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Mexico: Territory of confinement during the pandemic Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space (IF 2.633) Pub Date : 2024-03-01 Guillermo Castillo Ramírez
Since the 1990s, Mexico has been a transit country par excellence in the Americas. However, since the beginning of the 2010s, Mexican territory has been configured as an extended and violent space of migratory containment. In the regional context of Mexico and the United States, the COVID-19 pandemic accentuated state processes of migratory control and criminalization that had been in place for years
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Securing financial returns in politically uncertain worlds: Finance and urban water politics in Brazil Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space (IF 2.633) Pub Date : 2024-02-29 Isadora A Cruxên
Studies of financialization have highlighted how politics, particularly through the state, drives the increasing entanglement of financial actors and rationales in the production of urban space. This article shifts the angle to consider the challenges that uncertain politics pose for such entanglement. Looking beyond techno-calculative practices, it explores how finance works politically to sustain
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Unfolding dispositifs: Attempts at digital business education in North Korea Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space (IF 2.633) Pub Date : 2024-02-27 Thomas Wainwright, Ewald Kibler, Will Scott, Jukka-Pekka Heikkilä
Scholars have drawn attention to educational spaces as sites of contestation and struggle. Researchers have increasingly scrutinised the power structures and relations that shape educational spaces, particularly in the mobilisation of education to further the economic competitiveness of nation-states. Adopting a dispositif lens, our ethnographic study examines digital business education in a North
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Intimate witnessing: Volunteer testimonies of everyday border violence Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space (IF 2.633) Pub Date : 2024-02-27 Kavita Ramakrishnan, Luděk Stavinoha
In this paper, we center the witnessing repertoires of grassroots volunteers and explore the ways in which they bear witness to and condemn the border violence experienced by illegalized migrants across Europe. Drawing on long-term research of volunteer solidarity structures across Greece and in Paris, our analysis of witnessing uses the ‘intimate’ as a conceptual framing across three intersections
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What is the role of activism in air pollution politics? Understanding policy change in Poland Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space (IF 2.633) Pub Date : 2024-02-16 Tomas Maltby, Sarah Birch, Adam Fagan, Mate Subašić
There has been growing awareness across the world of the negative health effects of air pollution. Poland is the European country that is worst affected by this problem, and the Polish government has in recent years adopted a number of measures designed to reduce coal use. This paper explores the role of civil society activism in this shift, investigating the extent to which local activists played
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Spaces of in/formality in the Turkish humanitarian field: Spatial and discursive practices impacting refugee women Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space (IF 2.633) Pub Date : 2024-02-13 Tahire Erman, Aminath Nisha Zadhy-Çepoğlu
Drawing upon critical feminist theorising, this article intervenes in the debates about humanitarian aid organisations in the case of urban refugees to highlight the ubiquity of in/formal practices in their interlinkedness that increasingly shape aid distribution. By examining humanitarian enactments at three levels –the national, the district and the neighbourhood– in the case of Ankara, Turkey, the
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Territory, rights, and migrant justice: Undocumented first amendment rights, or the deterritorialization of rights access Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space (IF 2.633) Pub Date : 2024-02-09 Jacob P Chamberlain
This paper analyzes the work of the powerful migrant rights organization Migrant Justice, as they exemplify ways in which migrant activists in the U.S. today are challenging the socio-political confines of bordered state territory and are pushing the landscape of rights access in new directions. This work utilizes a year-long ethnography conducted with Migrant Justice as they faced intense targeting
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Blood, sweat and tears: On the corporeality of deportation Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space (IF 2.633) Pub Date : 2024-02-09 Lisa Marie Borrelli, William Walters
It is hard to imagine how deportation regimes could function without the threat or the exercise of force. Yet surprisingly a focus on forces and bodies, and more generally the question of corporeality, has rarely been foregrounded by migration scholars looking at deportation. Academic study of clandestine border crossing as well as detention abounds with descriptions and theorization at the level of
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Collecting, assembling, ordering: Border politics and the invisible data work of asylum Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space (IF 2.633) Pub Date : 2024-02-06 Lucrezia Canzutti, Claudia Aradau
