Politics of Place issue 2 available

PoPPolitics of Place issue 2 available – visually looks great, including an interview with Bradley Garrett.

Posted in Politics, Publishing | 1 Comment

Boğaziçi Chronicles, Interview with Michael Hardt: Empire, Sovereignty and New Struggles

Interview with Michael Hardt – link to pdf for full text.

Keith Harris's avatarMy Desiring-Machines

A new portion of an interview with Hardt is up at the Boğaziçi Chronicles site. The full interview (pdf) is here.

View original post

Posted in Uncategorized | 2 Comments

Reflections on teaching the history of geography

Also from Jeremy Crampton – news of the publication of a series of pieces reflecting on teaching the history of geography.

Jeremy's avatarOpen Geography

I have a short piece in a forum on teaching the history of geography, organized by Innes Keighren for Progress in Human Geography. There are also contributions by Franklin Ginn, Scott Kirsch, Audrey Kobayashi, Simon Naylor and Jörn Seemann.

Here’s the abstract:

Drawing upon the personal reflections of geographical educators in Brazil, Canada, the UK, and the US, this Forum provides a state-of-the-discipline review of teaching in the history of geography; identifies the practical and pedagogical challenges associated with that teaching; and offers suggestions and provocations as to future innovation. The Forum shows how teaching in the history of geography is valued – as a tool of identity making, as a device for cohort building and professionalization, and as a means of interrogating the disciplinary present – but also how it is challenged by neoliberal educational policies, competing priorities in curriculum design, and sub-disciplinary divisions.

View original post

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Interview with John Pickles

Jeremy Crampton and Matt Wilson interview John Pickles for a special issue of Cartographica.

Jeremy's avatarOpen Geography

Matt Wilson and I interviewed John Pickles recently about the history of critical cartography, the Friday Harbor meetings in 1993 and Brian Harley. This has now appeared in Cartographica as part of a special issue marking the 25th anniversary of the publication of Harley’s “Deconstructing the Map” which was published there in 1989.

The whole issue is worth reading with contributions by John Krygier, Denis Wood, Martin Dodge, Matthew Edney, Sarah Elwood and others. It was edited by Reuben Rose-Redwood.

View original post

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Open Letter from Faculty, Emeriti and Librarians of the University of Toronto

CARj-DZVAAAvWWWOpen Letter from Faculty, Emeriti and Librarians of the University of Toronto on the ongoing strike action – more here and on Twitter.

Posted in Politics, Universities | 1 Comment

Update on University of Surrey’s Politics department under threat

sspUniversity of Surrey’s Politics department update: There is a story in Times Higher Education but also some reports that the University is reconsidering.

Posted in Politics, Universities | 1 Comment

University of Surrey’s Politics department under threat

sspUniversity of Surrey’s Politics department is under serious threat. Apparently “the current staff of 14 lecturers/professors will be reduced to 5. The current staff have received their redundancy notices and will have to re-apply to one of the 5 positions. There is no guarantee that the 5 positions under this newly structured department will go to any of the current staff members”. The University plan is that teaching the current curriculum will be continued, but obvious concerns are being raised about the delivery to students, and of course for the staff concerned.

As Ben Rosamond puts it, despite the successes of this department:

And then, on Thursday morning, the members of staff were gathered together by university senior management and told that their department was to be dismembered. I gather ‘restructured’ was the preferred euphemism chosen by the suits, but dismemberment and probable abolition is what actually seems to be on the table. So let’s call it that. As I understand it, two thirds of the faculty will lose their jobs from the end of the summer. Some colleagues may be forced to accept demotion to stay. The sole rationale of retaining teaching staff seems to be to maintain a skeletal undergraduate programme. Masters and PhD provision are set to go. It is hard to see how any research culture could be sustained in such an environment.

Students are mobilising to resist this – there is a Facebook page ‘Save Surrey’s Politics Department‘; and a Twitter hashtag #savesurreypolitics to keep up-to-date.

There is also a petition to sign – but also to share:

We are graduates, current students and friends of the Politics Department at the University of Surrey and we are greatly distressed by the current news on the University administration’s proposed plans for the department. This petition is a way to gather signatures to express concern at the effective closure of the Surrey Politics Department which has been widely reported on twitter. This will be presented to University management next week. We invite you all to add your name to our petition. Thank you for your support.

Posted in Politics, Universities | 1 Comment

“University Freiburg: Husserl and Heidegger Remain in Freiburg” – clarification

The University of Freiburg has issued a clarification: “University Freiburg: Husserl and Heidegger Remain in Freiburg” (via Enowning).

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Top posts on Progressive Geographies this week

I was away for much of the week, so not that many new posts.

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

What We Talked About At ISA: Weaponising Geography and the Global Striations of Military Targeting

Antoine Bousquet on geography, weapons and global calculation.

Antoine Bousquet's avatarThe Disorder Of Things

In the context of a panel I put together on “Turning Ploughshares into Swords: Weapons and Weaponizations”, the ISA’s annual conference was the occasion for me to present some of the research I have undertaken as part of my long term project into the logistics of military perception. The central aim of that project is to uncover the genealogy and operation of the functional constituents of contemporary targeting practices as they increasingly span the globe. I submit that we can outline three distinct, if profoundly intertwined, functions of sensing, imaging and mapping that respectively gather sensorial information, visually represent and disseminate it, and relate it to geospatial frameworks. It is the last of these operations that was the focus of my paper, with particular attention paid to the way in which the planet has increasingly been enframed within systems of geographic coordinates permitting the geolocation and thereby targeting of any…

View original post 2,204 more words

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment