Zwangsleitner (Polytechnic University of Turin, Italy), Chiara Basile (Polytechnic University of Turin, Italy / Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium)
4
Disappearing into Night – David Kendall (Goldsmiths, University of London, UK)
5
Todgarh Raoli Wildlife Sanctuary, Rajasthan, India: A Socio-Ecological Dilemma – Vijay Kumar Loyal (M.L.V. Government College Bhilwara, India)
6
The Dynamics Response of The of Betula ermanii Population and Climate Change on Different Slopes Aspect of North SlopeChangbai Mountains – Huiqing Liu (Northeast Normal University, China)
7
Todgarh Raoli Wildlife Sanctuary, Rajasthan, India: A Socio-Ecological Dilemma – Vijay Kumar Loyal (M.L.V. Government College Bhilwara, India)
ThP | RGS-CR
Transport Geography Research Group AGM
ThP | RGS-LR
Race, Culture and Equality Working Group AGM
ThP | RGS-SR
Quantitative Methods Research Group AGM
ThP | RGS-DR
Geographies of Health and Wellbeing Research Group AGM
Thurs
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
201 ThP | RGS-TR
Evening 18:45–
Continuing the Conversation on Mental Health in the British Academy
Convenors and chairs
Linda Peake (York University, Canada), Maddy Thompson (Newcastle University, UK)
ThP | SAF-119
Higher Education Research Groups AGM
ThP | SAF-120
Gender and Feminist Geographies Research Group AGM
ThP | SAF-121
Geography of Leisure and Tourism Research Group AGM
ThP | SAF-122
Coastal and Marine Research Group AGM
Lunch will be served in the Main Hall and Marquee at the RGS-IBG. You will find a ticket for lunch in your name badge. If you have requested a special diet, please go to the Marquee. Please help us with recycling by separating food waste and not contaminating the recycling bins. Please come to the Registration Desk if you have questions and/or there are any problems.
The End of Development
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Also availble in ebook and hardback ‘An ambitious and engaging book, challenging readers to go beyond simple depictions of development success or failure to examine how colonialism and capitalism are implicated in current global economic and social inequalities, and to consider alternative futures.’ - Katie Willis, Royal Holloway, Uni. of London
Thurs
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
202
Evening 18:45–
Th3 | RGS-OT
Dialogues in Human Geography plenary forum: The Whereabouts of Climate Politics: navigating climate’s human geographies View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/202
Convenors
Rob Kitchin (National University of Ireland, Maynooth, Ireland)
Chair
Ayona Datta (King’s College London, UK)
1
The Whereabouts of Climate Politics: navigating climate’s human geographies – Harriet Bulkeley (Durham University, UK), Robyn Dowling (University of Sydney, Australia), Andrew Jones (City University of London, UK), Heather Lovell (University of Tasmania, Australia), Matthew Paterson (The University of Manchester, UK)
203 Th3 | RGS-EC
Decolonising institutional arrangements: insights from the arts, education, and policy (1) See also: 235 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/203
Affiliation
Area, RACE
Convenors
Margaret Byron (University of Leicester, UK), James Esson (Loughborough University, UK), Anja Kanngieser (University of Wollongong, Australia), Peter Kraftl, Patricia Noxolo (University of Birmingham, UK)
Chair
Patricia Noxolo (University of Birmingham, UK)
1
The 2017 RGS-IBG chair’s theme: decolonising geographical knowledges, or reproducing coloniality? – Margaret Byron (University of Leicester, UK), Patricia Daley (University of Oxford, UK), James Esson (Loughborough University, UK), Patricia Noxolo (University of Birmingham, UK)
2
Geography in UK Higher Education – Vandana Desai (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
3
Geography in UK Primary/Secondary Education – Hafsa Garcia (University College London, UK)
4
Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) – Swetavalli Raghavan (King’s College London, UK)
5
Museums and Archives 1 – William Tantam, Adom Philogene Heron (School of Advanced Study, University of London, UK)
6
Museums and Archives 2 – Carol Dixon (University of Sheffield, UK)
7
Culture, Media and the Arts 2 – Claudine Booth (Institute of Black Culture, Media and Sport)
8
Dual identities, different worlds: reflections from a British Asian geographer with Cerebral Palsy – Amita Bhakta (Loughborough University, UK)
9
Art and Activism – Femi Nylander (Artist-Activist)
10
Policy-Making/Law – David Neita (Society of Black Lawyers)
Thurs
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
204
Evening 18:45–
Th3 | RGS-CR
Visualising the Conserved Anthropocene (1) See also: 236 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/204
Affiliation
PGF
Convenors and chairs
Philip Nicholson, Daisy Sutcliffe (University of Glasgow, UK)
1
Kin-servation: Revisualising conservation in the anthropocene – Daisy Sutcliffe (University of Glasgow, UK)
2
Creative Geovisualisation and the Anthropocene – Philip Nicholson (University of Glasgow, UK)
3
Visualising the human in rewilding landscapes – Nadia Bartolini, Caitlin DeSilvey (University of Exeter, UK)
4
You’re Gonna Lose that Work, Exploring the landscape of absence in experience driven artworks – Sophie Kromholz (Independent Researcher)
5
Research On Heritage Values Description of World Heritage Site Wudang Mountains Via Landscape Character Identification – Ye Zhao (Huazhong Agricultural University, China)
205 Th3 | RGS-LR Chair
Vulnerable spaces View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/205 Claire Thompson (London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, UK)
1
Exploring common mental illness as a driver of internal migration in Great Britain – Sam Wilding, David Martin, Graham Moon (University of Southampton, UK)
2
“We shouldn’t need to be here”: the perceived social goods and ills of foodbanks and food aid in London’s changing welfare landscape – Claire Thompson (London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, UK), Dianna Smith (University of Southampton, UK), Steven Cummins (London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, UK)
3
"Energy Research in Social Housing: Methodological Considerations – Graeme Sherriff (University of Salford, UK)
4
Health risk and resilience in Nigeria: a postcolonial perspective – Mildred Oiza Ajebon (Durham University, UK)
5
How do they cope? The differential impact of the Economic Recession on the Mental Health of the UK – Gareth Griffith, Kelvyn Jones (University of Bristol, UK)
206 Th3 | RGS-SR
The role of expert knowledge in socio-environmental policy and decision making (1) See also: 238 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/206
Affiliation
PERG
Convenors
Iain Cross (St Mary's University, UK), Alina Congreve (Climate KIC), Sophie Elsmore (London South Bank University, UK), Mark Addis (St Mary's University, UK)
Chairs
Iain Cross (St Mary's University, UK), Sophie Elsmore (London South Bank University, UK)
Thurs
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
Evening
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
18:45–
1
Tacit planning: transferring practitioner know-how into contemporary practice – Kevin Muldoon-Smith, David McGuinness (Northumbria University, UK)
2
Housing market experts: a review of planned, continuous and non-linear interventions – Thomas Oliver (Catalyst Housing Limited, UK)
3
Tacit and explicit knowledge in construction management – Mark Addis (St Mary's University, UK)
4
Are we all experts now? – Michael Taster (The University of Sheffield, UK)
207 Th3 | RGS-DR
Decolonising ICT4D - Digital for development : Critiques and Reimaginings (3): Decentering Knowledge Production? See also: 137, 171 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/207
Affiliation
DGWG
Convenors
Julia Verne (University of Bonn, Germany), Dorothea Kleine (University of Sheffield, UK)
Chair
Dorothea Kleine (University of Sheffield, UK)
1
“Made in Africa, for Africa” - How to perform Silicon Valley’s imaginary of technological innovation in Nairobi – Alev Coban (Goethe University Frankfurt, Germany)
2
Decolonising the Information Systems Curriculum - A contrapuntal postcolonial theory approach – Pitso Tsibolane, Irwin Brown (University of Cape Town, South Africa)
3
Towards a Transformative Teaching Discourse: The State of Education in Postcolonial South Africa – Gwamada Mwalemba, Pitso Tsibolane (University of Cape Town, South Africa)
4
Decolonising ICT4D - Discussion – Julia Verne (University of Bonn, Germany)
208 Th3 | SAF-G34
It started raining: Screening and discussing a film about the fight for housing in Bucharest, Romania (1) See also: 240 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/208
Convenors
Melissa Fernández Arrigoitia (Lancaster University, UK), Alex Vasudevan (University of Oxford, UK), Michele Lancione (Cardiff University, UK)
Chair
Melissa Fernández Arrigoitia (Lancaster University, UK)
1
Introduction - Melissa Fernández Arrigoitia – Melissa Fernández Arrigoitia (Lancaster University, UK)
2
Introduction - Michele Lancione – Michele Lancione (Cardiff University, UK)
3
A început ploaia. O poveste a retrocedarilor (It started raining. Fighiting for housing in Bucharest) – Michele Lancione (Cardiff University, UK)
Thurs
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
209 Th3 | SAF-119
Evening 18:45–
Health in the buffer zone of EU View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/209
Affiliation
GHWRG
Convenor and chair
Izabella Lecka (University of Warsaw, Poland)
1
Medical, health and wellbeing geography in Poland versus West European experience – Izabella Lecka (University of Warsaw, Poland)
2
Medical, health and wellbeing geography in Ukraine versus West European experience – Victoriya Pantyley (University in Lublin, Poland), Lubov Shevchuk (Lviv Institute for Business and Law, Ukraine)
3
Factors of life expectancy dynamics in Belarus – Liudmila Tsikhanava, Liudmila Fakeyeva (Belarusian State University, Belarus)
4
Barriers to implementation of the EU HIV/AIDS Action Plan in the EU and neighbouring countries – Eva Pilot, Megan Davis, Thomas Krafft (Maastricht University, The Netherlands)
210 Th3 | SAF-120
Anti-Colonialism and the Spaces of Political Negotiation (1): Event Spaces See also: 242 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/210
Affiliation
HGRG, PolGRG
Convenors
Jake Hodder, Stephen Legg (University of Nottingham, UK)
Chair
Alan Lester (University of Sussex, UK)
1
The Limits of International Socialism: India at the International Socialist Congresses, 19041917 – Ole Birk Laursen (Open University, UK)
2
“Official” space and the anticolonial imaginary – Gerry Kearns (National University of Ireland, Maynooth, Ireland)
3
The Pan-African Congress Reconsidered – Jake Hodder (University of Nottingham, UK)
4
Negotiating Interwar London: Moderately Political Spaces outside of the Round Table Conferences – Stephen Legg (University of Nottingham, UK)
211 Th3 | SAF-121
Refractions of the State: Viewing Governance through the Lens of Major Infrastructure Projects View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/211
Convenor and chair
Ariell Ahearn (University of Oxford, UK)
1
Refractions on the blue spectrum: big dam construction in Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan – Jeanne Féaux de la Croix (Eberhard Karls Universität Tübingen, Germany)
2
Knowing the State Through the Subsoil: The State Under Surveillance at the Tavan Tolgoi Coal Mine – Lauren Bonilla (University College London, UK)
3
(Dis)integrations? Mega Projects and State Fragility in the Gobi and Baluchistan – Ariell Ahearn (University of Oxford, UK)
Thurs
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
Evening 18:45–
4
Dispossession by 'rehabilitation'. The case of Polavaram dam in South India – Dalel Benbabaali (University of Oxford, UK)
5
Discussant – Andrew Barry (University College London, UK)
212 Th3 | SAF-122
Coastal Resilience across boundaries and disciplines (2) See also: 111 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/212
Affiliation
CMRG
Convenor and chair
Emma McKinley (Cardiff University, UK)
1
Art, Resilience and Porosity in the Coastal Zone – Simon Read (Middlesex University, UK)
2
Assessment of the susceptibility of the coast of Ikaria Island (Aegeran Sea, Greece) to sea-level rise and land use implications – Athanasios Skentos (Mott Macdonald Group / National & Kapodistrian University of Athens, Greece), Ourania Anagnostopoulou (National & Kapodistrian University of Athens, Greece)
3
Coastal Governance and the role of Coastal Partnerships in the UK: supporting resilience in coastal communities? – Natasha Barker Bradshaw (University of the West of England, UK), Tim Stojanovic (University of St Andrews, UK)
4
RESILCOAST: Ecosystem Services, Governance and Resilience of Welsh coastal Marshes – Emma McKinley (Cardiff University, UK)
213 Th3 | SKE-060a Chair
Geographies of disaster, risk and fragility View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/213 Gemma Sou (University of Manchester, UK)
1
Using spatial analysis to trace system dynamics: applications concerning a seismic sequence in Central Italy – Cristian Suteanu (Saint Mary's University, Halifax, Canada), Luisa Liucci, Laura Melelli (University of Perugia, Italy)
2
'The safest place on Earth': The Hazard Exposure of the Maltese Islands – Geoff Main (Liverpool Hope University, UK), John Schembri, Ritienne Gauci (University of Malta, Malta), Kevin Crawford, David Chester, Angus Duncan (University of Liverpool, UK)
3
Historical weather extremes and transport infrastructure in the UK – Marie-Jeanne Royer (Université de Montréal, Canada)
4
The social dimensions of disasters in mountainous and rural areas – Angelo J. Imperiale (University of Groningen, The Netherlands)
214 Th3 | SKE-060b
Urban growth and development (2) See also: 145 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/214
Chair
Nina Laurie (University of St Andrews, UK)
1
Urban leisure and tourism-led redevelopment frontiers in central Cape Town (South Africa) since the 1990s – Gustav Visser (Stellenbosch University, South Africa)
Thurs
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
Evening 18:45–
2
Climate Human: Urban climate experiments and resilience in the age of Anthropocene – Erwin Nugraha (Durham University, UK)
3
Recycling urban spaces in the post-socialist context: establishing a new actor-network – Jiří Malý (Institute of Geonics of the CAS, Czech Republic)
4
Territorial identity as an engine of urban spatial transformation in post-soviet cities: the case-study of Zaporizhia-city (Ukraine) – Mariia Rastvorova (Taras Shevhenko University of Kyiv, Ukraine)
5
Information and communication technologies and urban planning: the promise of the smart cities – Fu Kei Lin, Flavia Feitosa (Federal University of ABC, Brazil)
6
Hsinchu Technopolis: A Sociotechnical Imaginary of Modernity in Taiwan? – Jinn yuh Hsu (National Taiwan University, Taiwan)
215 Th3 | SKE-064a
Que(e)rying Gender, Tourism and Mobilities (1) See also: 247 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/215
Affiliation
GFGRG, GLTRG
Convenors
Caroline Scarles (University of Surrey, UK), Claudia Eger (University of Warwick, UK), Heather Jeffrey (University of Bedfordshire, UK), Eveleigh Buck-Matthews (Coventry University, UK), Jaeyeon Choe (Bournemouth University, UK)
Chair
Erin Sanders-McDonagh (Middlesex University, UK)
1
Making Bodies speak: voices of embodied practices in LGBTQ tourism – Yo-Hsin Yang (Durham University, UK)
2
‘Can you accom?’: the masculine and sexual politics of hosting Grindr hook-ups – Carl Bonner-Thompson (Newcastle University, UK)
3
Gender, Sexuality and the Homestay Industry – Charlotte Bolton (Loughborough University, UK)
4
A feminist affirmative critique of volunteer tourism studies, affect and social transformation – Chih-Chen Trista Lin (Wageningen University, The Netherlands)
5
Queering the Pedestrian Street: Displays, Challenges, Freedoms and Consumption. A Comparison Between NYC, Barcelona and Istanbul – Fahad Alhammadi (Durham University, UK)
216 Th3 | SKE-064b
Everyday nation and complexity (1) See also: 248 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/216
Convenors
Marta Bivand Erdal, Mette Strømsø (Peace Research Institute Oslo, Norway), Tatiana Fogelman (Roskilde University, Denmark), Marco Antonsich (Loughborough University, UK)
Chair
Marta Bivand Erdal (Peace Research Institute Oslo, Norway)
1
Communal politics and religious difference in Denmark – Tatiana Fogelman, Thomas Thies Nielsen (Roskilde University, Denmark)
Thurs
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
Evening 18:45–
2
Coming together in Glasgow: Everyday spaces of encounter and constructions of community and nationhood in contemporary Scotland – Hannah Melike Peterson (University of Glasgow, UK)
3
The meaning and significance of nation in everyday suburban encounters – Amy Clarke (University of Sussex, UK)
4
Blurring the boundaries of nationhood: A (mis)match between perceptions and everyday experiences – Mette Strømsø (Peace Research Institute Oslo, Norway)
217 Th3 | SKE-163
Between Geographic Knowledge and Experience View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/217
Convenors
Doron Avraham (Bar Ilan University, Israel), Guy Miron, Nurit Kirsh (Open University of Israel, Israel)
Chair
Guy Miron (Open University of Israel, Israel)
1
German Jews and Colonialism: The Practices of Geographic Knowledge Dissemination – Doron Avraham (Bar Ilan University, Israel)
2
Recreating space under exclusion: The spatial experience of German Jews under the Nazi regime – Guy Miron (Open University of Israel, Israel)
3
Mediterranean Landscapes in the Scientific Eye of German Jews – Nurit Kirsh (Open University of Israel, Israel)
218 Th3 | SKE-164
Economic Geography, Journal of Economic Geography, and Environment and Planning A – Advancing global production networks research: progress and prospects (5): Global production networks: nature, resources, environment See also: 85, 116, 150, 183, 250 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/218
Affiliation
EGRG
Convenors
Neil M. Coe, Henry Yeung (National University of Singapore, Singapore)
Chair
Henry Yeung (National University of Singapore, Singapore)
1
Re-thinking Corporate Influence in Global Production Networks through the Challenge of Antimicrobial Resistance in the Meat Sector – Alex Hughes (Newcastle University, UK), Emma Roe, Neil Wrigley, Michelle Lowe, Bill Keevil (University of Southampton, UK)
2
Shifting resource-based GPNs: the role of environmental crises in configuring geographies of production, the case of the global salmon industry facing the Chilean ISA crisis – Felipe Irarrazaval (University of Manchester, UK), Beatriz Bustos (University of Chile, Chile)
3
Fairtrade and beyond: the implications of stakeholders moving away from third-party oversight in cocoa sustainability production networks – Judith Krauss, Stephanie Barrientos (University of Manchester, UK)
4
“Re-environmentalization”: Integrating environmental dimensions into embeddedness in GPNs through the case of Kenyan horticulture farmers – Aarti Krishnan (University of Manchester, UK)
Thurs 5
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
Evening 18:45–
Global Production Networks (GPN) and the Circular Economy (CE): Linking the Global and Local? – Geir Orderud, Knut Onsager, Steinar Johansen (Institute for Urban and Regional Research, Oslo, Norway)
219 Th3 | SKE-201
Brexit and the Future of Agriculture, Food and Rural Society (3): Panel Discussion See also: 151, 184 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/219
Affiliation
RGRG, FGWG
Convenors
Gareth Enticott (Cardiff University, UK), Damian Maye (University of Gloucestershire, UK)
Chair
Gareth Enticott (Cardiff University, UK)
1
Panel Discussion: Brexit and the Future of Agriculture, Food and Rural Society – Paul Milbourne (Cardiff University, UK), Michael Woods (Aberystwyth University, UK), Jo Little (University of Exeter, UK), Clive Potter (Imperial College London, UK)
220 Th3 | SKE-207
Everyday Mobilities and Climatic Events View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/220
Affiliation
TGRG
Convenors
Anna Plyushteva (Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium), Nihan Akyelken, Tim Schwanen (University of Oxford, UK)
Chair
Tim Schwanen (University of Oxford, UK)
1
Everyday mobility, gender and household dynamics in an era of climate variability and change: building a research agenda around the changing mobility needs of vulnerable populations in rural Africa – Gina Porter (Durham University, UK)
2
Dead animals, frozen grass and people on the move: neoliberal encompassment and abandonment in Mongolia – Kiril Sharapov (Edinburgh Napier University, UK)
3
Tracing floodwater through the everyday urban circulations of Malate, Manila – Anna Plyushteva (Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium), Tim Schwanen (University of Oxford, UK)
4
Gender, poverty and climate change: the case of Leveriza, Manila – Nihan Akyelken (University of Oxford, UK)
5
Seeing climate migration through a mobilities lens: translocalism, journeying and everyday life – Alex Arnall (University of Reading, UK)
221 Th3 | SKE-307
What is rural? Ensuring a fair deal for rural communities (1): The digital challenge See also: 253 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/221
Affiliation
RGRG
Convenors
Sonja Rewhorn (University of Chester, UK), Keith Halfacree (Swansea University, UK), Megan Palmer-Abbs (University of Aberdeen, UK), Fiona Williams (University of Chester, UK)
Thurs
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
Chair
Evening 18:45–
Keith Halfacree (Swansea University, UK)
1
Mind the gap: reflecting on UK broadband and digital-only services policy and remote rural practice – Fiona Williams (University of Chester, UK), Lorna Philip (University of Aberdeen, UK)
2
Conveying the story of rural digital access and inequity: reframing concepts of digital access in the rural – Megan Palmer-Abbs (University of Aberdeen, UK)
3
Noiva do Cordeiro: can the internet foster disruptive socio-spatial practices? – Lorena Melgaço (University of Birmingham, UK)
4
When creativity meets policy - shaping the rural with the help of cultural constructs – Raili Nugin (Tallinn University, Estonia)
222 Th3 | SHE-RD
Contesting Smart Cities (1) See also: 254 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/222
Convenors
Aoife Delaney, Caspar Menkman (National University of Ireland, Maynooth, Ireland)
Chair
Caspar Menkman (National University of Ireland, Maynooth, Ireland)
1
The Concepts of Urban Sustainable Development and Smart Cities - In the understanding of Academia and the European Union – Wolfgang Haupt (Gran Sasso Science Institute, Italy)
2
Following Smart Cities in the Making: stories from the Milton Keynes Data Hub – Nick Bingham, Alan-Miguel Valdez (Open University, UK)
3
What the smart city model can learn from Latin American cities - The case of Medellin, Columbia – Gynna Millan (Queen Mary University of London, UK)
4
'Smartening up' the secondary city in (South) Africa: Tracing the outlines of an emerging research agenda – Rushil Ranchod (University of Bath, UK)
223 Th3 | SHE-PIP
Historical Geographies of Mobility and Knowledge (1) See also: 255 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/223
Affiliation
HPGRG, PopGRG
Convenors
Dean Bond, Heike Jöns (Loughborough University, UK)
Chair
Dean Bond (Loughborough University, UK)
1
The many translations of Alexander von Humboldt’s Cosmos: a case study of the circulation and transformation of scientific knowledge in the 19th century – Laura Peaud (University Grenoble Alpes, France)
2
Hidden and unrecognized knowledge on Tibet: the British Library’s Wise Collection – Diana Lange (Humboldt University of Berlin, Germany)
3
The mobility of Pacific geographic knowledge via translation in the mid-eighteenth century – Katherine Parker (Hakluyt Society)
4
Circulating referees: geographical knowledge and local administration under indirect rule – Elizabeth Haines (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
Thurs 5
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
Evening 18:45–
“Out there” and “in here”: the developing spaces of antiquarian fieldwork in Scotland – Richard Sobolewski (University of Edinburgh, UK)
224 Th3 | SALC-1
Fieldwork Experiences of Decolonising Geographical Knowledges View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/224
Affiliation
PGF
Convenors
Tim Fewtrell (Loughborough University, UK), Daniel Casey (University of Sheffield, UK)
Chair
Raksha Pande (Newcastle University, UK)
1
Emerging positionalities at the Asylum Seekers’ Residence Centre – Clemens Bernardt, Bettina van Hoven, Paulus Huigen (University of Groningen, The Netherlands)
2
Academic Scholar, Woman and Mestiza: Challenges, obstacles and advantages of doing research in the Afro-Geographies of the Colombian Caribbean – Ana Laura Zavala Guillen (University of Sheffield, UK)
3
Being an insider researcher within Eurovision Song Contest fandom: Challenges within online and offline spaces – Jamie Halliwell (Manchester Metropolitan University, UK)
4
Knowledge is power: interviewing as an outsider – Roeland Hemsteede (University of Dundee, UK)
5
“The streets are messy but I love them” – Morag Rose (University of Sheffield, UK)
6
Orientalism in one city? On doing ethnography in Naples – Mario Trifuoggi (Goldsmiths, University of London, UK)
225 Th3 | SALC-2
Financialisation in the Global South (1): Emerging Economies and Regions See also: 257 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/225
Affiliation
EGRG
Convenors
Gary A. Dymski (University of Leeds, UK), Ewa Karwowski (Kingston University, UK)
Chair
Gary A. Dymski (University of Leeds, UK)
1
Financialization at the International Level and Exchange Rates of Emerging Market Economies – Raquel Ramos (Université Paris Nord, France)
2
Peripheral Financialization: Extractivism and New Dependency in Mexico and Brazil – Nadine Reis (University of Bonn, Germany), Daniela Andrade (Erasmus University Rotterdam, The Netherlands)
3
The Space-Finance Nexus: The Significance of Large Cash Holdings Among JSE-Listed Firms – Gary A. Dymski (University of Leeds, UK), Ewa Karwowski (Kingston University, UK), Pedro Mendes Loureiro (SOAS, University of London, UK)
4
Financial Inclusion and Financialization: Mexico’ main trends after NAFTA – Eugenia Correa (University of Namibia, Namibia), Laura Vidal, Alfredo Delgado (Mexico National University, Mexico)
Thurs
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
226
Evening 18:45–
Th3 | SALC-5
Putting Transport on the Map: Advancements in Mapping and Visualising Sustainable Transport Systems (3): Workshop: Building and using participatory maps for transport planning See also: 158, 191 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/226
Affiliation
TGRG, GIScRG
Convenors and chairs
Robin Lovelace (University of Leeds, UK), Craig Morton (University of Leeds, UK)
227
Destabilising Knowledges of Refugee Reception, Settlement and Integration (3) See also: 159, 192 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/227
Th3 | SALC-6
Convenors and chairs
Erica Pani (Queen Mary University of London, UK), Martina Manara (London School of Economics and Political Science, UK)
1
Precarious Lives: Syrian Refugees in Non-Traditional Destinations – Lauren Fritzsche (Pennsylvania State University, USA)
2
An Alternative Is Possible Accoglienza Diffusa as a New Asylum Seekers Reception Model – Caterina Mazzilli (University of Sussex, UK), Antonios Alexandridis (Vrije Universiteit, The Netherlands)
3
Interrogating Urban Refugees Spatialities – The case of Palermo – Kolade Akiyode, Federico Wulff Barreiro (Cardiff University, UK)
228 Th3 | SALC-7
Teaching Mobilities: Practice, Pedagogies, Power (1) See also: 260 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/228
Convenors
Peter Adey (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK), Justin Spinney (Cardiff University, UK), Simon Cook (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
Chair
Simon Cook (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
1
Introduction to Teaching Mobilities – Peter Adey (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK), Justin Spinney (Cardiff University, UK), Simon Cook (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
2
Framing mobilities: negotiating the classroom from everyday mobilities to exodus – Lars Frers (University College of Southeast Norway, Norway)
3
Mobile pedagogies: learning about places while on the move – Mark Holton, Nichola Harmer, Rebecca Vickerstaff (Plymouth University, UK)
4
Teaching Mobilities: Lessons, Experiments and Opportunities in Pedagogy – Weiqiang Lin (University of Toronto, Canada / National University of Singapore, Singapore)
5
A one-week seminar on walking for students of architecture and civil engineering – Dominique Vondermuehll, Derek Christie (École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, Switzerland), Emmanuel Ravalet (EPFL, Switzerland)
Thurs
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
229 Th3 | SALC-8
Evening 18:45–
More-than-human geographies of empathy (3): empathy in future ecologies See also: 161, 194 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/229
Convenors
Megan Donald (University of Glasgow, UK), Richard Gorman, Christopher Bear (Cardiff University, UK)
Chair
Christopher Bear (Cardiff University, UK)
1
Feeling environmental impact: more-than-human empathy in the ebb and flood – Aurora Fredriksen (University of Manchester, UK)
2
No-Empathy Zone. Warfare Logic in Urban Rat Control Schemes – Gabriela Jarzebowska (Warsaw University, Poland)
3
Practices of more-than-human empathy: Learning from attempts to share space with protected species – Katrina Brown (James Hutton Institute, UK)
4
Why we can’t just make like a tree and leaf. Or, the difficulty of empathetic relations with plants – Hannah Pitt (Cardiff University, UK)
5
Embodied Inter-Species Encounters: Urgent Interactions Between Hikers and Black Bears – Kate Marx (University of Exeter, UK)
230 Th3 | SALC-9
New and Emerging Rural Researchers View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/230
Affiliation
RGRG
Convenors and chairs
Hannah Brooking (University of Leicester, UK), Andrew Maclaren (University of Aberdeen, UK)
1
Global challenges and everyday lives in rural Wales – Fidel Budy (Aberystwyth University, UK)
2
Rural Geographies of Deprivation: Exploring the Limitations of Area-based Indices – David Clelland (University of Glasgow, UK)
3
The Water Commons, (Post)politics, and the Politics of “Shared Giving” in Montana, USA – Matthew B Anderson (Eastern Washington University, USA), Lucas Ward (Rocky Mountain College, USA), Jamie Mcevoy, Susan J Gilbertz (Montana State University-Billings, USA), Damon Hall (Saint Louis University, USA)
4
Public Access to Woodland in North East Derbyshire - England – Vivyan Lisewski-Hobson (University of Nottingham, UK)
5
Farm shop websites: Reinforcing identity and consumption experience beyond the farm gate – Robert Geary-Griffin (University of Leicester, UK)
231 Th3 | HUX-340
Politics of the Everyday in Urban Transformations in China (2): Energy, water, food See also: 196, 263 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/231
Affiliation
EnGRG
Convenors
Alison Browne, Harriet Larrington-Spencer, Saska Petrova (University of Manchester, UK)
Thurs
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
Evening
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
Chair
18:45–
Saska Petrova (University of Manchester, UK)
1
Which subject? Considering the governmentality practices of alternative food communities in urban China – Franziska Fröhlich (University of Würzburg, Germany)
2
Everyday politics in the process of water management on an “eco-island”, Chongming – Ran Feng (KU Leuven, Belgium)
3
DeOthering through autoethnography: Reflecting on intimate practices consuming water and energy in China – Harriet Larrington-Spencer (University of Manchester, UK)
4
“What can we do?!”: Everyday resilience of residents in the petrochemical cities of Nanjing and Anqing – Xinhong Wang (University of Warwick, UK)
5
Unpacking water-energy vulnerabilities in urban China: scale, power and practices – Saska Petrova, Alison Browne (University of Manchester, UK)
232 Th3 | HUX-341
Learning from the South: Applying Social Theory & Practices in both the North and South View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/232
Convenor and chair
Peter M. Ward (University of Texas at Austin, USA)
1
From América Latina to Latin London: the complex geographies of international migration – Cathy McIlwaine (Queen Mary University of London, UK)
2