This article proposes to understand the ‘invisible data work’ that asylum seekers must do to put together a ‘credible’ asylum application. While the intersections between asylum and work have typically been analysed in relation to access to employment and labour conditions, we attend to the work of collecting, assembling, and ordering different forms of analogue and digital data inherent to the asylum
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Contested port cities: Logistical frictions and civic mobilization in Genoa and Venice Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space (IF 2.633) Pub Date : 2024-02-05 Francesca Savoldi
This article examines the increasingly conflictual relationship between ports and their surrounding communities at a time of wide-reaching infrastructural expansion. It highlights how the centralization of power and logistical gigantism produce deterritorializing frictions, decoupling inhabitants from their territories and creating the conditions for social contestation. It calls for a rethinking of
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Is it worth a punt on pensions? A case study of three municipalities’ use of pension obligation bonds Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space (IF 2.633) Pub Date : 2024-02-02 Mark Davidson
Cities now commonly engage with financial actors, tools, and markets to manage their budgets and associated activities. The growing significance of finance within urban governance is connected by some scholars to the latter’s increasingly speculative character. One area of urban governance where financial tools are now commonly used for speculative ends are public pensions. Across the United States
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Another sign on the wall: Graffiti slogans between dissent and post-political dynamics Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space (IF 2.633) Pub Date : 2024-01-30 Francesca Bragaglia
This paper contributes to the debate on the ‘post-political city’ in urban studies. This debate has highlighted that the ‘post-political’ seems now an inherent condition of contemporary cities. However, empirical analysis reflects a more complex reality where dissent in urban space can challenge the idea of a ‘post-political city’ by default. Among the expressions of dissent within urban space, ‘graffiti
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De facto standstill: Ruination and deterioration in the Abkhazian borderlands Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space (IF 2.633) Pub Date : 2024-01-25 Mikel J.H. Venhovens
This article explores the ruination of homes and infrastructure in the Gal(i) district of the contemporary de-facto state of Abkhazia. After the 1992–1993 conflict, over 200,000 ethnic Georgians were forcefully displaced, making the roughly 40,000 ethnic Georgians who stayed behind as an unwanted minority. Like the demographics, the landscape changed significantly. The homes became ruins, and the infrastructure
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A polluting war: Risk, experts, and the politics of monitoring wartime environmental harm in Eastern Ukraine Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space (IF 2.633) Pub Date : 2024-01-23 Freek van der Vet
War always harms the environment. As the fog of war produces unreliable data, it also obstructs our capacity to monitor those harms. While some call for more data collection to advance a clear narrative of the origins of environmental harm, sociologists of risk and professional risk assessors find that the urgency of environmental hazards depends not on data alone but on who has the authority to define
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Digital denizenship: Hindu nationalist architectures of digital closings and unbelonging in India Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space (IF 2.633) Pub Date : 2024-01-22 Ekta Oza, Philippa Williams, Lipika Kamra
This paper examines the sociodigital experiences of political and religious minorities in contemporary India to understand matters of voice and power, as well as feelings of belonging, identity and citizenship. It builds out from research conducted in New Delhi between February and June 2019 during and after the Indian national elections and focuses on WhatsApp as an everyday space where Hindu nationalism
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Solutions in search of a problem: Opening policy windows for Business Improvement Districts in the Nordic countries Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space (IF 2.633) Pub Date : 2024-01-22 Chiara Valli, Kristian Olesen, Peter Parker
Policy mobility literature invites us to consider the power-laden processes of how urban policies are exported, mimicked, and transformed in different urban contexts. However, recent critique has highlighted the need for a fuller understanding of urban policy context to understand where and when policies come to be implemented in new settings and how they are transformed. The purpose of this study
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National sovereignty across city networks: Singapore and the diplomacy of a global city-state Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space (IF 2.633) Pub Date : 2024-01-20 Ricardo Martinez, Tim Bunnell
