INTERNATIONAL GEOGRAPHICAL UNION COMMISSION ON

Transcrição

INTERNATIONAL GEOGRAPHICAL UNION COMMISSION ON
INTERNATIONAL GEOGRAPHICAL UNION COMMISSION
ON GENDER AND GEOGRAPHY
Newsletter No. 54
May, 2015
From the Commission Chair
This newsletter brings much exciting news about feminist geographers and feminist geography
activities from all around the world. In particular, I want to highlight the April 2015 conference
on “Gendered Rights to the City” which our Commission was proud to have co-sponsored with
the Geographic Perspectives on Women Specialty (GPOW) Group of the Association of
American Geographers (AAG). I would like to reiterate my thanks and congratulations to the
organising team for an outstanding job! The event also acted as our Commission’s preconference to the main 2015 IGU Conference coming up in Moscow (17th-22nd August).The
Gender and Geography Commission will be organising six sessions in Moscow:
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Factors Affecting Women’s Education: Gender, Space, Culture and Society
Gender and climate change: Mitigation and Adaptation strategies”
Gendered Crime and Spaces: An approach in Feminist Geography
Gendered Life-Courses
Gender Activisms in Asia: Peoples, Places and Politics (jointly with the Political
Geography Commission)
Geographies of International Student Mobility: The Roles of Gender, Class and Ethnicity
(jointly with the Population Geography Commission)
Also, as part of winning the award for being the best IGU Commission for 2014, our
Commission has been invited to present a keynote lecture at the Moscow meeting. While I will
be presenting the paper entitled “A Continuing Agenda for Gender” on behalf of the
Commission, it is being written collaboratively with Janet Momsen, Janice Monk, Maria Dolors
Garcia Ramon and Joos Droogleever Fortuijn. The paper will discuss the challenges faced by
and contributions of the Commission in its 27-year history, and consider some of the
emerging directions and challenges ahead for a continuing agenda for gender in geography.
Please do support the lecture if you are planning to be in Moscow and all the best for the coming
months.
Shirlena Huang
National University of Singapore
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GENDERED RIGHTS TO THE CITY: INTERSECTIONS OF IDENTITY AND POWER
On April 19-20, 2015, the IGU Commission on Gender and Geography co-sponsored an
outstanding conference with the Geographic Perspectives on Women Specialty (GPOW) Group of
the Association of American Geographers (AAG). Organized as a pre-cursor to the AAG Annual
Meeting held later that week in Chicago, the conference was hosted and co-organized by the
Department of Geography, University of Wisconsin Milwaukee under the excellent local
leadership of Anne Bonds, Anna Mansson McGinty, Kristin Sziarto, Rebecca Wolfe, and
Hyejin Yoon with IGU Gender Commission support from Holly Hapke, Ann Oberhauser, and
Jan Monk and from GPOW by Nicole Laliberte and Laura Shillington and a team of seven
graduate student volunteers. Over 130 people participated, from at 15 least countries in northern,
western and central Europe, Israel,Australia, New Zealand, Singapore, the USA and Canada.
In all, there were 23 sessions, 63 papers, 3 panels and 2 workshops. The opening panel brought
together representatives of community women’s organizations who addressed the challenges
they face and their strategies for addressing them -- Martha de la Rosa, Director of the
Wisconsin Chapter of 9to5, which advocates for women’s rights in the workplace, Janan
Najeeb of the Milwaukee Muslim Women’s Coalition. Gender Commission Chair, Shirlena
Huang, National University of Singapore took up research on how the state controls rights and
freedom of movement and in space of immigrants in the city, and Linda Peake (York
University, Canada) addressed challenges and approaches in academic/community collaboration
drawing on her sustained connections in Guyana and beyond.
The range of papers offered was wide – encompassing aspects of safety and threat, racism.
activism, intersectionality of gender with, for example, sexuality, migrant status, and race.
Diverse research methodologies were explored, including visual and digital, taking account of
emotions, and of feminist pedagogies, as well as the challenges being faced by early career
academics in contemporary neoliberal universities. An excellent field trip revealed historical
expressions of the ethnicity, immigration, race and class expressions in the political landscape of
Milwaukee.