Packaging Inequality: slums, resilience and pedagogy – Gareth Jones (The London School of Economics and Political Science, UK)
3
Informal Housing and Self-Help in Texas and the US: Learning from Latin America -- Past and Present – Peter M. Ward (University of Texas at Austin, USA)
233 Th3 | HUX-342
A geography of small things: geographies of architecture beyond the high rise (1) See also: 265 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/233
Affiliation
SCGRG
Convenors
Rachel Hunt, Julia Heslop (Durham University, UK)
Chair
Julia Heslop (Durham University, UK)
1
Small things: the geography of vernacular architecture – Rachel Hunt (Durham University, UK)
2
The Highlands and Islands Film Guild, and the role of the ‘wee cinema’ in rural communities, 1947-71 – Ealasaid Munro, Ian Goode (University of Glasgow, UK)
3
Inhabiting the miniature: rethinking scalar imaginaries through the architecture and interiority of dollhouses – Tara Woodyer (University of Portsmouth, UK)
4
Floating Courts and Vows On board: Ship Geographies and Government Reach – Elizabeth Alexander (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
5
Co-constructing (A Sense of) Home: Cellars, Attics and Other Storage Spaces – Alex Miller (University of Leeds, UK)
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Thurs
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
234
Evening 18:45–
Th4 | RGS-OT
The Brian Hoyle Annual Lecture in Transport Geography: Human Mobility, Individual Context, and Environmental Exposure: A Spatiotemporal Perspective View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/234
Affiliation
TGRG
Convenor
Kate Pangbourne (University of Leeds, UK)
Chair
Karen Lucas (University of Leeds, UK)
1
Human Mobility, Individual Context, and Environmental Exposure: A Spatiotemporal Perspective – Mei-Po Kwan (University of Illinois, USA)
235 Th4 | RGS-EC
Decolonising institutional arrangements: insights from the arts, education, and policy (2) See also: 203 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/235
Affiliation
Area, RACE
Convenors
Margaret Byron (University of Leicester, UK), James Esson (Loughborough University, UK), Anja Kanngieser (University of Wollongong, Australia), Peter Kraftl, Patricia Noxolo (University of Birmingham, UK)
Chair
Margaret Byron (University of Leicester, UK)
1
Workshop Theme 1: Education and Science – Swetavalli Raghavan (King’s College London, UK)
2
Workshop Theme 2: The Media and the Arts – Claudine Booth (Institute of Black Culture, Media and Sport)
3
Workshop Theme 3: Museums and Archives – Carol Dixon (The University of Sheffield, UK)
4
Workshop Theme 4: Policy/Law – David Neita (Society of Black Lawyers)
236 Th4 | RGS-CR
Visualising the Conserved Anthropocene (2) See also: 204 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/236
Affiliation
PGF
Convenors and chairs
Philip Nicholson (University of Glasgow, UK), Daisy Sutcliffe (University of Glasgow, UK)
1
Applying Creative Writing to Aid Visualisation – An Experimental, Whole Art Aproach – Winston Plowes (Independent)
2
Art and climate science in the anthropocene: an artistic collaboration with palaeo-climate geography – Lionel Playford (Northumbria University, UK)
3
The Jurassic Longcase Clock: Artistic exploration in the Anthropocene – Lorna Rees (Gobbledegook Theatre)
Thurs 4
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
Evening 18:45–
Panel Discussion – Daisy Sutcliffe, Philip Nicholson (University of Glasgow, UK), Nadia Bartolini (University of Exeter, UK), Sophie Kromholz (Independent Researcher), Ye Zhao (Huazhong Agricultural University, China), Winston Plowes (Independent), Lionel Playford (Northumbria University, UK), Lorna Rees (Gobbledegook Theatre)
237 Th4 | RGS-LR
Making Injustice visible: cross-disciplinary representational techniques and processes of Spatial & Environmental Injustice and Environmental Conflicts View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/237
Affiliation
GJRG
Convenors and chairs
Chiara Certomà (Ghent University, Belgium), Federico Martellozzo (University of Rome, Italy)
1
Injustice for whom? Spatial justices and the idea of development – Jukka Keski-Filppula (University of Oulu, Finland)
2
Negotiating "Creata" between the imperial space time and vulnerable places – Eija Merilainen (Hanken School of Economics, Finland)
3
Spatial Inequalities and Urban Form in Mexican Cities – Ruben Garnica-Monroy (Tecnologico de Monterrey, Mexico), Seraphim Alvanides (Northumbria University, UK)
4
Environmental conflicts in the new Chilean forest landscape: a political ecology approach – Enrique Aliste (University of Chile, Chile)
5
Can the globally emerging movement of political gardening work as a correction mechanism for spatial injustice in the city? – Chiara Certomà (Ghent University, Belgium), Federico Martellozzo (University of Rome, Italy)
238 Th4 | RGS-SR
The role of expert knowledge in socio-environmental policy and decision making (2) See also: 206 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/238
Affiliation
PERG
Convenors
Iain Cross (St Mary's University, UK), Alina Congreve (Climate KIC), Sophie Elsmore (London South Bank University, UK), Mark Addis (St Mary's University, UK)
Chair
Alina Congreve (Climate KIC), Mark Addis (St Mary's University, UK)
1
The potential of citizen science to inform expert understanding: a case study of an urban river in London – Iain Cross (St Mary's University, UK), Rob Gray (Friends of the River Crane Environment), Joe Pecorelli (Zoological Society of London, UK), Richard Haine (Frog Environmental, UK)
2
The role of expert knowledge in decision making on climate change: insights from two case studies – Candice Howarth (CECAN, University of Surrey, UK)
3
Expert and Experiential Knowledge in Pollinator Policy: The Perspectives of Beekeepers – Siobhan Maderson (Aberystwyth University, UK)
4
Expert knowledge and local responses to climate change in the Czech Republic – Slavomíra Ferenčuhová (Masaryk University, Czech Republic)
Thurs 5
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
Evening 18:45–
Between public management and private companies: circuits of the knowledge about slum upgrading and socio-environmental policies in São Paulo (Brazil) – Magaly Marques Pulhez (University of Sao Paulo, Brazil), Luciana Ferrara (Federal University of ABC, Brazil)
239 Th4 | RGS-DR Chair(s)
Geographies of development: positions and critiques View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/239 Emma Mawdsley (University of Cambridge, UK)
1
Global Consultants in the Global South. Expertise, Ideology and Development Aid – Malve Jacobsen (Goethe University Frankfurt, Germany)
2
When Decolonial Ontologies meet Development Policies – Kiran Asher (University of Massachusetts, USA)
3
Gendered knowledges of development: The role of ESRC and DFID research funding in constructing geographical knowledge of the global south – Sarah Bradshaw (Middlesex University, UK)
4
Geography of multiple modernities – Markus Keck (University of Goettingen, Germany)
5
The strength of local level relationships formed between younger volunteers and hosts: New Zealand perspectives on international development volunteering – Sam McLachlan, Tony Binns, Sebastian Filep (University of Otago, New Zealand)
240 Th4 | SAF-G34
It started raining: Screening and discussing a film about the fight for housing in Bucharest, Romania (2) See also: 208 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/240
Convenors
Melissa Fernández Arrigoitia (Lancaster University, UK), Alex Vasudevan (University of Oxford, UK), Michele Lancione (Cardiff University, UK)
Chair
Alex Vasudevan (University of Oxford, UK)
1
Commentary on 'A început ploaia', a film about the fight for housing in Bucharest – Katherine Brickell (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK), Liviu Chelcea (University of Bucharest, Romania), Gillian Rose (The Open University, UK), AbdouMaliq Simone (Max Planck Institute for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity, Germany), Michele Lancione (Cardiff University, UK)
241 Th4 | SAF-119
Sensing and making sense of ‘nature’ in the context of illness and impairment View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/241
Affiliation
GHWRG
Convenors and chairs
Sarah Bell (University of Exeter, UK), Ronan Foley (National University of Ireland, Maynooth, Ireland)
1
Watching and befriending the horse chestnut tree has made the most difference – Joanna Birch, Clare Rishbeth (University of Sheffield, UK), Sarah Payne (Heriot-Watt University, UK), Brendan Stone (University of Sheffield, UK)
2
Exploring young psychotic patients’ spaces of recovery in the city of Lausanne (Switzerland) – Zoé Codeluppi (University of Neuchâtel, Switzerland)
Thurs
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
Evening 18:45–
3
Being bobby, being blobby: Transforming swimming bodies in blue space – Ronan Foley (National University of Ireland, Maynooth, Ireland)
4
“I love it here. I like to sit outside” – The Reigershoeve farm as an example of dementia care – Virve Repo (University of Turku, Finland)
5
An ‘overly green canvas’ or ‘multisensory watercolour’? Reflecting on diverse encounters with nature in the context of visual impairment – Sarah Bell (University of Exeter, UK)
242 Th4 | SAF-120
Anti-Colonialism and the Spaces of Political Negotiation (2): Diplomatic Spaces See also: 210 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/242
Affiliation
HGRG, PolGRG
Convenors
Jake Hodder, Stephen Legg (University of Nottingham, UK)
Chair
Stephen Legg (University of Nottingham, UK)
1
“The Demands of Dutiful Subjects”: Mapping Moderate Calls for Reform from London to Ceylon at the Turn of the 20th Century – Andi Schubert (Social Scientists’ Association, Sri Lanka)
2
The political spaces of the New Commonwealth, 1947-1964 – Michael Ratnapalan (Yonsei University, South Korea)
3
Constructing an anti-colonial Commonwealth through every day diplomacy – Ruth Craggs (King’s College London, UK)
4
Negotiating anti-colonialism: the UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues – Fiona McConnell (University of Oxford, UK)
Th4 | SAF-121
Urban Geography Research Group AGM
243
Marine Social Sciences: New Solutions to old Challenges? View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/243
Th4 | SAF-122 Affiliation
CMRG
Convenors and chairs
Emma McKinley (Cardiff University, UK), Tavis Potts (University of Aberdeen, UK)
1
Marine Social Sciences: New Solutions to old Challenges? – Terence Ilott (Independent), Sarah Young (WWF, UK), Rachel Muckle (Defra, UK), Mel Nicholls (Marine Management Organisation, UK), Estelle Jones (Marine Scotland)
Thurs
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
Evening
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
244 Th4 | SKE-060a Chair
18:45–
Financial geographies: trade, retail and markets View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/244 Jennifer Ferreira (Coventry University, UK)
1
The new cafe society: exploring spaces of possibility – Jennifer Ferreira (Coventry University, UK)
2
Reading Collective Spaces and Structures of Spatial Autonomy in Self-Organized Wealth; Possibilities and Constraints – the case of Onitsha Markets, Nigeria – Vincent Chukwuemeka, Kris Scheerlinck, Yves Schoonjans (KU Leuven, Belgium)
3
Malaysia’s national retail market: from competition to state supported transformation – Alexandra Dales (University of Manchester, UK)
4
Visiting the pedestrian shopping street- a consumer modal choice study – Lena Eskilsson (Lund University, Sweden)
245 Th4 | SKE-060b Chair
Land use and data View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/245 Mark Welford (Georgia Southern University, USA)
1
Remote Sensing and GIS Analysis for the Varied Population Distribution in Eritrea and the reasons behind their distribution – Temesghen Eyassu Sereke (Moscow State University of Geodesy and Cartography, Russia)
2
Managing symmetry in geographical research – Cristian Suteanu (Saint Mary's University, Halifax, Canada)
3
Residential neighbourhood classification using ‘demographic-environmental-socioeconomic’ characteristics: a comparison of place and time – Richard Armitage (University of Salford, UK), Nigel Walford (Kingston University, UK)
246 Th4 | SKE-060c Chair
Geographies of heritage and tourism View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/246 Jo-Anne Lester (University of Brighton, UK)
1
Informal Mode of Educating through Cruise Tourism – Kiran Lata Dangwal (University of Lucknow, India)
2
Investigating the inscription-visitation effect of UNESCO World Heritage Sites: A comparative study of domestic and international climbers at Mount Fuji – Thomas Edward Jones (Meiji University, Japan)
3
Liberating the 1961 Census Small Area Statistics: Statistical Archaeology to create a major addition to the UK’s national digital heritage – Justin Hayes (UK Data Service), Apostolos Antonacopoulos, Christian Clausner (University of Salford, UK), Richard Wiseman (UK Data Service)
4
Recovering the precolumbian and colonial landscape of the Yucatan through a reanalysis of environmental LiDAR – Timothy M. Murtha (Pennsylvania State University, USA)
Thurs
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
247
Evening 18:45–
Th4 | SKE-064a
Que(e)rying Gender, Tourism and Mobilities (2) See also: 215 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/247
Affiliation
GFGRG, GLTRG
Convenors
Caroline Scarles (University of Surrey, UK), Claudia Eger (University of Warwick, UK), Heather Jeffrey (University of Bedfordshire, UK), Eveleigh Buck-Matthews (Coventry University, UK), Jaeyeon Choe (Bournemouth University, UK)
Chair
Erin Sanders-McDonagh (Middlesex University, UK)
1
Gendered (in)equalities in the Douro’s tourism labour market – Luzia Oca, Vera Mendonca, Yousra Makanse (Universidade de Trás-os-Montes e Alto Douro, Portugal)
2
The embodied experience of slow food making in a slow city in southeast Turkey – Anna Elisabeth Kuijpers (University of Zurich, Switzerland)
3
When migrant’s bodies reshape urban spaces and temporality: the case of women migrant domestic workers in Amman – Daphné Caillol (University Paris Diderot, France)
4
Tourism practices of expatriate women in Luxembourg: a heteronormative play leading to social emancipation through Europe exotisation – Karine Duplan (University of Geneva, Switzerland)
248 Th4 | SKE-064b
Everyday nation and complexity (2) See also: 216 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/248
Convenors
Marta Bivand Erdal, Mette Strømsø (Peace Research Institute Oslo, Norway), Tatiana Fogelman (Roskilde University, Denmark), Marco Antonsich (Loughborough University, UK)
Chair(
Mette Strømsø (Peace Research Institute Oslo, Norway)
1
Troubling the nation: exploring the sameness-strangeness divide in the age of migration – Marco Antonsich (Loughborough University, UK)
2
Dealing with borderland complexity. The multisided views of local individuals in the Norwegian-Russian borderland – Brit Lynnebakke (Oslo and Akershus University College, Norway)
3
Encountering the nation in the streetscape: The significance of the past to contemporary collective identity – Danielle Drozdzewski (University of New South Wales, Australia)
4
Employing negotiation as a lens to explore everyday nation and complexity – Marta Bivand Erdal (Peace Research Institute Oslo, Norway)
249 Th4 | SKE-163 Convenors and chairs 1
Towards a post-structuralist political economy View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/249 Nick Lewis, Richard Le Heron (University of Auckland, New Zealand)
Panel Discussion – Nick Lewis, Karen Fisher, Yvonne Underhill-Sem (University of Auckland, New Zealand), Wendy Larner (Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand), Richard Le Heron (University of Auckland, New Zealand)
Thurs
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
250 Th4 | SKE-164
Evening 18:45–
Economic Geography, Journal of Economic Geography, and Environment and Planning A – Advancing global production networks research: progress and prospects (6): Global production networks: labour dimensions See also: 85, 116, 150, 183, 218 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/250
Affiliation
EGRG
Convenors
Neil M. Coe, Henry Yeung (National University of Singapore, Singapore)
Chair
Neil M. Coe (National University of Singapore, Singapore)
1
Firms versus Floors: Interrogating labour's geographical strategies within and beyond global production networks – Jamie Doucette, Martin Hess (University of Manchester, UK)
2
Towards Transnational Collaborative Industrial Relations: Analysing the Evolving Relationships among Lead Firms and Unions in the Global Garment Industry – Chika Oka (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK), Elke Schüßler (Johannes Kepler Universität Linz, Germany), Rachel Alexander, Sarah Ashwin (London School of Economics and Political Science, UK), Nora Lohmeyer (Freie Universität Berlin, Germany)
3
Exploring collaboration and contestation in the development of a multi-stakeholder initiative governing social standards in the global South: the case of the Indian tea industry – Natalie Langford (University of Manchester, UK)
4
The paradox of formalization and informalization in South-North production networks – Peter Dannenberg, Boris Braun (Universität zu Köln, Germany), Elmar Kulke (Humboldt University of Berlin, Germany)
251 Th4 | SKE-201
Digital Power, Decolonising Life: Platforms and Place View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/251
Affiliation
DGWG
Convenors
Clancy Wilmott (University of Manchester, UK), Sam Hind (University of Warwick, UK), Michael Duggan (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
Chair
Sam Hind (University of Warwick, UK)
1
Transmodern subject-positioning; platform navigation – Giancarlo M Sandoval (Birkbeck, University of London, UK)
2
From Psychogeography to Recipricolgeography, a choice to roam – Maryclare Foa (University of the Arts London, UK)
3
e-cards from Palestine: sharing our experience between activism and research – Valentina Carraro (City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong), Amany Khalifa (Grassroots Jerusalem, Occupied Palestinian Territories)
4
Discussants – Clancy Wilmott (University of Manchester, UK), Michael Duggan (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
Thurs
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
252 Th4 | SKE-207
Evening 18:45–
The globally emerging Large Urban Developments (LUDs) and the future of cities View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/252
Convenors
Efrat Eizenberg, Hilla Michowiz Setton, Lihi Matza (Technion - Israel Institute of Technology, Israel)
Chair
Efrat Eizenberg (Technion - Israel Institute of Technology, Israel)
1
The Urban Imaginary and Planetary Urbanisation: Past, Present, and Future – Vladimir Rizov, Will Paterson (University of York, UK)
2
‘If there is no school it is meaningless’: education provision, urban development and young lives – Sophie Hadfield-Hill, Cristiana Zara (University of Birmingham, UK)
3
Contemporary High-Rise Housing Complexes: form, function, use, and the future of cities – Hilla Michowiz Setton, Lihi Matza, Efrat Eizenberg (Technion - Israel Institute of Technology, Israel)
4
Defragmentation of the Urban Fabric: Large urban redevelopments of industrial areas – Lihi Matza, Efrat Eizenberg (Technion - Israel Institute of Technology, Israel)
5
Hegemonic discourses and practices in the context of large urban developments in Luxembourg – Annick Leick (University of Zürich, Switzerland)
253 Th4 | SKE-307
What is rural? Ensuring a fair deal for rural communities (2): Challenging poverty and marginalisation See also: 221 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/253
Affiliation
RGRG
Convenors
Sonja Rewhorn (University of Chester, UK), Keith Halfacree (Swansea University, UK), Megan Palmer-Abbs (University of Aberdeen, UK), Fiona Williams (University of Chester, UK)
Chair
Sonja Rewhorn (University of Chester, UK)
1
Contested rural voices: EU8 migrants as silent actors in the English countryside – Paulina Mackrell, Simon Pemberton (Keele University, UK)
2
Poverty in the Green Heart of Wales: a case study of multiple deprivation in Powys, Wales – Greg Philip Thomas (Aberystwyth University, UK)
3
Local assets, local decisions and community resilience: what does success look like in rural Scotland? – Marianna Markantoni (Scotland’s Rural College, UK)
4
Social networks and gender. A comparative perspective from UK and Spain – Javier Serrano, Javier Esparcia (University of Valencia, Spain)
5
Addressing delivery of services’ fairness in rural areas: gazing into the future – Sonja Rewhorn (University of Chester, UK)
Thurs
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
254 Th4 | SHE-RD
Evening 18:45–
Contesting Smart Cities (2) See also: 222 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/254
Convenors
Aoife Delaney, Caspar Menkman (National University of Ireland, Maynooth, Ireland)
Chair
Nick Bingham (The Open University, UK)
1
Publics and Populations of the Smart grid – Caspar Menkman (National University of Ireland, Maynooth, Ireland)
2
Urban data cultures and the prehistories of smart urbanism in Cape Town – Jonathan Cinnamon (University of Exeter, UK)
3
Unfolding the relation between new towns developments and existing cities – Maria Chiara Pastore (Politecnico di Milano, Italy)
255 Th4 | SHE-PIP
Historical Geographies of Mobility and Knowledge (2) See also: 223 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/255
Affiliation
HPGRG, PopGRG
Convenors
Dean Bond, Heike Jöns (Loughborough University, UK)
Chair
Heike Jöns (Loughborough University, UK)
1
The thermometer screen and the mobility of meteorological knowledge – Simon Naylor (University of Glasgow, UK)
2
Circulating instruments, constructing observatories: (some of) the geographies of the magnetic crusade – Matthew Goodman (University of Glasgow, UK)
3
Wolf Signs and Stories: Complicating Wildlife Science with Animal Tracks – Karen Jones (University of Kent, UK)
4
Mobilities of the Greenland ice sheet: scientific practice and the material politics of motion in Cold War Greenland – Johanne Bruun (Durham University, UK)
5
Discussants – Dean Bond, Heike Jöns (Loughborough University, UK)
256 Th4 | SALC-1
Energy Geographies Postgraduate Research View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/256
Affiliation
EnGRG, PGF
Convenors
Caitlin Robinson, Joseph Chambers, Craig Thomas (University of Manchester, UK)
Chair
Caitlin Robinson (University of Manchester, UK)
1
Timescapes of solar and wind energy: Negotiating reversibility and change – Rebecca Windemer (Cardiff University, UK)
2
The Spatial Politics of Struggle: Labour Environmentalism and the Fight for Energy Democracy – Franziska Christina Paul (University of Glasgow, UK)
Thurs
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
Evening 18:45–
3
Exploring the Potential Synthesis between Urban Living Laboratories and Energy Cooperatives – Joseph Chambers (University of Manchester, UK)
4
Energy Justice and the Legacy of Conflict: Assessing the Kosovo C Thermal Power Plant Project – Teresa Lappe-Osthege (University of Sheffield, UK), Jan-Justus Andreas (University of York, UK)
5
Direct-load control and energy justice – Philippa Calver (University of Manchester, UK)
257 Th4 | SALC-2
Financialisation in the Global South (2): Low-Income Economies and Regions See also: 225 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/257
Affiliation
EGRG
Convenors
Gary A. Dymski (University of Leeds, UK), Ewa Karwowski (Kingston University, UK)
Chair
Ewa Karwowski (Kingston University, UK)
1
Financialising Dependence in the Global South: Observations from Structural Trends in the Balance of Payments in Lower Income Countries – Andrew Fischer (Erasmus University Rotterdam, The Netherlands)
2
The Financialisation of Mozambique’s Road Concession: the Case of N4/EN4 Highway – Basani Baloyi (SOAS, University of London, UK)
3
Variegated Financialisations: Remittance Sending and Receiving in London, UK and Thies, Senegal – Kavita Datta, Vincent Guermond (Queen Mary University of London, UK)
4
Brokerage, Rentierism, and the Dual Economy: When ‘Inclusion’ Drives Informality – Juvaria Jafri (City, University of London, UK)
258 Th4 | SALC-5
Food and power: Decolonising food systems and food research View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/258
Affiliation
FGWG
Convenors
Charlie Spring, Mags Adams (University of Salford, UK)
Chair(s)
Charlie Spring (University of Salford, UK)
1
Facing unequal power dynamics: reflecting on the role of food in fieldwork encounters in Zimbabwe and South Africa – Sara Brouwer (University of Edinburgh, UK)
2
Organizing agricultural and food systems in Eastern Europe during and after communist regime – Maria Roxana Triboi (University of Architecture and Urbanism "Ion Mincu" Bucharest, Romania)
3
Hunger and food waste: paradox or symbiosis? – Charlie Spring (University of Salford, UK)
Thurs
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
259
Evening 18:45–
Th4 | SALC-6
Emerging voices in political geography: fragments from our research View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/259
Affiliation
PolGRG, PGF
Convenors
Jonathan Harris (University of Cambridge, UK), Olivia Mason (Durham University, UK), Ian Slesinger (University of Birmingham, UK)
Chair
Jo Sharp (University of Glasgow, UK)
1
The Community Mural as a Political Space – Yael Arbell (University of Leeds, UK)
2
The Consent Form – Emma Marshall (University of Exeter, UK)
3
Untyings and Undoings: archival finds in and of the city – Aya Nassar (University of Warwick, UK)
4
Knitting Together in Glasgow: The importance of material objects in mediating encounters around diversity, community and nationhood – Hannah Melike Peterson (University of Glasgow, UK)
5
Urban Agriculture and the Right to the City – Christopher Yap (Coventry University, UK)
6
'The closet’ and ‘the girl child’: Insights into the homonational state through folk art masks – William Payne (York University, Canada)
260 Th4 | SALC-7
Teaching Mobilities: Practice, Pedagogies, Power (2) See also: 228 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/260
Convenors
Peter Adey (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK), Justin Spinney (Cardiff University, UK), Simon Cook (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
Chair
Justin Spinney (Cardiff University, UK)
1
Messengers of Mobilities: mobilities interns as link between academia and practice – Gunvor Riber Larsen (Aalborg University, Denmark)
2
Teaching Mobilities via Visual Practice – Peter Adey, Clare Booker (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
3
The Pedagogical Car Crash - An interdisciplinary case study that uses tourism research to teach Health and Wellbeing students to consider reflexive approaches to academic enquiry – Sharon Wilson (University of Sunderland, UK)
4
Mobilising theory through practice: Mobile diaries as a teaching and learning tool – Bradley Rink (University of the Western Cape, South Africa)
5
Walking tours as active (mobilities) learning tools – Chris McMorran (National University of Singapore, Singapore)
Thurs
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
Evening
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
261 Th4 | SALC-8
18:45–
Playing, listening, engaging and taking action with children View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/261
Affiliation
GCYFRG
Convenors and chairs
Sruthi Atmakur-Javdekar (City University of New York, USA), Tracy Hayes (University of Cumbria, UK)
1
Parc Pawb – Actively engaging with young people to provide play opportunities – Eifiona Thomas Lane (Bangor University, UK), Angharad ab Iorwerth (Porthmadog Town Council), Huw Meredydd Owen (huwmeredyddowen.com (Consultant Architect))
2
Playworkers as providers and facilitators of play? Questioning adult territorialisation of children’s play – Shelly Newstead (University College London, UK)
3
Uneven playing fields: the changing landscapes of play in contemporary British childhoods – Sarah Holloway, Helena Pimlott-Wilson (Loughborough University, UK)
4
Active playgrounds for adolescents: Co-producing places for play in school through intergenerational dialogue and pupil participation – Patrizio De Rossi (University of Stirling, UK)
262 Th4 | SALC-9
Political ecologies of austerity: Conservation and park management in an age of austerity View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/262
Convenors and chairs
Marion Ernwein, Jamie Lorimer (University of Oxford, UK)
1
Ecological engineers: ecologies of austerity and the transformation of nonhuman work in landscaping and conservation – Marion Ernwein, Jamie Lorimer (University of Oxford, UK)
2
‘Call the contractors!’ Examining public sector experience of parks management in England – Nicola Dempsey, Mel Burton (University of Sheffield, UK)
3
Re-framing Austerity: Public participation and partnership in New Zealand park conservation – Timothy Tait Jamieson (University of Fribourg, Switzerland)
4
From austerity to the management of biodiversity: the case of the regional natural parks in Nord-Pas-de-Calais – France – Clemence Guimont (University Lille, France)
5
Working with haste: embodied austerity in Finnish forestry – Taru Peltola (Finnish Environment Institute, Finland)
263 Th4 | HUX-340
Politics of the Everyday in Urban Transformations in China (3): Making urban China See also: 196, 231 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/263
Affiliation
UGRG
Convenors
Alison Browne, Harriet Larrington-Spencer, Saska Petrova (University of Manchester, UK)
Chair
Harriet Larrington-Spencer (University of Manchester, UK)
1
‘Formalomorphist’ Treatment of Urban Informality: why the zoning policy for itinerant street vendors fails in Guangzhou, China – Huang Gengzhi (Cardiff University, UK)
Thurs
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
Evening 18:45–
2
Building Ecological Civilisation on the edge of the city – the everyday life of periurban space – Asa Roast (University of Leeds, UK)
3
Negotiating authority and expertise in the governance of seismic safety in urban China – Qiaonan Li, David Demeritt (King’s College London, UK)
4
Discussion: Reflecting on the politics of the everyday in China – Alison Browne (University of Manchester, UK)
264 Th4 | HUX-341
(Re)Engaging Geographies of Religions, Faith and Spiritualties View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/264
Affiliation
SCGRG
Convenors and chairs
Stephanie Denning (University of Bristol, UK), Richard Scriven (University College Cork, Ireland)
1
Panel Discussion – Lily Kong (Singapore Management University, Singapore), Peter Hopkins (Newcastle University, UK), Elizabeth Olson (University of Edinburgh, UK), Tristan Sturm (Queen's University Belfast, UK)
265 Th4 | HUX-342
A geography of small things: geographies of architecture beyond the high rise (2) See also: 233 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/265
Affiliation
SCGRG
Convenors
Rachel Hunt, Julia Heslop (Durham University, UK)
Chair
Rachel Hunt (Durham University, UK)
1
Dabbling, Learning and Practising: The amateur builder in participatory housing – Julia Heslop (Durham University, UK)
2
Smaller, Bigger, and Stranger Things: Supervised Drug Consumption Sites at the Nexus of Architecture and Governance – Eugene McCann (Simon Fraser University, Canada)
3
Geography of Caring – Camille Sineau (University of Aberdeen, UK), Iris Lacoudre (None)
4
The E.V.A. “cantiere”: the remaking of sociality through self-build – Enrico Marcore (University of Aberdeen, UK)
5
The geographies of a street museum – Nancy Stevenson (University of Westminster, UK)
New Wiley Geography from
The International Encyclopedia of
Geography
People, the Earth, Environment and Technology Editor-in-Chief: Douglas Richardson, Executive Director of the American Association of Geographers General Editors: Noel Castree, Michael F. Goodchild, Audrey Kobayashi, Weidong Liu, and Richard A. Marston Published in collaboration between Wiley and The American Association of Geographers, over 1,000 entries by 900 scholars review and define the concepts, research, and techniques within geography and interrelated fields, providing a comprehensive an authoritative overview of geography around the world. Available online and as a 15 volume print edition
www.geographyencyclopedia.com
Health Geographies A Critical Introduction Tim Brown, Gavin J. Andrews, Steven Cummins, Beth Greenhough, Daniel Lewis, and Andrew Power Health Geographies explores health and biomedical topics from a range of critical geographic perspectives, building on the field’s past engagement with social theory and extending the focus of health geography into new areas of enquiry.