Even though the expanding relevance of city diplomacy has unsettled the traditional state-centered conceptualization of international politics, the growing transnational dynamism of city governments is still embedded in, and structurally constrained by, a state-centric international polity. We exemplify this through consideration of Singapore’s exceptionalism as a city-state, and what this means for
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Serial adapters? Local government chief officers and the navigation of space and time Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space (IF 2.633) Pub Date : 2024-01-16 Neil J Barnett, Arianna Giovannini, Steven Griggs
This article analyses the everyday practices of ‘doing’ socio-spatial relations, drawing upon a series of in-depth interviews with local authority chief officers from across the UK. It argues that for chief officers ‘thinking spatially’ is played out in and through the practice of leadership on the move as they navigate the multiple spaces and temporalities that constitute the landscape of local government
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“Sentir su camino”: (Im)mobilities in the return of Venezuelan migrant women during the pandemic in Ecuador Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space (IF 2.633) Pub Date : 2024-01-12 Tania Bonilla Mena
The pandemic exacerbated the already inequitable conditions to which Venezuelan migrants are exposed in Latin America. Influenced by global policies of public health control, the Ecuadorian government imposed numerous constraints on internal and external mobilities to reinforce its restrictive shift of at least the past decade, thereby limiting migrant regularization and curtailing the guarantee of
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Mini-Publics as an innovation in spatial governance Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space (IF 2.633) Pub Date : 2023-05-16 Daniel Durrant, Tom Cohen
Mini-publics—deliberative fora made up of randomly selected, representative groups of citizens—have attracted considerable interest as a means of resolving perceived weaknesses in existing forms of...
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Ghostly murals: Tracing the politics of public art in Vancouver’s Hogan’s Alley Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space (IF 2.633) Pub Date : 2023-05-10 Friederike Landau-Donnelly
The article unpacks the multiple political implications of commissioned murals in contested urban space. It examines public artwork in Hogan’s Alley, a historically Black neighborhood in Vancouver,...
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Landscapes of dispossession: Criminal justice and property rights in Mexico (2015–2020) Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space (IF 2.633) Pub Date : 2023-05-10 Rodrigo Meneses-Reyes, Gustavo Fondevila, Carlos Galindo
It is generally accepted that the State plays an important role in promoting and facilitating practices of dispossession; yet there is little reflection on its role in prevention, processing, and r...
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Politicizing the “unknown”: Territorial narratives, shared spatial imaginaries, and Bermuda’s oceans Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space (IF 2.633) Pub Date : 2023-05-05 Leslie Acton
Marine conservation advocates have promoted the designation of large-scale marine protected areas (LSMPAs) in the EEZs of small island states and territories. These offshore spaces, early proponent...
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Spatial justice as a prerequisite for a just transition in rural areas? The case study from the Irish peatlands Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space (IF 2.633) Pub Date : 2023-05-03 Aparajita Banerjee, Geertje Schuitema
Energy production from fossil fuels is gradually phased out as many countries aim to transition to a low-carbon society. As society and technology are intertwined, phasing out fossil fuels impacts ...
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Militarized urbanism in the cold war era: The resettlement of the refugees in Khan Younis Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space (IF 2.633) Pub Date : 2023-04-17 Fatina Abreek-Zubiedat
The resettlement of Palestinian refugees is often studied through two distinct approaches: the first uses settler colonialism as an analytical framework to explore structural violence and Indigenou...
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Border hotels: Spaces of detention and quarantine Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space (IF 2.633) Pub Date : 2023-04-12 Ari Jerrems, Kaya Barry, Andrew Burridge, Umut Ozguc
‘Border hotels’ have come to prominence during the COVID-19 pandemic as spaces of detention and quarantine. Despite the longer history of using hotels for immigrant detention, efforts to contain ou...
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Imaginaries of place in territorialization processes: Transforming the Oyacachi páramos through nature conservation and water transfers in the Ecuadorian highlands Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space (IF 2.633) Pub Date : 2023-04-05 Rossana Manosalvas, Jaime Hoogesteger, Rutgerd Boelens
How Ecuadorian páramos are perceived has drastically changed over the last five decades. From cold, hostile, and unproductive hinterlands, páramos have changed to become areas for biodiversity cons...