We appreciate the collegiality and sustained work of the organizers, of the many departments in
the university that contributed support to the conference, and also of the facilities and
cooperation of staff of the American Geographical Society Library, not only for hosting multiple
sessions in its impressive space but for organizing the multifaceted exhibit “Borders Drawn and
Crossed: Women Cartographers/Geographers/Explorers.”
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Opening Session: (left to right) Linda Peake, Janan Naeeb, Marha de la Ross, Shirlena Huang.
Panel Discussion: “Feminist Methods and the City: Creating and Shaping Urban Knowledges.”
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Lots to talk and think about
NEWS FROM AROUND THE WORLD
On April 14-17, the Congreso Internacional sobre Gėnero y Espacio was held at Universidad
Nacional de Mexico (UNAM) sponsored by the Instituto de Geografía and the Programa
Universitario de Estudios de Genero. With 89 papers and 15 parallel sessions, this event
represents a landmark in highlighting Spanish-language research gender studies in geography
and related fields. It brought together researchers, including graduate students, from an array of
Latin American countries, especially Mexico, as well as others from several European countries
and the United States. Topics were wide-ranging including theoretical and empirical studies
covering topics such as identities, race, sexualities, representation, exclusion, resistance, and
emotions. Keynote speakers were architect Olga Segovia (Chile), anthropologist Teresa del
Valle (Spain) and geographer Maria Dolors Garcia Ramon (Spain). The goal of organizing an
ongoing series every two years is envisioned.
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Gender themes were well represented at the Annual Meeting of the Association of American
Geographers held in Chicago in April with 65 sessions listed as sponsored or co-sponsored by
the Geographic Perspectives on Women Specialty Group and more than 20 by the Sexuality and
Space Specialty Group. Many sessions were co-sponsored with other groups such as Social and
Cultural Geography, Economic Geography, and Cultural Geography. The complete program,
including the index by group and topic may be accessed at
http://www.aag.org/galleries/conference-files/AAG2015_Program.pdf
Congratulations to the feminist geographers who received awards at that meeting: Susan
Hanson (Clark University) was honored with the Stan Brunn Creativity Award recognizing her
instrumental role in introducing feminist theories and gendered analysis to geography, thus creating
new modes of interpreting and explaining our everyday worlds. The Jan Monk Service Award
honored Linda Peake (York University, Canada). Students recognized included Aparna Parikh
(Pennsylvania State University) with the Susan Hanson Dissertation Proposal Award for her
research on nightscapes of call center workers in Manila and Mumbai; Ana Grahovac
(University Of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign) received the Glenda Laws MA Paper Award for
“Geographies Of Abortion Access In the US” and the undergraduate award went to Christine
Alic, of Brock University, for her paper “Contested Landscapes of the Female Gaze: Self –
Portraits as Resistance to Gender Oppression. ” In the Sexuality and Space Specialty Group first
prize in the graduate student paper competition was earned by Kiran Bhairannavar (National
University of Singapore) for his contribution “Exploring the 'more-than-closet' geographies of
sex and sexuality: A study of Delhi's queer men;” Carly Nichols (University of Arizona) was
awarded a prize by the Asia Specialty group for her paper on the negative consequences of
government agricultural programs for health in the Uttarakand region (India). Emma Gallaas
Mullaney (Pennsylvania State University) also recently received three awards for her work on
gender-power relations as an aspect of historical and contemporary aspects of agricultural
change in Mexico (see below, chapter and articles listing,) Two of these are from AAG
Specialty Groups (Political Geography and Cultural and Political Ecology) and the Miller Award
for PhD students from her department.
Congratulations to Kuntala Lahiri-Dutt (Australian National University (ANU) who was
honored as a Champion of Gender Equity in ANU, by the university’s Gender Institute.