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Published July 2017 | Paperback ISBN: 978-1-118-73902-0
Discover More: wiley.com/go/geography
Thurs
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
Evening 18:45–
ThE | RGS-MQ
Conference dinner and reception Starts at 20.00. Enter via the Main Hall. Pre-booking required.
ThE | RGS-CR
Hoyle Drinks Reception Follows session 234
266 ThE | RGS-LR
Book launch and drinks reception: Health Geographies – A Critical Introduction View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/266
Affiliation
GHWRG
Convenor and chair
Ailie Tam (University of East Anglia, UK)
1
Health Geographies – A Critical Introduction – Tim Brown (Queen Mary University of London, UK), Andrew Power (University of Southampton, UK), Beth Greenhough (University of Oxford, UK), Gavin Andrews (McMaster University, Canada), Steven Cummins (London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, UK)
ThE | RGS-SR
Social and Cultural Geography Research Group AGM
267
Monograph Launch: Women and Sex Tourism Landscapes View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/267
ThE | RGS-DR Affiliation
GFGRG
Convenor and chair
Erin Sanders-McDonagh (Middlesex University, UK)
Fri
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
Evening 18:45–
20. Sessions – Friday 1 September 268 F1 | RGS-OT
Social and Cultural Geography Lecture: From Historical Chains to Derivative Futures: Land Title Registries as Time Machines View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/268
Convenor and chair
Mary Gilmartin (National University of Ireland, Maynooth, Ireland)
1
From Historical Chains to Derivative Futures: Land Title Registries as Time Machines – Sarah Keenan (Birkbeck, University of London, UK)
269 F1 | RGS-EC
Geographies of the body and technology (1): objects and subjects See also: 299 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/269
Affiliation
DGWG
Convenors
Lizzie Richardson (Durham University, UK), Cordelia Freeman (University of Nottingham, UK)
Chair
Lizzie Richardson (Durham University, UK)
1
Digital intimacy: non-human object-choice and the changing spatial biopolitics of sexuality – Daniel Cockayne (University of Kentucky, USA), Agnieszka Leszczynski (University of Auckland, New Zealand), Matthew Zook (University of Kentucky, USA)
2
Self-objectification and subject-optimization and in smart environments – Anke Struver (University of Hamburg, Germany)
3
Creative practice for geographical enquiry and Creative Geovisualisation – Deborah Dixon, Philip Nicholson (University of Glasgow, UK)
4
Digital Methods: a post-phenomenological approach for studying embodied responses to interfaces, websites and apps – James Ash (Newcastle University, UK)
270 F1 | RGS-CR
Consumer to Citizens: Reconfiguring the human factor in energy (1) See also: 300 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/270
Affiliation
PERG
Convenors
Stephen Axon, John Morrissey (Liverpool John Moores University, UK), Niall Dunphy, Breffni Lennon (University College Cork, Ireland)
Chair
Stephen Axon (Liverpool John Moores University, UK)
1
Activating the Energy Citizen? Negotiation and Agency at the Community Level in the Energy Transition – Breffni Lennon, Niall Dunphy (University College Cork, Ireland)
2
Energy system visioning: Community perspectives on transition and low-carbon configurations – John Morrissey, Stephen Axon, Rosita Aiesha, Joanne Hillman (Liverpool John Moores University, UK)
3
The Gender of Energy Citizenship – Christine Gaffney, Niall Dunphy (University College Cork, Ireland)
Fri
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
Evening
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
18:45–
4
Product Service Systems: Exploring a More Sustainable Way for Consumers to Acquire Products – Nick Reed, Maurizio Catulli (University of Hertfordshire, UK)
5
Missing out on energy citizenship: pitfalls of delivering first-time access to modern energy services – Anne Schiffer (Leeds Beckett University, UK)
271 F1 | RGS-LR
New and Emerging Research in Historical Geography (1): Historic Environments See also: 301, 333 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/271
Affiliation
HGRG
Convenors
Benjamin Newman (Royal Holloway, University of London / Royal Geographical Society (with IBG), UK), Bronia Cross (University of Hull, UK)
Chair
Bronia Cross (University of Hull, UK)
1
A historical perspective on wildfire and the savannas of southern Belize – Cathy Smith (University of Edinburgh, UK)
2
‘Trees to the rescue’: reforestation and forestry policies in development of the 19th and the 20th century coastal Dalmatia – Ivan Tekic (University of Nottingham, UK)
3
Incoherence, assimilation, co-option, overflow: Four limits to the colonisation of socioecological space in Mukogodo Forest, Kenya – Sipke Shaughnessy (University of Cambridge, UK)
4
Archive (small)stories: an ethnography of an abandoned clay mine – Robyn Raxworthy (University of Exeter, UK)
5
Lime as Enlightenment Project: the historical geographies of lime burning during Scotland’s long nineteenth century – Douglas Mitchell (University of Glasgow, UK)
272 F1 | RGS-SR
Making the Slow University Inclusive View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/272
Affiliation
HERG
Convenor
Joe Thorogood (University College London, UK)
Chair
Niranj Neena (University College London, UK)
1
Preparing school students for the slow university – Roy Peachey (Woldingham School, UK)
2
Navigating research….Slowly – Tessa Holland (Newcastle University, UK)
3
Between Speed and Slowness: An Independent Researcher’s Search for Academic Rhythm – Basak Tanulku (Independent)
4
How to slow down students – Joe Thorogood (University College London, UK)
Fri
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
273 F1 | RGS-DR
Evening 18:45–
Exploring brands and being (1): elision with literal and figurative landscapes See also: 303 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/273
Convenors
Anna McLauchlan (University of Leeds, UK), Steve Millington (Manchester Metropolitan University, UK)
Chair
Steve Millington (Manchester Metropolitan University, UK)
1
Constructing the independent clothing shop brand through workers' clothed bodies, inside and beyond the shop: a shared project of identity-building? – Rosa Lydia Dean (University of Oxford, UK)
2
The Role of Brands in Perceptions of Socio-Political Positionality among Hong Kong Youths – Sonia Lam-Knott (National University of Singapore, Singapore)
3
Placing the Hardy angling brand: investigating the symbolic British landscapes that have made a global icon – Tom Mordue, Oliver Moss (Northumbria University, UK)
4
Brands, Pathological Dwelling and Toxic Ecologies – Owain Jones (Bath Spa University, UK)
5
Scents of citizenship through the brandscape: exploring the proliferation of Lynx Africa – Anna McLauchlan (University of Leeds, UK)
274 F1 | SAF-G34
Decolonizing Land/Water: Critical Settler and Indigenous Perspectives on land/water governance View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/274
Convenors
Karen Bakker, Michelle Daigle (University of British Columbia, Canada)
Chair
Michelle Daigle (University of British Columbia, Canada)
1
Anishinabek Gikendaasowin, research and water governance – Deborah McGregor (York University, Canada)
2
Decolonizing the Water-Energy Nexus: Reflections on collaborative research from northwestern Canada – Karen Bakker (University of British Columbia, Canada)
3
Water is Life: Decolonization in The Age of Extraction – Melanie Yazzie (University of New Mexico, USA)
4
Water as Archive: Urbanization and Resistance along the Salish Sea – Jessica Hallenbeck (University of British Columbia, Canada)
275 F1 | SAF-119
Researcher Trauma: dealing with traumatic research content and places (1) See also: 305 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/275
Affiliation
GHWRG
Convenors
Christine Eriksen (University of Wollongong, Australia), Danielle Drozdzewski (University of New South Wales, Australia), Dale Dominey-Howes (University of Sydney, Australia)
Chair
Christine Eriksen (University of Wollongong, Australia)
Fri
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
Evening 18:45–
1
Reflections on experiences with researcher trauma: implications for professional practice – Danielle Drozdzewski (University of New South Wales, Australia), Dale Dominey-Howes (University of Sydney, Australia)
2
Speaking Through Silence: Mapping Researcher and Respondent Relations – Bashabi Gupta (Delhi University, India)
3
Researcher Trauma: A PhD Candidate's Perspective – Sandra Astill (James Cook University, Australia)
4
Discussant – Christine Eriksen (University of Wollongong, Australia)
276 F1 | SAF-120
Fat Sexy Spaces View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/276
Affiliation
SSQRG
Convenor and chair
Nick McGlynn (University of Brighton, UK)
1
‘As it is at the disco, so it shall be in life’: Making space at Unskinny Bop – Francis Ray White (University of Westminster, UK)
2
Too Fat, Too Thin, Just Right?: Stigmatised Bodies in Bear Spaces – Nick McGlynn (University of Brighton, UK)
3
Big Belly Blogs, Art & Admiration – Joseph Ridgeon (Independent Artist)
4
Discussion
277 F1 | SAF-121
Decolonising Wild-Life: Critical Geographies of Rewilding (1) See also: 307, 339 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/277
Affiliation
PyGyRG, RGRG
Convenors
Cara Clancy, Kim Ward (Plymouth University, UK), Sophie Wynne-Jones (Bangor University, UK), Kieran O'Mahony (Cardiff University, UK)
Chair
Kim Ward (Plymouth University, UK)
1
A Very Human Wildness: Rewilding and the Anthropocene – Benedict Dempsey (University of Sussex, UK)
2
Performing urban wild-life: the nature(s) of belonging in city conservation – Cara Clancy (Plymouth University, UK)
3
More-than-humans in the city: Understanding the social impacts of urban rewilding and greening interventions for biodiversity – Cecily Maller (RMIT University, Australia)
4
The implications of ambivalent framings for re-wildering: lessons from peatbogs public perceptions – Anja Byg (James Hutton Institute, UK), Julia Martin-Ortega (University of Leeds, UK), Klaus Glenk (Scotland's Rural College, UK), Paula Novo (James Hutton Institute, UK)
Fri
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
278
Evening 18:45–
F1 | SAF-122
Where Next for the Ethical Market? (1): production perspectives See also: 308 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/278
Affiliation
GJRG
Convenor and chair
Agatha Herman (Cardiff University, UK)
1
Standardising sustainability and the palm oil industry complex – Izabela Delabre (London Zoological Society, UK)
2
Power relations in the global production network for Fairtrade orthodox Himalayan tea. A case study of key actors – Andri Brugger (University of Zurich, Switzerland)
3
Practising Fairtrade: assembling alternative economic relations? – Agatha Herman (Cardiff University, UK)
4
Fairtrade, place and moral economy: bridging the gap between abstract ethical discourse and the moral experience of farmers – Cheryl McEwan (Durham University, UK), Alex Hughes (Newcastle University, UK), David Bek (Coventry University, UK)
5
Discussant – Stephanie Barrientos (The University of Manchester, UK)
279 F1 | SKE-060a
Politics, migration and citizenship (1) See also: 309 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/279
Chair
Catherine Waite (University of Northampton, UK)
1
Decolonizing Citizenship? – Jan Hutta (University of Bayreuth, Germany)
2
From City to Nation of Sanctuary: Examining Political Geographies of Solidarity and Migration in Wales – Franz Bernhardt (Swansea University, UK)
3
Refugees and displaced people in Ukraine and Russia: fractured identities and belonging in the context of forced migration from the Ukraine conflict – Irina Kuznetsova (University of Birmingham, UK)
280 F1 | SKE-060b Chair
Experiencing the digital View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/280 Gillian Rose (The Open University, UK)
1
Care, indifference and anxiety - attitudes and perception towards location data collection and production in everyday life – Michal Rzeszewski, Piotr Luczys (Adam Mickiewicz University, Poland)
2
How can geographic information better support place based research and analysis? – Jenny Harding (Ordnance Survey, UK)
3
UNIGIS UK at 26: What have we learnt about GIS distance learning teaching? – Richard Armitage (University of Salford, UK), Graham Smith (Manchester Metropolitan University, UK)
4
Gamification application as means of supporting the process of spatial planning and social participation – Bogna Kietlinska (University of Warsaw, Poland), Agnieszka Turek, Agnieszka Wieladek (Warsaw University of Technology, Poland)
Fri
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
Evening 18:45–
5
Places to play: the spatial semantics of location-based games – Vyron Antoniou (Hellenic Military Geographical Service, Greece), Cristina Capineri (Univerita di Siena, Italy), Christoph Schlieder (University of Bamberg, Germany)
6
Recovering worlds: Cultural heritage, data, and the appearance of history – Oliver Belcher (Durham University, UK)
There is no session 281.
282 F1 | SKE-163
Innovative Methods within Geographic Research (1) See also: 312 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/282
Affiliation
PGF
Convenors
Tim Fewtrell (Loughborough University, UK), Daniel Casey (University of Sheffield, UK)
Chair
Phil Jones (University of Birmingham, UK)
1
Can gender and queer studies be considered innovative research in the architectural and planning fields in Italy? – Giulia Custodi (ENSA Paris La Villette, France), Serena Olcuire (Sapienza Università di Roma, Italy), Martina Silvi (ENSA Paris La Villette, France)
2
What do we see through the GoPro lens? – Liv Lofthus, Lars Frers (University College of Southeast Norway, Norway)
3
Innovative methods for assessing competitiveness in the tourism sector: development of the tourism organizations competitiveness index (TOCI) – Viktoriia Margieva (Saint Petersburg State University, Russia)
4
Observing the South African urban elite: ‘Studying up’ as a practice of epistemic disobedience – Zung Nguyen (London School of Economics and Political Science, UK)
5
Overcoming Methodological Challenges in Profiling Access to Healthcare Facilities in Kano State – Farouk Umar (University of Sheffield, UK)
283 F1 | SKE-164
Muslim women’s geographies – decolonizing discourses, rewriting everyday lives (1) See also: 313 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/283
Affiliation
SCGRG
Convenors
Christine Schenk, Negar Elodie Behzadi, Akanksha Awal (University of Oxford, UK)
Chair
Christine Schenk (University of Oxford, UK)
1
Placing faith in creative labour: work-based activism of Muslim women in the UK cultural and creative economy – Saskia Warren (University of Manchester, UK)
2
Unusable women- Labour geographies of young women’s work in post-Soviet Tajikistan – Negar Elodie Behzadi (University of Oxford,UK)
3
Modernity, Mobility and Muslim young women in north India – Akanksha Awal (University of Oxford, UK)
Fri
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
Evening
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
284
18:45–
F1 | SKE-201
Governance, energy and injustice (1) See also: 314 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/284
Affiliation
EnGRG
Convenors
Karen Bickerstaff, Catherine Butler, Paulina Luzecka (University of Exeter, UK)
Chair
Karen Bickerstaff (University of Exeter, UK)
1
Fuel poverty and invisible energy policy – Paulina Luzecka, Catherine Butler (University of Exeter, UK), Karen Parkhill (University of York, UK), Karen Bickerstaff (University of Exeter, UK)
2
Composite fuel poverty indicators: Revealing, concealing and creating spatial injustices – Caitlin Robinson (University of Manchester, UK)
3
Energy justice and vulnerable groups: a comparative analysis of domestic energy efficiency policy in the UK nations – Carolyn Snell, Ross Gillard, Mark Bevan (University of York, UK)
4
'Some people are really poor and some of them are lazy’: the role of misrecognition and stigma in the experience and (re)production of energy poverty – Neil Simcock (University of Manchester, UK)
5
The role of ‘sharing economy services’ in the energy sector as a governance model for ‘energy justice’? – Severine Saintier (University of Exeter, UK)
285 F1 | SKE-207
Geographies of Safe Space (1): Spaces of embodiment, identity and education See also: 315 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/285
Affiliation
PolGRG
Convenors
Janet Bowstead, Katherine Brickell (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK), Mary Cobbett (University of York, UK), Naomi Graham (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
Chair
Katherine Brickell (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
1
The kitchen as a safe feminist space for marginalized knowledges? Insights from Sheffield, United Kingdom – Beth Kamunge (University of Sheffield, UK)
2
Conceptualising geographies of disability, hostility and (un)safety: re-thinking safe(r) space in Ireland – Claire Edwards (University College Cork, Ireland)
3
The big yellow sanctuary: new ways of thinking about self-storage in the United Kingdom – Jennifer Owen (Cardiff University, UK)
4
Re-politicizing campus, curriculum and knowledge: safe spaces and student activism at the University of Auckland – Hanne Kirstine Adriansen, Gritt B Nielsen (Aarhus University, Denmark)
5
Pride School Atlanta: ‘it is not about creating a safe space, we have tried that, it is about creating a thriving space’ – Joe Hall (University of Northampton, UK), Max Hope (University of Hull, UK)
Fri
Session 1
286 F1 | SKE-307 Convenors and chairs 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
Evening 18:45–
Opening Geography Out to Fashion Worlds View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/286 Merle Patchett (University of Bristol, UK), Nina Williams (University of Bristol, UK)
Panel Discussion – Bethan Bide (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK), Carole Collet (Central Saint Martins, UK), Adeola Enigbokan (University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands), Helen Mears (University of Brighton, UK)
287 F1 | SHE-RD
Transport, Sustainable Cities and Transit Oriented Development (1): Urban development and sustainability See also: 317, 350 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/287
Affiliation
TGRG
Convenors
Richard Knowles (University of Salford, UK), Fiona Ferbrache (University of Oxford, UK)
Chair
David Keeling (Western Kentucky University, USA)
1
Urban Rail Investment and Transit-Oriented Development: What are the Links? – Richard Knowles (University of Salford, UK)
2
Bus Transit Oriented Development (BTOD): evaluating BRT impacts in cities – Fiona Ferbrache (University of Oxford, UK)
3
New multimodal stations in the United States and Transit Oriented Development: a true ‘smart growth’ approach or a ‘marketing’ approach of TOD? – Matthieu Schorung (Universite Paris-Est, France)
4
Development of the Transit Oriented Development Concept in the Gulf Staes. Case Study: Dubai City – Nasma Hannawi, Peter Jones, Helena Titheridge (University College London, UK)
5
Preliminary investigations into the potential of LRT as a tool for urban regeneratiion in Malta – Maria Attard (University of Malta, Malta)
6
Danish local government: Early adopters of electric vehicles? – Tessa Anderson (Danish Technical University, Denmark)
288 F1 | SHE-PIP
Negotiating Brexit: migrant spatialities and identities in a changing Europe (1): Transnational mobility, materiality and emotion See also: 318, 351 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/288
Affiliation
PopGRG
Convenors
Kate Botterill (Edinburgh Napier University, UK), David McCollum (University of St Andrews, UK), Naomi Tyrrell (Plymouth University, UK), Andrew Wooff (Edinburgh Napier University, UK)
Chair
Naomi Tyrrell (Plymouth University, UK)
1
Brexit and Secondary Mobilities in EU Migrants' Lives – Kathy Burrell (University of Liverpool, UK)
Fri
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
Evening 18:45–
2
The Impact of Brexit on EU migrants: British migrants across Europe – Katie Wright Higgins (Keele University, UK), Katie Walsh (University of Sussex, UK)
3
Living in Limboland? How Paris-based British Nationals deal with the Uncertainties of Brexit – Corinne Nativel (University of Paris-East, France)
4
British Youth’s Mobility Experiences and Their Identities – Calvin Jephcote, Hania Janta, Gang Li, Allan Williams (University of Surrey, UK)
5
Negotiating transnational identities in ‘Brexit Britain’: Communication strategies and everyday encounters of Polish nationals following the EU referendum vote – Kate Botterill (Edinburgh Napier University, UK), Jonathan Hancock (University of Edinburgh, UK)
289 F1 | SALC-1
Author meets critics - The home-migration nexus: theory, research, prospects View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/289
Convenor and chair
Paolo Boccagni (Università di Trento, Italy)
1
Panel discussion – Jørgen Carling (Peace Research Institute Oslo, Norway), Lauren Wagner (Maastricht University, The Netherlands), Melissa Fernández Arrigoitia (Lancaster University, UK), Marco Antonsich (Loughborough University, UK), Louise Meijering (University of Groningen, The Netherlands)
290 F1 | SALC-2
Food in Urban Africa (1): Changing foodways and everyday lives See also: 320 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/290
Affiliation
FGWG
Convenors
Shari Daya, Gareth Haysom (University of Cape Town, South Africa)
Chair
Beth Oppenheim-Chan (University of Cape Town, South Africa)
1
Food, Space and Gender in Urban Malawi – Liam Riley (Wilfred Laurier University, Canada), Belinda Dodson (University of Western Ontario, Canada)
2
‘It’s a struggle to eat real Sadza with real Kovo here’: mediating cultural food preferences, the food environment and daily realities in Johannesburg – Sara Brouwer (University of Edinburgh, UK)
3
Serious Fun: Food for Thought – Rike Sitas, Gareth Haysom (University of Cape Town, South Africa)
4
Considering Alternative Food Networks from the Global South – expanding the debate – Gareth Haysom (University of Cape Town, South Africa)
291 F1 | SALC-5
The 'commons and borderland' of geography and anthropology View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/291
Affiliation
HPGRG
Convenor
Emily Hayes (Oxford Brookes University, UK)
Chair
Innes Keighren (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
Fri
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
Evening 18:45–
1
Common ground and distinguishing features: the co-production of knowledge by the Royal Geographical Society and the Royal Anthropological Institute, c. 1883-1900 – Emily Hayes (Oxford Brookes University, UK)
2
From Learned Societies to the ‘Wildest Siberia’: Locating Maria Czaplicka’s scholarship among academic currents of early 20th century anthropology and geography – Jaanika Vider (University of Oxford, UK)
3
Anthropology, ethnography and cartography in the early 20th century Russian Empire: imperial or decolonizing knowledge? – Sergey Alymov (Russian Academy of Sciences, Russia)
4
Phyllis Kaberry and the Politics of Place in Anglo-Australian Anthropology (1935-39) – Sophie Scott-Brown (Australian National University, Australia)
292 F1 | SALC-6 Convenors and chairs
(Post-)colonial knowledge and the making of contemporary Asian urbanism View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/292 Aparajita De (University of Delhi, India), Yannan Ding (University of Oxford, UK)
1
Transfer of Western knowledge in China: A Case Study of Architecture in University L’Aurore (1903-1952) – Yi Ren (Shanghai Jiao Tong University, China)
2
(De)colonialCulinary Imaginings: An Ethnographic Study of Bengali Public Dining in Kolkata – Aditi Das (University of Delhi, India)
3
Post-colonial sexualities and everyday sexual urbanisms: a case study of Delhi – Kiran Bhairannavar (National University of Singapore, Singapore / University of Delhi, India)
4
Governance for Resilience: The Role of Knowledge and Learning – Rachna Leveque (University College London, UK)
5
(Post-)Colonial Knowledge and City Building in Asia – Aparajita De (University of Delhi, India), Yannan Ding (University of Oxford, UK)
293 F1 | SALC-7
Can Smart Mobility be Inclusive Mobility? (1) See also: 323 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/293
Affiliation
TGRG
Convenors
Miriam Ricci, Graham Parkhurst (University of the West of England, UK)
Chair
Graham Parkhurst (University of the West of England, UK)
1
Smart Mobility and Social Inclusion: an introduction to the sessions – Miriam Ricci, Graham Parkhurst (University of the West of England, UK)
2
Who fits under Smart Mobility’s umbrella? A critical exploration of Mobility as a Service – Kate Pangbourne (University of Leeds, UK), Milos Mladenovic (Aalto University, Finland)
3
Smart mobility, delivering an assistive technology or creating a digital divide? – Ian Shergold (University of the West of England, UK)
4
Automated transport and society. Identifying drawbacks, exploring possibilities – Enrica Papa (University of Westminster, UK), António Ferreira (Ferreira Solutions, Portugal), Christopher Clark (Caneparo Associates, UK)
Fri 294 F1 | SALC-8
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
Evening 18:45–
Geographies of mobility and creativity: impacts, identities, inequalities (1) See also: 324 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/294
Convenors
Shu-Yi Chiu, Wen-I Lin (National Taipei University, Taiwan), Justin Spinney (Cardiff University, UK)
Chair
Justin Spinney (Cardiff University, UK)
1
Mobility, Creativity and the Relative Dimensions of Social (In)justice – Gregg Culver (Heidelberg University, Germany)
2
Railway Landscapes as Mobile and Creative Infrastructures: The Spatial Politics at Changhua City, Taiwan – Yu-Ting Kao, Chih-Hung Wang (National Taiwan University, Taiwan)
3
Mobility and Creativity – The feasibility study of e-PBS sharing economy – Chang Hsin-Wen (Chung-Hua University, Taiwan)
4
I only hear about multimode. Addressing the lack of creativity in policy making. A methodological experiment – Luis Iturra Munoz (University of Oxford, UK)
5
Mobilities of Counter-Creativity and Illicit Innovation: Material Cultures of Design and Crime – Craig Martin (University of Edinburgh, UK)
295 F1 | SALC-9
Governance, shadow states and the positioning of civil society in processes of devolution (1) See also: 325 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/295
Convenors
David Beel, Martin Jones (Staffordshire University, UK), Ian Rees Jones (Cardiff University, UK)
Chair
David Beel (Staffordshire University, UK)
1
Localism, Neighbourhood and Conservative Civil Society – Joe Painter (Durham University, UK), Raksha Pande (Newcastle University, UK)
2
Assembling the Healthopolis: Devolution, regional assemblages and spatial policy experimentation – Colin Lorne (University of Manchester, UK)
3
Localism, inequality and community responses in children’s services – Eleanor Jupp (University of Kent, UK)
4
Social reproduction, crisis resolution and the shadow state: social investment and the local adult social care sector – Ryan Bushell, Nick Henry, Lindsey Appleyard, Carlos Ferreira (Coventry University, UK)
5
Devolution, civic engagement and the importance of the neighbourhood scale – Jane Wills (Queen Mary University of London, UK)
Fri
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
296 F1 | HUX-341
Evening 18:45–
Creative Technologies and the City View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/296
Affiliation
UGRG
Convenors
Rachel Granger, Tracy Harwood (De Montfort University, UK)
Chair
Rachel Granger (De Montfort University, UK)
1
A Place for Pikachu in the Smart City – Thomas Birtchnell, Pauline McGuirk, Christopher Moore (University of Wollongong, Australia)
2
Heritage and Creative Technologies – Kazz Morohashi (Norwich University of the Arts, UK)
3
Creating Healthy Places through Open Space Music-Making – Barney Spigel (Independent)
4
Cityscapes for Smarter cities: Revisiting ecologies, ecosyems, and institutional thickness in a digital age – Rachel Granger, Tracy Harwood (De Montfort University, UK)
297 F1 | HUX-342
Geographies of cruise tourism: Navigating the field(s) of inquiry (1) See also: 327 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/297
Affiliation
GLTRG
Convenors
Jo-Anne Lester (University of Brighton, UK), Antonio Paolo Russo (University Rovira i Virgili, Spain)
Chair
Jo-Anne Lester (University of Brighton, UK)
1
Caribbean Cruise Ship Tourism: The Questionable Economic Benefits – Paul Wilkinson (York University, Canada)
2
Small ship tourism in the Myeik Archipelago (MA), Myanmar: An analysis of social, environmental and economic impact – Clare Weeden, Nigel Jarvis (University of Brighton, UK)
3
The Spatial Nexus of Globalization: Heritage Buildings and Cruise Ship Tourism – Carola Hein (Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands)
4
Commoning the Cruise Port? An Enquiry into the Engagements of Cruise Tourism with the Community in Barcelona – Antonio Paolo Russo, Fiammetta Brandajs (University Rovira i Virgili, Spain)
5
The impacts of the cruise industry on tourism destinations and sustainable development of cruise tourism – Mandavi Srivastava (University of Lucknow, India)
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Join us! Publishing Sessions on Maximising Impact and Peer Review Peer Review: The good, the challenging, and the rewarding Friday September 1st • 11.15-11.45 • Sunley Room In this session we discuss the importance and challenges of, and how to navigate the Peer Review process; as well as top tips for peer reviewers. Speakers: Graham Woodward, Wiley Gail Davies, University of Exeter, UK and co-Editor of Geo: Geography and Environment
Maximising the Impact of your research Friday September 1st • 12.00-12.30 • Sunley Room Find out more about how to promote and measure the impact your research. Speaker: Graham Woodward, Wiley
Wileyauthors.com
Fri
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
298 F2 | RGS-OT Convenor and chair
Evening 18:45–
Political Geography Lecture: Decolonising migration View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/298 Fiona McConnell (University of Oxford, UK)
1
Decolonising migration – Mary Gilmartin (National University of Ireland, Maynooth, Ireland)
2
Discussant – Jo Sharp (University of Glasgow, UK), Raksha Pande (Newcastle University, UK)
299 F2 | RGS-EC
Geographies of the body and technology (2): technologies of embodiment See also: 269 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/299
Affiliation
SCGRG
Convenors
Lizzie Richardson (Durham University, UK), Cordelia Freeman (University of Nottingham, UK)
Chair
Cordelia Freeman (University of Nottingham, UK)
1
‘Tuning out’ or ‘tuning in’? Mobile music listening technologies and intensified encounters with the city – Allan Watson (Loughborough University, UK)
2
Walking bodies: urban laws and governing of mobility – Tauri Tuvikene (Tallinn University, Estonia)
3
Bodies, wheelchair technologies and ontological security: The production of disability identities and subjectivities in space – Mariela Gaete Reyes (Universidad de Chile, Chile)
4
Breeding robust pollinators: imagining and embodying environmental futures – Jacob Bull (Uppsala University, Sweden)
5
Gender dynamics in the donation field: human tissue donation for research, therapy and feeding – Maria Fannin (University of Bristol, UK), Julie Kent, Sally Dowling (University of the West of England, UK)
300 F2 | RGS-CR
Consumer to Citizens: Reconfiguring the human factor in energy (2) See also: 270 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/300
Affiliation
PERG
Convenors
Stephen Axon, John Morrissey (Liverpool John Moores University, UK), Niall Dunphy, Breffni Lennon (University College Cork, Ireland)
Chair
Stephen Axon (Liverpool John Moores University, UK)
1
Contemporary processes of energy citizenship: locating participation currents linked to energy transitions and energy futures – Alexandra Revez (National University of Ireland, Galway, Ireland), Niall Dunphy (University College Cork, Ireland)
2
Community energy transitions: Lessons for community engagement from residential biomass energy – Stephen Axon, Rosita Aiesha, John Morrissey (Liverpool John Moores University, UK)
Fri
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
Evening
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
18:45–
3
Beyond behaviour change: Prospects for low carbon urban intermediaries intervening in social practices in Victoria, Australia – Ralph Horne, Susie Moloney (RMIT University, Australia)
4
The Path to Climate Citizens – German roles, experiences, challenges and opportunities amongst the citizens of Heidelberg and the administrative district Steinfurt – Frieder Rubik, Ria Mueller (Institute for Ecological Economy Research, Germany
5
Learning about the home: Engaging people with energy and environmental monitoring data through technology and citizen science – Georgina Wood, Rosie Day (University of Birmingham, UK), Dan van der Horst (University of Edinburgh, UK), Shuli Liu (Coventry University, UK)
301 F2 | RGS-LR
New and Emerging Research in Historical Geography (2): Performed Historical Spaces See also: 271, 333 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/301
Affiliation
HGRG
Convenors
Bronia Cross (University of Hull, UK), Benjamin Newman (Royal Holloway, University of London / Royal Geographical Society (with IBG), UK)
Chair
Bronia Cross (University of Hull, UK)
1
‘Our true intent is all for your delight’ – re-awakening material histories of Scotland’s travelling fairgrounds – Elisabeth Alice Lacsny (University of Glasgow, UK)
2
‘I will be mistress of my own’: Property management during widowhood in 18th-century England – Sarah Shields (University of Hull, UK)
3
Practising monarchy: revaluating Victorian royal history through geography and practice – Lee Butcher (King's College London, UK)
4
A cultural-historical geography of Leonard Cheshire Disability – Laura Crawford (Loughborough University, UK)
5
Learning anti-racism: preliminary snapshots from PhD research on the historical geographies of anti-racist education in London, 1960-1990 – Jacob Fairless-Nicholson (King's College London, UK)
302 F2 | RGS-SR
Wiley: Join our Publishing Sessions on Maximising Impact and Peer Review View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/302
1
Peer Review: The good, the challenging, and the rewarding (11.15-11.45) – Graham Woodward (Wiley), Gail Davies (University of Exeter, UK)
2
Maximising the Impact of your research (12.00-12.30) – Graham Woodward (Wiley)
303 F2 | RGS-DR
Convenors
Exploring brands and being (2): coproducing understandings of place See also: 273 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/303 Anna McLauchlan (University of Leeds, UK), Steve Millington (Manchester Metropolitan University, UK)
Fri
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
Evening
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
Chair
18:45–
Anna McLauchlan (University of Leeds, UK)
1
Branded juices: Practices of knowing and branding in the perfume industry – Bodo Kubartz (Passion and Consulting)
2
Subcultures and the experience and branding of place and fashion – Atle Hauge (Eastern Norway Research Institute, Norway), Dominic Power (Stockholm University, Sweden), Paul Sweetman (King's College London, UK)
3
Exporting Regional Identity: Some Evidence from Argyll & Bute, Scotland – Julie Clark, Gareth Rice (University of the West of Scotland, UK)
4
“Guggenheim Effect”? The Bilbao Brand and Gentrification Process – Iratxe MuñecasIzaguirre (University of Deusto, Spain)
5
Embedding, Disembedding and Re-embedding Manchester City – Steve Millington (Manchester Metropolitan University, UK)
304 F2 | SAF-G34
Author meets critics - Reappraising Livingstone's The Geographical Tradition after a quarter of a century View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/304
Affiliation
HPGRG, RACE
Convenors
James Sidaway (National University of Singapore, Singapore), Mark Boyle (National University of Ireland, Maynooth, Ireland), Tim Hall (University of Winchester, UK)
Chair
James Sidaway (National University of Singapore, Singapore)
1
Panel Discussion – David Livingstone (Queen's University Belfast, UK), Ruth Craggs (King’s College London, UK), Federico Ferretti (University College Dublin, Ireland), Avril Maddrell (University of Reading, UK), Fiona Smith (University of Dundee, UK), Michiel van Meeteren (Brussels University, Belgium), John Wylie (University of Exeter, UK)
305 F2 | SAF-119
Researcher Trauma: dealing with traumatic research content and places (2) See also: 275 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/305
Affiliation
GHWRG
Convenors
Christine Eriksen (University of Wollongong, Australia), Danielle Drozdzewski (University of New South Wales, Australia), Dale Dominey-Howes (University of Sydney, Australia)
Chair
Christine Eriksen (University of Wollongong, Australia)
1
‘Same Sex parenting is child abuse’: Trauma in Covert Research – Kath Browne (University of Brighton, UK), Heather Maguire, Andrew McCartan, Catherine Nash (Brock University, Canada), Andrew Gorman-Murray (Western Sydney University, Australia)
2
A researcher, migration actors and interpreters all on board: Coping with the emotional ride of conflict-induced migration research – Niemi Saija (University of Helsinki, Finland)
3
Does Humanities Research Have Space For Human Emotions? Experiences of Studies of Resettlement in India – Vinita Mathur, Isha Kaushik (University of Delhi, India)
4
Discussant: Promoting and practicing researcher self-care – Christine Eriksen (University of Wollongong, Australia)
Fri
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
306
Evening 18:45–
F2 | SAF-120
Gay Male Urban Spaces after Grindr & Gentrification (1): Intersecting Urban Geographies of Sexuality & Inequality See also: 338 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/306
Affiliation
SSQRG
Convenors
Ryan Centner (London School of Economics and Political Science, UK), Martin Zebracki (University of Leeds, UK)
Chair
Gustav Visser (Stellenbosch University, South Africa)
1
Gay Neighborhoods, Online Technologies, and Sexual Deserts: How Urban Structures Create and Perpetuate Sexual Inequality – Morgan Purrier (University of Michigan, USA)
2
Emancipation and the City: The Fragmented Spatiality of Migrant Gay Men in Amsterdam & New York – Wouter Van Gent, Gerald Brugman (University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands)
3
Wellbeing in the 'World We Have Won': Interrogating Gay Men's Mental and Emotional Health in 'Post-Gay' Spaces – Nathaniel Lewis (University of Southampton, UK)
4
Discussant – Amin Ghaziani (The University of British Columbia, Canada)
307 F2 | SAF-121
Decolonising Wild-Life: Critical Geographies of Rewilding (2) See also: 277, 339 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/307
Affiliation
PyGyRG, RGRG
Convenors
Cara Clancy, Kim Ward (Plymouth University, UK), Sophie Wynne-Jones (Bangor University, UK), Kieran O'Mahony (Cardiff University, UK)
Chairs
Cara Clancy (Plymouth University, UK), Kieran O'Mahony (Cardiff University, UK)
1
Rewilding in Wales: Abandoning or Reimagining a Cultural Heartland? – Sophie WynneJones, Graham Strouts (Bangor University, UK), George Holmes (University of Leeds, UK)
2
Re-introducing the Eurasian lynx, wilding and compensation – Lois Mansfield (University of Cumbria, UK), Ian Convery (University of Cumbria, UK)
3
Contested knowledges and participation in governing unsanctioned wild-life – Kieran O'Mahony (Cardiff University, UK)
4
Last night a desk jockey saved wild life: rewilding in the Scottish Highlands – Ella Furness (Cardiff University, UK)
308 F2 | SAF-122
Where Next for the Ethical Market? (2): consumption perspectives See also: 278 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/308
Affiliation
GJRG
Convenor and chair
Agatha Herman (Cardiff University, UK)
1
Invisible certifications within neo-colonial supply chains: the thorny case of ethical cutflowers – David Bek, Jill Timms (Coventry University, UK)
2
Ethical Consumption in Times of Austerity – Eleanor Boyce (University of Manchester, UK)
Fri
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
Evening 18:45–
3
Ethical complex-‘ities’: responsible business practice and the big brand takeover of farm animal welfare – John Lever (University of Huddersfield, UK), Mara Miele (Cardiff University, UK)
4
Discussant – David Evans (University of Sheffield, UK)
309 F2 | SKE-060a
Politics, migration and citizenship (2) See also: 279 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/309
Chair
Sarah Evans (Royal Geographical Society (with IBG), UK)
1
Racism in access to housing for blacks latin american inmigrants living in central areas of Chile – Yasna Contreras Gatica (University of Chile, Chile)
2
From crisis as a shock to crisis as a norm attitude: The post-socialist case – Olga Cretu (Middlesex University, UK)
3
Who and how learns the city. Attuning as a newcomer and re-attuning to others' arrival processes – Chiara Basile (Polytechnic University of Turin, Italy / Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium)
4
“When you see nature, nature give you something inside”: Exploring the Impact of Naturebased Leisure on Refugee Well-being – Jane Hurly (University of Alberta, Canada)
310 F2 | SKE-060b
Resource Temporalities (1): Resource-making, Anticipation, Retention See also: 342 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/310
Convenors
Kärg Kama (University of Oxford, UK), Gisa Weszkalnys (London School of Economics and Political Science, UK)
Chair
Kärg Kama (University of Oxford, UK)
1
Nuclear futures and an uncertain present: tracing rumours in the shadow of Tanzania's first uranium mine – Stephanie Postar (University of Oxford, UK)
2
Moving boundaries with temporal constructs: Criticality in the making of resources – Erika Machacek (Centre for Minerals and Materials, Denmark)
3
Claims, enclosures and circulations: accommodating time in mineral resource access – Gavin Bridge (Durham University, UK)
4
Dredging up the future along the Río Magdalena – Austin Zeiderman (London School of Economics and Political Science, UK)
5
‘Chromite is forever’: the temporal making of a mineral in-becoming – Lorenzo D'Angelo (University of Milano-Bicocca, Italy)
311 F2 | SKE-064b
Diversity Matters within Educational Contexts: Interdisciplinary Perspectives View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/311
Convenor
Panagiota Sotiropoulou (Loughborough University, UK)
Chair
Sarah Mills (Loughborough University, UK)
Fri
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
Evening 18:45–
1
'On the Same Wavelength? Hyperdiverse Young People at a Community Radio Station – Catherine Wilkinson (Edge Hill University, UK)
2
Using Technology to Promote Multicultural Competence in Primary Schools: An Evaluation of the One Globe Kids Method – Lindsey Cameron (University of Kent, UK)
3
Engaging Youth in Global Storytelling – Phil Avery (Bohunt Education Trust), Anne Glick (Globe Smart Kids)
4
Examining the Factors Influencing Greek Pre-Service Teachers' Multicultural Competence: Preliminary Fidnings – Panagiota Sotiropoulou (Loughborough University, UK)
312 F2 | SKE-163
Innovative Methods within Geographic Research (2) See also: 282 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/312
Affiliation
PGF
Convenors
Daniel Casey (University of Sheffield, UK), Tim Fewtrell (Loughborough University, UK)
Chair
Daniel Casey (University of Sheffield, UK)
1
Ethnographic Sketching – Clemens Bernardt, Bettina van Hoven, Paulus Huigen (University of Groningen, The Netherlands)
2
Research methods and urban queer subjectivities: studying men who practice same-sex sexualities in Delhi, India – Kiran Bhairannavar (National University of Singapore, Singapore / University of Delhi, India)
3
Seeing the Sensible Side: Multi-sensory research and the City – Earl Harper (University of Bristol, UK)
4
Women and resistances in the Brazilian amazon: against migrations and for the right to be and stay in the land – Gleys Ramos (Universidade Federal do Tocantins, Brazil)
313 F2 | SKE-164
Muslim women’s geographies – decolonizing discourses, rewriting everyday lives (2) See also: 283 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/313
Affiliation
PolGRG
Convenors
Christine Schenk, Negar Elodie Behzadi, Akanksha Awal (University of Oxford, UK)
Chair
Negar Elodie Behzadi (University of Oxford,UK)
1
Young Muslim Women and Political Participation in Scotland – Robin Finlay, Peter Hopkins (Newcastle University, UK)
2
Shapes of Muslim Feminism in Germany within the discourse of migration – Hazal BudakKim (University of Hamburg, Germany)
3
Muslim women and institutional Islamophobia in Switzerland – Elisa Banfi (University of Geneva, Switzerland), Vista Eskandari (Independent Researcher)
4
Spatial strategies of victims of Islamophobia in Paris – Kawtar Najib (Newcastle University, UK)
Fri 5
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
Evening 18:45–
Islam, conflict, disaster: legislating citizenship in Aceh, Indonesia and Sri Lanka – Christine Schenk (University of Oxford, UK)
314 F2 | SKE-201
Governance, energy and injustice (2) See also: 284 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/314
Affiliation
EnGRG
Convenors
Karen Bickerstaff, Catherine Butler, Paulina Luzecka (University of Exeter, UK)
Chair
Paulina Luzecka (University of Exeter, UK)
1
Policy Impact and Energy Governance – Karen Parkhill (University of York, UK), Catherine Butler, Paulina Luzecka (University of Exeter, UK)
2
Water - energy governance: the mega hydropower project in Río Marañón, Perú – Rocio Herrera, Alena Israel (Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany)
3
Exploring the influence of social movements’ use of online resources on the English shale gas debate – Imogen Rattle (University of Leeds, UK)
4
‘Attributing responsibility for energy justice: a case study of the Hinkley Point Nuclear Complex’ – Kirsten Jenkins (University of Sussex, UK)
5
Exploring community energy governance as a ‘socio-legal institution’ and its potential role for ‘energy justice’ – Severine Saintier (University of Exeter, UK), Michiel Heldeweg (University of Twente, The Netherlands)
315 F2 | SKE-207
Geographies of Safe Space (2): Spaces of refuge, shelter and contact See also: 285 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/315
Affiliation
GFGRG
Convenors
Janet Bowstead, Katherine Brickell (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK), Mary Cobbett (University of York, UK), Naomi Graham (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
Chair
Janet Bowstead (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
1
Promoting community-led responses to violence against immigrant and refugee women in metropolitan and regional Australia. The ASPIRE Project (Analysing Safety and Place in Immigrant and Refugee Experience) – Linda Murray (University of Tasmania, Australia), Cathy Vaughan (University of Melbourne, Australia), Jasmin Chen, Adele Murdolo (Multicultural Centre for Women’s Health, Australia), Deborah Warr (University of Melbourne, Australia), Regina Quiazon (Multicultural Centre for Women’s Health, Australia), Karen Block, Erin Davis (University of Melbourne, Australia)
2
‘Safe spaces’ and ‘bad’ girls: Experiences of child-marriage and human trafficking ‘victims’ from a shelter home in Eastern India – Mima Guha (University of East Anglia, UK)
3
‘I’m safe but I still worry… I don’t tell anyone’: physical and emotional safe spaces for women in safe shelters in Cambodia – Naomi Graham (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
4
Homeless youth and intersectionality: safe shelter for who? – Philip Mullen (Durham University, UK)
Fri 5
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
Evening 18:45–
Safe spaces for participatory work in women’s refuges – Janet Bowstead (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
316 F2 | SKE-307
The Future of the Bunker // The Bunker of the Future (1): new uses and meanings for the 20th century's abandoned bunkers See also: 349, 378 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/316
Convenor and chair
Luke Bennett (Sheffield Hallam University, UK)
1
Rethinking the Atlantic Wall: art, death and minerology – Xenia Vytuleva (Columbia University, USA)
2
The BMEW radomes: reimagining RAF Fylingdales as a military contemporary art complex – Michael Mulvihill (Newcastle University, UK)
3
Malleable concrete?: moving from contemporary memory to curated meaning at York Nuclear Bunker – Kevin Booth (English Heritage, UK)
4
De-bunking the bunker: managing myth and misinformation in the bunkers beneath Dover Castle – Rowena Willard-Wright (English Heritage, UK)
5
Bunker Boredom: An ethnography of the experience of bunker labour, as an emergency planner – Rebecca Alexis-Martin (University of Southampton, UK)
317 F2 | SHE-RD
Transport, Sustainable Cities and Transit Oriented Development (2): linked with more social development and sustainability See also: 287, 350 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/317
Affiliation
TGRG
Convenors
Richard Knowles (University of Salford, UK), Fiona Ferbrache (University of Oxford, UK)
Chair
Fiona Ferbrache (University of Oxford, UK)
1
Transit Investments and Neighbourhood Change – Elizabeth Delmelle, Isabelle Nilsson (University of North Carolina at Charlotte, USA)
2
Spatial and non-spatial influences on travel behaviour during a large-scale workforce relocation – Richard Knowles, Andrew Binder (University of Salford, UK)
3
Transit-Oriented Development in Buenos Aires, Argentina: Comparing Puerto Madero and Avenida 98 de Julio – David Keeling (Western Kentucky University, USA)
4
Planning for railroad network accessibility: the case of the Regional Express Railway (RER) in the Brussels Metropolitan Area – Freke Caset (Ghent University, Belgium / Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium), Ben Derudder (Ghent University, Belgium), Kobe Boussauw (Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium), Frank Witlox (Ghent University, Belgium)
Fri
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
Evening
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
318
18:45–
F2 | SHE-PIP
Negotiating Brexit: migrant spatialities and identities in a changing Europe (2): Politics of Mobility, Citizenship and Belonging See also: 288, 351 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/318
Affiliation
PopGRG
Convenors
Kate Botterill (Edinburgh Napier University, UK), David McCollum (University of St Andrews, UK), Naomi Tyrrell (Plymouth University, UK), Andrew Wooff (Edinburgh Napier University, UK)
Chair
David McCollum (University of St Andrews, UK)
1
Moving in, moving on, or wait and see: the reaction of East European migrants in London to the unfolding realities of Brexit – Russell King, Aija Lulle, Laura Morosanu (University of Sussex, UK)
2
Agency, politics and Brexit: political representations of international student mobility in the UK – Allan Findlay (University of St Andrews, UK), Laura Prazeres (University of Dundee, UK)
3
EU Nationals in the UK: Challenges and Perceptions of Belonging – Ronald Ranta, Nevena Nancheva (Kingston University, UK)
4
'What have I done to deserve this?’ Young Italian migrants in Britain narrate their reaction to Brexit and plans for the future – Caterina Mazzilli, Russell King (University of Sussex, UK)
319 F2 | SALC-1
(en) Countering change, (dis) Assembling placeness (1): politicising place-making See also: 352, 381 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/319
Affiliation
HPGRG
Convenors
Marcus Welsh, Samantha Saville (Aberystwyth University, UK)
Chairs
Marcus Welsh (Aberystwyth University, UK), Hayden Lorimer (University of Glasgow, UK)
1
Transnational place: theory and method in the search for an elusive facet of placeness – Jørgen Carling (Peace Research Institute Oslo, Norway)
2
Re-placing deprivation – Samuel Strong (University of Cambridge, UK)
3
The territorialisation of heterogeneous space at São Paulo’s urban periphery – Matthew Richmond (Centro de Estudos da Metrópole (CEM), Brazil)
4
Contesting Temporalities of Place at Nuit Debout, Paris – Robert Shaw (Newcastle University, UK)
5
Lines and Entanglements: Conceptualising Place in the Digital Age – Michael Duggan (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
Fri 320
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
Evening 18:45–
F2 | SALC-2
Food in Urban Africa (2): Nutrition and governance See also: 290 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/320
Affiliation
FGWG
Convenors
Shari Daya, Gareth Haysom (University of Cape Town, South Africa)
Chair
Gareth Haysom (University of Cape Town, South Africa)
1
Double Burden Malnutrition Despite Lack of Strong Nutritional and Food System Transitions – Heather Mackay (Umeå University, Sweden), Frank Mugagga, Lydia Kakooza (Makerere University, Uganda), Linley Chiwona-Karltun (Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Sweden)
2
Towards the critical development and application of food environment research in low and middle income countries – Christopher Turner (London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, UK)
3
Food, ethics and identity in urban South Africa – Beth Oppenheim-Chan, Shari Daya (University of Cape Town, South Africa)
4
Urban Food Policies in Africa as innovative actions for cooperation amongst cities for Food Security in the cadre of the Milan Urban Food Policy Pact – Egidio Dansero (Università degli studi di Torino, Italy), Valerio Bini (University of Milan, Italy), Andrea Magarini (Està Research Center, Italy), Yota Nicolarea (Sapienza University of Rome, Italy)
321 F2 | SALC-5
Decolonising Drug Policy Debates View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/321
Affiliation
DARG
Convenors
Heather Jeffrey (University of Bedfordshire, UK), Sophia Ostler (King's College London, UK)
Chair
Sophia Ostler (King's College London, UK)
1
Continuity, Ambiguity and Change: Weeding Through Cannabis Reforms and Debates in Latin America – Jonas Von Hoffmann (University of Oxford, UK)
2
“End of the war” and resignifications of the coca leaf in an Afrocolombian Community Council of the north of Cauca, Colombia – Juan Ballestas (National University of Colombia, Colombia)
3
TBC – Ines Elvira Mejia Motta (Independent)
4
The Asian Cocaine Crisis 1900-1945: Consumers, control and colonialism in the growth of a drugs market – Jim Mills (Strathclyde University, UK)
5
The norm prohibiting coca leaf chewing: from the international system to the Colombian State – Julián Fernandez (Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne, France)
6
A State of Camouflage and Subterfuge: ‘Addicts’ and Public Health in Iran Maziyar – Maziyar Ghiabi (University of Oxford, UK)
Fri
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
322 F2 | SALC-6 Convenor and chair
Evening 18:45–
Counter-mapping: Theories, Tools, and Tropes View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/322 Gwilym Eades (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
1
The Geospatial Intelligence of Challenging Racialized Violence: Calculating, Mapping and Remembering the Geography of Lynching in USA – Derek Alderman (University of Tennessee, USA), Joshua Inwood (Pennsylvania State University, USA)
2
Mapping commodity regions –challenges when data “is not there” but people is… the case of the salmon region in Chile – Beatriz Bustos (University of Chile, Chile)
3
Counter-mapping: Theories, Tools, and Tropes – Gwilym Eades (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
4
Map and Territory: A Critical Ethnography of Crowd-sourced Humanitarian Mapping – Darryl Stellmach (University of Sydney, Australia)
5
A Cultural Political Economy Approach to Geoeconomic and Geopolitical Re-Mapping and Counter-Mapping: China’s ‘One Belt One Road’ Imaginary – Ngai-Ling Sum (Lancaster University, UK)
6
Counter-mapping a multiplicity of place – Katherine Stansfeld (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
323 F2 | SALC-7
Can Smart Mobility be Inclusive Mobility? (2) See also: 293 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/323
Affiliation
TGRG
Convenors
Miriam Ricci, Graham Parkhurst (University of the West of England, UK)
Chair
Miriam Ricci (University of the West of England, UK)
1
Developing the underlying technology for a Shared Demand Responsive Transport at the University of Malta – Michael Camilleri, Adrian Muscat, Maria Attard (University of Malta, Malta)
2
Exploring socio-spatial inequalities in bike-sharing systems: case studies from Brazil and Spain – Esther Anaya Boig (Imperial College London, UK), Ana Clara Duran, Thiago de Sa (University of Sao Paolo, Brazil), Angel Cebollada (Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona, Spain), Joshua Shake (University of Sao Paolo, Brazil), Leandro Garcia (Oswaldo Cruz Foundation, Brazil), Leandro Rezende (University of Sao Paolo, Brazil)
3
Analysing the marginalisation and inclusiveness of smart mobility technologies on noncar users in cities in the developed and developing world – Sridhar Raman, Denise Morrey (Oxford Brookes University, UK), James Golding-Graham (Oxfordshire County Council, UK)
4
Engaging the public in the smart mobility debate – Sal Lampkin (University of Exeter, UK), Stewart Barr (University of Exeter, UK)
Fri 324 F2 | SALC-8
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
Evening 18:45–
Geographies of mobility and creativity: impacts, identities, inequalities (2) See also: 294 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/324
Convenors
Shu-Yi Chiu, Wen-I Lin (National Taipei University, Taiwan), Justin Spinney (Cardiff University, UK)
Chair
Wen-I Lin (National Taipei University, Taiwan)
1
Located media and shared mobility: Creation and activation in one or two contemporary artistic devices – Bernard Guelton (Université Panthéon-Sorbonne, France)
2
Artificial Intelligence and Spaces of Creativity: Automating ‘No Collar’ Jobs in Audio PostProduction – Thomas Birtchnell (University of Wollongong, Australia)
3
How can slowness be encouraged in slow travel? An analysis of individual- and contextual-level factors – Lin Li-Pin (MingChuan University, Taiwan), Shu-Chun (Lucy) Huang (Shih Hsin University, Taiwan)
4
Mobilising the creative nation: the role of cycling in constructing the Taiwanese designscape – Justin Spinney (Cardiff University, UK), Wen-I Lin, Shu-Yi Chiu (National Taipei University, Taiwan)
325 F2 | SALC-9
Governance, shadow states and the positioning of civil society in processes of devolution (2) See also: 295 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/325
Convenors
David Beel, Martin Jones (Staffordshire University, UK), Ian Rees Jones (Cardiff University, UK)
Chair
Martin Jones (Staffordshire University, UK)
1
Positioning civil society in the building of English and Welsh City-Regions – David Beel, Martin Jones (Staffordshire University, UK), Ian Rees Jones (Cardiff University, UK)
2
Beyond the ‘Shadow State’? Exploring civil society in response to welfare state retrenchment in Scotland – Hayley Bennett (The University of Edinburgh, UK)
3
Coming out of the shadows: ‘civil society effects’ and the governance of youth in contemporary Wales – Rhys Jones, Elin Royles, Dyfan Powel (Aberystwyth University, UK)
4
Integration, interrelations and status in Wales' first devolved anti-poverty programme – Sioned Pearce (Cardiff University, UK)
5
The Role of Civil Society in Multispatial Metagovernance in the Age of the Austerity State – Bob Jessop (Lancaster University, UK)
Fri
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
326
Evening 18:45–
F2 | HUX-341
Digital technologies: Digital methods as influences on research design in geography View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/326
Affiliation
DGWG
Convenors and chairs
Megan Palmer-Abbs (University of Aberdeen, UK), Gillian Rose (The Open University, UK)
1
The Evolution of Research Design - Old Instruments Rethought – Megan Palmer-Abbs (University of Aberdeen, UK)
2
Digitising the body: using biosensing technologies for geographic research – Tess Osborne (University of Birmingham, UK)
3
Freelancers on Facebook: Mining Social Media Data to Understand the Digital Economy – Ana Basiri, Annabelle Wilkins, Darja Reuschke, Markieta Domecka (University of Southampton, UK)
4
Exploring digital methods for mapping and visualising interpretations of cultural heritage sites – Isabel Williams (Newcastle University, UK)
5
Digital viewing environments as visual methods of research and practice – Clare Booker (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
327 F2 | HUX-342
Geographies of cruise tourism: Navigating the field(s) of inquiry (2) See also: 297 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/327
Affiliation
GLTRG
Convenors
Jo-Anne Lester (University of Brighton, UK), Antonio Paolo Russo (University Rovira i Virgili, Spain)
Chair
Antonio Paolo Russo (University Rovira i Virgili, Spain)
1
Wayfinding on Cruise Ships: A Complex Activity in Tourism Practice – Paul Symonds, Valeria Lo Lacono (Cardiff Metropolitan University, UK)
2
Research from Within: Issues of Researcher Positionality in Cruise Research – Jennifer Holland (University of Brighton, UK)
3
‘Round the World’ Cruising – a holiday of a lifetime – Jacqueline Tivers (St Mary’s University, UK)
4
The Cruise Ship Employee: Emotion Regulation and the Impact for Organisational Citizenship Behaviours (or Extra Role Behaviours) – Richard Parkman (Plymouth University, UK)
㌀ ─ 䐀椀 猀挀漀甀渀琀 愀琀 琀 栀攀 猀琀 愀氀 氀 ㈀㔀─ 䐀椀 猀挀漀甀渀琀 漀渀氀 椀 渀攀 甀猀攀 挀漀甀瀀漀渀 挀漀搀攀 ᰠ 刀䜀匀ᴠ
眀眀眀⸀ 瀀洀瀀爀 攀猀猀⸀ 漀爀 最⸀ 甀欀
Fri
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
Evening
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
328
18:45–
FP | RGS-OT
Chair's plenary: The politics of solidarity and decolonial possibilities View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/328
Convenor and chair
Sarah Radcliffe (University of Cambridge, UK)
1
The politics of solidarity and decolonial possibilities – Juanita Sundberg (The University of British Columbia, Canada)
2
Discussant – Mark Jackson (University of Bristol, UK)
There will be an exhibition of posters in the Main Hall on Friday 1 September. Poster presenters have been asked to stand by their posters in the tea breaks and in this lunchtime session. 329 FP | RGS-MH
Posters 3 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/329
1
Mapping diversity in Pembrokeshire: A geographical fieldwork application of ArcGIS for Post-16 education – Janine Maddison, Elizabeth Weston (Field Studies Council, UK)
2
Quality Assessment and Spatial Feature of Portal Websites in China’s 5A Rated Tourism Attraction – Lin Mei, Ruiqiu Pang (Northeast Normal University, China)
3
The housebuilding process in Benin City, Nigeria: The politics of formal and informal institutions on the delivery of quality housing – Uyi Ezeanah (University of Sheffield, UK)
4
Hydrosedimentary behavior in drainage system with natural and artificial channels: implications in hydrological connectivity – Renato Emanuel Silva, Silvio Carlos Rodrigues (Federal University of Uberlândia, Brazil)
5
The Slaughterhouse Tour: the Benefits of Experiential Learning in an Agricultural Geography Course – Karen Barton (University of Northern Colorado, USA)
FP | RGS-EC
Postgraduate Forum Business Meeting
FP | RGS-CR
Planning and Environment Research Group AGM
FP | RGS-LR
Historical Geography Research Group AGM
FP | RGS-SR
Participatory Geographies Research Group AGM
FP | RGS-DR
Developing Areas Research Group AGM
FP | SAF-120
Space, Sexualities and Queer Research Group AGM
FP | SAF-121
Geographies of Justice Research Group AGM
Lunch will be served in the Main Hall and Marquee at the RGS-IBG. You will find a ticket for lunch in your name badge. If you have requested a special diet, please go to the Marquee. Please come to the Registration Desk if you have questions and/or there are any problems.