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Film programming politics vis-à-vis festival site politics: The case of the Mezipatra queer film festival Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space (IF 2.633) Pub Date : 2023-03-30 Ondřej Šerý, Pavel Doboš
This paper belongs to the sub-field of queer geography. It is a spatially sensitive study of queer film festival programming that relates its politics to the affective politics of the site. It focu...
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Technology of detachment: The promise of renewable energy and its contentious reality in the south of Colombia Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space (IF 2.633) Pub Date : 2023-03-30 Cornelia Helmcke
Taking infrastructure as the means to control space, this paper analyses the large-scale hydroelectric dam project “El Quimbo” in Huila, South Colombia, and the environmental conflict it caused. Th...
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Territorial variance in the UK’s refugee politics and its consequences: Young Syrian refugees in England and Scotland Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space (IF 2.633) Pub Date : 2023-03-29 Gareth Mulvey, Dimitris Skleparis, Brian Boyle
Access to social rights is crucial to refugee settlement and integration, and a whole range of social policy measures determine the limits on those rights. In the United Kingdom (UK) various releva...
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Grab it and change it, it’s yours: Affect, attitude and politics in 1970s Northern Irish punk music Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space (IF 2.633) Pub Date : 2023-03-21 Rachel Smith, Janet Banfield
This paper argues for incorporation of attitude into geographical work on affect. We do so through an engagement with affect in musical experiences and adopting as our focus punk music in Northern ...
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Situated dynamics of environmental governance in Swedish smart energy experimentation: Tentativeness, demonstration, upscaling Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space (IF 2.633) Pub Date : 2023-03-20 Fredrik Envall
In this article unfolding processes of environmental governance are explored through the case of smart energy experimentation in Sweden. When experimentation merges with place-based dynamics, parti...
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The life and death of the ‘Baron mall’: The shifting politics of urban regeneration in Valparaiso Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space (IF 2.633) Pub Date : 2023-03-18 Rodrigo Caimanque
The waterfront regeneration of Valparaiso in Chile has been the expression of significant institutional efforts aimed at reaching the so-called urban renaissance of the port-city, seeking to overco...
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Conjuring a cooler world? Imaginaries of Improvement in Blockchain Climate Finance Experiments Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space (IF 2.633) Pub Date : 2023-03-17 Malcolm Campbell-Verduyn
Meeting on the second anniversary of the Paris Agreement signing, the United Nations Climate Change Secretariat founded the Climate Chain Coalition (CCC) in 2017. Backed by a number of multi-stakeh...
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The sisyphean cycle of inequitable state production: State, space, and a drainage project in Pakistan Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space (IF 2.633) Pub Date : 2023-03-16 Ayesha Siddiqi
This paper examines the cycle of a hydraulic infrastructure producing an unequal state, using space, every flood year, for what seems like perpetuity. Instead of theorising “elite capture” of the s...
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The emperor, the lion and the peacock: Monuments and contested state sovereignty in contemporary Ethiopia Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space (IF 2.633) Pub Date : 2023-03-20 Asebe Debelo Regassa, Rony Emmenegger
As a first project launched after his nomination as Ethiopia’s new prime minister in 2018, Abiy Ahmed renovated the Imperial Palace in Ethiopia’s political center, Addis Ababa to turn it into a her...
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Push and back: The ripple effect of EU border externalisation from Croatia to Iran Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space (IF 2.633) Pub Date : 2023-03-15 Karolina Augustova, Helena Farrand-Carrapico, Jelena Obradovic-Wochnik
Pushbacks have become a key feature of EU migration controls since 2015. As this article argues, practices of pushbacks stretch from EU spaces, such as Croatia, to its external borders and neighbou...
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Informality and the politics of urban flood management Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space (IF 2.633) Pub Date : 2023-03-14 Patrick Brandful Cobbinah, Clifford Amoako, Ata Senior Yeboah
This paper explores reasons for unproductive urban flood management agendas in informal settlements. Does geography of informal settlements inform city-led flood management agendas? And in what way...
