Conference programme book

Transcription

Conference programme book
RGS-IBG Annual International Conference, Exeter, 1-4 September 2015
Offsite
Forum –
Alumni
Auditorium
TUES
11.00-17.00
The GEES Network Annual Meeting: Teaching Focused in
Higher-Education
Teaching Justice: a workshop organised by the Geographies of
Justice Research Group
Food Matters Symposium: Tackling Systemic Food Waste
Departing University of Exeter at 10.00, returning by 18.00
Registration & lunch from 12:00,
starts 13.00, ends 17.45
Postgraduate Forum Annual Conference
Training Symposium (PGF-ACTS)
1
Chair’s Plenary
Will Steffen (ANU)
Kathy Willis (Kew
Gardens)
Starts at 18.15
Conference opening
drinks reception to
follow, sponsored by
the University of
Exeter Geography
Department
Paul Gilroy (KCL)
Anna Tsing (UC
Santa Cruz)
DARG
EnGRG
Energy Geographies
Research Group
AGM
Antipode Drinks
Reception
Followed by a drinks
reception
108
The Many Faces of
Flooding: Policy,
Science, and Art
From c. 18.30
Evening
RGRG
Global agricultural
networks: configurations
and implications
85
Wet Geographies II:
Developing Areas
Water in the
Research Group
Anthropocene: creative AGM
approaches (Discourses
and engagement) (2)
SCGRG 84
Transport Geography Wet Geographies II
Research Group
Water in the
AGM
Anthropocene:
creative approaches
(Alternative
Knowledge) (1)
5
SCGRG, 31
SCGRG,
SSQRG 59 SCGRG, PyGyRG
PyGyRG
PyGyRG
Forum Surfaces of
Surfaces of Distinction: Space, Sexualities
Surfaces of
Seminar Room Distinction: Materiality Materiality and
and Queer Research Distinction: Materiality
3
and viscerally
viscerally knowing food Group AGM
and viscerally knowing
knowing food (1)
(2)
food (3): Practitioners
Panel
Forum Music of the Rural /
Seminar Room The Rural of Music:
2
Folk and Beyond
TGRG 58
83
Floods in a Changing
Climate: Science,
Politics and
Transformation
82
Antipode Lecture
16:50-18:30
Session 4
54
Chair's plenary
14:40-16:20
HPGRG 57
BSG
History and
Geomorphology and
Philosophy of
the Anthropocene
Geography Research
Group AGM
29
HGRG
Historical and cultural
geographies of story
and storytelling (2):
Storytelling,
communities and
change
30
PolGRG,
SCGRG, CMRG
Wet Geographies I:
Under the Sea:
Geographies of the
Deep
28
Chair's opening
plenary: discussion
panel
2
Understanding
institutional responses
to climate change
challenges in
vulnerable rural areas
13:10-14:25
Session 3
3
HGRG
Forum Historical and cultural
Seminar Room geographies of story
1
and storytelling (1):
Story, memory,
performance and
place
4
RGRG
11:10-12:50
09:00- 10:40
Plenary
Lunch served
Session 2
Session 1
Devonshire
House - Great
Hall
Forum Alumni
Auditorium
WED
RGRG, GFGRG
36
HPGRG
Algorithmic Practices:
Emergent
interoperability in the
everyday (2)
10
HPGRG
Forum Algorithmic Practices:
Seminar Room Emergent
8
interoperability in the
everyday (1)
SSQRG, GJRG
Liveable Lives (2):
Spaces Where Lives
Are Lived?
35
Losing Ground –
Gaining Ground (2):
Losing and Recovering
Self(in)Place
34
SSQRG,
GJRG
Forum Liveable Lives (1):
Seminar Room Theorising
7
Liveability/Livability
9
RGRG,
GFGRG
Forum Losing Ground –
Seminar Room Gaining Ground (1):
6
Finding and Losing
Identity in (Remote)
Rural Communities
8
33
EnGRG
Cooperative energy:
practising a just low
carbon transition? (2)
7
EnGRG
Forum Cooperative energy:
Seminar Room practising a just low
5
carbon transition? (1)
11:10-12:50
09:00- 10:40
32
GCYFRG
Children and Nature in
the Anthropocene (2)
Leaning to be affected
Session 2
Session 1
6
GCYFRG
Forum Children and Nature
Seminar Room in the Anthropocene
4
(1): Building and living
with natures
WED
61
EGRG
Risk and Complexity
in Finance and
Beyond (1):
Geographies of Risk
60
GCYFRG
Children and Nature in
the Anthropocene (3):
young people
connecting with nature
14:40-16:20
Session 3
Race, Culture and
Equality Discussion
Meeting
Internal Migration
Processes:
Geographic
Perspectives: Book
launch
64
UGRG
Middle classes and
the politics of space in
transforming cities (1)
Urban Sustainabilities
(1): interrogating
"smart" and "eco"
urbanism(s)
63
Beyond gateways
cities: immigrants’
pathways in
small/medium-sized
cities (1)
PopGRG 62
55
Cultivating Wellness
in Geography:
invitation to a
conversation
13:10-14:25
Plenary
90
UGRG
Middle classes and the
politics of space in
transforming cities (2)
Urban Sustainabilities
(2): interrogating
sustainable urban
designs
89
Beyond gateways cities:
immigrants’ pathways in
small/medium-sized
cities (2)
88
87
EGRG
Risk and Complexity in
Finance and Beyond (2)
Working with Complexity
86
GCYFRG
Children and Nature in
the Anthropocene (4):
young people
connecting with nature
16:50-18:30
Session 4
From c. 18.30
Evening
11:10-12:50
09:00- 10:40
Newman
Building Lecture
Theatre
B/Purple
Newman
Building Lecture
Theatre A/Blue
GJRG
40
The city and the
margins: Ethnographic
challenges across
makeshift urbanism (2)
41
Behavioural change in
the Anthropocene (2)
14
The city and the
margins:
Ethnographic
challenges across
makeshift urbanism
(1)
15
Behavioural Change
in the Anthropocene
(1)
Responsibility:
Enacting care over
time and space in the
Anthropocene (2)
GJRG 39
Forum Responsibility:
Seminar Room Enacting care over
11
time and space in the
Anthropocene (1)
13
11
Session 2
Session 1
TGRG, 37
TGRG, GIScRG
GIScRG
Forum GIS for sustainable
GIS for sustainable
Seminar Room transport (1)
transport (2): open
9
source GIS workshop
12
RGRG 38
RGRG
Forum Fairness and Social
Fairness and Social
Seminar Room Justice for Rural
Justice for Rural
10
Communities (1)
Communities (2)
WED
13:10-14:25
Plenary
16:50-18:30
Session 4
From c. 18.30
Evening
94
TGRG
Hoyle Lecture:
Hoyle Lecture Drinks
Transport, technology
Reception in Peter
and the Anthropocene: Chalk Foyer
views from the periphery
Gina Porter (Durham
University)
69
95
Communism and
Communism and
catastrophe (1): Panel Catastrophe (2): Panel
Discussion
Discussion
68
The Metropocene:
radical challenge or
business as usual?