RESEARCH PROJECTS
The collaborative project “Visible parenting in the workplace: implications, costs and strategies”,
being conducted by N. Klocker, D. Drozdzewski, M. Flood, S Hamylton, J. Atchinson, and
J. Croft has been funded from University of Wollongong Global Challenges Strategic Funding:
2015. Project details can be found at http://globalchallenges.uow.edu.au/UOW192487
Kuntala Lahiri-Dutt, (Australian National University) is Chief Investigator of the Australian
Research Council Discovery Project ‘Farmers of the Future: the Challenges of Feminised
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Agriculture in India’ (with co-investigators Dr Bill Pritchard, Professor Stewart Lockie, Dr
Patrick Kilby and Professor Amita Shah). The project is co-funded by the Indian Council of
Social Science Research jointly with Professor Amita Shah and Dr Itishree Pattnaik (Gujarat
Institute of Development Research, Ahmedabad, India).
Emma Gallaas Mullaney (Pennsylvania State University) has been named a GEO fellow and is
serving as lead author author United Nations Environmental Programme, Regional Assessment
for Latin America and the Caribbean for the sixth Global Environment Outlook report (GEO-6),
Panama City, Panama.
NEW BOOKS
Buechler, Stephanie and Anne-Maria Hanson (eds). 2015. A Political Ecology of Women, Water,
and Global Environmental Change. London: Routledge.
Chant, Sylvia and Gwendolyn Beetham, (eds) (2015) Gender, Poverty and Development
(London: Routledge) (4 Volumes – Vol 1: Key Approaches and Concepts, Vol 2: Gender and
Poverty in the Domestic Domain; Vol 3: Gendered Poverties in Relation to Health, Labour
Markets and Assets; Vol 4: Gender, Poverty and Policy Interventions)
Coles, Anne. Leslie Gray, and Janet Momsen (eds)2015. The Routledge Handbook of Gender
and Development. London and New York: Routledge..
Ferreira, Eduarda, Isabel Ventura, Luisa Rego, Manuela Tavares, Maria Antónia.Pires de
Almeida, (Eds.) 2015). Percursos Feministas: Desafiar os Tempos. Lisboa: UMAR /
Universidade Feminista.
Garcia-Ramon, Maria Dolors, Anna Ortiz Guitart, and Maria Prats Ferret. (2014). Espacios
Públicos, Género, y Diversidad: Geografias para unas ciudades inclusivas. Barcelona: Icaria
Editorial.
Harcourt, W. and I.L. Nelson (eds.) 2015. Practicing Feminist Political Ecologies: Moving
Beyond the ‘Green Economy.’ London: Zed Books ( Several chapters are written by geographers
including Leila Harris, Andrea Nightingale, and Dianne Rocheleau. Full listing of chapters can
be found at http://www.zedbooks.co.uk/paperback/practising-feminist-political-ecologies
Lund, Ragnhild, Phillippe Doneys and Bernadette Resurrección (eds). 2015. Gendered
Entanglements: Revisiting Gender in Rapidly Changing Asia. NiAS Press. Denmark.
Seager, Joni. (2014). Carson's Silent Spring. London: Bloomsbury.
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Silva, Maria das Graças Nascimento Silva, Nasciemento Silva, Joseli Maria (Org.).
Interseccionalidades, Gênero e sexualidades na Análise Espacial. Ponta Grossa, Toda
Palavra.
Stratford, E. 2015. Geographies. Mobilities and Rhythms over the Life Course: Adventures in the
Interval. London: Routledge and New York.
RECENT ARTICLES AND BOOK CHAPTERS
Alfasi, Nurit and Tovi Fenster. 2014 " Between socio-spatial and urban justice: Rawls'
principles of justice in the 2011 Israeli Protest Movement". Planning Theory 13 (4): 407-427
Almeida, João Paulo, Leandro de Ornat, Marcio Jose. 2014. Espacialidade e masculinidade na
vivência de jovens da escola de 'guardas mirins' em ponta grossa, paraná”. Geo UERJ (2007), 2
142-171.
Ansell, Nicola, Seroala Tsoeu and Flora Hadja. 2015. “Women’s changing domestic
responsibilities in neoliberal Africa: A relational time-space analysis of Lesotho’s garment
industry.” Gender, Place and Culture 22 (3) 363-82.
Bagheri, Nazgol. 2015. “What qualitative GIS maps tell and don’t tell: Insights from mapping
women in Tehran’s public spaces.”Journal of Cultural Geography 31(4): 166-78.
Bain, Alison L., William Payne and Jaclyn Isen. 2015. “Rendering a neighborhood
queer.”Soclal and Cultural Geography 16(4): 424-43.
Baylina, Mireia, Maria Dolors Garcia Ramon et al. 2015. “O mundo rural em Espanha: uma
perspectiva das mulheres profissionais.” Revista Latino-American de Geografia e Género 6(2)::
24-37.
Benedicto, Bobby. 2015. “ The queer afterlife of the postcolonial city: (Trans)gender
performance and the war of beautification.” Antipode 47(3): 580-97.
Blazek, Matej, Fiona M. Smith, Miroslava Lemesova, and Petro Hriková. 2015. “Ethics of care
across professional and everyday positionalities: The (un)expected impacts of participatory video
with young female carers in Slovakia.” Geoforum 61:45-55.
Blidon, Marianne. 2014. “Les sens du je. Réflexivité et objectivation des rapports sociaux.”
Géographie & cultures 89-90 :111-129.
-----. 2015. “L’AAG pour les nuls.”European Journal of Geography (cybergeo.revues.org/26977
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Boterman, William R. and Gary Bridge. 2015. ”Gender, class and space in the field of
parenthood: compating middle-class fractions in Amsterdam.” Transactions of the Institute of
Britsh Geographers 40(2): 249-61.
Brickell, Katherine 2014, “’The whole world is watching’: Intimate geopolitics of forced
eviction and women’s activism in Cambodia.” Annals of the Association of American
Geographers 104(6): 1256-72.
----. “Participatory video drama research in transitional Vietnam: post-production narratives on
marriage, parenting and social evils.” Gender, Place and Culture 22(4): 510-25.
Cabral, Vinicius; Ornat, Marcio Jose; Silva, Joseli Maria. 2014. “As Relações Entre Espaço,
Violência e a Vivência Travesti na Cidade de Ponta Grossa - Paraná – Brasil”. Caderno
Prudentino de Geografia, 3: 118-135.
Carneiro, Marcia Tobias and Marcio Jose Ornat. 2014. “Espaço, atendimento de saúde e
sexualidades segundo a vivência travesti em Ponta Grossa – paraná”. Terr@ Plural (UEPG.
Impresso), 8:203-223.
Caretta, M. A., G.Y. Cadena Montero, L. Sulbarán, and R. Sandoval, R. (2015). “¿La
revolución tiene cara de campesina?" Un caso de estudio de la participación activa de las mujeres
en el riego del páramo venezolano.” Revista Latino Americana de Genero y Geografia, 6 (2): 323. DOI: 10.5212/Rlagg.v.6.i2.0001
Caretta, M. A. et al. 2015. Labour, climate perceptions and soils in the irrigations systems in
Sibou, Kenya & Engaruka, Tanzania. Popular scientific publication from the dept of Human
Geography in English, Swahili and Marakwet. ISBN: 978-91-87355-15-8 (English); 978-9187355-17-2 (Kiswahili); 978-91-87355-16-5 (Marakwet)
Chant, Sylvia (2014) ‘Exploring the “Feminisation of Poverty” in Relation to Women’s Work
and Home-based Enterprise in Slums in the Global South.’ International Journal of Gender and
Entrepreneurship, 6:3, 296-316.
----. “Gender and Poverty in the Global South’, in Anne Coles, Leslie Gray and Janet Momsen
(eds). A Handbook of Gender and Development (London: Routledge), 191-203.
----. “‘The “Feminisation of Poverty”: A Reflection 20 Years After Beijing’, UNRISD Think
Piece ‘Let’s Talk About Women’s Rights 20 Years After the Beijing Platform for Action’
(Geneva: UNRISD)
(http://www.unrisd.org/unrisd/website/newsview.nsf/(httpNews)/8A36603F76FE20EFC1257DF80
055522C?OpenDocument)
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----. (2015) “Gambian Diaspora: Signs of Separation and Symbiosis”, Africa at LSE Newsletter,
blog post(http://blogs.lse.ac.uk/africaatlse/2015/03/30/gambian-diaspora-signs-of-separationand-symbiosis/)
Cezar, Tamires Regina Aguiar de Oliveira, Pinto, A M Vagner 2015. “A produção intelectual da
Geografia Brasileira em torno das temáticas de Gênero e Sexualidades. Revista Latinoamericana de Geografia e Gênero, 6(2):119 – 132.
Connell, J. and M. Walton-Roberts, M. 2015 "What about the Workforce? The Missing
Geographies of Health Care." Progress in Human Geography. doi:10.1177/0309132515570513.
Cook, Ian R. 2015. “A vengeful education? Urban revanchism, sex work and the penal politics of
John School.” Geografiska Annaler 97(1): 17-30.
Das, Tulshi Kumar, Alam, Falrul, Md., Bhattacharyya, Rituparna and Parvin, Amina (2015).
“Causes and contexts of domestic violence: Tales of help-seeking married women in Sylhet,
Bangladesh, Asian Social Work and Policy Review, 9, 1–14, doi:10.1111/aswp.12055
De Jong, Anna. 2015, “Dykes on bikes: Mobility, belonging, and the visceral.” Australian
Geographer 46(1):1-13.
Del Casino, Vincent and Catherine F. Brooks. 2015.”Talking about bodies online: Viagra,
YouTube, and the politics of public(ized) sexualities” Gender Place and Culture 22(4): 474-93.
Domosh, Mona. 2015. “Commentary on ‘The lives of others: Body work, the production of
difference and labor.” Economic Geography 91(1): 25-28.
Drozdzewski, D., (2015) “Retrospective reflexivity: The residual and subliminal repercussions of
researching war.” Emotions, Space and Society, Special Issue on Researcher Trauma,
doi:10.1016/j.emospa.2015.03.004, (Available online 24 April 2015).
Drozdzewski, D, and D.F. Robinson (2015) “Care-work on fieldwork: taking your own children
into the field.” Children’s Geographies 13(3): 372-78.
England, Kim. 2015. “Nurses across borders: Global migration of registered nurses to the US.”
Gender Place and Culture 22 (1)) 143-56.
Evans, Alice. 2015. “History lesson for gender equality from the Zambian copper belt.” Gender
Place and Culture 22 (3): 344-62.,
Faria, Caroline and Sharlene Mollett. 2014 "Critical feminist reflexivity and the politics of
whiteness in the field" Gender, Place and Culture: A Journal of Feminist Geography [available on
ifirst]
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Faria, Caroline. 2014. "'I want my children to know Sudan' Narrating the long-distance
intimacies of diasporic politics" Annals of the Association of American Geographers 104(5):
1052-67.
Fenster, Tovi and Chen Misgav 2014. "Memory and place in Participatory Planning." Planning
Theory and Practice , 15 (3): 349-369
Fenster, Tovi . 2015. " Do Palestinians live across the road? Address and the micropolitics of home in Israeli contested urban spaces". Environment and Planning A 46:2435-2451
Fisher, Karen T. 2015. “Positionality, subjectivity, and race in transnational and transcultural
geographical research.” Gender, Place and Culture 22 (3): 456-73.
Giese, Kirsten and Alena Thiel. 2015. “ Chinese factor in the space, place and agency of female
head porters in urban Ghana.” Social and Cultural Geography 16(4): 444-64.
Glynn, Kevin and Julie Cupples. 2015. “Negotiating and queering US hegemonies in TV drama:
Populat geopolitics and cultural studies.” Gender, Place and Culture 22 (2): 271-87.
Gomes, Fernando Bertani. 2014. “Trajetórias Espaciais de Jovens do Sexo Masculino e os
Agenciamentos da Morte na Cidade de Ponta Grossa – Pr”. Revista Latino-americana de
Geografia e Gênero, Ponta Grossa, 5(2): 99 – 113.
Gomes, Fernando Bertani, and Joseli Maria. Silva. 2014. “'Cenas Loucas'. As assemblages da
violência de jovens do sexo masculino com envolvimento com as drogas na cidade de Ponta
Grossa – PR”. Revista Latino-americana de Geografia e Gênero, 5 (1): 3-24.
Gorman-Murray, Andrew. 2015. “Twentysomethings and tweenagers: Subjectivities, spaces and
young men at home. Gender, Place and Culture 22 (3): 422-39.
Greenough, Beth, Bronwyn Parry, Isabel Dyck, and Tim Brown. 2015. “Introduction: The
gendered geographies of ‘bodies across border.’” .Gender, Place and Culture 22 (1): 83-89.