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Resistant recycling and recycling (r-)existences: self-organizing collective subjectivations of waste pickers in Rio Grande Do Sul, Brazil Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space (IF 2.633) Pub Date : 2023-03-14 Davide Carbonai, Marco Checchi, Luiz Lentz Junior
Recycling consists of a variety of everyday practices that involve a complex urban ecology of materialities, subjectivities, knowledges, organising practices, institutions, policies, communities. I...
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A tale of two crises: The emergence of an eco-Keynesian coalition in Swedish transport decarbonisation discourse Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space (IF 2.633) Pub Date : 2023-03-02 Simon Haikola, Jonas Anshelm
The paper traces a discursive shift in Swedish transport decarbonisation discourse, by which neoliberal hegemony has been increasingly challenged through the emergence of an eco-Keynesian discourse...
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Marielle’s seeds: Contesting the emotional life of corruption talk in Bolsonaro’s Brazil Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space (IF 2.633) Pub Date : 2023-03-02 Jennifer L Tucker, Thainara Granero de Melo
In this paper, we argue the emotional life of corruption narratives underwrite the rise of the extreme Right in Brazil. Further, we argue that the talk of corruption is pervasive, polysemic, contes...
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The will to security: Law, order, and the shifting terrain of popular struggles Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space (IF 2.633) Pub Date : 2023-02-15 Robert Samet
Populism is a notoriously unstable phenomenon. This instability has been on full display in contemporary Latin America where the progressive gains of the Pink Tide have confronted a rightwing backl...
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Planning and designing universal access to social services. A pioneering local program on welfare spaces in Italy Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space (IF 2.633) Pub Date : 2023-02-07 Massimo Bricocoli, Benedetta Marani, Stefania Sabatinelli
The combined effect of socio-economic and demographic changes exerts pressure on the welfare systems and makes it more urgent to provide appropriate answers to increasing and diversifying needs wit...
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Bridgeheads of EU border externalisation? NGOs/CSOs and migration in Libya Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space (IF 2.633) Pub Date : 2023-02-05 Paolo Cuttitta
This paper analyses the work carried out by non-governmental organisations (NGOs) and civil society organisations (CSOs) in Libya from 2009 to 2020 to shed light on its ambivalent relationship to t...
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Modernism on the margins: A genealogy of Namibia’s (post-) apartheid spaces Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space (IF 2.633) Pub Date : 2023-02-01 Fatima Müller-Friedman, John Friedman
Namibian spaces have been shaped, transformed, and ordered according to the ideas and practices propagated by the Modern Movement. These ideas were originally transferred from Europe and adapted to...
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Exploring the affective dimension of climate adaptation discourse: Political fantasies in German adaptation policy Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space (IF 2.633) Pub Date : 2023-01-31 Elise Remling
Critical adaptation research has documented how climate change adaptation responses largely tend to maintain rather than change the status quo. Building and expanding on these literatures, this art...
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Strategic incapacitation, scaled up: National security influence on protest policing for the 2018 Quebec G7 summit Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space (IF 2.633) Pub Date : 2023-01-15 Andrew Crosby, Kevin Walby
In June 2018, the 44th Group of Seven (G7) Summit was held in La Malbaie in the Province of Quebec, Canada. Drawing from geographic and sociological literature on protest and social movement polici...
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“People expect you to choose”: Postcolonial hybridity in complex geographies of scaled diaspora identities Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space (IF 2.633) Pub Date : 2023-01-11 Christabel Devadoss
Hybridity in geography, specifically hybridity through a postcolonial lens, is often removed from postcolonial origins regarding geographic scale. I argue that postcolonial hybridity is key to situ...
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Infrastructures of dissensus: repartitioning the sensible and articulating the political through the occupation of Greece’s public broadcasting service Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space (IF 2.633) Pub Date : 2023-01-07 Lazaros Karaliotas
This article engages with contemporary debates around the politics of space and the spatiality of politics by exploring how the fabrication of emancipatory infrastructures shapes the articulation a...