City-Region Building:
Process, Practice,
People, Politics
92
HPGRG
Suspending the
Anthropocene (2) Or,
Cannibalizing the
Holocene, Panel
Session
67
GHRG 93
PolGRG,
UGRG
Geographies of risk, The Urban
health and wellbeing Governmentalities of
Forced Migration
PERG 91
Local belonging and
the dynamics of
change to places
66
HPGRG
Suspending the
Anthropocene (1)
Impasse, Lost
Futures, Déjà vu
65
14:40-16:20
Session 3
Peter Chalk Room 1.5
Peter Chalk Room 1.4
Peter Chalk Room 1.1
Newman
Building Lecture
Theatre F
(Red)
Newman
Building Lecture
Theatre E
(Green)
Newman
Building Lecture
Theatre C&D
WED
11:10-12:50
42
UGRG
The field formerly
known as Urban
Studies? (2)
09:00- 10:40
16
UGRG
The field formerly
known as Urban
Studies? (1)
45
PGF
Innovative
Methodologies in
Postgraduate
Research (2)
46
Community, migration
and identity
19
PGF
Innovative
Methodologies in
Postgraduate
Research (1)
20
Knowledge,
governmentality and
power
21
Water and
sustainability
47
New dimensions of
state space
transformation
44
Mobility, mutation and
translation processes
of EU renewable
energy policies (2)
18
Mobility, mutation and
translation processes
of EU renewable
energy policies (1)
17
TGRG 43
TGRG
Spaces of
Spaces of Participatory
Participatory
Transport Planning (2)
Transport Planning
(1)
Session 2
Session 1
56
Waterworlds Art
Programme - Film
Screening (1)
13:10-14:25
Plenary
96
PolGRG
Materialising (geo-)
politics (2):
Security/war/governance
16:50-18:30
Session 4
100
Geographies of art and
media
74
Governance and
development
75
101
HERG, GIScRG
Migration, labour and GIS and the
livelihood
Anthropocene:
Educational
Perspectives
99
Community, agriculture
and development (2)
73
Community,
agriculture and
development (1)
71
TGRG 97
EnGRG
Urban Transport
Grid networks:
Visions and Pathways understanding the
dynamics of public
acceptance across
European contexts
72
HPGRG 98
HPGRG
The Ends of
The Ends of
Geography’s Worlds Geography’s Worlds (2)
(1)
70
PolGRG
Materialising (geo-)
politics (1):
Bodies/affects/nature
14:40-16:20
Session 3
From c. 18.30
Evening
102
Urban planning
16:50-18:30
53
PERG, EGRG
Alternative
experiments: spaces of
learning and
innovation at the
grassroots (2)
27
PERG, EGRG
Alternative
experiments: spaces
of learning and
innovation at the
grassroots (1)
Peter Chalk Rooms 2.2 &
2.3
106
SCGRG, HGRG
Geographies of Amateur
Creativities: Spaces,
Practices and
Experiences (2)
107
SSQRG
Privilege in the
Production of
Geographies of
Sexualities / Queer
Geographies
80
SCGRG, HGRG
Geographies of
Amateur Creativities:
Spaces, Practices and
Experiences (1)
81
PGF, EnGRG
Postgraduate
research in Energy
Geographies
52
The World System
Model: World Games
Interactive Event (2)
26
The World System
Model: World Games
Interactive Event (1)
Peter Chalk Rooms 1.2 &
1.3
Peter Chalk Room 2.4
79
105
Elsevier Editor Speed Elsevier Editor Speed
Review Sessions (3) Review Sessions (4)
77
103
Ecological Restoration Health, environment and
in the Anthropocene migration
76
Climate change and
local knowledges
14:40-16:20
Session 4
25
51
Elsevier Editor Speed Elsevier Editor Speed
Review Sessions (1) Review Sessions (2)
48
Climate change and
policy (2): risk and
governance
49
Cultivating Ecologies
(2): “walk and talk” tour
22
Climate change and
policy (1): behaviour
management
23
Cultivating Ecologies
(1)
13:10-14:25
Session 3
Peter Chalk Room 2.5
11:10-12:50
09:00- 10:40
Plenary
78
GLTRG
An ontology of tourism
transport
Session 2
Session 1
24
50
Housing and planning "Not drowning but
fighting": Decolonising
the anthropocene
Peter Chalk Room 2.1
Peter Chalk Room 1.6
WED
From c. 18.30
Evening
Forum Seminar
Room 4
Forum Seminar
Room 3
Forum Seminar
Room 2
Forum Seminar
Room 1
Devonshire
House - Great
Hall
Forum Alumni
Auditorium
THURS
13:10-14:25
Plenary
135
EnGRG
Individual and
collective imaginaries
of energy: storying
energy in the past,
present and future (2)
14:40-16:20
Session 3
187
Sharing cities for
justice and
sustainability
Louise Amoore
(Durham University)
186
Progress in Human
Geography Lecture
16:50-18:30
Session 4
113
GJRG
Food Matters Thinking through Food
Justice and
Sovereignty
138
GJRG
HERG
Food Matters (1):
Higher Education
Food systems &
Research Group AGM
(re)distribution
networks
165
GJRG
Food Matters (2):
Food systems & food
security
190
GJRG
Food Matters (3):
Urban agriculture and
embodied practice
188
DARG
Development’s pasts
and futures: A critical
dialogue between
(Latin American) Area
Studies and Geography
112
TGRG, GLTRG 137 TGRG, GLTRG
GHRG 164
GHRG 189
Transitioning to Low
Transitioning to Low Geography of Health
Geographies of Sport Geographies of Sport
Carbon Mobilities (1)
Carbon Mobilities (2) Research Group AGM (1): Everyday sport
(2): Everyday sport
162
Negotiating Rights
and Understanding
Water Needs:
Knowledges and
politics of water
management in small
towns
111
EGRG 136
EGRG
QMRG 163
EGRG
Critical geographies of Critical geographies Quantitative Methods
Critical geographies of
the sharing economy
of the sharing
Research Group AGM the sharing economy
(1) Sharing
economy (2) Sharing
(3) Sharing places
communities
Networks
110
EnGRG
Individual and
collective imaginaries
of energy: storying
energy in the past,
present and future (1)
Lunch served
134
159
How to Get Your
Chair's plenary
Published Work Read
and Cited
Lorraine van Blerk
Amita Baviskar (Delhi
(University of Dundee)
University Enclave)
11:10-12:50
09:00- 10:40
109
Social and Cultural
Geography Lecture
Session 2
Session 1
SCGRG
Social and Cultural
Geography
Research Group
AGM
Conference dinner