Gutierrez, Caitlin O’Neill and Peter Hopkins. 2015. “Introduction: Young people, gender and
intersectionality.” Gender, Place and Culture 22 (3): 383-89.
Haugen, Marit S., Berit Brandth, and Gro Follo. 2015. “Farm, family and myself: Farm women
dealing with family break-up.” Gender, Place and Culture 22(1): 37-49.
Hopkins, Peter. 2014. “Managing Strangerhood: Young Sikh men’s strategies.” Environment and
Planning A 7:1572-85.
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Horochovski, Rodrigo, Ivan Jairo Junckes, Edson Armando Silva, Camargo, Neilor; Almeida, L.
B, and Joseli Maria Silva 2014. “Redes de Financiamento Eleitoral nas Eleições de 2008 no
Litoral do Paraná.”Paraná Eleitoral, 3:103-131.
Hoseng, Lan Anh and Brensa S.A. Yeoh, 2015.”’I’d do it for love or money’: Vietnamese
women in Taiwan and the social construction of female migrant sexuality.” Gender, Place and
Culture 22(5): 591-607.
Hubbard, Phil, and Eleanor Wilkinson. 2015. “Welcoming the world? Hospitality,
Homonationalism and the London Olympics.” Antipode 47(3): 598-615.
Hvorka, Alice J. 2015. “Feminism and animals: Exploring interspecies relations through
intersectionality, performativity, and standpoint.” Gender, Place and Culture 22(1): 1-19.
Jenkins, Katy. 2015. “Unearthing women’s anti-mining activism in the Andes Pachamama and
the ‘Mad Old Woman.’” Antipode 47(2): 442-60.
Johnson, Jennifer L. 2014. “‘Studying up’: Researcher as supplicant in feminist studies of elite
spaces of work, International Journal of Gender and Women’s Studies 2(3):1-12.
----. 2013. “Gendering trade negotiations: elite spaces of work as regulatory nodes in the global
economy.” Atlantis: Critical Studies in Gender, Culture & Social Justice, 36(1): 87-97.
[http://journals.msvu.ca/index.php/atlantis/issue/view/280].
Jin, Xiuming, and Risa Whitson. 2014. "'Traditional Chinese girls' in a modern place: Gender
and public leisure spaces in contemporary Beijing." Social and Cultural Geography 15(4): 449469.
Junckes, Ivan Jairo; R.R. Horochovski, R. R., N.F. Camargo, Joseli Maria Silva, Edson
Armando and L.B. Almeida. 2015. “ Posicionamento das Mulheres na Rede de Financiamento
Eleitoral e seu Desempenho nas Eleições de 2010 no Brasil: A Dinâmica Estrutural da Exclusão
e Marginalização Feminina no Poder Político”. Revista Latino-americana de Geografia e
Gênero, 6: 25-47.
Kanai.J. Mentr[iguel.2015. “Buenos Aires beyomd (homo) sexualized urban entrepreneurialism:
The geographies of queer tango.” Antipode 47(3): 652-70.
Kaspar, Heidi and Sara Landolt. 2014. “Flirting in the field: Shifting positionalities and power
relations in innocuous sexualisations of research encounters.” Gender, Place & Culture 0, no. 0 (
1–13. doi:10.1080/0966369X.2014.991704.
Kataoka, Caio Shigueharu and Marcio Jose Ornat. 2015. “Mapas de Significados Espaciais e
Vivência Geracional de Homens e Mulheres Nikkeys de Maringá e Londrina, Paraná”. Revista
Latino-americana de Geografia e Gênero, Ponta Grossa, 6(1): 64 – 90.
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Kinyanjui, Mary Njeri. 2015. Can Africa’s informal sector spur growth? ( blog posting that
examines how small scale and cooperative operations can be developed to enhance economies
with case studies of ventures initiated by a Kenyan man and women)
http://www.worldpolicy.org/blog/2015/04/07/can-africas-informal-sector-spur-growth
Kusek, Veronica and Sarah L. Smiley. 2015.”Navigating the city: gender and positionality in
cultural geography research.” Journal of Cultural Geography 31(2) 152-65.
Kwan, Mei-Po and Axander Kotsev. 2015. “Gender differences in commute times and
accessibility in Sofia, Bulgaria: A study using 3D visualization. The Geographical Journal
181(1): 85-96.
Leszczynski, Agnieszka and Sarah Elwood. 2015. “Feminist geographies of new spatial media.
The Canadian Gepgrapher 59(1): 12-28.
Lichtenstein, Bronwen and Joe Weber. 2015. “Woman foreclose: A gender analysis of housing
loss in the U.S. deep south.” Social and Cultural Geography 16(1): 1-21.
Listerborn, Carina. 2015. “Geographies of the veil violent encounters in urban public spaces in
Malmö, Sweden.” Social and Cultural Geography 16(1): 95-115.
Lahiri-Dutt, Kuntala. 2014. “ Medicalising menstruation: A feminist political economic critique
of Menstrual Hygiene Management in South Asia, Gender, Place and Culture Published online,
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Makiepaard, Emiel, 2015. “Bisexuals in space and geography: more than queer? Fennia 193(1):
148-59.
Manalanson, Martin F. 2015. “The messy art of being global in Manila and New York. Antipode
47(3):566-79.
May, Jeff. 2015. “Racial vibrations. masculine performances: Experience of homelessness
among young men of colour in the Greater Toronto area. Gender, Place and Culture 22 (3):
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McDowell, Linda. 2015. “The lives of others: Body work, the production of difference and labor
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----.2015. “Braided streams: Spaces and flows in a career.” Documents d’Anàlisi Geogràfica
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----.2015.Changing doctoral education: The case of U.S. Geography.” Geojournal 80 (2): 18791.
Morrow, Oona, Roberta Hawkins, and Leslie Kern. 2015. “ Feminist research in online spaces.”
Gender, Place and Culture 22 (4): 526-43.
Mountz, A., A. Bonds, B. Mansfield, J. Loyd, J. Hyndman, M. Walton-Roberts, R. Basu, R.
Whitson, R. Hawkins, T. Hamilton, W. Curran, W. (in press 2015) "For slow scholarship: A
feminist politics of resistance through collective action in the neoliberal university" ACME: An
International Journal for Critical Geographies.
Mühlen, and Kelly Cristina Kohn . (Org.). Caminhos de homens.:Gênero e Movimentos 127-153.
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Mullaney, Emma Gaalaas, 2014. "Geopolitical maize: Peasant seeds, everyday practices, and food
security in Mexico." Geopolitics 19(2): 406-30.
Muller Myrdahl, Tiffany. 2014. "A geographer in the gallery: Reflections on making the
invisible visible." In Barrett, L., Doolittle, L., Luce, E., MacKay, B., Mills, J. and Muller
Myrdahl, T. Complex Social Change, pp. 34-53. Lethbridge, Alberta: University of Lethbridge
Art Gallery. (Contact author for pdf)
----. 2014. "Sexuality, rurality & geography." Gender, Place & Culture 21(1): 134-135.
----. 2013. "Ordinary (small) cities & LGBQ lives." ACME 12(2) http://www.acmejournal.org/vol12/MullerMyrdahl2013.pdf
Muzaini, Hanzah. 2015. “(In)formal memoryscapes and the unmas(k)ing of a Malaysian war
heroine.” Singapore Journal of Tropical Geography 35(3): 382-96.
Nash, Catherine J. and Kath Browne. 2015. “Best for society? Transnational opposition to sexual
and gender equalities in Canada and Great Britain.” Gender, Place & Culture 22(4): 561-77.
Ornat, Marcio Jose; Santos, Adelaine Ellis Carbonar dos; Han Gomes, Fernando Bertani; Silva,
Joseli Maria. 2014. “'Cenas Loucas'. As assemblages da violência de jovens do sexo masculino
com envolvimento com as drogas na cidade de Ponta Grossa – PR”. Revista Latino-americana
de Geografia e Gênero, 5 (1): 3-24.
Ornat, Marcio Jose, Santos, Adelaine Ellis Carbonar dos Santos, and William Hanke, 2014.
“Espaço Escolar, Homofobia, Controle e Transgressão.” In: José Rogério Santana; José Gerardo
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