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“I choose fish”: Understanding informal civil society in vietnam through environmental grievances and actions Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space (IF 2.633) Pub Date : 2022-12-27 Thai Nguyen-Van-Quoc, Elen-Maarja Trell
This paper focuses on informal civil society in an authoritarian context, particularly the unprecedented nation-wide protests and civic action in Vietnam, triggered by the industrial pollution and ...
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“Land imaginaries” in Western Canada: (financial) neoliberalism, agrarianism, and the contemporary politics of agricultural land Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space (IF 2.633) Pub Date : 2022-12-22 Naomi Beingessner, André Magnan, Mengistu Wendimu
This article examines contemporary political controversies over agricultural land in the prairie region of Canada. We suggest that contemporary land politics reflect elements of continuity and chan...
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‘Mainstreaming’ Meets ‘Choice and Control’: Unsettling Neoliberal Imaginaries of Service Choice Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space (IF 2.633) Pub Date : 2022-12-12 Ilan Wiesel, Christine Bigby, Ellen van Holstein, Brendan Gleeson
‘Mainstreaming’ and ‘Choice and control’ agendas have played a dominant role in shaping disability policy and advocacy in many countries since the 1970s, however scholarship is yet to critically ex...
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Fast-track institutionalization: The opening of urban planning best practice agencies in Mexico City Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space (IF 2.633) Pub Date : 2022-12-12 Ryan Anders Whitney, David López-García
The article explores the related concepts of best practice agencies (BPAs) and fast-track institutionalization. We define BPAs as agencies that have been inspired by international trends in urban g...
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What level of resistance to air pollution is justified? On violence and self-defense Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space (IF 2.633) Pub Date : 2022-12-07 J. Mohorčich
This article evaluates responses to air pollution that lie beyond the domain of state policy and nonviolent civil disobedience. I begin by presenting evidence that fine particulate matter pollution...
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Epidermal politics: Control, violence and dissent at the biometric border Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space (IF 2.633) Pub Date : 2022-12-06 Georgios Glouftsios, Anna Casaglia
In this paper, we critically interrogate the registration of migrants in pan-European, large-scale biometric databases, like Eurodac (European Asylum Dactyloscopy Database). We employ the notion of...
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The landrush of wind energy, its socio-material workings, and its political consequences: On the entanglement of land and wind assemblages in Denmark Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space (IF 2.633) Pub Date : 2022-12-01 Julia Kirch Kirkegaard, David Rudolph, Sophie Nyborg, Tom Cronin
Challenges of deploying wind farms on land are often associated with the notion of local acceptance. For developers, however, the socio-material practicalities of identifying appropriate sites and ...
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Lockdown and the intimate entanglements of terror, virus, and militarism Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space (IF 2.633) Pub Date : 2022-12-01 Sunčana Laketa, Sara Fregonese
Despite their wide implementation since the COVID-19 pandemic, lockdowns are not spatial interventions unique to public health emergencies but have also recently been used to tackle the aftermath o...
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Geopolitical priorities, governance gaps, and heritage subjectivities: The perils of heritage-making in the post-disaster reconstruction in Nepal Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space (IF 2.633) Pub Date : 2022-12-01 Urmi Sengupta
Natural disasters are becoming more frequent around the world, causing extensive damage to both the physical and social fabric of cities and towns. Reconstruction of a city’s architecture and built...
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City regions and decent work: Politics, pluralism and policy making in Greater Manchester Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space (IF 2.633) Pub Date : 2022-11-28 Mathew Johnson, Miguel Martínez Lucio, Stephen Mustchin, Damian Grimshaw, Jo Cartwright, Jenny K. Rodriguez, Tony Dundon
Despite a growing body of literature examining the politics of city-regionalism, the question of how local actors engage with, and challenge each other in the subnational regulatory space requires ...
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The veil of transparency: Blockchain and sustainability governance in global supply chains Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space (IF 2.633) Pub Date : 2022-11-25 Nick Bernards, Malcolm Campbell-Verduyn, Daivi Rodima-Taylor
This article interrogates the turn towards digital technologies for addressing sustainability challenges in global supply chains. Focusing on the case of blockchains, we assess industry claims that...