and drinks reception
From c. 18.30
Evening
Forum Seminar
Room 10
Forum Seminar
Room 9
Forum Seminar
Room 8
Forum Seminar
Room 7
Forum Seminar
Room 6
Forum Seminar
Room 5
THURS
11:10-12:50
09:00- 10:40
PolGRG,
GCYFRG
Being and becoming
citizens: spaces of
political engagement
(2)
143
PopGRG
142
14:40-16:20
Session 3
160
Playing War (2)
192
Planning in the Wake
of Austerity Urbanism:
Urban Governance (2)
193
191
CMRG
The Blue Economy and
Blue Communities
16:50-18:30
Session 4
SCGRG, HPGRG 169 SCGRG, HPGRG 194
Playing War (1)
CMRG 166 CMRG, EnGRG
Coastal and Marine
Offshore renewable
Research Group AGM energy and the public
(2)
PERG 167
PERG
Planning and
Planning in the Wake
Environment Research of Austerity Urbanism:
Group AGM
Urban Governance (1)
168
13:10-14:25
Plenary
SCGRG,
HPGRG
Attentive Geographies: Attentive
Attentive Geographies:
Tools of the Trade, a
Geographies:
materials, processes,
guided walk
materials, processes, creations (2)
creations (1)
PopGRG 170 PopGRG, QMRG 195
PopGRG,
QMRG
Exploring the Migration Exploring the
Population Geography Exploiting New Data Exploiting New Data for
Industries (1)
Migration Industries Research Group AGM for Population
Population Research
(2)
Research (1):
(2): Global and Health
Demographic Insights Insights
119
171
GFGRG 144
HGRG
EnGRG, 196
EnGRG,
Anthropocene
Anthropocene
Review
Review
What can a feminist
Curating
Rural Geography
Exploring
Exploring vulnerabilities
geopolitics do?
environmental
Research Group AGM vulnerabilities in the
in the Anthropocene:
transformation
Anthropocene: the
the energy-climate
energy-climate nexus nexus (2)
(1)
GCYFRG,
PolGRG
Being and becoming
citizens: spaces of
political engagement
(1)
118
PopGRG
117
SCGRG, 141
PolGRG
Domesticating
Domesticating
Geopolitics (1)
Geopolitics (2)
116
114
CMRG 139 CMRG, EnGRG
Place, Space and
Offshore renewable
Conflict
energy and the public
(1)
115
140
Creative placemaking Creative placemaking
and beyond (1)
and beyond (2)
Session 2
Session 1
From c. 18.30
Evening
Newman
Building Lecture
Theatre E
Newman
Building Lecture
Theatre C&D
Newman
Building Lecture
Theatre
B/Purple
Newman
Building Lecture
Theatre
A/Blue
Forum Seminar
Room 11
THURS
11:10-12:50
145
09:00- 10:40
120
Smart cities, limits and Smart cities, limits
potentialities (1)
and potentialities (2)
146
HPGRG
Future Fossils?
Specimens from the
5th millennium
"Return to Earth"
expedition (2): From
slum fragments to
shattered hard drives
122
CCRG, DARG 147
CCRG, DARG
Critical spaces of
Critical spaces of
disaster risk
disaster risk
governance and
governance and
avenues to
avenues to
transformation (1)
transformation (2)
123
HERG 148
HERG
Enhancing student
The Impacts of
learning and graduate Recent Changes to
attributes through
the School
research
Geography
Curriculum
124
PERG 149
PERG
121
HPGRG
Future Fossils?
Specimens from the
5th millennium "Return
to Earth" expedition (1):
From Matrimandir to
oil-field bacteria
GIScRG,
GFGRG
Contested Spaces of
Mixed Methods,
Citizenship: Camps,
Qualitative and
memories and marginal Feminist (GIS)
subjects
Session 2
Session 1
13:10-14:25
Plenary
TGRG 197
16:50-18:30
Session 4
TGRG
200
HERG
The University in the
Anthropocene
175
HERG
Creating Global
Students:
Internationalisation of
Curricula in Higher
Education
176
EnGRG,
EGRG
Bioaccumulation: Re- Transnational Energy
valuing life in the
Investments in the
Anthropocene
South
201
199
PolGRG
Producing Law, Making
Space, Mobilising
Subjects (2)
174
PolGRG
Producing Law,
Making Space,
Mobilising Subjects
(1)
173
GCYFRG 198
HPGRG
Children’s
Future Fossils?
Geographies Lecture Specimens from the
5th millennium "Return
to Earth" expedition (3):
Chris Philo (University
Reflections on "Return
of Glasgow)
to Earth"
The Spaces of Road Maintaining Mobility:
Transport Automation Geographies of
transport and ageing
172
14:40-16:20
Session 3
Peter Chalk Foyer
Area Drinks
Reception for early
career researchers
From c. 18.30
Evening
Peter Chalk Room 2.1
Peter Chalk Room 1.6
Peter Chalk Room 1.5
Peter Chalk Room 1.4
Peter Chalk Room 1.1
Newman
Building Lecture
Theatre F
(Red)
THURS
11:10-12:50
09:00- 10:40
13:10-14:25
Plenary
14:40-16:20
Session 3
Postgraduate
Networking Event
PGF 150
PyGyRG 161 HPGRG, SCGRG 177
SCGRG
Exploring The Role of Water-worlds: Arts
Elemental
Transformative
Performance by PIDGE Experiments (1)
Research in
Struggles for Food
Sovereignty
125
178
GFGRG
More-than-human
New and Emerging
geographies of
Research within
conservation
Gender and Feminist
Geography
126
151
179
PGF
Urban contested
The Contemporary
Spaces of Urban
spaces
Growth of Regional
Vulnerability:
Identity in Europe
Abjection and
Resistance in the
Austericity
127
152
180
UGRG
Everyday mobilities
Neoliberalism, labour
Urban Political
and transport
and education
Ecology Beyond
Methodological
Cityism (1)
128
153
181
At a Crossroads or
New Pangeas:
Investigating the
New Strategies? The relational
Anthropo-Unseen:
Mapping the
Role of Protected
transformations and
Paranormal, the
Areas in the
planetary movements
Extraordinary and the
Anthropocene
in the anthropocene
Unknown (1)
129
182
TGRG, PGF 154
TGRG, PGF
TGRG
Current and emerging Current and emerging
Understanding
research in transport
research in transport
inequalities in
(1): Active travel and
(2): Inclusive mobility
transport and mobility
commuting
and networks
(1)
Session 2
Session 1
206
Investigating the
Anthropo-Unseen:
Mapping the
Paranormal, the
Extraordinary and the
Unknown (2)
207
TGRG
Understanding
inequalities in transport
and mobility (2)
204
"Waste narratives" of
the Anthropocene.
Developing models of
arts –informed citizen
science
205
UGRG
Urban Political Ecology
Beyond Methodological
Cityism (2)
203
HGRG
New and Emerging
Research in Historical
Geography
202
SCGRG
Elemental Experiments
(2)
16:50-18:30
Session 4
From c. 18.30
Evening
157
Verticality and the
Anthropocence:
politics & law of the
subsurface (2)
158
SSQRG
QUEER(ED) ART (2):
Radical Artistic
Geographies Around
the Sexed World
133
SSQRG
QUEER(ED) ART (1):
Artistic Practices of
Sexual Difference and
Radical Possibilities
Peter Chalk Rooms 2.2 &
2.3
From c. 18.30
Evening
185
Proximity and
intraregional aspects
of tourism (1)
209
GLTRG
Proximity and
Children's
intraregional aspects of Geographies Drinks
Reception
tourism (2)
GCYFRG
PyGyRG
UGRG
Geographies of
Participatory
Urban Geography
Verticality and the
Children, Youth and
Geographies
Research Group AGM Anthropocene
Families Research
Research Group AGM
Drinks Reception
Group AGM
GFGRG
Gender and Feminist
Geographies Research
Group AGM
132
Verticality and the
Anthropocence: politics
& law of the subsurface
(1)
Peter Chalk Room 2.5
Peter Chalk Room 2.4
Peter Chalk Rooms 1.2 &
1.3
16:50-18:30
Session 4
184
Community and
resilience (3)
14:40-16:20
Session 3
156
Community and
resilience (2)
13:10-14:25
Plenary
131
Community and
resilience (1)
11:10-12:50
09:00- 10:40
183
PyGyRG 208
PyGyRG
Uncalled for or Just
Uncalled for or Just
(Un)Cool? (1)
(Un)Cool? (2)
Session 2
Session 1
130
UGRG 155
UGRG
Urban Precarities (1)
Urban Precarities (2)
THURS
GLTRG
Geography of Leisure
and Tourism
Research Group AGM
260
GLTRG
Travel after retirement:
developing critical
perspectives
237
What are appropriate
delivery models for
sustainable energy
access in the
developing world? (2)
214
Forum What are appropriate
Seminar Room delivery models for
10
sustainable energy
access in the
developing world?(1)
258
HGRG
Historical Geographies
of Anarchism (3) Places,
states and politics:
situating critical traditions
and present challenges
236
GHRG
GJRG 259
Geographies of Sport Geographies of
Geographies of Sport
(4): Methods and
Justice Research
(5): The Role of Sport
Approaches to Sport
Group AGM
Elizabeth Povinelli
(Columbia University,)
Noel Castree
(University of
Wollongong)
14:40-16:20
Session 3
213
Forum Geographies of Sport
Seminar Room (3): Sport Facilities
6
and Participation
Chair's plenary
Plenary lecture,
sponsored by
Transactions of the
Institute of British
Geographers
TIBG 256
13:10-14:25
Plenary
235
HGRG
Historical Geographies Food Matters ‘Setting
of Anarchism (2)
Up Meeting’
Transnational
Anarchism and
Anarchist
Geographers: situating
theories, networks and
struggles
RGS-IBG Book
Series
Author meets critics:
Alex Vasudevan,
Metropolitan
Occupations: The
Spatial Politics of
Squatting in Berlin
234
11:10-12:50
09:00- 10:40
211
Session 2
Session 1
212
HGRG
Forum Historical
Seminar Room Geographies of
5
Anarchism (1) Cities,
technics and
environments:
Anarchist visions of
Anthropocene
Forum Alumni
Auditorium
FRI
Closing Drinks
Reception
Forum Street
16:30-17:30
Closing session
11:10-12:50
09:00- 10:40
Newman
Building Lecture
Theatre E
(Green)
Newman
Building Lecture
Theatre C&D
Newman
Building Lecture
Theatre
B/Purple
241
Welfare responses in
the meantimes: the
geographies of food
banking (2)
219
Welfare responses in
the meantimes: the
geographies of food
banking (1)
264
Determinism,
environment and
geopolitics: an
interdisciplinary
conversation
263
Governing the
Anthropocene
Workshop: Actors,
institutions and
processes
SCGRG
240
Geo-aesthetics in an
Anthropocenic World
(2): Collaborating
262
Post-Disaster Cultures
EGRG, PolGRG
Geographies of debt
and indebtedness:
everyday and
comparative frames (2)
239
14:40-16:20
Session 3
PGF 261
Postgraduate Forum Geographies of Politics
Meeting
and Anti-Politics
13:10-14:25
Plenary
EGRG,
PolGRG
Geographies of debt
and indebtedness:
everyday and
comparative frames
(1)
218
SCGRG
Geo-aesthetics in an
Anthropocenic World
(1): Discussing
217
238
Assembling
Globalization (2):
Politics, People,
Systems
Session 2
Session 1
215
Forum Assembling
Seminar Room Globalization (1):
11
Assembling Place
and Power
216
TGRG
Newman
Sustainable Freight
Building for City and Global
Lecture
Logistics
Theatre A/Blue
FRI
16:30-17:30
Closing session
Peter Chalk Room 1.6
Peter Chalk Room 1.5
Peter Chalk Room 1.4
Peter Chalk Room 1.1
Newman
Building Lecture
Theatre F
(Red)
FRI
268
RGRG, HERG
Social Media and Mobile
Technology: The new
era for learning, teaching
and communication
245
DARG
Doing Community
Development the
Corporate Way:
Evidence from the
Developing World
246
HERG
Writing Successfully for
Journal of Geography
in Higher Education
223
Living in
Heterotopias:
Communities, mobility
and aesthetics
224
PGF, HERG
Teaching as a
postgraduate:
challenges,
adaptations and best
practices
269
SCGRG, PGF
Provocations and
Possibilities ‘in’ and ‘of’
the Anthropocene:
Postgraduate Snapshots
267
Scales of citizenship:
Critical geographies of
citizen engagements
266
New and Emerging Rural
Researchers (3): The
Rural Environment and
Production
265
The Influence of Place
and Space on Young
People’s Mobilities
14:40-16:20
Session 3
222
GJRG 244
GJRG
Geographies of
Doing Gender and
Islamophobia
Justice: Freedoms,
Action and
Participation
243
RGRG
New and Emerging
Building a Network of
Rural Researchers (2): British and French
Rural Society and
Geographers
Place
221
RGRG
New and Emerging
Rural Researchers
(1): Rural Society and
Change
257
Waterworlds Art
Programme - Film
Screening (2)
13:10-14:25
242
PERG
Governing
Experimental Spaces
of Urban Transition (2)
11:10-12:50
09:00- 10:40
Plenary
220
PERG
Governing
Experimental Spaces
of Urban Transition
(1)
Session 2
Session 1
16:30-17:30
Closing session
Peter Chalk Rooms 1.2 &
1.3
Peter Chalk Room 2.6
Peter Chalk Room 2.5
Peter Chalk Room 2.4
Peter Chalk Room 2.1
FRI
229
PyGyRG 251
Gentle Geographies Athena SWAN panel
250
Biodiversity, markets
and human wellbeing
(2): political ecology
and the social impacts
of the commodification
of nature
228
Biodiversity, markets
and human wellbeing
(1): political ecology
and the social
impacts of neoliberal
conservation
governance
274
Athena SWAN
workshop/networking
session
273
Exploring methodologies
and critical geographies
of education
272
UGRG
Producing Urban Life:
Fragility and SocioCultural Infrastructures
(3)
249
UGRG
Producing Urban Life:
Fragility and SocioCultural Infrastructures
(2)
EnGRG
227
UGRG
Producing Urban Life:
Fragility and SocioCultural
Infrastructures (1)
271
270
Perceptions and
understandings of
climate change and
migration: Evidence from
small islands
14:40-16:20
Session 3
Negotiating energy
megaprojects within and
beyond boundaries
13:10-14:25
Plenary
HPGRG, 248
HPGRG,
PolGRG
PolGRG
Distance, Proximity
Distance, Proximity
and the Geopolitical and the Geopolitical (2)
(1)
226
247
Islands, Archipelagos
and the Anthropocene
(2)
11:10-12:50
09:00- 10:40
225
Islands, Archipelagos
and the
Anthropocene (1)
Session 2
Session 1
16:30-17:30
Closing session
11:10-12:50
09:00- 10:40
Offsite
Queen's
Building Meeting
Rooms 2 & 3
Queen's
Building Meeting Room
1
Peter Chalk Rooms 2.2 &
2.3
254
Knowing (and
engaging) Nature
Otherwise (2): Human
and More-Than-Human
Relations at the
Extractive Frontier in
Latin America
255
PopGRG
Time to move?
Exploring the temporal
geographies of
international migration
(2): Differences,
changes and
spatialities
232
Knowing (and
engaging) Nature
Otherwise (1): Human
and More-ThanHuman Relations at
the Extractive Frontier
in Latin America
233
PopGRG
Time to move?
Exploring the
temporal geographies
of international
migration (1):
Histories, memories,
and disjunctures
253
HPGRG
Wet Geographies III
(2): Water-worlds –
Wet Geographies
Panel Discussion
252
HPGRG, TGRG
Surveilling Global
Space
Session 2
Session 1
230
EnGRG
Challenging
expectations:
responsibilities,
quality of life and
demand reduction
231
HPGRG
Queen's
Wet Geographies III
Building (1): Water-worlds –
Lecture
art practices and wet
Theatres 4.1 & ecologies
4.2
FRI
13:10-14:25
Plenary
279
PyGyRG
Fuller geographies
278
Time to move? Exploring
the temporal
geographies of
international migration
(3): Borders, policies,
futures
277
PolGRG
Circulating Approaches
to Biopolitics in the
Anthropocene
275
Scale, politics and
participation in water
resources management:
exploring new/old
geographies
276
Reimagining the mobility
transition
14:40-16:20
Session 3
16:30-17:30
Closing session
Contents
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
From the Director, Rita Gardner
Welcome from the RGS-IBG Chair of Conference, Sarah Whatmore
Registration and general information
Eating, drinking and recycling
Local transport
Plenaries and lectures
Workshops, field experiences and discussions
Exhibitions, performances and screenings
Receptions
Offsite event and sessions
Research and Working Group AGMs
Exhibitors and advertisers
Posters
Publishing workshops
Postgraduate and international delegate events
Instructions to speakers for uploading presentations
Instructions to session Chairs
Building directions and information
Sessions – Tuesday 1 September
Sessions – Wednesday 2 September
Sessions – Thursday 3 September
Sessions – Friday 4 September
Index of authors, chairs and convenors
Index of Research and Working Group affiliated sessions
From the Director
1 September 2015
Dear Colleague,
Welcome to the Royal Geographical Society (with IBG)’s annual international conference.
The wide range of sessions and events over the next few days promise to be both
stimulating and enjoyable. I would like to recognise Sarah Whatmore for the direction she
has brought to the conference in her role as Chair. The theme she selected, Geographies of
the Anthropocene, embraces all dimensions of our discipline. The plenary speakers, the
linked panel discussions, the convened sessions and exhibits, all will serve to illuminate our
understanding, key debates and challenges of this theme. I also want to thank all of you delegates, presenters, chairs, convenors, discussants for your contributions, your vitality
and your commitment to attend this event. You make this conference.
While at the conference, please do take just a little time to find out about the
Society’s work by talking to the RGS-IBG staff in Exeter. Much of our work is done
collaboratively with you, for example:
x
supporting teachers with resources and professional development events drawing
on the latest research
x
the Ambassadors programme that enthuses young people at school about the
value of studying geography at university
x
opportunities for personal development for disadvantaged young people through
fieldwork
x
connecting diverse community groups with the Society’s historic collections and
encouraging reinterpretation and enrichment of them
x
engaging and enthusing the wider public with geography through Discovering
Britain, a programme of street exhibits and geographical walks
x
advocacy and lobbying that we do to secure the recognition, position and funding
of geography in schools, through fieldwork and in higher education, and
increasingly its recognition by employers through the professional accreditation
Chartered Geographer.
I also encourage you to find out more about our new initiatives focused on policy, bringing to
the fore geographical insights and the contributions of geographers.
The Society exists for one purpose only - to advance geography. We work, with
you, to give the subject a strong, influential and effective voice. We thank you for the time
and expertise that many of you give us in this work. Arguably with the changes happening in
university and school education, and in research funding, this advocacy is more important
today than ever. Our work has grown substantially in recent years, such that now each year
we have to raise about £5 million just to cover our activities. The most sustainable source of
funds is the subscriptions from our members. Many of you are Fellows and I, on behalf of
the Society, extend a sincere thank you for your support because it makes a real difference
to what we can do. For those who are not Fellows or members, please join us and support
our work for geography. And Fellowship gives you a voice and vote in the Society; this
matters too.
I hope you have a most enjoyable time in Exeter. I warmly thank the Geography
Department at the University of Exeter for all their support.
Dr Rita Gardner CBE, Director
2. Welcome from the RGS-IBG Chair of Conference,
Sarah Whatmore
Welcome to the RGS-IBG conference, and to Exeter! It is a real privilege to serve as the
2015 Conference Chair. One of the early pleasures was the opportunity to select a theme for
the conference. In ‘Geographies of the Anthropocene’ I hoped to have selected a theme that
plays to the unique strengths of our discipline in combining the insights, skills and
perspectives of geographers working across the spectrum of human and physical
geography, and to bring the diversity of interdisciplinary debates and communities with
which they engage to the fore, not least through the range of invited plenary speakers
addressing the theme from many different perspectives. I am delighted that this ambition
has born fruit in the rich programme that has taken shape around this theme and the
intellectual enthusiasms and energies across the geographical community that have
embraced it in such imaginative ways. I am particularly pleased to welcome the participation
of the British Society for Geomorphology and the deeper engagement of natural scientists
that their involvement represents.
The Anthropocene has been claimed to herald a new geological epoch in which
human society is acknowledged as having become the greatest force shaping planet Earth.
Although its recognition as a new age in geological history remains provisional, the idea of
the Anthropocene has already captured the public imagination and that of scientists, social
scientists and humanities scholars variously advancing new projects, agendas and critiques
in its wake. For example, it has given rise to the ‘post-disciplinary’ ambitions of an Earth
Systems Science that presents the integrative role of geography with new challenges; it
marks a radical geo-political moment in which the Earth shapes new concerns and forms of
public engaged in the contestation of planetary governance; and it heralds new demands on
our habits of thought in which ‘post-human’ or ‘more-than-human’ modes of theorising and
analysis are stretching familiar models of historical, cultural and economic analysis in new
directions.
The conference opens on Tuesday evening with an opening plenary which brings
together two leading scholars, Will Steffen and Kathy Willis. They will consider the
Anthropocene in terms of ‘Towards a bright future or global collapse? and ‘4 degrees and
beyond – what does this mean for biodiversity and the ecosystem services it provides to
humankind?’. A panel will discuss these papers in session 2 (late morning) on Wednesday.
The lunchtime Chair's plenary lectures that then follow are ‘Feral geographies: life in
capitalist ruins (Anna Tsing; Wednesday); ‘Anthropocene or Anglocene? Debating Cause
and Consequence in the Great Climacteric (Amita Baviskar, Thursday); and ‘After Sexuality:
Desert, Animist, Virus: Figures of Geontopower’ (Elizabeth Povinelli, Friday). For each
plenary lecture a panel discussion will follow. The Transactions of the Institute of British
Geographers lecture this year will be given by Noel Castree ‘Geographers and the discourse
of an Earth transformed: influencing the intellectual weather or changing the intellectual
climate?’ These, though, are just a selection of highlights – we are expecting more than
1200 participants who will contribute to nearly 300 individual panels and sessions. It will be
here, in these smaller and more intimate sessions, where interesting themes will be explored
and debated.
I would like to thank all those involved in the organisation of the conference,
particularly Sarah Evans and Stephanie Wyse, Eilidh Reed and Catherine Souch, but also
all others at the RGS-IBG and at the University of Exeter who have been working so hard to
arrange the event and ensure it runs smoothly. In addition, I am particularly grateful to all of
you who have put in the work to convene and/or chair sessions, encourage presenters,
develop displays, and more beyond. I wish all of you and all participants a stimulating and
enjoyable conference.
Sarah Whatmore, University of Oxford
Chair of the RGS-IBG Annual International Conference 2015
3. Registration and general information
3.1. Registration
Registration will be in the Forum Street and open from:
x
11:00 to 20:00 on Tuesday 1 September
x
8:00 to 20:00 on Wednesday 2 September & Thursday 3 September
x
8:00 to 15:00 on Friday 4 September
Please come to the Registration esk with any questions or enquiries.
3.2. Programme venues
Parallel sessions will take place in the Forum; Newman Building; Peter Chalk Centre; and
Queen’s Building. Buildings and their entrances are clearly marked on the map on the back
cover of this programme book.
Research Group acronyms (found in session affiliations) are as follows:
BRG: Biogeography Research Group
BSG: British Society for Geomorphology
CCRG: Climate Change Research Group
CMRG: Coastal and Marine Research Group
DARG: Developing Areas Research Group
EGRG: Economic Geography Research Group
EnGRG: Energy Geographies Research Group
GIScRG: Geographical Information Science Research Group
GCYFRG: Geographies of Children, Youth and Families Research Group
GFGRG: Gender and Feminist Geographies Research Group
GHRG: Geography of Health Research Group
GJRG: Geographies of Justice Research Group
GLTRG: Geography of Leisure and Tourism Research Group
HERG: Higher Education Research Group
HGRG: Historical Geography Research Group
HPGRG: History and Philosophy of Geography Research Group
PERG: Planning and Environment Research Group
PGF: Postgraduate Forum
PolGRG: Political Geography Research Group
PopGRG: Population Geography Research Group
PyGyRG: Participatory Geographies Research Group
QMRG: Quantitative Methods Research Group
RGRG: Rural Geography Research Group
SCGRG: Social and Cultural Geography Research Group
SSQRG: Space, Sexualities and Queer Research Group
TGRG: Transport Geography Research Group
UGRG: Urban Geography Research Group
3.3. Security and medical emergencies
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 in one of the rooms in the Forum. However, this room will not be
staffed and we take no responsibility for any of the items. For safe keeping we advise you to
leave your travelling bag at your accommodation if possible.
When at the conference venue, please wear your delegate badge at all times. Delegates
not wearing a badge will not be able to attend any sessions or events or receive
refreshments.
In the case of medical emergencies, please contact one of the University of Exeter event
staff or the RGS-IBG staff at the Registration desk. The emergency number in the UK is
999.
3.4. Staff and volunteers
All staff and conference volunteers can be identified by their red coloured lanyards. Please
do not hesitate to ask them for assistance at any time.
3.5. Conference planning committee
Members of the Conference planning committee can be contacted via the Registration desk
in the Forum Street.
Chair of the Conference
Sarah Whatmore
Head of Research and Higher
Education at the RGS-IBG
Catherine Souch
Conference organiser
Sarah Evans
3.6. Acknowledgements
We would like to thank the University of Exeter for permission to use the ‘Forum’ image that
appears on the front of the programme book, and Bryant Longley for the conference
database and online programme software.
3.7. Photography
Elements of the conference may be photographed 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.
3.8. Computers, email access and technical help
If you need wifi access at the University of Exeter, please see one of the RGS-IBG
conference staff at the Registration Desk. We hope to be able to provide limited printing
facilities.
Each presentation room will have a data projector and a facility for PowerPoint, including a
laptop. Please do not plug your own laptop into the projector in any room. We ask you to
bring your presentation on a USB memory stick. Please arrive 20 minutes before the
session starts to upload your presentation.
For more information, see section16: ‘Instructions to speakers for uploading presentations’
in this Programme Book.
3.9. Other facilities
Please ask the Registration desk if you would like a private space for prayer, or for
breastfeeding/baby changing. Quiet space can also be made available for interviews and
phone calls with the press/media.
3.10. Banks and bureau de change
An ATM can be found in the Forum Street.
3.11. Child care / crèche
Child care facilities are offered by the OFSTED approved company, Helping Hands
Childcare Services. Crèche bookings must be made in advance. Any enquiries about the
crèche should be directed to the Registration desk in the Forum Street.
3.12. Social media
The conference’s Twitter hashtag is #RGSIBG15.
4. Eating, drinking and recycling
4.1. Eating and drinking
Tea and coffee
Tea, coffee and water will be available from 8:00 each morning and at breaks, from serving
points in the Forum Street and in the foyer of the Peter Chalk Centre. Please follow signs to
your nearest location.
Delegates are encouraged to reuse water bottles and to refill them.
Lunch
Lunch is included in the delegate fee and is available in the Devonshire House Great Hall
and Terrace restaurants (follow the signage) upon presentation of a lunch ticket (found in
your plastic name tag pouch). Lunch will be served from 12:30 to 14:00 each day.
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. All special meals are labelled with the delegate’s
name.
Drinks receptions
Unless specifically marked “invitation only”, delegates are invited to join any advertised
drinks receptions.
Conference reception and buffet dinner
The conference dinner will take place in Devonshire House Great Hall on Thursday 2
September, starting at 19:30. Special diets that have been advised in advance will be
catered for.
4.2. Recycling
Building on initiatives in previous years, we remain 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. Please do not contaminate the recycling by mixing food with recycled
materials!
5. Local transport
Buses run from the city centre to the University of Exeter Streatham campus all year round
(frequency varies by time of day).
x
x
The H bus runs between Exeter St David’s Station and the university campus. The H
bus route includes the RDE hospital, St Luke’s Campus, the City Centre, St David’s
Station, Cowley Bridge and the Streatham Campus.
The D bus runs between the Streatham Campus, the City Centre, St Luke’s Campus
and the Tesco Superstore at Digby. Buses generally run every 15 minutes all year
round.
One-way fares for these buses are approximately £1 to £2, depending on where you catch
the bus.
A metred taxi fare from Exeter St David’s station to the conference venue at the university
campus will cost approximately £7-10. A metred taxi fare from Exeter Central station to the
conference venue at the university campus will cost approximately £10-15. Prices vary
according to time of day and traffic.
6. Plenaries and lectures
To view the full abstracts and further information for each plenary speaker, please visit
the online programme. For location information, please refer to the key on the inside front
cover and map on the back of the programme book.
Day
Session
Time
Location
Tuesday 1
September
Chair’s opening plenary: ‘The
Anthropocene: Towards a bright future or
global collapse?’ and ‘The Anthropocene:
4 degrees and beyond – what does this
mean for biodiversity and the ecosystem
services it provides to humankind?’
Will Steffen and Kathy Willis [session 1]
18.15
Forum Alumni
Auditorium
Wednesday 2
September
Chair’s opening plenary: Panel discussion
Andrew Barry, Tony Brown, Noel Castree,
Lesley Head, Will Steffen, Stephen Tooth,
Kevin Walsh, Kathy Willis [session 28]
11.10
Forum Alumni
Auditorium
Day
Thursday 3
September
Friday 4
September
Session
Time
Location
Chair's plenary: ‘Feral geographies: life in
capitalist ruins’ Anna Tsing. Panel
discussion: Stephen Hinchliffe, Gail
Davies,Cheryl McEwan [session 54]
13.10
Forum Alumni
Auditorium
Antipode Lecture: ‘Offshore Humanism’
Paul Gilroy [session 82]
16.50
Forum Alumni
Auditorium
Hoyle Lecture: ‘Transport, technology and
the Anthropocene: views from the
periphery’ Gina Porter [session 94]
16.50
Newman
Building Lecture
Theatre A/Blue
Social and Cultural Geography Lecture
‘Undulations of urban life: experiences and
temporalities of growing up on the streets
in Accra, Ghana’ Lorraine van Blerk
[session 109]
09.00
Forum Alumni
Auditorium
Chair's plenary: ‘Anthropocene or
Anglocene? Debating Cause and
Consequence in the Great Climacteric’
Amita Baviskar. Panel discussion Colin
MacFarlane, Emma Mawdsley, Tariq
Jazeel [session 159]
13.10
Forum Alumni
Auditorium
Children’s Geographies Lecture:
‘Childhood is measured by sounds and
sights and smells, before the dark hour of
reason grows': children's geographies at
12’ Chris Philo [session 173]
14.40
Newman
Building Lecture
Theatre A/Blue
Progress in Human Geography Lecture:
‘Cloud Geographies: Computing,
Calculation, Sovereignty’ Louise Amoore
[session 186]
16.50
Forum Alumni
Auditorium
Plenary lecture, sponsored by
Transactions of the Institute of British
Geographers: ‘Geographers and the
discourse of an Earth transformed:
influencing the intellectual weather or
changing the intellectual climate?’ Noel
Castree [session 234]
11.10
Forum Alumni
Auditorium
Chair's plenary: ‘After Sexuality: Desert,
Animist, Virus: Figures of Geontopower’
Elizabeth Povinelli. Panel discussion:
Kathryn Yusoff, Nigel Clark, Beth
Greenhough [session 256]
13.10
Forum Alumni
Auditorium
7. Workshops, field experiences and discussions
Day
Session
Time
Location
Tuesday 1
September
Postgraduate Forum Annual Conference
Training Symposium (PGF-ACTS)
13.00
Forum Alumni
Auditorium
Teaching Justice :Geographies of Justice
Research Group
Wednesday 2
September
Thursday 3
September
Friday 4
September
The GEES Network Annual Meeting:
Teaching Focused in Higher-Education
11.00
Food Matters Symposium: Tackling
Systemic Food Waste.