Visit the Edward Elgar stand to browse our current geography publications, or to discuss a proposal with our commissioning editor: Katy Crossan:
[email protected]
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The Lypiatts, 15 Lansdown Road Cheltenham, Glos, GL50 2JA UK Tel: + 44 1242 226934 . Fax: + 44 1242 262111 . www.e-elgar.com
Fri
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
330
Evening 18:45–
F3 | RGS-OT
Singapore Journal of Tropical Geography Lecture: Singularity. A manifesto for incomparable geographies View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/330
Convenor
Tim Bunnell (National University of Singapore, Singapore)
Chair
Jonathan Rigg (National University of Singapore, Singapore)
1
Singularity. A manifesto for incomparable geographies – Tariq Jazeel (University College London, UK)
331 F3 | RGS-EC
The Museum of Contemporary Commodities: creative propositions and provocations on the heritages of data-tradeplace-value (1): Panel Discussion See also: 361 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/331
Affiliation
DGWG
Convenors
Paula Crutchlow, Ian Cook, Sam Kinsley (University of Exeter, UK)
Chair
Sam Kinsley (University of Exeter, UK)
1
Panel Discussion – Paula Crutchlow, Ian Cook (University of Exeter, UK), Ruth Catlow (Furtherfield, UK), Philip Crang (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK), Merle Patchett (University of Bristol, UK), Alison Powell (London School of Economics and Political Science, UK), Dorothea Kleine (University of Sheffield, UK)
332 F3 | RGS-CR
Alternative narratives of Mashriq and Maghreb; the politics of situated, practiced and indigenous knowledges View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/332
Affiliation
PolGRG
Convenor
Olivia Mason (Durham University, UK), Jonathan Harris (University of Cambridge, UK)
Chair
Jonathan Harris (University of Cambridge, UK)
1
Everyday urbanisms instead of desert dreams: the contestation of knowledge production on contemporary Cairo – Katharina Grueneisl (Durham University, UK)
2
Carabiners and Bedouin bridges: climbing the rocks of Wadi Rum – Olivia Mason (Durham University, UK)
3
Tamazgha beyond the sea; articulations of indigeneity at a distance in the Amazigh diaspora – Jonathan Harris (University of Cambridge, UK)
4
Walking ‘watan’: Journeys of resistance, affect and knowledge to Palestine as a homeland – Dorien Vanden Boer (Ghent University, Belgium)
Fri
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
Evening
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
333
18:45–
F3 | RGS-LR
New and Emerging Research in Historical Geography (3): Spaces of Knowledge Making See also: 271, 301 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/333
Affiliation
HGRG
Convenors
Bronia Cross (University of Hull, UK), Benjamin Newman (Royal Holloway, University of London / Royal Geographical Society (with IBG), UK)
Chair
Benjamin Newman (Royal Holloway, University of London / Royal Geographical Society (with IBG), UK)
1
A princely education in Georgian Britain: The view from the King’s topographical collection – Jeremy Brown (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
2
The concrete cartographers who built Scotland in miniature – John Hutchinson (University of Glasgow, UK)
3
The geographies of the 1911 Eclipse Expeditions to Tonga – Rory Mawhinney (Queen's University Belfast, UK)
4
White Children’s Bodies as Sites of Colonial Medical Knowledge Making – Bronia Cross (University of Hull, UK)
5
The 20th century pub pamphlet & the re-enchantment of the world – Jonathan Moses (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
334 F3 | RGS-SR
Energy poverty and vulnerability: developing a global perspective (1) See also: 364 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/334
Affiliation
EnGRG
Convenors
Harriet Thomson, Neil Simcock, Saska Petrova, Stefan Bouzarovski (University of Manchester, UK)
Chair
Neil Simcock (University of Manchester, UK)
1
Panel Discussion – Darren McCauley (University of St Andrews, UK), Saska Petrova (University of Manchester, UK), Jiska de Groot (University of Cape Town, South Africa), Irena Connon (University of Dundee, UK), Marilyn Smith (The Energy Action Project)
335 F3 | RGS-DR Convenor and chair
Terra Femme: Early Film Travelogues by Women View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/335 Courtney Stephens (Independent Filmmaker)
Fri
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
336 F3 | SAF-G34
Evening 18:45–
Decolonisation and Relationships of Accountability (1) See also: 366 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/336
Convenor
Michelle Daigle (University of British Columbia, Canada), Adam Barker (University of Hertfordshire, UK)
Chair
Adam Barker (University of Hertfordshire, UK)
1
Unsettling Decolonizing Geographies – Sarah Hunt (University of British Columbia, Canada), Sarah De Leeuw (University of Northern British Columbia, USA)
2
Decolonising geography by being-together-in-place: situated engagement in a more-thanhuman world – Jay T. Johnson (University of Kansas, USA), Soren Larsen (University of Missouri, USA)
3
Unsettling geographical knowledges in the classroom – Michelle Daigle, Juanita Sundberg (University of British Columbia, Canada)
337 F3 | SAF-119
After Urban Creative Economies View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/337
Convenors
Kate Oakley, Jonathan Ward (University of Leeds, UK)
Chair
Kate Oakley (University of Leeds, UK)
1
Craft, creative economies and the challenge of sustainable scale – Susan Luckman (University of South Australia, Australia)
2
Understanding creative labour: shifting focus from individuals to households – Carol Ekinsmyth (University of Portsmouth, UK), Brian Hracs, Suzanne Reimer (University of Southampton, UK)
3
From the margins to the centre: the role of creative hubs in supporting craft and creative workers in the Northern Isles of Scotland – Katherine Champion (University of Stirling, UK)
4
Where the creative economy goes next: lessons from the UK – Kate Oakley, Jonathan Ward (University of Leeds, UK)
338 F3 | SAF-120
Gay Male Urban Spaces after Grindr & Gentrification (2): Rethinking Gay Urban Geographies See also: 306 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/338
Affiliation
SSQRG
Convenors
Ryan Centner (London School of Economics and Political Science, UK), Martin Zebracki (University of Leeds, UK)
Chair
Amin Ghaziani (The University of British Columbia, Canada)
1
Centering Provincial Gay Life – Greggor Mattson (Oberlin College, USA)
2
A Room of One’s Own? Digital Domestication of the Public Encounter – Sam Miles (Queen Mary University of London, UK)
Fri
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
Evening 18:45–
3
The Limits of Urban Mournability? Bearded Drag Zombies and the Flatlining of Gay Nightlife in East London – Ryan Centner (London School of Economics and Political Science, UK)
4
South Beach and Wilton Manors as Alternative Futures for the Post-Gay Era – Kai Kenttamaa Squires (McGill University, Canada)
5
Discussant – Gustav Visser (Stellenbosch University, South Africa)
339 F3 | SAF-121
Decolonising Wild-Life: Critical Geographies of Rewilding (3) See also: 277, 307 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/339
Affiliation
PyGyRG, RGRG
Convenors
Cara Clancy, Kim Ward (Plymouth University, UK), Sophie Wynne-Jones (Bangor University, UK), Kieran O'Mahony (Cardiff University, UK)
Chair
Sophie Wynne-Jones (Bangor University, UK)
1
Rewilding or profits? Learning from the Save Valley Conservancy in Zimbabwe – Svongwa Nemadire, Maarten Loopmans (University of Leuven, Belgium)
2
Re-wilding and De-wilding the Galápagos: Re-worlding World Heritage – Daisy Sutcliffe (University of Glasgow, UK)
3
Hybrid Beings. Livestock Guardian Dogs and the Synthetisation of Nature and Culture in the Swiss Wolf Repopulation Process? – Nikolaus Heinzer (University of Zurich, Switzerland)
4
(More-than-)Human Beings and Becomings: taking participation and community ownership seriously in rewilding praxis – Clare Bissell (University of Cambridge, UK)
5
Discussant – George Holmes (University of Leeds, UK)
340 F3 | SAF-122
Mobility and transport justice (1): framing and scope See also: 370 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/340
Affiliation
GJRG
Convenors
Caroline Mullen (University of Leeds, UK), Tom Cohen (University College London, UK)
Chair
Tom Cohen (University College London, UK)
1
Towards Global Mobility Justice – Hendrik Kempt (University of Siegen, Germany/Brown University, USA)
2
Mobilities at the edge: Urban development, transport networks and mobility (in)justice in Soacha, Colombia – Daniel Oviedo Hernández (University College London, UK)
3
Freedom and the basis of mobility justice – Caroline Mullen (University of Leeds, UK)
Fri
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
341
Evening 18:45–
F3 | SKE-060a
Housing, community and development (1) See also: 371 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/341
Chair
Charlotte Lemanski (University of Cambridge, UK)
1
Building a new community within an existing community: Stoke City's £1 housing scheme – Charlotte Lemanski (University of Cambridge, UK)
2
Bonded citizenship: home ownership and class formation in Cosmo City public housing project, Johannesburg – Alexander Wafer (University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa)
3
High-Rise Housing ‘Gangnam Style’: the Cultural and Institutional Determinants of the Urban Residential Built Forms – Jinhee Park (Korea University, South Korea)
4
A typology of Smart homes and technology within Scotland – Rachel Creaney (University of St Andrews/James Hutton Institute, UK)
5
Calculative Practices, Residential Development Processes and the Supply of Affordable Housing – Laurence Murphy (University of Auckland, New Zealand)
342 F3 | SKE-060b
Resource Temporalities (2): Circulation, Mutation, Standstill See also: 310 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/342
Convenors
Kärg Kama (University of Oxford, UK), Gisa Weszkalnys (London School of Economics and Political Science, UK)
Chair
Gisa Weszkalnys (London School of Economics and Political Science, UK)
1
Gilded time: gold, desire and the evasive future in Amazonia – Amy Penfield (University of Manchester, UK)
2
Resource nationalism, cut-off trades and the supercycle: temporal erasure at the extractive industries' financial frontier – Gilbert Paul Robert (University of Brighton, UK)
3
The role of Material Flow Analysis (MFA) in assembling resources for a circular economy – Ruth Lane (Monash University, Australia)
4
Chemical potential – Andrew Barry (University College London, UK)
5
Accounting for oil's end: the afterlife of a well-site and the politics of liability in Alberta – Caura Wood (York University, Canada)
343 F3 | SKE-060c
Emerging Geographies of Religions, Spiritualties, and Faith (1) See also: 373 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/343
Convenors
Stephanie Denning (University of Bristol, UK), Richard Scriven (University College Cork, Ireland)
Chair
Stephanie Denning (University of Bristol, UK)
1
The persistence of action: an affective approach to faith-based social action – Stephanie Denning (University of Bristol, UK)
2
Insider or outsider? Reflections from a Christian researcher working within a religious context – Beth Saunders (Aberystwyth University, UK)
Fri
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
Evening 18:45–
3
‘Your grandmother’s here’: positionality and reflexivity when researching Spirit communication – Nadia Bartolini (University of Exeter, UK)
4
New Agenda for Geographies of Religion – Siti Mazidah Haji Mohamad (Universiti Brunei Darussalam, Brunei)
5
Geographical imagination and the postsecular city – Giuseppe Carta (University of Bristol, UK)
344 F3 | SKE-064b
Finding futures for waterways (1): Cultural heritage and hidden histories See also: 374 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/344
Convenors
Hannah Pitt (Cardiff University, UK), Paul Gilchrist (University of Brighton, UK)
Chair
Hannah Pitt (Cardiff University, UK)
1
Water – City – Bristol. (Re)Weaving Narratives of Hidden Water Ecologies – Katherine Jones (University of the West of England, UK), Owain Jones (Bath Spa University, UK), Lindsey McEwen, Michael Buser (University of the West of England, UK), Antony Lyons (-), Peter Coates (University of Bristol, UK)
2
Watery pasts and the constellation of the canal – Paul Gilchrist (University of Brighton, UK)
3
“The Canal is dead; long live the Canal”: connecting stories and perceptions – Francesco Visentin (University of Venice, Italy)
4
Canals as leisurescape: Boating through time in North-West England – Maarja Kaaristo (Manchester Metropolitan University, UK)
345 F3 | SKE-163
Teaching as a postgraduate: How to Maximise the Available Opportunities View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/345
Affiliation
PGF
Convenors
Tim Fewtrell (Loughborough University, UK), Daniel Casey (The University of Sheffield, UK)
Chair
Tim Fewtrell (Loughborough University, UK)
1
Panel Discussion – Tim Fewtrell, Panagiota Sotiropoulou (Loughborough University, UK), Maddy Thompson (Newcastle University, UK)
Fri
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
346
Evening 18:45–
F3 | SKE-164
Problematizing colonial modernity: geographies of universalism and pluriversalism (1): Classes, genders ad universals See also: 375 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/346
Affiliation
HGRG
Convenors
Gerónimo Barrera de la Torre (Research Institute “Dr. José María Luis Mora”, México), Federico Ferretti (University College Dublin, Ireland), Anthony Ince (Cardiff University, UK)
Chair
Anthony Ince (Cardiff University, UK)
1
Convenors’ Introduction – Gerónimo Barrera de la Torre (Research Institute “Dr. José María Luis Mora”, México), Federico Ferretti (University College Dublin, Ireland), Anthony Ince (Cardiff University, UK)
2
The Promised Barbarians: Bakunin and the People without History – Antonio Ferraz de Oliveira (University of Warwick, UK)
3
Decolonising the Encyclopédie: early anarchist geographers and Radical Enlightenment – Federico Ferretti (University College Dublin, Ireland)
4
Terra plena: Madre Tierra and the pluriverse – Naomi Millner (University of Bristol, UK)
5
Intersex embodiment of the hegemonic misconception of an immutable individual. Postcolonial “order” of knowledge about pediatric surgery in the second half of 20th century in Colombia – Sara Lugo Marquez (Universitat Autónoma de Barcelona, Spain)
347 F3 | SKE-201
Panel discussion: Sally Eden’s Environmental Publics View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/347
Convenors
Gordon Walker (Lancaster University, UK), Christopher Bear (Cardiff University, UK), David Gibbs (University of Hull, UK), Andrew Donaldson (Newcastle University, UK)
Chair
Gordon Walker (Lancaster University, UK)
1
Panel discussion: Sally Eden’s Environmental Publics – Harriet Bulkeley (Durham University, UK), Christopher Bear (Cardiff University, UK), Lewis Holloway (University of Hull, UK), Gordon Walker (Lancaster University, UK), Russell Hitchings (University College London, UK), Andrew Donaldson (Newcastle University, UK), Paul Barratt (Staffordshire University, UK), David Gibbs (University of Hull, UK), Karen Bickerstaff (University of Exeter, UK), Helen Pallett (University of East Anglia, UK), Gerald Taylor Aiken (University of Luxembourg, Luxembourg), Anita McKeown (Independent Researcher)
Fri
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
348
Evening 18:45–
F3 | SKE-207
New Energy Spaces – Conceptualizing the geographical political economy of energy transitions (1) See also: 377 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/348
Affiliation
EnGRG
Convenors
Ludger Gailing (Leibniz Institute for Research on Society and Space, Germany), Gavin Bridge (Durham University, UK)
Chair
Ludger Gailing (Leibniz Institute for Research on Society and Space, Germany)
1
Rescaling Energy?! Politics of Scale and the German energy transition – Soeren Becker (Leibniz Institute for Research on Society and Space, Germany), Matthias Naumann (Freie Universität Berlin, Germany)
2
Building Urban Energy Democracy? Social Reproduction and the Local State in Europe’s New Energy Municipalism – James Angel (King's College London, UK)
3
The contested geographies of Mozambique’s energy pathways – Joshua Kirshner (University of York, UK), Julia Tomei (University College London, UK)
4
Understanding the political economy of demand and supply side energy policy via the policy assessment process of retrofit and unconventional gas – Niall Kerr (University of Edinburgh, UK), Imogen Rattle (University of Leeds, UK)
5
Geological pore space – a new energy infrastructure? – Alexandra Gormally (Lancaster University, UK)
349 F3 | SKE-307
The Future of the Bunker // The Bunker of the Future (2): materialising contemporary anxieties and desires in 21st century bunker building See also: 316, 378 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/349
Convenor
Luke Bennett (Sheffield Hallam University, UK)
Chair
Kathrine Sandys (Rose Bruford College, UK)
1
What do we want from our bunkers? ruins, reinvention, anxiety and power – Luke Bennett (Sheffield Hallam University, UK)
2
Every home a Fortress: Fatherhood and the Family Fallout Shelter in Cold War America – Tom Bishop (University of Sheffield, UK)
3
Bunker play: Possibility space and survival in the Fallout series – Emma Fraser (University of Manchester, UK)
4
Bugging out and bunkering down: on the sheltering tactics of survivalists and preppers in the 21st century – Michael Adams, Carrie Wilkinson (University of Wollongong, Australia)
5
Subterranean sanctuaries? secret underground spaces today – Theo Kindynis (University of Greenwich, UK)
Fri
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
350
Evening 18:45–
F3 | SHE-RD
Transport, Sustainable Cities and Transit Oriented Development (3): promotion and methods - how it works See also: 287, 317 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/350
Affiliation
TGRG
Convenors
Richard Knowles (University of Salford, UK), Fiona Ferbrache (University of Oxford, UK)
Chair
Richard Knowles (University of Salford, UK)
1
Funding Public Transport with Transit Oriented Development Land Value Capture: Comparing Rome and Turin – Gualtiero Bonvino (University College London, UK)
2
The Assessment of Transit Oriented Developments Using Microsimulation Models – Tara Tanoz-Sargeant (AECOM, UK)
3
Modal choice and TOD development: anemic transit and anemic TOD in Montreal – Pierre Barrieau (Universite de Montreal, Canada)
4
Implementing TOD in Greater London – Enrica Papa (University of Westminster, UK)
5
Defining Paratransit’s Role as a Feeder Mode to Mass Transit System in Metro Manila – Daniel Mabazza (University of the Philippines Diliman, Philippines)
351 F3 | SHE-PIP
Negotiating Brexit: migrant spatialities and identities in a changing Europe (3): Everyday Relations, Integration and Securities See also: 288, 318 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/351
Affiliation
PopGRG
Convenors
Kate Botterill (Edinburgh Napier University, UK), David McCollum (University of St Andrews, UK), Naomi Tyrrell (Plymouth University, UK), Andrew Wooff (Edinburgh Napier University, UK)
Chair
Kate Botterill (Edinburgh Napier University, UK)
1
‘Brexit and Me’: Exploring Identity and Belonging with Eastern European Young People Living in the UK – Naomi Tyrrell (Plymouth University, UK), Daniela Sime (University of Strathclyde, UK), Claire Kelly (Plymouth University, UK), Christina McMellon (University of Strathclyde, UK)
2
‘Getting used to it’: understanding EU migrants’ experiences of hostility in pre- and postBrexit Wales – Taulant Guma, Rhys Dafydd Jones (Aberystwyth University, UK)
3
Brexit and the Spanish community: Integration trajectories in turbulent contexts – Helen McCarthy (Middlesex University, UK)
4
‘Betwixt and between’ during Brexit? Questions of home for retired British migrants on the Costa del Sol – Rebekah Miller (The University of Edinburgh, UK)
5
Some Aspects of Intangible Costs of International Migration: A case study of professional Indian immigrants in UK – Atreyi Majumdar (Delhi University, India)
Fri
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
352
Evening 18:45–
F3 | SALC-1
(en) Countering change, (dis) Assembling placeness (2): materialising place See also: 319, 381 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/352
Affiliation
HPGRG
Convenors
Marcus Welsh, Samantha Saville (Aberystwyth University, UK)
Chair
Robert Shaw (Newcastle University, UK)
1
Manufacturing places: ‘the problem of mid-wales’ – Marcus Welsh, Samantha Saville (Aberystwyth University, UK)
2
Passing Places – Hayden Lorimer (University of Glasgow, UK)
3
Steppable city identity: Selective placeness at a micro scale – Edgar Liu (University of New South Wales, Australia)
4
Fish, Fog and Fluorescent Bulbs: Negotiating the More-than-Human, More-than-Terrestrial Place-Assemblage of a Canadian Coastal Community – Michael Woods (Aberystwyth University, UK)
353 F3 | SALC-2
Different and Diverse Knowledges of (Rural) Food Access and Security (1) See also: 382 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/353
Affiliation
FGWG, RGRG
Convenors
Eifiona Thomas Lane, Rebecca Jones (Bangor University, UK)
Chair
Rebecca Jones (Bangor University, UK)
1
Engaging With Beekeepers’ Environmental Knowledge To Ensure Food Security – Siobhan Maderson (Aberystwyth University, UK)
2
'If the countryside doesn’t plant, the city won’t eat’: rural livelihoods, young people and food-water-energy security in the Vale do Paraiba, São Paulo – Catherine Walker, Ben Coles (University of Leicester, UK)
3
Diverse experiences of food poverty in rural Wales – David Beck, Eifiona Thomas Lane, Hefin Gwilym (Bangor University, UK)
354 F3 | SALC-5
Clarence Glacken’s ‘Traces on the Rhodian Shore’ at 50: Nature, Culture and ‘Western Thought’ View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/354
Convenor and chair
Philip Conway (Aberystwyth University, UK)
1
Roundtable Discussion – Innes Keighren (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK), Georgina Endfield (The University of Liverpool, UK), David Livingstone (Queen's University Belfast, UK)
Fri 355
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
Evening 18:45–
F3 | SALC-6
Authors meet critics - Money and Finance after the Crisis: Critical Thinking for Uncertain Times (eds. Brett Christophers, Andrew Leyshon and Geoff Mann, Wiley, 2017) View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/355
Affiliation
EGRG
Convenors
Brett Christophers (Uppsala University, Sweden), Andrew Leyshon (University of Nottingham, UK)
Chair
Sarah Hall (University of Nottingham, UK)
1
Panel – Brett Christophers (Uppsala University, Sweden), Andrew Leyshon (University of Nottingham, UK), Gary A. Dymski (University of Leeds, UK), Paul Langley (Durham University, UK), Karen P.Y. Lai (National University of Singapore, Singapore), Yuval Millo (University of Warwick, UK), Ismael Ertürk (University of Manchester, UK)
356 F3 | SALC-7
Tourism and Geographies of Risk View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/356
Affiliation
GLTRG
Convenors
Jennifer Holland, Jo-Anne Lester, Clare Weeden (University of Brighton, UK)
Chair(s)
Jennifer Holland (University of Brighton, UK)
1
Degrees of Risk: Evaluating the experiences of international students as tourists – Martin Selby (Coventry University, UK)
2
Navigating Uncertainty: The Perception of Risk in Cruise Tourists' Decision-Making – Jennifer Holland (University of Brighton, UK)
3
Women mountaineers: Place, risk and dreaming of the unknown – Jenny Hall (York St John University, UK)
4
Integrating Risk Perspectives into the Tourism-Peacebuilding Debate: Observations from the Israeli-Palestinian Context – Daniel Laven, Minna Lundgren, Anna Olofsson, Katarina Giritli-Nygren (Mid Sweden University, Sweden)
5
The relationship between risk perception and destination choice processes – Marion Karl (University of Munich, Germany)
357 F3 | SALC-8
Soundscapes and Wellbeing (1): Performing Soundscapes of Wellbeing See also: 386 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/357
Convenors
Laura Colebrooke (University of Exeter, UK), Richard Gorman (Cardiff University, UK)
Chair
Laura Colebrooke (University of Exeter, UK)
1
The mother as flaneure- sensory stories mapping embodied maternal landscapes – Rosie Reed Hillman (University of the West of England, UK)
2
Soundscape of Shamanic Rituals – Elina Hytonen-Ng (University of Eastern Finland, Finland)
Fri
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
Evening
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
18:45–
3
Experiential Intensive: The Listening and Sounding Meditations of Pauline Oliveros – Anne Bourne (Independent)
4
ASMR and the intimacy of individuals, sounds, and environments – Craig Richard (Shenandoah University, USA)
5
The Tingle-Event: To What Extent Can the Posthuman Subject Be Embodied Within the Intimate Soundscapes of Autonomous Sensory Meridian Response (ASMR) Videos? – Lizzie Masterton (University of the Arts London, UK)
358 F3 | SALC-9
Workshop: Spatial Urban Analytics and Crowdsourced Geographic Information for Smarter Cities (1) See also: 387 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/358
Affiliation
GIScRG
Convenors
João Porto de Albuquerque (University of Warwick, UK), René Westerholt (Heidelberg University, Germany)
Chair
João Porto de Albuquerque (University of Warwick, UK)
1
Welcome note – João Porto de Albuquerque (University of Warwick, UK), René Westerholt (Heidelberg University, Germany)
2
A platform for measuring urban functionality from social media data – Chen Zhong, Michele Ferretti (King's College London, UK)
3
The role of mobility in exploring spatial aspects of liveability using big data – Anna KovácsGyőri (University of Salzburg, Austria)
4
Locating the social: Embedding spatial urban analytics into the operation of critical urban infrastructure – Philipp Ulbrich, Jon Coaffee (University of Warwick, UK)
5
How Twitter and Instagram can locate ‘food deserts’ and predict cancer rate: Studying dietary choices and chronic diseases in food deprivation areas in London – Elisabeth Titis (University of Warwick, UK)
359 F3 | HUX-341
Constructing the higher education student: understanding spatial variations (1) See also: 388 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/359
Affiliation
GCYFRG
Convenors
Rachel Brooks (University of Surrey, UK), Johanna Waters (University of Oxford, UK)
Chair
Rachel Brooks (University of Surrey, UK)
1
Constructing ‘spaces’ of student friendship: understanding the socio-spatial coproduction of friendship in UK university halls of residences – Mark Holton (Plymouth University, UK)
2
Cohortness and more-than-neoliberal subjectivities: (mis)fitting into student life – Peter Kraftl (University of Birmingham, UK), Gavin Brown (University of Leicester, UK)
3
Black and minority ethnic experiences of a university campus in northern England – Graeme Mearns, Peter Hopkins (Newcastle University, UK)
Fri
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
Evening 18:45–
4
The role of the university - and therefore the student? – Richard Budd (Liverpool Hope University, UK)
5
The meaning of discipline in constructing the implied student in higher education – Lene Møller Madsen, Lars Ulriksen, Henriette Tolstrup Holmegaard (University of Copenhagen, Denmark)
360 F3 | HUX-342
The Hydrosocial Cycle in Postcolonial Times View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/360
Convenors
Marcus Nuesser (Heidelberg University, Germany), Jessica Budds (University of East Anglia, UK)
Chair
Jessica Budds (University of East Anglia, UK)
1
Decolonizing Himalayan waterscapes – Marcus Nuesser, Susanne Schmidt (Heidelberg University, Germany)
2
Modern pipes and traditional institutions: Reassembling the irrigation system in Central Pokot, Kenya – Paul Roden (Kenyatta University, Kenya)
3
Sachet water use in Accra, Ghana: Making do or making anew? – Ravi Baghel (Trier University, Germany)
4
Desalination and the disarticulation of the hydrosocial cycle: Stabilising the neoliberal model in Chile – Mariac Fragkou (University of Chile. Chile), Jessica Budds (University of East Anglia, UK)
5
Water conflicts in north-central Chile: neoliberal agenda, agrarian exports and social movements – Juliane Dame, Carina Zang (Heidelberg University, Germany)
CARTOGRAPHICA the international journal for geographic information and geovisualization
Cartographica is an international, interdisciplinary, peer-reviewed journal, which publishes transformative research, education, and practice contributions to the methodological, social, political, technological, and historical aspects of cartography, mapping, GIS, surveying, geography, computer science, remote sensing, and visualization. Cartographica Online features the complete archive of current and previously published articles going back to 1964 (issue 1.1) – more than 1,800 articles, monographs, book reviews, and commentaries. RECENT SPECIAL ISSUES AND SECTIONS Student Papers: Societal Uses of Cartography (52.2, Summer 2017)
Student Papers: Glaciers, Geomorphology, and Sedimentology (50.3, Fall 2015) “Deconstructing the Map”: 25 Years On (50.1, Spring 2015) The Challenges of Visualization: Selected Papers from the 26th International Cartographic Conference, Dresden, August 25–30, 2013 (48.2, Summer 2013) Land Use and Land Change (47.4, Winter 2012) Indigenous Cartographies and Counter-Mapping (47.2, Summer 2012)
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Fri
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
361
Evening 18:45–
F4 | RGS-EC
The Museum of Contemporary Commodities: creative propositions and provocations on the heritages of data-tradeplace-value (2) See also: 331 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/361
Affiliation
DGWG
Convenors
Paula Crutchlow, Ian Cook, Sam Kinsley (University of Exeter, UK)
Chair
Ian Cook (University of Exeter, UK)
1
Remaking the future: imitation as agency – Louise Ashcroft (AltMFA, UK)
2
Footsteps in the Wind: The Touristic Noise of Muzeum Auschwitz-Birkenau – Emmanuel Spinelli (Goldsmiths, University of London, UK)
3
A critique of linguistic capitalism (and an artistic intervention) – Pip Thornton (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
4
Place-faking: fermenting resistance through digital productions of space – Andrew Dwyer (University of Oxford / Cyber Security CDT, UK), Joe Shaw (University of Oxford, UK)
5
Textual Maps: The Body as Site – Alexandra Joensson (Westminster, UK), Loes Bogers (Amsterdam University of Applied Sciences, The Netherlands)
6
The Critter Compiler: Speculations on life and microbial computing – Helen Pritchard (Goldsmiths, University of London, UK)
7
Talking to MoCC Guide Mikayla - a responsive play between dramaturgy and protocol – Paula Crutchlow, Sam Kinsley (University of Exeter, UK)
362 F4 | RGS-CR
Unsettling tourism knowledges View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/362
Affiliation
GLTRG, PyGyRG
Convenors
Claudia Eger (University of Warwick, UK), Heather Jeffrey (University of Bedfordshire, UK), Caroline Scarles (University of Surrey, UK)
Chair
Caroline Scarles (University of Surrey, UK)
1
Unsettling knowledges and silences within – Claudia Eger (University of Warwick, UK)
2
Panoramic perspectives: Unsettling the aesthetics and idealisations of travel experiences – Kaya Barry (Griffith University, Australia)
3
Volunteer Tourism: A path towards Buen Vivir? – Steven Owen (University of St Andrews, UK)
4
"The Tourist is not a White Man" – Harng Luh Sin (National University of Singapore, Singapore)
5
Frictions and interactions between hosts and visitors – changes in the cultural landscape in Bucovina – Cristina Maxim (University of West London, UK), Carmen Chasovschi (Stefan cel Mare University, Romania)
Fri
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
Evening
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
363 F4 | RGS-LR
18:45–
Locating the limits to financialisation View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/363
Convenors
Kelly Kay (London School of Economics and Political Science, UK), Amy Horton (Queen Mary University of London, UK)
Chair
Amy Horton (Queen Mary University of London, UK)
1
Panel Discussion – Kavita Datta (Queen Mary University of London, UK), Desiree Fields (University of Sheffield, UK), Brett Christophers (Uppsala University, Sweden), Paul Langley (Durham University, UK), Fanny Malinen (Debt Resistance UK, UK)
364 F4 | RGS-SR
Energy poverty and vulnerability: developing a global perspective (2) See also: 334 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/364
Affiliation
EnGRG
Convenors
Harriet Thomson, Neil Simcock, Saska Petrova, Stefan Bouzarovski (University of Manchester, UK)
Chair
Harriet Thomson (University of Manchester, UK)
1
World Cafe
365 F4 | RGS-DR
Mobile lives in the digital age: implications, challenges and opportunities View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/365
Affiliation
TGRG, DGWG
Convenors
Billy Clayton, Juliet Jain (University of the West of England, UK), Adele Ladkin (Bournemouth University, UK), David Kirk (Northumbria University, UK)
Chair
Adele Ladkin (Bournemouth University, UK)
1
Mobile lives in the digital age: The intimate, emotional and haptic geographies of everyday wayfinding with my iPhone – Ainsley Hughes (University of Newcastle, Australia)
2
The indispensable device. Or how daily mobility strategies are adapted by mobile phones in Santiago de Chile – Paola Jiron (University of Chile, Chile)
3
Technologies and the Representations of Mobility Spaces of Elderly People – Ondrej Mulicek, Zdenek Stachon (Masaryk University, Czech Republic)
4
Connected by rail: a study of internet use on the train – Juliet Jain, Billy Clayton, Caroline Bartle (University of the West of England, UK)
5
“The world is not your oyster”: the mediatization of work and belonging in mobile academic settings – Jenny Jansdotter (Karlstad University, Sweden)
Fri
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
366 F4 | SAF-G34
Evening 18:45–
Decolonisation and Relationships of Accountability (2) See also: 336 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/366
Convenors
Michelle Daigle (University of British Columbia, Canada), Adam Barker (University of Hertfordshire, UK)
Chair
Michelle Daigle (University of British Columbia, Canada)
1
Indigenising the concept and process of accountability – Matthew Scobie (University of Sheffield, UK)
2
Who Are We Here?: Settler relationality and accountability in the heart of empire – Adam Barker, Emma Battell-Lowman (University of Hertfordshire, UK)
3
On Shit-Kicking and Tea-Drinking: Accountability through Anger and Diplomacy in the Academy – Heather Castleden (Queen's University, Canada)
4
Beyond colonial confines? – Vanessa Sloan Morgan (Queen's University, Canada)
367 F4 | SAF-119 Chair
Food geographies: production and supply chains View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/367 Bruce Scholten (Durham University, UK)
1
The Potential for Aquaculture in Lake Victoria and Implications for Wild Fisheries and Fish Commodity Markets – Stuart Hamilton (Salisbury University, USA), Sarah Glaser (Secure Fisheries), Leslie Kaufman (Boston University, USA), Dale Rothman, Karin Wedig (University of Denver, USA)
2
Imag(in)ing farms in supermarkets: gender, sexuality, nation and the sale of ‘high welfare’ chicken – Andrea Petitt, Jacob Bull (Uppsala University, Sweden)
3
Changing chicken bodies – what has science got to do with it? – Helena Nordström Källström (Swedish University for Agricultural Sciences, Sweden)
4
Dairy Cooperatives Empower Farmers vis-à-vis Processors & Traders in US, UK & India – Bruce Scholten (Durham University, UK)
5
Livelihood strategies, food production in a rural small town in Turkey – Coşku Kocabıyık (KU Leuven, Belgium), Maarten Loopmans (University of Leuven, Belgium)
6
Reflections on supplier entry barriers to domestic retail markets: The case of food processing firms in Kenya – Lotte Thomsen (Copenhagen Business School, Denmark), Paul Kamau, Dorothy McCormick (University of Nairobi, Kenya)
368 F4 | SAF-120
Teaching Geographies of Gender and Sexualities View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/368
Affiliation
SSQRG
Convenors and chairs
Martin Zebracki (University of Leeds, UK), Joe Hall (University of Northampton, UK)
1
Panel discussion – Ruth Evans (University of Reading, UK), Tracey Skelton (National University of Singapore, Singapore), Kath Browne (University of Brighton, UK), Marianne Blidon (PantheonSorbonne University, France)
Fri
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
369
Evening 18:45–
F4 | SAF-121
Decolonising Nature in the Anthropocene: emerging conceptualisations of nature & their challenges View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/369
Affiliation
DARG
Convenor and chair
Jessica Hope (University of Cambridge, UK)
1
Dilemmas of decolonisation: Indigeneity, nature, and extraction in Bolivia – Penelope Anthias (University of Copenhagen, Denmark)
2
Indigenous ontologies of nature for the Anthropocene: challenges and opportunities in context – Jessica Hope (University of Cambridge, UK)
3
The Chief and the Snake: Spiritual-Ecological-Political Assemblages of Sacred Site Protection – Thomas Aneurin Smith (Cardiff University, UK)
4
Decoloniality and the 'critical' enchantment of nature – Karsten Schulz (University of Trier, Germany)
370 F4 | SAF-122
Mobility and transport justice (2): power and participation See also: 340 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/370
Convenors
Caroline Mullen (University of Leeds, UK), Tom Cohen (University College London, UK)
Chair
Caroline Mullen (University of Leeds, UK)
1
Setting the rules of just mobility: the essential role of citizen participation – Tom Cohen (University College London, UK)
2
Role of participation in understanding accessibility, social exclusion and urban mobility – Nihan Akyelken (University of Oxford, UK)
3
Streets as conduits for Social Justice: analysis of the current mobility culture of Cape Town streets and their ability to catalyse authentic community participation in enhancing mobility for all – Kirsten Wilkins (ContestedSpaces : Urban Design Consultancy), Gordon Laing (Pedal Power Association)
4
Normative concepts in travel behaviour change communications and mobility justice – Kate Pangbourne, Al Baker-Graham (University of Leeds, UK)
371 F4 | SKE-060a
Housing, community and development (2) See also: 341 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/371
Chair
Sarah Evans (Royal Geographical Society (with IBG), UK)
1
‘Tiny house, big impact’: are tiny homes a cure for consumerism? Exploring tiny house living in the United States – Megan Carras (University of St Andrews, UK)
2
Everyday home life with biomass boilers, heat pumps and solar thermal panels: a UK and Netherlands comparison – Katherine Ellsworth-Krebs, Louise Reid (University of St Andrews, UK)
3
Domesticating energy efficiency technologies: understanding the ‘adopter’ perspectives of uk homeowners in existing housing – Rosita Aiesha (Liverpool John Moores University, UK)
Fri 4
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
Evening 18:45–
Levies, levies, levies: Its influence on the production of quality housing in Benin City – Uyi Ezeanah (The University of Sheffield, UK)
372 F4 | SKE-060b Chair
Geographies of activism and protest View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/372 Ruth Craggs (King’s College London, UK)
1
Rethinking Activism; Spaces of Disability Activism in Times of Austerity – Angharad ButlerRees (University of Southampton, UK)
2
#demo2010: Using Twitter to Research the Geographies of Protest – Hannah Awcock (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
3
Squatting the Heart of the Empire: Olive Morris and the Brixton Black Women's Centre – Milo Bettocchi (University of Nottingham, UK)
4
Deliberative Democracies in Global Justice Movements: Agonistic Pluralisms & Horizontal Democracies – John Haworth (University of East London, UK)
5
Grassroots community solidarity structures in Greece as counterhegemonic practices contesting the dominant hegemony of neoliberalism – Janet Speake (Liverpool Hope University, UK), Maria Pentaraki (Queen's University Belfast, UK)
6
Transformative reformism: A study of the UK University Fossil Fuel Divestment Movement’s potential for significant change – Xaviera Ringeling (University College London, UK)
373 F4 | SKE-060c
Emerging Geographies of Religions, Spiritualties, and Faith (2) See also: 343 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/373
Convenors
Stephanie Denning (University of Bristol, UK), Richard Scriven (University College Cork, Ireland)
Chair
Richard Scriven (University College Cork, Ireland)
1
Sounds of Pilgrimage: a sonic exploration of performance, place, and prayer – Richard Scriven (University College Cork, Ireland)
2
La Ruta Dragonte: A Guerrilla Pilgrimage – Sian Taylder (University of Exeter, UK)
3
Practicing faith, practicing sexuality: everyday lived experiences of non-heterosexual Muslims – Nathar Iqbal (Newcastle University, UK)
4
Historical Geographies of Everyday Religion and the ‘Material Archive’ – Ruth Slatter (University College London, UK)
5
Negotiating religious power in fieldwork – Andrew Williams (Cardiff University, UK)
Fri
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
374
Evening 18:45–
F4 | SKE-064b
Finding futures for waterways (2): Communities, mobilities and changing lifestyles See also: 344 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/374
Convenors
Hannah Pitt (Cardiff University, UK), Paul Gilchrist (University of Brighton, UK)
Chair
Paul Gilchrist (University of Brighton, UK)
1
Mooring and Mobility: Continuous Cruising on East London Waterways – Erika Jones (University College London, UK)
2
Waterways’ missing communities and hidden benefits – Hannah Pitt (Cardiff University, UK)
3
Castles and roses: challenging the visual regime of canal heritage-led regeneration – Abigail Wincott (University of Brighton, UK)
4
Experiencing minor waterways and the recovery of hydrophilia – Francesco Vallerani (University of Venice, Italy)
5
Canalscapes: reading the contemporary, post-industrial urban canal – Andrew Wallace, Katy Wright (University of Leeds, UK)
375 F4 | SKE-164
Problematizing colonial modernity: geographies of universalism and pluriversalism (2): Which decolonial geographies? See also: 346 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/375
Affiliation
HGRG, PolGRG
Convenors
Gerónimo Barrera de la Torre (Research Institute “Dr. José María Luis Mora”, México), Federico Ferretti (University College Dublin, Ireland), Anthony Ince (Cardiff University, UK)
Chair
Federico Ferretti (University College Dublin, Ireland)
1
“No platform”? Decolonial thought and the anti-fascist imperative – Anthony Ince (Cardiff University, UK)
2
Decoloniality and the struggle for freedom of movement: solidarity, anarchist politics and (un)learning – James Ellison (Loughborough University, UK)
3
Reflections on the ontological approaches and knowledges dialogue: "other" geographies and the Chatino landscape – Gerónimo Barrera de la Torre (Research Institute “Dr. José María Luis Mora”, México)
4
“Other” Geographies: Nature, natures or “culturalezas”? Theories, concepts and practices of territory and landscape production among Purhépecha and Chatino people of México – Narciso Barrera-Bassols (Universidad Autónoma de Querétaro, Mexico), Gerónimo Barrera de la Torre (Research Institute “Dr. José María Luis Mora”, México)
376 F4 | SKE-201
Unsettling Carbon Society View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/376
Convenors
Harriet Bulkeley (Durham University, UK), Johannes Stripple (University of Lund, Sweden), Matthew Paterson (University of Manchester, UK)
Chair
Harriet Bulkeley (Durham University, UK)
Fri
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
Evening
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
18:45–
1
Deflating a ‘Carbon Bubble’: State-organized devaluation and the socialization of decarbonization risk – Sarah Knuth (University of Michigan, USA)
2
Coal-fired incumbency: the contested roles of trade unions in sustainability transformations – Phil Johnstone, Peter Newell (University of Sussex, UK)
3
Decarbonizing the meat & dairy sector: Investigating political dynamics in EU low carbon innovation pathways – Agni Kalfagianni, Simona Negro, Maria Tziva (Utrecht University, The Netherlands)
4
Inertia and stability in electricity metering – Heather Lovell (University of Tasmania, Australia)
5
‘Three extra minutes’. Contesting Complete Streets in Ottawa – Matthew Paterson (The University of Manchester, UK), Louis Machabee (University of Ottawa, Canada)
6
Undoing Carbon – Harriet Bulkeley (Durham University, UK), Johannes Stripple (University of Lund, Sweden)
377 F4 | SKE-207
New Energy Spaces – Conceptualizing the geographical political economy of energy transitions (2) See also: 348 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/377
Affiliation
EnGRG
Convenors
Ludger Gailing (Leibniz Institute for Research on Society and Space, Germany), Gavin Bridge (Durham University, UK)
Chair
Gavin Bridge (Durham University, UK)
1
The political and material construction of low-carbon transitions: the (non-)diffusion of district energy systems in Alberta (Canada) and Ile-de-France (France) – Aida Nciri (University of Calgary, Canada)
2
Sociospatial Dimensions of Energy Transitions in Germany: Using the TPSN framework (Territory, Place, Scale and Network) – Ludger Gailing (Leibniz Institute for Research on Society and Space, Germany)
3
Deconstructing technopolitics: the influence of spatial representations in the debate over energy transitions in Sweden – Teva Meyer (University of Paris VIII, France)
4
The (geo)politics of 'Just Transition' from fossil fuels: Uneven resource geographies and supply-side constraint options in the Anthropocene – Philippe Le Billon (The University of British Columbia, Canada)
5
Governance of biomass-based energy production – Maria Proestou (Humboldt University of Berlin, Germany), Wibke Crewett (Humboldt University of Berlin, Germany)
378 F4 | SKE-307
The Future of the Bunker // The Bunker of the Future (3): In the Ruins of the Cold War Bunker: John Beck in conversation with Luke Bennett, Kathrine Sandys and Kevin Booth See also: 316, 349 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/378
Convenors
Luke Bennett (Sheffield Hallam University, UK)
Chair
Nadia Bartolini (University of Exeter, UK)
Fri 1
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
Evening 18:45–
In the Ruins of the Cold War Bunker: John Beck in conversation with Luke Bennett, Kathrine Sandys and Kevin Booth – John Beck (University of Westminster, UK), Luke Bennett (Sheffield Hallam University, UK), Kathrine Sandys (Rose Bruford College, UK), Kevin Booth (English Heritage, UK)
379 F4 | SHE-RD
The role and significance of consultants in planning and development View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/379
Affiliation
UGRG
Convenors
Gavin Parker, Emma Street (University of Reading, UK)
Chair
Gavin Parker (University of Reading, UK)
1
Co-producing local plans? The role of consultants in local planning in England – Gavin Parker, Emma Street (University of Reading, UK), Matt Wargent (The University of Sheffield, UK)
2
Constructing Evidence, Deconstructing Democracy? – Emma Ormerod (Durham University, UK)
3
Locally trapping mobile urbanisms: of the use and failures of consultancies in the city of Rome – Semi Giovanni (University of Turin, Italy), Alessandro Coppola (Polytechnic University of Milan, Italy)
4
Why understanding architectural design and developer practice at a micro scale is integral to good urban planning – Kate McCauley (Macquarie University, Australia)
380 F4 | SHE-PIP
"Trump-etting" Population Geography in Brexit and US Presidential Election Debates? View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/380
Affiliation
PopGRG
Convenor and chair
Darren Smith (Loughborough University, UK)
1
Making a splash, not a ripple: Population Geography and Impact – Darren Smith (Loughborough University, UK)
2
The impact of “impact”: Reflections on opportunities and challenges in undertaking ‘socially-relevant’ research in (Population) Geography – Gemma Catney (University of Liverpool, UK)
3
Roundtable
381 F4| SALC-1
(en) Countering change, (dis) Assembling placeness (3): emerging research See also: 319, 352 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/381
Affiliation
SCGRG
Convenors
Marcus Welsh, Samantha Saville (Aberystwyth University, UK)
Chair
Michael Woods (Aberystwyth University, UK)
1
A place for newcomers: inquiring arrival processes in the city of Brussels – Chiara Basile (Polytechnic University of Turin, Italy / Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium)
Fri
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
Evening 18:45–
2
Assemblage(s) of home: Perspectives of Sri Lankan refugee settlement in Australia – Charishma Ratnam (University of New South Wales, Australia)
3
Re/Dis/Assembling Place: The place-making of Bangkok’s mobile market practice – Kisnaphol Wattanawanyoo (University College London, UK)
4
Rhythmanalysis and refrain: On the role of rhythm and synchronisation in the temporal extension of placeness – Carl Olsson (Lund University, Sweden)
382 F4 | SALC-2
Different and Diverse Knowledges of (Rural) Food Access and Security (2) See also: 353 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/382
Affiliation
FGWG, RGRG
Convenors
Eifiona Thomas Lane, Rebecca Jones (Bangor University, UK)
Chair
Eifiona Thomas Lane (Bangor University, UK)
1
Fish Wives Tales exploring the potential of rural pesca-tourism – Rebecca Jones (Bangor University, UK)
2
Food in the Welsh uplands: still an option? – Jane Ricketts Hein (Cynidr Consulting, UK), Eifiona Thomas Lane, Rebecca Jones (Bangor University, UK)
3
Community Supported Agriculture: food access and security for rural communities? – Ian Humphrey (University of Sheffield, UK)
383 F4 | SALC-5
Against Decolonising Geography, For Epistemic Knowledge View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/383
Convenors
Alexander Standish (Institute of Education, University of London, UK), Jim Butcher (Canterbury Christ Church University, UK)
Chair
Peter Smith (St Mary's University College, UK)
1
Decolonising Geography: Dismantling Epistemic Knowledge in the Curriculum? – Alexander Standish (Institute of Education, University of London, UK), Jim Butcher (Canterbury Christ Church University, UK), Peter Sammonds (University College London, UK), Vanessa Pupavac (University of Nottingham, UK)
384 F4 | SALC-6
The porous city View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/384
Convenors
Colin McFarlane, Noam Leshem, Katharina Grueneisl (Durham University, UK)
Chairs
Antonis Vradis (Loughborough University, UK)
1
Plain Site: the ordinary alliances of opacity and visibility in the strange juxtapositions of extended urbanization – AbdouMaliq Simone (Max Planck Institute for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity, Germany)
2
What lies between us? Urban transportation and the politics of porosity – Theresa Enright (University of Toronto, Canada)
Fri
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
Evening 18:45–
3
‘Les Fripes’: second hand markets and the contested production of porous urban spaces in Tunis – Katharina Grueneisl (Durham University, UK)
4
Porosity and margins: connection, translation, movement – Colin McFarlane (Durham University, UK)
5
Perforating space: porosity and the settler colonial city – Noam Leshem (Durham University, UK)
385 F4 | SALC-7
Court Geographies View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/385
Affiliation
GJRG, PolGRG
Convenors
Nick Gill (University of Exeter, UK), Alex Jeffrey (University of Cambridge, UK)
Chair
Nick Gill (University of Exeter, UK)
1
Courts as Punitive Spaces – Alex Jeffrey (University of Cambridge, UK)
2
Towards a geography of neutrality: Staging the (in)significance of emotions and affects in a courtroom in The Hague – Catherine Traynor (University of Leicester, UK)
3
The Dock On Trial: Courtroom Design And The Presumption Of Innocence – Meredith Rossner (London School of Economics and Political Science, UK)
4
In Praise of Formality? The Role of Formality in Protecting Vulnerable Groups in the Courts – Nick Gill (University of Exeter, UK)
5
Discussant – Jodie Blackstock (Justice, UK)
386 F4 | SALC-8
Soundscapes and Wellbeing (2): Everyday Soundscapes of Wellbeing See also: 357 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/386
Convenors
Laura Colebrooke (University of Exeter, UK), Richard Gorman (Cardiff University, UK)
Chair
Richard Gorman (Cardiff University, UK)
1
Listening towards the sounds of silences – Noora Vikman (University of Eastern Finland, Finland)
2
Soundscaping – Jaap Klevering (Sound and Performance Artist)
3
Parenting and neighbouring in the consolidating city: the emotional geographies of sound in apartments – Sophie-May Kerr (University of Wollongong, Australia)
4
Sounding Off: an investigation of visible street homelessness – Oliver Moss (Northumbria University, UK)
5
Constructing sensory boundaries: the role of sound in situating place and belonging in France – Roza Tchoukaleyska (Memorial University of Newfoundland, Canada)
Fri
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
387
Evening 18:45–
F4 | SALC-9
Workshop: Spatial Urban Analytics and Crowdsourced Geographic Information for Smarter Cities (2) See also: 358 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/387
Affiliation
GIScRG
Convenors
João Porto de Albuquerque (University of Warwick, UK), René Westerholt (Heidelberg University, Germany)
Chair
René Westerholt (Heidelberg University, Germany)
1
The paths to knowledge – Danny Edwards (Edwards Stadsontwerp, Amsterdam), Richard Van de Werken (Hastig, Woerden), Balázs Dukai (Technical University Delft, The Netherlands)
2
The use of Nature-inspired paradigms to strengthen Urban Resilience: Systematic Literature Review and Future Trends – Francisco Rivas (University of Granada, Spain)
3
Characterization of urban blocks and sidewalks based on Volunteered Geographic Information and image-based social media – Tessio Novack (Heidelberg University, Germany)
4
Kriging algorithm Optimisation for impactful integration into industry utilising a new data source to introduce ‘road distance’ and ‘travel time’ matrices – Henry Crosby (University of Warwick, UK)
388 F4 | HUX-341
Constructing the higher education student: understanding spatial variations (2) See also: 359 View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2017/388
Affiliation
GCYFRG
Convenors
Rachel Brooks (University of Surrey, UK), Johanna Waters (University of Oxford, UK)
Chair
Johanna Waters (University of Oxford, UK)
1
Constructing the international student in UK policy: the neocolonial subject – Sylvie Lomer (The University of Manchester, UK)
2
A critical analysis of the Palestinian educational student im/mobility – Nancy Amoudi (Leeds Beckett University, UK)
3
Academic mobility and precarity: study abroad as escape or emplacement among political actors – Rika Theo, Maggi Leung (Utrecht University, The Netherlands)
4
Implementing Study-to-work Policies for International Students in Switzerland: To what Extent are Federal Policies Re-interpreted at the Local Level? – Yvonne Riaño (University of Neuchâtel, Switzerland)
5
The construction and spatial positioning of higher education students in English policy documents – Rachel Brooks (University of Surrey, UK)
FE | RGS-MQ
Conference closing drinks reception in the Marquee 18.15-19.30
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Progress in Human Geography
Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space
Environment and Planning D: Society and Space
Launching March 2017 – Environment and Planning E: Nature and Space
Find out more sagepub.com/geography-urbanstudies @SAGEGeography
21. Index of authors, chairs and convenors Andrews
Gavin
266
Andrews
Kehinde
133
136
Angel
James
348
143, 177
Ansell
Nicola
52, 197
Anthias Antona
Penelope Laura
Abejide
Muyiwa
51
Ackerley
Elizabeth
Acott
Tim
Adam Adams
Francesca Mags
Adams
Michael
Addis
Mark
Adelekan
Ibidun
156
Adesina
Francis
115
159 39, 178, 258 349 206, 238
Antonacopoulos Antoniou
369 6
Apostolos
246
Vyron
280
Antonsich
Marco
3, 216, 248 289
Appleyard
Lindsey
295
Elina
105
Adewole
Funmi
74, 106
Adey
Peter
228, 260
Apsite-Berina
Adriansen
Hanne Kirstine
102, 285
Arabindoo
Pushpa
137
Arangoitia
Vanessa Rojas
Arbell
Yael
Arik
Elvan
Armitage
Richard
Armstrong
Lisa
Arnall Arriagada
Alex Arturo
220 42
Ash
James
142, 269
Ashcroft
Louise
Afonso
Rita
Afroze
Jiniya
Ahearn
Ariell
4 211
Aiesha Airas
Rosita Isabel
Ajebon
Mildred Oiza
Akiyode
Kolade
Akyelken
Nihan
270, 300, 371 47 205 227 220, 370
Alderman
Derek
Alexander
Elizabeth
Alexander
Rachel
250
Alexandridis
Antonios
227
Alexis-Martin Rebecca
316
Alhammadi
Fahad
215
Aliste Allan-Ross
Enrique Tania
237 10
Allen
Julian
Alvanides
Seraphim
Alvarez-Velasco
322 143, 233
80
Soledad
237 192
Sarah Sandra
Atmakur-Javdekar Avery
Phil
Avila
Ione
Avraham
Doron
Awal Awcock
Akanksha Hannah Stephen
Axon
Anable
Jillian
191
B
212
Badger
Baeza Gonzalez
Marina
162
Anaya Boig
Esther
45, 323
Anderson Anderson
Ben Jon
Anderson
275
Sruthi
Maria
388
Anastasio
250
Attard
291
361 65, 90, 121 167, 239
Astill
Nancy
178, 245, 280 90
Kiran
Sergey
Ourania
53
Ashwin
Amoudi
Anagnostopoulou
86, 259
Asher
Alymov
89 197
261 61, 287, 323 311 45 217 283, 313 372 87, 118, 177 270, 300
Adam Sebastián Andrés
25, 56, 91 108
Baghel
Ravi
360
129, 141, 175 143
Bailey
Adrian
132
Bailey
Ian
149
Matthew B
230
Bailey
Mark-Stanton
Anderson
Tessa
287
Baker
Julius
64
Andow
Caroline
136
Baker
Lucy
126
Andrade
Daniela
225
Andreas
Jan-Justus
256
Baker-Graham Al Bakker Karen
Andres
Lauren
167
84
370 274
,QGH[
A
Baldwin
Andrew
133
Beel
David
295, 325
Ball
Tom
114
Behzadi
Negar Elodie
283, 313
Ballatore
Andrea
Bek
David
278, 308
Ballestas
Juan
321
Bektas
Tolga
80
Baloyi
Basani
257
Belcher
Oliver
141, 175, 280
Bamberg
Jarkko
Belichenko
Margarita
Banfi
Elisa
313
Beljaars
Diana N.M.
Bankoff
Greg
12
Bell
Sarah
7
Bannister
Jon
68
Bell
Sarah
140, 174, 241
Banon
Fabrice
94
Bellanca
Raffaella
163
Baptista
Idalina
126
Benbabaali
Dalel
211
Barber
Jacob
62
Bennett
Hayley
Barcena Barker
Alejandro Adam
Bennett Bergmann
Luke Christoph
Bernardt
Clemens
Bernhardt
Franz
279
Bērziņš
Māris
105
Besio
Kathryn
375
Bettocchi
Milo
372
350
284
Barker Bradshaw
Natasha
Barr
Stewart
Barratt
Paul
,QGH[
11
156 336, 366 212 45, 323 347
Barrera de la Torre Gerónimo Barrera-Bassols
57
Narciso
346, 375
102 63
325 316, 349, 378 115 224, 312
8
Barrieau
Pierre
Bevan
Mark
Barrientos
Stephanie
116, 218, 278
Bhagat
Ayushman
Bhairannavar Kiran
292, 312
Barry
Andrew
101, 148, 211 342
Bhakta
Amita
181, 203
Barry
Kaya
33, 64, 362
Bartindale
Tom
57
Bhardwaj Bickerstaff
Asmita Karen
139 284, 314, 347
Bartle
Caroline
Bide
Bethan
286
Bieri
David
19
Billing
Chloe
150
Binder
Andrew
Bingham
Nick
Bini
Valerio
Binns
Tony
Birch
Joanna
Birkin
Mark
Birtchnell
Thomas
Bishop
Tom
Bissell
Clare
339
Bivand Erdal Marta
216, 248
365 204, 236, 343 378
Bartolini Barton
Nadia Karen
Barton
Margo
109
Barylo
William
72
Basak
Bishnupriya
92
Basile
Chiara
Basiri
Ana
Bassens
David
Basu
Ritwika
186
Bateman
Jerram
186
Bates
Oliver
80
Battell-Lowman
Emma
Batty
Michael
Bear
Christopher
Beaumont
Justin
Beaverstock Beck
Jonathan V. David
329
200, 309, 381 326 19, 54
366
66
317 101, 222, 254 320 186, 239 241 61 296, 324 349
Black
Andrew
Blackstock
Jodie
Blanco
Melissa
72
Blidon
Marianne
368
37
Block
Karen
315
353
Blue
Stanley
144
Michael
153 161, 194, 229 347
114 385 74, 106
Beck
John
378
Boampong
Becker
Soeren
348
Beckers
Joris
112
Boanada-Fuchs Anthony Boccagni Paolo
4
Beebeejaun
Yasminah
124
Boehme
Kate
92
Beeckmans
Luce
54
Boetcher
Derek
113
190 15, 289
Loes
Bolton
Charlotte
Bolzman
Claudio
Bond
Dean
Bonilla
Lauren
Bonizzoni
Paola
Bonner-Thompson
Carl
361
Brown
Katrina
162, 215
Brown
Tim
102
Browne
Alison
223, 255
Browne
Kath
47, 305, 368
211
Brugger
Andri
278
99
Brugman
Gerald
306
Bruner
Michael
146
Brunsdon
Chris
153 255
147, 215
Bonvino
Gualtiero
350
Book
Karin
43
Bruun
Johanne
Booker
Clare
260, 326
Bryant
Lia
Booth
Claudine
203, 235
Booth
Kevin
316, 378
Borrion Bos
Aiduan Elizabeth
7 71
Boschmann
Eric
45
Bosworth
Kai
175
Botterill
Kate
Bourne
Anne
Boussauw
Kobe
44, 288, 318 351
Brydges
Taylor
Bryson
John
Buckle
Caitlin
Buck-Matthews Eveleigh Budak-Kim Hazal
229 266 196, 231, 263
27 10, 42, 77 109, 152, 185 150 38, 73 17, 67, 147 180, 215, 247 313
Budd
Lucy
357
Budd
Richard
359
317
Budds
Jessica
360
Budy
Fidel
230
Buetje
Clara Henrike
123
Bukachi
Vera
Bouzarovski
Stefan
24, 55, 131 135, 334, 364
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Sophie
58
Bowstead
Janet
Boyce
Eleanor
Boyle
Mark
Bradshaw
Sarah
285, 315
37
156 55, 202, 347 376
Bulkeley
Harriet
Bull
Jacob
239
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Dilshaad
184
Tim
330
308 29, 60, 304
299, 367
Brandajs Brannen
Fiammetta Ilona
297 171
Bunnell Burrell
Kathy
288
Braun
Boris
250
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Harry
127
Burton Buser
Mel Michael
262 344
Brenda
Mathijssen
124
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Ryan
Bresers
Hans
178
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Beatriz
Brice
Sage
78
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Jim
383
67, 240, 285 315
Butcher
Lee
301
Butler
Allan
116, 310, 348 377
Butler
Catherine
284, 314 372
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Katherine
295 40, 218, 322
151
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Gavin
Butler-Rees
Angharad
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Katja
50
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Cat
Brohan
Philip
69
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156
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Anja Susanne
277 159
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Marco
230
32
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Hannah
Brooks
Rachel
359, 388
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Ben
Brooks
Sally
19
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Sara
258, 290
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Andrew
149
Caffyn
Alison
Brown
Donald
156
Caillol
Daphné
247
Brown
Gavin
359
Cairns
Sally
191
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Irwin
207
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Sydney
180
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Jeremy
333
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Philippa
256
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Lindsey
311
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Michael
323
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Brad
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105
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Venugopal Rao
191
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Liviu
240
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Charlotte
Campbell
Morgan
13
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Jasmin
315
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Mengqiu
61
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Yu
157
280
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Han
169
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Jianquan
157
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Cristina
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Federico
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Maria Luisa
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Tom
80
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Ivan
80
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Jonathan
14
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Liev
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David
Cardozo
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Thomas S.
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Silvio
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Valentina
251
Christie
Derek
Carras
Megan
371
Christie
Hazel
62
Carta
Giuseppe
343
Christophers
Brett
355, 363
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Evan
17
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Patrizia
42
Chukwuemeka
Caset
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317
Casey
Daniel
38, 82, 224 282, 312, 345
Cass
Noel
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244
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Francesca
128
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Jonathan
Clancy
Cara
144
Clare
Karenjit
186
55, 126, 131 182
Clark Clark
Christopher Julie
293 303
Clarke
Amy
216
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Nick
141
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Christian
246
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Alma
189
Clayton
Billy
365
Clelland
David
230
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Jonathan
163
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Paul
72
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Jon
358
53, 83, 306 338
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Janine Peter
97 344
142
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207
Mary
285, 315
Heather
366
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Ruth
331
Catney Catulli
Gemma Maurizio
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Chiara
237
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Chae
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145
Cockayne
Daniel
269
Chambers
Joseph
256
Cockshut
Ladan
108
Codeluppi
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Katherine
337
Champion
Tony
105
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Anya
177
Charles
Katrina
178
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Carmen
362
Chaterjee
Sharmistha
Chatterjee
Helen
92 174
241 85, 116, 150 183, 218, 250
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Neil M.
Cohen
Aaron
Cohen
Maurie
Cohen
Tom
340, 370
Colebrooke
Laura
357, 386
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Tom
113 160
45
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Ben
353
Daley
Patricia
203
Collet
Carole
286
Dame
Juliane
360
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Rob
57
D'Angelo
Lorenzo
310
Concha
Paz
152
Dangwal
Kiran Lata
246
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Alina
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Joseph
Connell
Raewyn
65
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Priscilla
160
Connon
Irena
334
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Ian
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Philip
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Ian
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Simon
Coombes Coppola
Brad Alessandro
Corns
Anthony
Corra
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Anna Carolina
Correa
Eugenia
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50
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171, 250
Dansero
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320
Darkal
Hoayda
307
Darling
Jonathan
354
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331, 361
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Ayona
89, 202
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Datta
Kavita
21, 257, 363
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John Nitza
111
Davies
Andrew
29
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Davies
Dominic
154 302
133, 167 379
292
146 102
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Davies
Gail
225
Davies
Megan
Hayley
69
Davies
Sarah
Couper
Pauline
119
Davis
Erin
315
Cox
Shaphan
139
Davis
Megan
209
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Ruth
Dawkins
Laura
45
Crampsie
Arlene
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Rosie
78, 300
Crang Crawford
Philip Kevin
25, 56, 91, 331 213
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Sophie Shari
111 290, 320
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Laura
301
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Rachel
341
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Anjeline
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Olga
309
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Wibke
377
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Jiska
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Gina
197
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Sarah
336
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Mike
150
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Patrizio
261
Crosby
Henry
387
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323
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Bronia
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Rosa Lydia
273
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Thomas
142
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Iain
Cross
Jamie
163
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Paula
331, 361
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Aoife
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Simon
178
Culora
Andreas
38, 162
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Alfredo Elizabeth
225 317
Culver
Gregg
294
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David
263
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121
278 222, 254
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Steven
205, 266
Demirbas
Custodi
Giulia
282
Dempsey
Benedict
277
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113
Dempsey
Nicola
262
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Stephanie
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Ben
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194
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Michelle
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244
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J. D.
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189
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Jen
137
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Claudia
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Carmen
182
Eizenberg
Efrat
252
Dillon
Susan
109
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Carol
337
Dilworth
Tasmin-Lara
122
El Moussawi
Hala
198
Dimitrijevic
Katarina
7
Elder
Colin
46
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Yannan
155, 292
Dixon
Carol
145
Dixon
Deborah
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Danny
387
80
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Leah
104
375
Kirsty
Elessawy
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101, 173, 269
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James Treva
203, 235
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David
156
Ellison
Dodson Dogancayir
Belinda Caner Murat
290 5
Ellsworth-Krebs Elsmore
Sophie
326
Elukapally
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Jay
47
40
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Paul
191
93, 161, 194 229
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Phil
Endfield
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275, 305
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371 206, 238 18
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Andrew
347
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Ping
157
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Theresa
Donovan
Archie
111
Enticott
Gareth
Doody
Brendan
160, 193
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Ia
Dornelles
Vevila
108
Erel
Umut
Doucette
Jamie
250
Eriksen
Christine
Douglas Douhaibi
Owen Dacia
140 8
Ermolaeva Ernsten
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114 105
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Robyn
132, 202
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Marion
262
Dowling
Sally
299
Ertürk
Ismael
355
Driver
Toby
111
Escauriza
Bettina
248, 275, 305
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Vista
251, 319
Eskilsson
Lena
Esparcia
Javier
Drozdzewski Danielle Duggan
Michael
Duivenvoorden
Anouk
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387
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Stephen
213
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James
Dunkley
Ria
128
Evans
Alice
Dunphy Duplan
Niall Karine
270, 300 247
Evans Evans
David Jeremy
Duran
Ana Clara
Dwyer
Andrew
Evans
Ruth
Dwyer
Charlotte
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Gary A.
Eades
Gwilym
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Will
Edensor
Tim
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Annabelle Claire
197
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322
Ezeanah F
195
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Wael Salah
157
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Frances
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323
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154, 275, 305
313
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384 190
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225, 257, 355
286 151, 184, 219
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176, 361
69, 354
103, 308 177 27, 58, 93 124, 368 47 140 329, 371
Jacob
Fakeyeva
Liudmila
Fang
Fei
Fannin
Maria
18, 83 87, 118 301 209 58 299
Faull Featherstone
James Jan David
Féaux de la Croix
Jeanne
Freeman
Cordelia
269, 299
155
37
Frers
Lars
228, 282
59
Friday
Adrian
80
211
Fritzsche
Lauren
227
Feitelson
Eran
13
Fröhlich
Franziska
231
Feitosa
Flavia
214
Frye
Lezlie
167
Feng
Ran
231
Fulcher
Michele
12
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Zhiqiang
105
Fuller
Crispian
183
Fennell
Shailaja
190
307
Fiona
Furness G
Ella
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Raihana
Gabor
Daniela
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287, 317, 350 2 23, 238
Fernandez Fernández Arrigoitia
Julián Melissa
321 86, 117, 208 240, 289
Gagen
Elizabeth
Ferrara
Luciana
238
Gailing
Ludger
Ferraz de Oliveira
Antonio
Gaete Reyes Mariela Gaffney Christine
19 51 299 270 33 348, 377
346
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Mostafa
14
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António
293
Gandra
Rakesh
18
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Carlos
295
Ganji
Farnaz
17
Ferreira
Daniela
9
Ferreira
Jennifer
244
Ferrero
Giuliana
18
Garcia
Diego Alexander Escobar
158
Garcia
Hafsa
203
Ferretti
Federico
155, 304, 346 375
Garcia
Leandro
Ferretti
Michele
358
Garlick
Ben Wendy
Tim
38, 82, 224 282, 312, 345
Garner
Fewtrell Fields
Desiree
Filep
Sebastian
Findlay Finlay
Allan Robin
Finney
Nissa
Firmin
Carlene
136, 170
Fischer
Andrew
Garnica-Monroy
19, 50, 363 239 105, 318 313
Gatica
323 134, 168 31
Ruben
237
Yasna Contreras
309
Gauci Ritienne Geary-Griffin Robert
213 230
Gee
Kira
143
Gekker
Alex
110
257
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Huang
263
Fischhendler Itay
149
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Audley
118
Fisher
Julie
181
Georgeson
Lucien
82
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Karen
Gerike
Regine
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Maryclare
251
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Basil
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Stefanie
159
Germond-Duret
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Mike
Fogelman Foley
Tatiana Ronan
Forster
Johanna
Foulds
Chris
118
Fragkou
Mariac
France Frank Franzi
Simone
Fraser
Emma
76, 349
Fredriksen
Aurora
229
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39
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45 143 79, 143, 177
Gertsberg
Marina
Ghaziani Ghiabi
Amin Maziyar
306, 338 321
Gibbs
David
195, 347
Gil
Jorge
360
Gilbertz
Susan J
Derek
70, 107
Gilchrist
Paul
Sybille
81, 113
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Cheryl
Gill
Nick
Gillard
Ross
149, 284
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Mary
268, 298
216, 248 241 12
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Giovanni
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379
Eva
161
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356
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Håvard
Glaser
Sarah
367
Hadfield
Paris
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Klaus
277
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Sophie
97, 124, 252
Glick
Anne
311
Haigh
Martin
107
Godfrey
Lucas
158
Haine
Richard
238
Goetschi
Thomas
45
Haines
Elizabeth
223
Goggin
Joyce
76
Hajer
Maarten
Gohr
Charlotte
46
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James
Halfacree
Keith Damon
24, 55 24
55 98, 129, 221 253
Gong
Yun Yun
18
Hall
Goode Goodman
Ian Matthew
233 255
Hall
Jenny
Hall
Joe
Gopinath
Manik
117
Hall
Sarah
355
Gormally
Alexandra
348
Hall
Tim
304
Hallenbeck
Jessica
274
Halliwell
Jamie
224
Halvorsen
Sam
138
10
Hamilton
C
136
164, 197
Hamilton
Jo
Gorman
Richard
Gorman-Murray
Andrew
Gornostaeva Galina
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323
353
161, 194, 229 357, 386 47, 305
230 356 97, 285, 368
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Katherine
Grafham
Owen
163
Hamilton
Stuart
367
Graham
Naomi
285, 315
Hampton
Samuel
195
Granger
Rachel
296
Hancock
Jonathan
288
61
Hannawi
Nasma
287
238 44
Hannum Hardie
Kathryn Robert
15 82
Grant-Muller Susan
93
Gray Gray
Rob Tim
Greene
Mary
87
Harding
Jenny
Harding
Natacha
31
Greenhough
Beth
58, 93, 124 161, 266
Hardman
Michael
122, 178
Griffith
Gareth
Griffiths
Mark
Gröne
Marie-Christine
Grueneisl
Katharina
Guelton
Bernard
Guermond Guha
140, 174, 205
280
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Derk
104
2
Harmer
Nichola
228
182
Harper
Earl
312
332, 384
Harper
Jamilla
324
Harris
Jonathan
Vincent
257
Harris
Keith
Mima
315
Guillen
Ana Laura Zavala
224
Harrison Harrowell
Paul Eleanor
Guimont
Clemence
262
Hartwig
Lana
Harvey
David
41
Harwood
Tracy
296
Hasanov
Mustafa
Hasna
Kaneez
Hauge
Atle
Haupt
Wolfgang
222
Hautala
Johanna
185
Hawkins
Harriet
15
Haworth Hayes
John Emily
372 291
Guion Akdağ Emma Guisse Ibrahima
14 102
Gul
Mohsen
66
Guma
Taulant
351
Gunter
Ashley William
167
Gupta
Bashabi
275
Gupta
Meghna
2
Gustavsson
Madeleine
Guvenc
Muna
53
Gvion
Liora
103
79
156 259, 332 88 93 127 84
24 71 185, 303
Hayes
Justin
246
Holmes
George
307, 339
Hayes
Tracy
261
Holton
Mark
228, 359
Hayk
Ann-Christin
130
Hope
Jessica
Haysom
Gareth
290, 320
Hope
Max
He
Shenjing
Hedquist
Brent
146
Hopkins
Debbie
285 11, 80, 112 160, 193
Hein
Carola
297
Hopkins
Peter
264, 313, 359
Heinzer
Nikolaus
339
Horne
Ralph
300
Heldeweg
Michiel
314
Horswell
Michael
Hemming
Peter
130
Horton
Amy
Hemsteede
Roeland
Houngbedji
Mickael
94
House
Jonas
103
139 295
Houston
Donald
114
Houston
Donna
122
114, 278, 308
Howard
K
136
Howarth
Candice
238 122
Hendrikse
Reijer P.
Henry Henry
Lena Nick
125, 224 19
62 363
Herman
Agatha
Heron
Adom Philogene
203
Howarth
Michelle
Barbara
179
Howe
Helena
314
Howell
Philip
58, 93, 124
Hracs
Brian
10, 42, 77 109, 152, 185 337
Hsin-Wen
Chang
294
Hsu
Jinn-yuh
214
Hu
Baoqing
157
Huang
Rong
157
Huang
Rui
Huang
Shu-Chun (Lucy)
Hubacek
Klaus
Herr Harthorn Herrera
Rocio
Heslop
Julia
Hess
Ann-Kathrin
Hess
Martin
250
Hickman
Robin
61
Hickman Dunne
Jo
233, 265 87
97, 128
48
Hill
Jennifer
62, 70
Hillman Hilton-Gee
Joanne Chrissy
270 10
Hinchliffe
Stephen
Hind
Sam
Hind-Ozan
Edward
111
Hudson-Doyle
Hirep
Lionel
146
Hughes
Ainsley
Hirsch
Lioba
138
Hughes
Alex
Hislop
Donald
37
Hughes
Sarah
Hitchcock
K
136
Huigen
Paulus
Hitchings
Russell
11, 347
Huizinga
Rik
159
Hiteva
Ralitsa
24
Humphrey
Ian
103, 382
Ho Hocknell
Aileen Suzanne
Hunt
Rachel
Hunt
Sarah
Hodder
Jake
210, 242
Hunter
Alistair
Hoerning
Johanna
23
Huong
Vu Thi Thanh
197
Hoffman
Jesse
55
Hurly
Jane
309
Hogdahl
Elisabeth
43
Hurst
Kate
192
Holland
Caroline
117
Hussain
Zahra
Holland
Jennifer
327, 356
Hutchinson
John
333
Holland
Tessa
272
Hutta
Jan
279
Hollin
Greg
161
Huyse
Huib
169
Holloway
Lewis
347
Hytonen-Ng
Elina
357
Holloway Holmegaard
Sarah Henriette Tolstrup
261 359
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101 110, 193, 251
174 64, 161
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18 324 18 154 365 116, 218, 278 32 224, 312
98, 233, 265 1, 336 58
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369
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Ryo
16
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Martin
111
Ikwuyatum
Godwin O.
99
Johnson
Nuala C.
188
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Terence
243
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Michael
139
Imperiale
Angelo J.
213
Johnstone
Phil
376
Ince
Anthony
Jonas
Andrew E. G.
195
Jones
Andrew
202
Inderberg
Tor Håkon Jackson
149
Jones
Erika
Ingram
Alan
148
Jones
Estelle
44, 243
Inwood
Joshua
199, 322
Jones
Gareth
232
Iorwerth
Angharad ab
261
Jones
Ian
Irarrazaval
Felipe
218
Jones
Ian Rees
Ireland
Aileen V
194
Jones
Karen
Iskandrova
Marfuga
118
Ison
Stephen
61
Jones Jones
Katherine Kelvyn
Israel
Alena
95, 314
Jones
Martin
295, 325
Iturra Munoz J
Luis
294 Jones
Owain
93, 168, 273 344
Jabareen
Yosef
46
Jones
Peter
Jackson
Mark
328
Jones
Phil
108, 282
Jacobs
A.J.
145
Jones
Rebecca
353, 382
Jacobsen
Malve
239
Jones
Rhys
325
Jafri
Juvaria
257
Jaglin
Sylvy
126
Jones
Thomas Edward
246
365
Jones
Tod
25
Jöns
Heike
346, 375
374
112 295, 325 63, 255 161, 344 140, 205
287
139
Jain
Juliet
James
Al
James Jamieson
Candace Timothy Tait
122 262
Jordhus-Lier David Joshi
Bhoomika
160
Jansdotter
Jenny
365
Janssens
Alice
77
Bruce Eleanor
82 295
Jansson
Johan
152
Judd Jupp K
Janta
Hania
91, 288
Kaaristo
Maarja
344
Jaramillo
George
9
Kabuga
Adamu Ibrahim
144
Jarvis
Nigel
297
Kahlmeier
Sonja
45
229
Kakooza
Lydia
320
Kalfagianni
Agni
376
Kallitsis
Phevos
117
Källström
Helena Nordström
Kama
Kärg
310, 342
Kamau
Paul
367
Kamlomo Kamunge
Dominic Beth
156 285
Jarzebowska
Gabriela
Jazeel
Tariq
Jeffrey
Alex
100, 173, 330 385 67, 147, 180 215, 247, 321 362
223, 255 91
367
Jeffrey
Heather
Jehlicka
Petr
Jehling Jenkins
Mathias Kirsten
Jenkins
Rhosanna
Kanngieser
Anja
Jephcote
Calvin
288
Kao
Yu-Ting
Jessop
Bob
325
Kapinga
Laura
6
Jin
Cheng
157
Kaptani
Erene
75
Jiron
Paola
365
Karl
Marion
356
Joensson
Alexandra
361
Kartikeya
Kumar
Johansen
Steinar
218
Karunakar
V.
144, 186
Johnson
Jay T.
1, 336
Karwowski
Ewa
225, 257
8 95 314 84
33, 203, 235 294
200
Kaufman
Leslie
367
Kjaeras
Kristin
Kaunda
Jean
156
Klapeer
Christine M.
Kaushik
Isha
305
Kleibert
Jana
Kay
Kelly
363
Kay
Paul
Kearns
Gerry Wojciech
Keck
Markus
Keeling
David
Keen
Jonathan
150 137, 171, 207 331
Dorothea
Klevering
Jaap
Klinke
Ian
Knowles
Richard
Knuth
Sarah
376
Kocabıyık
Coşku
367
30
Koehler
Johanna
178
Jonas
142, 176 61, 165, 198 239 287, 317
386 93 287, 317, 350
Keenan
Sarah
268
Koenig
Keevil Kei Lin
Bill Fu
218 214
Kong
Lily
Kory
Raimar
155, 188, 291 354
Kotus
Jacek
Kotzé
Christoff
149 66
Keighren
Innes
Keith
Michael
120
Kou
Xinchang
Kelly
Ann
101
Kelly
Claire
351
KovácsGyőri
Anna
Kempf
Michael
123
Krafft
Thomas
Kempt
Hendrik
340
Kendall
David
200
Kenis
Anneleen
135, 169
Kennedy
Katherine
111
Kennedy
Tracy
Kent Kent
Andrew Julie
Kenttamaa Squires
10
Kai
100 299 338
Kerr
Niall
Kerr
Sophie-May
386
Kesby
Michael
138
Jukka
237
Keski-Filppula
149, 348
Ketcham
Allen
146
Khalifa
Amany
251
Khan
Rimi
109
Khoo
Suming
14
Khurana Kietlinska
Karan Bogna
109 280
Killada
Narendra
148
Kindynis
Theo
349
King
Russell
318
Kinsley
Sam
Kinton
Chloe
Kintrea Kirk Kirsh
Nurit
Kirshner
Joshua
Kirwan
James
Kitchin
62, 88, 119 176, 331, 361
9 68, 264 123 83
358 209
Kraftl
Peter
97, 203, 235 359
Krauss
Judith
218
Krijnen
Marieke
190
Krishnan
Aarti
218
Krisjane
Zaigo
Kromholz
Sophie
204, 236
Krone
Madlen
171
Kubartz
Bodo
303
Kuijpers Kulke
Anna Elisabeth Elmar
247 250
Kulu
Hill
Kumar
M. Satish
92
Kumar
V. Satish
144, 186
Kumar Lonavath
105
73
L. Ashok
144, 186
Kushe
James
Kůsová
Tereza
156
Kuznetsova
Irina
Kwan
Mei-Po
234
Lacoudre Lacsny
Iris Elisabeth Alice
265 301
13 114, 279
L
Ladkin
Adele
16
Lai
Karen P.Y.
Keith
52
Lai
Yen-Fu
52
David
365
Laidlaw
Lindsay
178
217
Laing
Anna
126, 348
Laing
Gordon
370
184
Lally
Nick
176
202
Lam
Christie
187
Rob
365 150, 355
75
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Kębłowski
122
Kleine
18 60, 210
Keating
28, 59
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Tiffany
147
Lewis
Nathaniel
Lam-Knott
Sonia
273
Lewis
Nick
Lammes
Sybille
78, 110
Leyshon
Andrew
Lampkin
Sal
45, 323
Li
Gang
288
Lanari
Nora
82
Li
Qiaonan
263
Lancione
Michele
208, 240
Li
Zipeng
196
Lane
Ruth
342
Liang
Yutian
183
Lange
Diana
223
Liebermann
Wanda Katja
117
Langford
Natalie
250
Light
Duncan
Langley
Paul
50, 355, 363
Lilley
Keith
14, 92
Lim
Kean
183
249 196, 231, 263
Lin
Chih-Chen Trista
215
Lin
Weiqiang
260
Lin
Wen-I
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Andrew
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127, 256 142, 176
Larsen
Gunvor Riber
Larsen
Karin
52
Linard
Catherine
Larsen
Soren
336
Li-Pin
Lin
Larsson
Anders
145
Liptrot
Timothy
Latham
Alan
11
Laurie
Nina
166, 214
Laursen
Ole Birk
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306 179, 249 50, 355
177
228 294, 324 51 324
Vivyan
22 230
Little
Jo
210
Liu
Edgar
27, 132, 219
10, 42, 77 109, 185
Liu
Huiqing
200
Liu
Shuli
300
356
Liu
Yi
183
Liucci
Luisa
Livingstone Lloyd
David Jenny
304, 354 136, 170
Lloyd
Sarah
170
Lo Lacono
Valeria
Lobo
Michele
82, 352
Lavanga
Mariangela
Laven
Daniel
Lawn
Katy
Lawrence Lawton
Gwilym Philip
Lazzeretti
Luciana
42
Le Billon
Philippe
377
Le Heron
Richard
179, 249
Leck
Hayley
156
Lofthus
Liv
282
Lecka
Izabella
209
Lohmeyer
Nora
250
Lee
Dongheon
150
Lomer
Sylvie
388
Lee
Kris Hyesoo
102
Long
Dianne
167
Legg
Stephen
Longboan
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Leick
Annick
Lemanski Lennon
Charlotte Breffni
Lennon
Mick
140
López Yánez
Lepp
Eric
127
Lord
Emma Jane
384
Lorenzoni
Irene
46, 92, 210
Lorimer
Hayden
129, 319, 352
246, 297, 327 356 269
Lorimer
Jamie
101, 161, 262
Lorne
Colin
Lotz
Christian
Leshem
Noam
Lester
Alan
25, 56, 91 6, 78 60
92, 210, 242 252 89, 341 270, 300
Loopmans
Maarten
Lopez
Patricia Maria Gabriela
213
327 33, 64
154 135, 169, 339 367 8, 40 74, 106 40 111
Lester
Jo-Anne
Leszczynski
Agnieszka
Leung
Maggi
Leveque
Rachna
292
Lou
Loretta Ieng Tak
Lever
John
308
Lou
Zhaoxuan
Levidow
Les
Lovelace
Robin
158, 191, 226
Lewis
Hannah
Lovell
Heather
182, 202, 376
102, 388
7, 39, 71 72, 104
295 46 196 183
Murray
Lowe
Jack
Lowe
Michelle
Lowe
Toby
Loyal
Vijay Kumar
Lu
Yuqi
Lucas
Karen
165, 234
Luckman
Susan
Luczys
Piotr
Lugo Marquez
Sara
175 76 218 57
Malamud
Bruce
Malinen
Fanny
156 363
Maller
Cecily
194, 277
Malleson
Nick
200
Malý
Jiří
61
157
Manara
Martina
Manda
Mtafu
337
Mandic
Sandra
280
Manley
David
140
346
Mann
Laura
171
91
Manna
Senjuti
174
318
Mansfield
Lois
307
356 284, 314
Manuel Marchais
Jen Quentin
214 159, 192, 227 156 11
Lugosi
Peter
Lulle
Aija
Lundgren Luzecka
Minna Paulina
Lynnebakke
Brit
248
Marcore
Enrico
265
Lyon
Dawn
56
Margieva
Viktoriia
282
Lyons M
Antony
344
Markantoni
Marianna
Marom
Nathan
Ma
Chen
66
Marschall
Sabine
Maat
Kees
45
Marsden
Greg
112
Mabazza
Daniel
350
Marsh
A. T.
115
Machabee
Louis
376
Marshall
Emma
259
Machacek
Erika
310
Marshall
Stephen
153
Mackaness Mackay
William Heather
158 320
Martellozzo Martin
Federico Craig
237 294
Mackay
Mike
151
Martin
David
205
MacKinnon
Iain
14
Martin
Peter
155
Mackrell
Paulina
253
Maclaren
Andrew
98, 129, 230
Marvell
Alan
Maclean
Kate
175
Marvin
Simon
Maddison
Janine
329
Marx
Kate
Marzorati
Roberta
Maddrell
Avril
Maslin
Mark
82
Maderson
Siobhan
Mason
Olivia
259, 332
Madge
Clare
167
Masterton
Lizzie
357
Madhok
Sumi
121
Mathur
Vinita
305
Madsen Magarini
Lene Møller Andrea
102, 359 320
Mattioli
Giulio
149
Mattson
Greggor
338
Maguire
Heather
305
Matulis
Brett
Maher
Barbara
169
Matza
Lihi
Mahoney
Lucy
13, 45
Mawdsley
Emma
Mahoudeau
Alex
192
Mawhinney
Rory
333
Mai
Lindsay
Maxim
Cristina
362
Main
Geoff
213
May
Jon
Mains
Susan
29
Mair
Heather
189
Maye
Damian
Majumdar
Atreyi
351
Mazzilli
Caterina
Makanse Makaya
Yousra Eugine
247 78
McCann McCartan
Eugene Andrew
58, 93, 124 304 238, 353
55
Martin-Ortega
Julia
57 44
253 22, 53 81
277 181 55 229 99
9 252 2, 94, 125, 239
72 48, 151, 184 219 227, 318 265 305
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Helen
351
McCarthy
Jane
58
Mejia Motta
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Melelli
Laura
McCauley
Darren
334
Melgaço
Lorena
McCauley
Kate
McClelland
Andrew
379
Mendes Loureiro
McClymont
Pedro
321 213 28, 167, 221 225
29, 60
Mendonca
Vera
Katie
58, 93, 124
Menkman
Caspar Eija
David
73, 105, 288 318, 351
Merilainen
McCollum
Merrick
Ciara
McConnell
Fiona
242, 298
Merrill
Samuel
McCormack
Derek
173
Merriman
Peter
3
McCormick
Dorothy
367
Meyer
Teva
87, 377
McDermott
Siobhan
McDonagh
Briony
188
McDonald
Tracy
194
McDonough
Evan
Mcevoy
Jamie
McEwan
Cheryl
McEwen
Lindsey
McFarlane
Colin
McGlynn
Nick
McGregor
Andrew
McGregor
Deborah
92
Michowiz Setton
247 237
Hilla
41
252
Jennie Mara
30
Mifsud
Deborah
230
Migozzi
Julien
38, 190
278
Mika
Kasia
187
344
Mikolai
Julia
73
Milbourne
Paul
16, 219
276
Miles
Sam
338
122
Milic
Nela
1, 274
Millan
Gynna
206
Miller
Alex Rebekah James
89, 120, 384
David
McGuirk
Pauline
McIlwaine
Cathy
232
Miller Millington
McKay McKendrick
Deirdre John H.
197 181
Millington
Steve
Millner
Naomi
McKeown
Anita
26, 347
Millo
Yuval
44, 79, 111 143, 177, 212 243
Mills
Jim
Mills
Sarah
Emma
33, 127
Middleton Miele
McGuinness
McKinley
222, 254
166, 296
172 308 30, 61
26 222 233 86, 351 156 273, 303 8, 346 355 321 97, 128, 311
McLachlan
Sam
239
Milne
David
McLauchlan
Anna
273, 303
Miron
Guy
217
McLennan
Amy
144
Mitchell
Douglas
271
80
Mitchell
Mary Niall
351
Mitchell
Peter Gaurav
165
Mcleod
Fraser
McMellon
Christina
61
81 92
McMorran
Chris
260
Mittal
McNally
Danny
124
Mladenovic
Milos
293
McRobert
Korinna
170
McSorley
Brian
163
Mohamad
Siti Mazidah Haji
343
Mearns Mears
Graeme Helen
359 286
Mohlakoana
Nthabiseng
178
Mohr
Alison
163
Amer
165
Medina
Moloney
Susie
300
Medland
Jose Maria Lopez Christopher
Mohtar
72
Moon
Graham
205
Meeteren
Michiel van
19, 304
Moore
Christopher
296
Susan
57 66
5
Meginnis
Keila
79
Moore
Mehmood
Abid
114
Moores
April
329
Morange Mordue
Marianne Tom
Mei
Lin
Meijering
Louise
11, 43, 289
54 273
Moretto
Luisa
178
Nassar
Aya
259
Morohashi
Kazz
296
Nativel
Corinne
288
Morosanu
Laura
318
Naumann
Matthias
348
Morrey
Denise
323
Naylor
Lindsay
Morris
Andy
128
Naylor
Simon
Morris
John
9
Nazelle
Audrey de
Morris
Nina
62
Nciri
Aida
Morrissey
John
270, 300
Neely
Abigail H.
Morrissey
Karyn
79
Neena
Niranj
272
Morse
Nuala
174
Negi
Rohit
135
Morton
Craig
158, 191, 226
Negro
Simona
Moses
Jonathan
Neita
David
Moss Moulton
Oliver Jeremy
Mphande
Chris
Msiska
Orton
Muckle
Rachel
Mueller
Felix
Mueller
Philip
Mueller
Ria
Muellerleile
Chris
Mugagga
Frank
273, 386 195 156
Nemadire
Svongwa
339
156
Newell
Peter
376
243
Newhouse
Léonie
40 155, 188, 271 301, 333
37
Newman
Benjamin
300
Newsham
Andrew
19, 50
Newstead
Shelly
320
Nguyen
Thuba
80
29
Nguyen
Zung
282
Ni
Alexandra Jingsi
196
Nichol
Janet E.
115
Nicholls
Mel
Nicholson Nicholson
Philip Richard
Nicolarea
Yota
320
Nielsen
Gritt B
285
206 146, 365
Mullen
Caroline
340, 370
Mullen
Philip
315
Mulligan
Joe
156
Mulligan
Martin
75
Mulvenna
Amy
36
Mulvihill
Michael Iratxe
376 203, 235 186 30
Muldoon-Smith Kevin Mulicek Ondrej
Muñecas-Izaguirre
8, 40
Nel Etienne Nello-Deakin Samuel
77
Zahid
45 377
316 303
Munro
Ealasaid
233
Munro
Gayle
104
Murdolo
Adele
315
Murphy
Laurence
341
Murray
Linda
315
Murtha
Timothy M.
246
Muscat
Adrian
323
Mwalemba N
Gwamada
207
Nagar
Richa
100
Naik
K. Sanjay
Najib
Kawtar
313
Nakai
Mina
180
Nambu Nancheva
Akiko Nevena
14 318
Narbed
Sofie
74, 106
Nash
Catherine
47, 305
144, 186
Nieuwenhuijsen
84 261
243
Mark
204, 236, 269 96
45
Nightingale
Glenna
105
Nilsson
Isabelle
317
Nissen
Bettina
9
Nodzenski
Sophie
44
Norwine
James (Jim)
146
Nouman
Muhammad
114
Novack
Tessio
387
Novo
Paula
Noxolo
Patricia
34, 203, 235
Nuesser
Marcus
115, 360
Nugin
Raili
Nugraha
Erwin
Nunes
Richard J.
5, 174
Nwokocha
Ezebunwa
156
Nylander O
Femi
203
Oakley
Kate
337
Oates
Jenny
277
221 214
79
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Mughal
333
90 69, 132, 255
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P
O'Brien
Liam
94
Oca
Luzia
247
Paccoud
Antoine
Octavianti
Thanti
178
Packwood
Helen
Oderinde
Folasade
115
Paddeu
Daniela
Odiari
Eusebio
61
Page
Ben
O'Donovan
Giles
184
Pain
Rachel
Oesch
Lucas
192
Painter
Joe
O'Grady
Nat
148
Paiva
Daniel
9
Ogunboye
Abiodun
179
Palazzi
Franco
124
Oh
Hana
188
Pallett
Helen
Ojo
Adegbola
Oka
Chika
250
O'Kane O'Kane
Bev Megan Rose
44 108
Pande
Raksha Ruiqiu
51
Palmer-Abbs Megan Palriwala
Rajni
148 52 112 164 35, 166 120, 295
75, 347 221, 253, 326 90 2, 224, 295 298
Olaniyan
Femi
156
Pang
Olcuire
Serena
282
Pangbourne
Kate
234, 293, 370
Oliver
Catherine
Pani
Erica
159, 192, 227
Angel
47
6, 194
329
Oliver
Thomas
206
Paniagua
Olofsson
Anna
356
Panis
Luc Int
Olson
Elizabeth
264
Pantyley
Victoriya
Olsson
Carl
Papa
Enrica
Olsson
Jerry
Parham
Martin
12
Park
Jinhee
341
Parker
Gavin
379
Parker
Katherine
218
Parkhill Parkhurst
Karen Graham
51
Parkinson
Arthur
9
Parkman
Richard
Parr
Hester
Parry
Bronwyn
76, 381 145
O'Mahony
Kieran
Omojola O'Neill
Ademola Kirstie
277, 307, 339
O'Neill
Maggie
Onsager
Knut
Onyeahialam Oosthuizen
Anthonia Shaune
Oppenheim-Chan
Beth
51 195 75
290, 320
293, 350
223 284, 314 112, 293, 323 60 327 27 101
Oraukwu
Chinyere O.
Orderud
Geir
218
Parsons
Meg
O'Regan
Michael
193
Partridge
Tristan
Ormerod
Emma
379
Pashby
Karen
Orth
Magdalena
94
Pastore
Maria Chiara
Ortiz
Willington
182
Patchett
Merle
96
Paterson Paterson
Matthew Will
Patier
Daniele
Patterson
Alan
Paul
Franziska Christina
Paul
Nian
17
Paul Robert
Gilbert
342
Pawlak
Jacek
191
Payne
Geoffrey
190
Payne
Sarah
241
Payne
William
Peace
Sheila
Peachey
Roy
Orton
Liz
Osakabe
Yutaka
Osborne
Tess
51
45 209
104 108, 326
Osman
Robert
146
Osthorst
Winfried
195
Ostler
Sophia
321
Ott
Anne-Cecile
Oviedo Hernández
Daniel
Owen
Huw Meredydd
Owen Owen
Jennifer Steven
Öz
Özlem
Ozkaracalar
Kaya
97 158, 340 261 27, 285 362 17, 53 17
18 179 14 254 168, 286, 331 202, 376 252 112 88 182, 256
259 86, 117 272
Peake
Linda
201
Potter
Clive
219
Pearce
Sioned
325
Potts
Tavis
44, 111, 243
Pearson
Gemma
36
Powel
Dyfan
325
Peaud
Laura
223
Powell
Alison
331
Peck
Sarah
125
Power
Andrew
266
Pecorelli
Joe
238
Power
Dominic
303
Peeren
Esther
130
Pownall
Rachel A. J.
Pelling
Mark
156
Prazeres
Laura
318
Peltola
Taru
262
Preda
Michael
146
Pemberton
Simon
253
Prinsloo
Paul
167
Penfield
Amy
342
Prior
Lucy
140
Pentaraki
Maria
372
Pritchard
Helen
361
Perkins Perkins
Chris Harvey
78, 110 151
Proestou Prost
Maria Sebastian
377 26
Perry
Beth
120
Proudfoot
Jesse
Perry-Young
Lucy
86
Puetz
Marco
Peterson
Hannah Melike
216, 259
Pugh
Rhiannon
Peterson
Maike
115
Petitt
Andrea
367
Pulhez
Magaly Marques
238
Pupavac
Vanessa
383
Purrier
Morgan
306
Pusterla
Michela
124
10
32, 63 179
Petrova
Saska
196, 231, 263 334, 364
Pettinger
Lynne
91
Pettit
Harry
175
Q
Philip
Lorna
221
Quiazon
Regina
315
Phillips
Ian
191
Qviström
Mattias
11
Phillips Phillips
Jon Martin
Radcliffe
Sarah
Phiri
Tamara
156
Raghavan
Swetavalli
203, 235
Pidgeon
Nick
179
Raghuram
Parvati
133, 167
Piecyk
Maja
80
Raimbault
Nicolas
Pierotti
Livia
45
Rainsborough
Piggott
Heather
38
Ramamurthy
Pilo
Francesca
95
Raman
Sridhar
Pilot
Eva
Ramasar
Vasna
95
97, 261
Ramos
Gleys
312
80
Ramos
Raquel
225
Ramsden Ranchod
Sam Rushil
122 222
Pimlott-Wilson
95, 126 16
209
Helena
R
Michael Priti
Piotrowska
Marzena
Pitt Platun
Hannah Janetka
Playford
Lionel
236
Rangecroft
Sally
Plowes
Winston
236
Ranta
Ronald
Plyushteva
Anna
220
Rasheed
Hifza
Poessinouw
Martyn
82
Rastvorova
Mariia
Polak
John
Pollock
Kristian
Porter
Gina
Porter
Libby
Porto de Albuquerque Pospíšilová Postar
229, 344, 374 21
191
Lucie Stephanie
80 127 90, 121 323
78 318 18 214
Ratnam
Charishma
Ratnapalan
Michael
242
220
Rattle
Imogen
149, 314, 348
139
Ravalet
Emmanuel
228
Raxworthy
Robyn
271
Ray Raynor
Charlotte Ruth
86
João
65, 199, 328,
358, 387 13 310
6, 381
163 98, 129
,QGH[
152, 185
Read
Simon
212
Roberts
Laura
46
Reavey
Duncan
181
Robinson
Caitlin
256, 284
Reddy
Chandan
121
Robinson
Jennifer
Reed
Brian
181
Robinson
Lisa
Reed
Nick
270
Robinson
Nicholas
Robison
Rosie
118
,QGH[
Reed Hillman Rosie
180, 357
23, 54, 89, 120 138 9
Rees
Lorna
236
Roddis
Pip
149
Reeves
Andrew
182
Roden
Paul
360
Reeves
Dory
139
Rodgers
A
Reid
Louise
371
Rodgers
Scott
Reimer
Suzanne
Roe
Emma
Reis
Nadine
225
Rogaly
Ben
91
Ren Ren
Julie Yi
23 292
Rohse Rojas
Mel David
78 45
Repo
Virve
241
Ronan
Nicola
Rerat
Patrick
Rosa
Cristina
Reuschke
Darja
Revez
Alexandra
300
Rose
Gillian
Revi
Aromar
89
Rose
Mitch
31, 70, 221 253
Rose
Morag
152, 337
13
136 57, 119 218
152
25, 326
74, 106 173, 240, 280 326 173
Rewhorn
Sonja
Reynolds
Tracey
Rezende
Leandro
Rezk
Ayham
Rhodes
Mark
Riaño Ricchetti
Yvonne Marco
Ricci
Miriam
293, 323
Rice
Gareth
303
Richard
Craig
357
Richardson
Lizzie
25, 88, 119, 269, 299
Richardson
Michael
Richardson
Peter
Richmond
Matthew
Rickett
Sophy
96
Jane
382
Russell-Mundine
Ridgeon
Joseph
276
Rienties
Bart
167
Rigby
Kate
93, 168
Rigg
Jonathan
Riley
Liam
290
Ringeling
Xaviera
372
S
Rink
Bradley
260
Sabater
Albert
Rishbeth
Clare
241
Saidi
Neila
80
Ristic
Mirjana
81, 113
Saija
Niemi
305
Rivas
Francisco
387
Saintier
Severine
Rizov
Vladimir
252
Samaha
Petra
165
Rizzo
Matteo
198
Samatar
Abdi Ismail
199
Roast
Asa
263
Sammonds
Peter
383
Ricketts Hein
75
Rosenberg-Jansen
147, 224 Sarah
163
Rosenow
Doerthe
323
Ross
Malcolm
48
162
Rossner
Meredith
385
15 388 109
Rossone de Paula
Francine
75
90
Rothman Royer
Dale Marie-Jeanne
367 213
Royles
Elin
325
Royo-Olid
Jaime
190
Rubik
Frieder
Ruddick
Sue
33
Ruiz
Alberto Mataran
79
Rumson
Alexander
Rusca
Maria
18, 83, 156
Nick
76, 108
319
164, 197, 330
Rush-Cooper
300 134, 168 5 12
Gabrielle
139
Russo
Antonio Paolo
297, 327
Ryan
Carrie
Rylands
Frances
Ryu
Je-Hun
60
Rzeszewski
Michal
83, 280
58 6, 63
105
284, 314
Sanchez-Diaz
Candela
122
Serrano
Javier
Ivan
80
Sexton
Alexandra
103
Sanders-McDonagh
151, 253
Erin
215, 247, 267
Seymour
Susanne
138
Sandoval
Giancarlo M
251
Seymour
Valentine
174
Sandys
Kathrine
349, 378
Shackley
Simon
Sanyal
Rajat
92
Shahidipak
Mohammadreza
Sareen
Siddharth
24
Shake
Joshua
Satariano
Bernadine
4
Shakeri
Moozhan
Saunders
Beth
343
Shankley
William
88, 319, 352 381
Sharapov
Kiril
Sharp
Jo
Sharp
Nina
35 146 323 26, 57 73 220
Saville
Samantha
Saxena
Lopamudra P.
Scarles
Caroline
Schaak
Julia
109
Scheba
Suraya
186
Scheerlinck
Kris
244
Shaw
Robert
32, 63, 319 352
Schembri
John
213
Shaw
Wendy
139
Schenk
Christine
Shelton
Clare
12
Schiffer
Anne
118, 182, 270
Sheombar
Anand
137
Schindler
Seth
120
Shepherd
Nick
81
Schlieder
Christoph
280
Shergold
Ian
293
Schlunze
Rolf
37
Sheridan
Sarah
Schmid
Benedikt
28
Sheringham
Olivia
Schmidt
Suntje
Sherriff
Graeme
Schmidt
Susanne
360
Sherwood
Juanita
139
Schneider Schneider
Justine Tanja
86 103
Shevchuk Shields
Lubov Sarah
209 301
Schoenpflug
Karin
122
Shilon
Mor
Schofield
Vanessa
148
Shin
HaeRan
145
Scholten
Bruce
367
Shoval
Noam
140
Scholz
Anne
66
Shubin
Sergei
Schoonjans
Yves
244
Shuttleworth
Ian
Schorung
Matthieu
287
Shuttleworth
Sophie
159
Schubert
Andi
242
Sidaway
James
124, 304
Schulz
Karsten
369
Sidsaph
Henry
184
Schüßler
Elke
250 Silva
Renato Emanuel
329
Silvi
Martina
Simcock
Neil
Sime
Daniela
351
Simm
David
181
Simon
David
Simone
AbdouMaliq
Schvimer Yonatan Schwanebeck Alexander Schwanen
Tim
Scobie
Matthew
Scott
Mark
Scott-Brown
Sophie
Scriven
Richard
Sear
Tom
5 215, 247, 362
283, 313
152, 185
140 123 80, 112, 165 193, 220 366 60, 140 291 264, 343
Shaughnessy Sipke Shaw Joe
Simundza
Daniel
41
Sin
Harng Luh
132, 259, 298 200 271 361
97 21 122, 205
83
73 105
282 284, 334, 364
197 240, 384 19 62, 362
Seidenglanz
Daniel
45
Sineau
Camille
265
Selby
Martin
356
Singh
Chandni
186
Semprebon
Michela
99
Singh
Jaideep
Singh
Shashi
Sereke
Temesghen Eyassu
Sitas
Rike
245
200 94, 125 290
,QGH[
Sanchez
Sjogren
Hanna
194
Skelton
Tracey
164, 368
Skentos
Athanasios
Skey
Michael
Skurnik
Johanna
Slesinger
Ian
,QGH[
Sloan Morgan
Vanessa
Stirling
Andy
Stojanovic
Tim
Stone
Brendan
241
Stoodley
Lyndsey
143
188
Strauss
Kendra
259
Street
Emma
366
Streule
Monika
85
Stripple
Johannes
271
212 3
55 79, 212
91 172, 379 54
Smith
Adrian
Smith
Cathy
Strømsø
Mette
Smith
Darren
16, 48, 380
Strong
Samuel
140, 174, 319
Smith
Dianna
205
Strouts
Graham
307
Smith
Fiona
304
Struver
Anke
Smith Smith
Graham Hannah
280 125
Sturm Sturtz-Filby
Tristan Tamara
Smith
Harriet
194
Suboticki
Ivana
Smith
Marilyn
334
Sum
Ngai-Ling
Smith
Peter
383
Sumartojo
Shanti
Smith
Sara
141
Summerwill
Kathryn
69
Sundberg
Juanita
121, 328, 336
Smith
Thomas Aneurin
128, 369
Snell
Carolyn
284
Sutcliffe
Daisy
134, 168, 204 236, 339
Sobolewski
Richard
223
Suteanu
Cristian
213, 245
Soilemezi
Dia
117
Sutherland
Lee-Ann
48, 130
Solley
Suzy
180
Svane
Baiba
105
Sotiropoulou
Panagiota
Swan
Scott
115
Sou Sowada
Gemma Tomasz
Swanson Sweetman
Dalene Paul
14 303
Špačková
Petra
Swilling
Mark
Sparke
Matthew
132
Sword-Daniels
Speake
Janet
372
Symonds
Paul
327
Spigel
Barney
296
Kate
9, 134, 168
Spinelli
Emmanuel
Symons T
228, 260, 294 324
Tafere
Yisak
Tallyn
Ella
Talmor
Dafna Ailie
311, 345 154, 187, 213 75 13
361
Victoria
376 216, 248
269 180, 264 42 55 322 3, 41
55 154
197
Spinney
Justin
Spring
Charlie
39, 258
Srigyan
Prema
135
Tam
Srivastava
Mandavi
297
Stachon
Zdenek
365
Tamayo-Duque Anamaria Tambe Ashwini
Staddon
Samantha
35, 78
Standish
Alexander
383
Tanoz-Sargeant
Stansfeld
Katherine
322
Tantam
William
203
Stanton
Polly
33
Tanulku
Basak
272
15
Taster
Michael
206
71
Tavendale
Amy
114 156
Steadman-Jones
Richard
Tan
9
Xin Wei Andy Tara
Stein
Mark
Steinberger
Julia
149
Taylor
Faith
Stellmach
Darryl
322
Taylor
Myfanwy
Stephens
Angharad Closs
3, 141
Taylor
Nick
Stephens
Courtney
Stephenson
Janet
Stevenson
Nancy
58, 335 11 265
Taylor Aiken Gerald Tchoukaleyska Roza
96 67, 266 74, 106 121 98 350
54 151 118, 347 386
Joaquin Romero de
Trotta
Susanna
Tejada
191
Trubina
Elena
198
Tekic
Ivan
271
Truedsson
Carl
175
Teller
Christopher
77
Tsibolane
Pitso
207
Teller
Jacques
178
Tsikhanava
Liudmila
209
Temenos
Cristina
148
Tufte
Thomas
137
Julia
182
Turek
Agnieszka
280
Thakur
Saurabh
114
Turner
Christopher
320
Theo
Rika
388
Turner
Sarah
Thiele
Maria Elisabeth
187
Tuvikene
Tauri
165, 198, 299
Thomas
216
Tyrrell
Naomi
288, 318, 351
Tziva
Maria
376
Ulbrich
Philipp
358
Ulriksen
Lars
359
Ulug
Ciska
Uluocha
Nna Oscar
Umar
Farouk
Thies Nielsen Thomas
Callum
Thomas
Craig
Thomas
Greg Philip
Thomas Merryn Thomas Lane Eifiona Thompson
Claire
Thompson
Maddy
Thomsen
Lotte
Thomson
Harriet
Thomson
Linda
30 256 31, 253 179 261, 353, 382 205 6, 102, 201 345 367 334, 364 174
U
Underhill-Sem
Anders David
153
Urquhart
Julie
177
Muhammad
115 222
Pip
9, 361
Thorogood
Joe
272
Tiberio
Alessandro
28, 175
Jill
Timms
Paul
Titheridge Titis
Helena Elisabeth
Valdez
Alan-Miguel
24
Valisena
Daniele
308
Vallerani
Francesco
61
Amy
Van Alstine
James
149
Van Brussel
Suzanne
169
Jacqueline
327
To
Long Seng
163
van der Horst
Toilier
Florence
112
Van Gent
Wouter
111
Van Heur
Bas
van Hoven
Bettina Anne
Trevor Divya P.
28 374
Van Allen
Tivers
Tolia-Kelly
91
287 358
Van de Werken
Tolhurst
282 90, 249
Unwin
Thornton
Timms
Yvonne
5 51
Underthun
Usman V
Tierado-Herrero Sergio
198
3
Richard Dan
6
387 182, 300 306 24, 135 159, 224, 312
Tomalin
Emma
104
Van Loon
Tomei
Julia
348
Vanden Boer Dorien
332
Tonkiss
Fran
120
Vasileiou
Fotios
181
57
Vasseur
Veronique
Toombs
Austin
Torabian Tornaghi
Pooneh Chiara
189 5
Toulmin
Llewellyn
180
Tove Buseth
Jill
82
Travers
Cheryl
86
Traynor
Catherine
Trell
Elen-Maarja
Triboi
Maria Roxana
258
Trifuoggi
Mario
224
Tristl
Christiane
171
385 5
Vasudevan
Alex
Vaughan
Cathy
Vavasour
Kris
Veale
Lucy
Vecchio
Giovanni
Vennam
Uma
Verdeil
Eric
Vergara Perucich Francisco Verhetsel Ann
78
87 23, 34, 208 240 315 43, 174 69 165 197 22, 126 84 112
,QGH[
Terrapon-Pfaff
72
Verne
Julia
Vickerstaff
Rebecca
Vickery
Veronica
Wedig
Karin
367
Vidal
Laura
225
Weeden
Clare
297, 356
Vider
Jaanika
291
Weise
Sebastian
Vigani
Mauro
184
Weitkamp
Gerd
11, 43
Vigar
Geoff
Welford
Mark
115, 245
Vikman
Noora
Wells
Peter
Vira
Bhaskar
Welsh
Marcus
Visentin
Francesco
Wendler
Jana
Visser
Gustav
214, 306, 338
Wenzl
Christine
56
Visser
Renske
86
Werner
Michael
123
189 189
Werritty West
Alan Harry
Vizcaino-Suarez Paola Vodicka Goran von Benzon
Nadia
Von Hoffmann
,QGH[
Vondermuehll
137, 171, 207 228 88
26, 57 386 35, 94, 125 344
4, 36
Watson
Iain
Wattanawanyoo
77 Kisnaphol
381
26, 57
193 319, 352, 381 78, 110
114, 153 62
West
Karen
86, 117
Jonas
321
Westerholt
René
358, 387
Dominique
228
Weston
Elizabeth
Vorley
Tim
186
Weszkalnys
Gisa
Vradis
Antonis
384
While
Aidan
Vytuleva W
Xenia
316 White
Carole
Wafer
Alexander
341
White
Francis Ray
276
289
Whiteing
Tony
112
162, 189, 279 72, 104
Wieladek
Agnieszka
280
Wagner
Lauren
Waite Waite
Catherine Louise
Wielgoszewska
Bozena
Walford
Nigel
245
Walker
Catherine
353
Wilczek Wilding
Barbara Sam
Walker
Gordon
169, 347
Wilkins
Annabelle Kirsten
329 310, 342 195 12, 44, 79 143, 177
52 91 205 25, 326
Walker
Joanne
136
Wilkins
Walker
K
136
Wilkinson
Carrie
Wallace
Andrew
374
Wilkinson
Catherine
Wallis
James
41
Wilkinson
Emily
12
Walmsley
Clive
69
Wilkinson
Paul
297
Walsh
Katie
288
Wilkinson
Samantha
86, 147
Wanda
Elijah
156
Willard-Wright
Rowena
316
Wang
Chih-Hung
294
Willi
Yasmine
179
231 28, 59
Williams Williams
Allan Andrew
288 72
337
Williams
Fiona
221, 253
277, 307, 339
Williams
Isabel
38, 326
230
Williams
Joseph
164, 232
Williams
Nina
142, 176, 286
Wang
Xinhong
Wanvik
Tarje
Ward
Jonathan
370 349 4, 36, 311
Ward
Kim
Ward
Lucas
Ward
Peter M.
Wargent
Matt
379
Willis
Katie
35
Warr
Deborah
315
Willman
Christopher
36
Warren
Saskia
283
Willment
Nina
56
Warren Wasai
Simon Sundus
14 114
Wills
Jane
295
Wilmott
Clancy
76, 110, 251
Waters
Johanna
Watson
Allan
Wilson
Helen
33, 64, 129 141
Wilson
Marisa
102, 359, 388 299
7
144
Wilson
Matthew
119
Y
Wilson
Sharon
260
Yamamura
Sakura
37
Wincott
Abigail
374
Yang
Yo-Hsin
215
Windemer
Rebecca
256
Yap
Christopher
259
Winlow
Heather
188
Yarker
Sophie
Wise
Sarah
80
Yazzie
Melanie
Wiseman
Richard
246
Witlox
Frank
317
Yeung
Henry
Wlokas
Holle
Yin
Xiuqin
66
Wong
Charles
Sarah
79, 243
Wood
Astrid
165, 198
Young Z
Wood
Caura
342
Zaltz-Austwick Martin
Wood Wood
Georgina Steve
300 77
Zampoukos
Kristina
91
Zang
Carina
360
Wood
Victoria
39
Zara
Cristiana
Woodhatch
Libby
44
Zavala
Jackie
111
Zdanowska
Natalia
145
85, 116, 150 183, 218, 250
80
97, 124, 252
Woods
Michael
99, 130, 219 352, 381
Woodward
Graham
302
Zea
Juan David Hincapié
Woodyer
Tara
233
Zebracki
Martin
306, 338, 368
Wooff
Andrew
Woroniuk
Clare
Worth
Nancy
158
Zeiderman
Austin
310
30, 61
Zhang
Xiaoyang
196
117
Zhang
Yueming Ye
288, 318, 351
196
Wouango
Joséphine
58
Zhao
Wright
Elizabeth
77
Zhao
Yuanying
191
Wright Wright
Katie Katy
73 374
Zhong
Chen
358
Zielke
Julia
288
Zipori Zografos
Esther Christos
160 32 269
Wright Higgins
Katie
Wrigley
Charlotte
Wrigley
Neil
218
Zook
Matthew
Wu
Qiyan
157
Zuskacova
Veronika
227
Zwangsleitner Daniel
Wulff Barreiro
Federico
134, 168
Wurzel
Rudi
195
Wylie
John
173, 304
Wynne-Jones X Xu
Sophie Feng
138, 277, 307 339 91
204, 236
27
30 200
,QGH[
55 115
143 1, 274
22. Index of Research and Working Group affiliated sessions Research Group
Abbrev
Programme IDs
Coastal and Marine Research Group
CMRG
12, 44, 79, 111, 143, 177, 212, 243
Developing Areas Research Group
DARG
2, 35, 94, 125, 164, 197, 321, 369
Digital Geographies Working Group
DGWG
9, 41, 76, 108, 137, 171, 207, 251, 269, 326, 331, 361, 365
Economic Geography Research Group
EGRG
25, 56, 85, 91, 116, 150, 152, 183, 185, 190, 218, 225, 250, 257, 355
Energy Geographies Research Group
EnGRG
55, 95, 126, 131, 149, 163, 182, 195, 231, 256, 284, 314, 334, 348, 364, 377
Food Geographies Working Group
FGWG
5, 44, 71, 103, 151, 184, 219, 258, 290, 320, 353, 382
GFGRG
8, 27, 40, 67, 86, 90, 117, 121, 147, 180, 215, 247, 267, 315
,QGH[
Gender and Feminist Geographies Research Group Geographical Information Science Research Group
GIScRG
158, 191, 226, 358, 387
Geographies of Children, Youth and Families Research Group
GCYFRG
Geographies of Health and Wellbeing Research Group
GHWRG
27, 51, 51, 86, 117, 140, 174, 209, 241, 266, 275, 281, 305
Geographies of Justice Research Group
GJRG
5, 35, 72, 104, 135, 139, 169, 237, 278, 308, 340, 385
Geography of Leisure and Tourism Research Group
GLTRG
Higher Education Research Group
HERG
31, 62, 70, 107, 181, 272
Historical Geography Research Group
HGRG
29, 60, 92, 123, 155, 188, 210, 242, 271, 301, 333, 346, 375
History and Philosophy of Geography Research Group
HPGRG
32, 63, 88, 98, 129, 142, 153, 173, 223, 255, 291, 304, 319, 352
Participatory Geographies Research Group
PyGyRG
Planning and Environment Research Group
PERG
Political Geography Research Group
PolGRG
3, 58, 93, 124, 148, 196, 210, 242, 259, 285, 313, 332, 375, 385
Population Geography Research Group
PopGRG
52, 73, 105, 162, 223, 255, 288, 318, 351, 380
Postgraduate Forum
PGF
6, 38, 82, 147, 162, 180, 204, 224, 236, 256, 259, 282, 312, 345
Quantitative Methods Research Group
QMRG
153
Race, Culture and Equality Working Group
RACE
Rural Geography Research Group
RGRG
16, 48, 82, 99, 130, 151, 184, 219, 221, 230, 253, 277, 307, 339, 353, 382
SCGRG
6, 29, 58, 60, 74, 93, 98, 102, 106, 124, 128, 129, 233, 264, 265, 283, 299, 381
Social and Cultural Geography Research Group Space Sexualities and Queer Research Group
SSQRG
4, 36, 97, 136, 170, 261, 359, 388
189, 215, 247, 297, 327, 356, 362
35, 75, 138, 277, 307, 339, 362 12, 87, 118, 206, 238, 270, 300
133, 167, 203, 235, 304
276, 306, 338, 368
Transport Geography Research Group
TGRG
30, 61, 80, 112, 158, 165, 191, 198, 220, 226, 234, 287, 293, 317, 323, 350, 365
Urban Geography Research Group
UGRG
22, 53, 95, 126, 165, 198, 263, 296, 379
NOTES
NOTES