10.00
Offsite
The World System Model [sessions 26 &
52]
09.00
Peter Chalk
Room 1.2 & 1.3
GIS for sustainable transport (2): Practical
workshop on open source GIS [session 37]
11.10
Forum Seminar
Room 9
Cultivating Ecologies (2): “walk and talk”
tour of the university campus [session 49]
11.10
Leave from
Peter Chalk
Room 2.1
Cultivating Wellness in Geography: an
invitation to a conversation [session 55]
13.10
Forum Seminar
Room 5
Informal lunch meeting for international
delegates, supported by DARG
13.10
Details from
Registration
Elsevier Meet the Editors Review
workshop [sessions 25, 51, 79 & 105]
All day
Peter Chalk
Room 2.5
Postgraduate Networking Event
9.00
Newman
Building Lecture
Theatre F/Red
How to Get Your Published Work Read
and Cited (Wiley) [session 134]
11.10
Forum Alumni
Auditorium
Attentive Geographies: Tools of the Trade,
a guided walk [session 160]
13.10
Leave from
Forum Seminar
Room 8
Playing War [sessions 168 & 193]
14.40
Forum Seminar
Room 7
Writing Successfully for Journal of
Geography in Higher Education [session
246]
11.10
Peter Chalk
Room 2.1
Athena SWAN Panel and
workshop/networking session [sessions
262 & 274]
11.10
Peter Chalk
Room 1.2&1.3
Building a Network of British and French
Geographers
13.10
Peter Chalk
Room 1.1
8. Exhibitions, performances and screenings
Day
Exhibition
Location
Throughout
conference
The Many Faces of Flooding Exhibition (linked
to session 108)
Lobby outside Forum
Alumni Auditorium
Attentive Geographies Exhibition with artist
Alice Angus, Proboscis
Forum Street
Waterworlds Exhibition
Forum Street
Wednesday 2
September
Waterworlds Art Programme – Film Screening
1 [session 56]
Newman Building
Lecture Theatre F/Red
Thursday 3
September
Waterworlds Arts Programme – Performance
by PIDGE [session 161]
Newman Building
Lecture Theatre F/Red
Friday 4
September
Waterworlds Art Programme – Film Screening
2 [session 257]
Newman Building
Lecture Theatre F/Red
9. Receptions
* Please come to the Registration desk for an updated list and for confirmed times and
locations
Day
Reception
Time
Location
Tuesday 1
September
Opening drinks reception, sponsored by
the Department of Geography,
University of Exeter
19:30
(after
plenary)
Forum Street
Wednesday 2
September
The Many Faces of Flooding Drinks
Reception
After
plenary
Forum Street
Wednesday 2
September
Antipode Drinks Reception
18:30
Devonshire
House – Great
Hall
Hoyle Lecture Drinks Reception
18:30
Peter Chalk
Foyer
Conference dinner and drinks reception
(for ticket holders only)
19:30
Devonshire
House Great
Hall
Area Drinks Reception for early career
researchers*
18:45
Peter Chalk
Foyer
Children’s Geographies Drinks
Reception*
18:45
Peter Chalk
Rooms 2.2 &
2.3r
Verticality and the Anthropocence:
politics & law of the subsurface (in
collaboration with the British Geological
Survey) Drinks Reception*
18:45
Peter Chalk
Rooms 1.2 & 1.3
Closing Drinks Reception
16:3017:30
Forum Street
Thursday 3
September
Friday 4
September
10. Offsite events and session
Day
Session
Time
Location
Friday 4
September
Fuller geographies
14.40
St Sidwells Community Centre,
Sidwell Street, Exeter, EX4 6NN (a
map will be available at the
Registration Desk)
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. Most
Groups hold their AGMs and the Annual Conference, and all delegates are encouraged to
join and attend.
Throughout the year there is a varying level of activity for each Group with seminars,
conferences, workshops, reading days etc.
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]).
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 visit:
W: www.rgs.org/ResearchGroups
E: [email protected]
11.2. Research and Working Group AGMs
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
Coastal and Marine Research Group
CMRG
Thursday 3
September
13.10
Forum
Seminar
Room 5
Developing Areas Research Group
DARG
Wednesday 2 18.30
September
Forum
Seminar
Room 2
Energy Geographies Research Group
EnGRG
Wednesday 2 18.45
September
Forum –
Seminar
Room 1
Research Group AGM
Code
Food Matters ‘Setting Up Meeting’
Day
Time
Room
Friday 4
September
13.10
Forum
Seminar
Room 5
Gender and Feminist Geography
Research Group
GFGRG
Thursday 3
September
16.50
Peter Chalk
Room 2.5
Geographies of Children, Youth and
Families Research Group
GCYFRG
Thursday 3
September
13.10
Peter Chalk
Room 1.2 &
1.3
Geography of Health Research Group GHRG
Thursday 3
September
13.10
Forum
Seminar
Room 3
Geographies of Justice Research
Group
GJRG
Friday 4
September
13.10
Forum
Seminar
Room 6
Geography of Leisure and Tourism
Research Group
GLTRG
Friday 4
September
13.10
Forum
Seminar
Room 10
Higher Education Research Group
HERG
Thursday 3
September
13.10
Forum
Seminar
Room 4
History and Philosophy of Geography
Research Group
HPGRG
Wednesday 2 13.10
September
Forum –
Seminar
Room 1
Participatory Geographies Research
Group
PyGyRG
Thursday 3
September
14.40
Peter Chalk
Room 1.2 &
1.3
Planning and Environment Research
Group
PERG
Thursday 3
September
13.10
Forum
Seminar
Room 6
Population Geography Research
Group
PopGRG
Thursday 3
September
13.10
Forum
Seminar
Room 9
Wednesday 2 13.10
September
Forum
Seminar
Room 7
Race, Culture and Equality
Discussion Meeting
Rural Geography Research Group
RGRG
Thursday 3
September
13.10
Forum
Seminar
Room 10
Quantitative Methods Research
Group
QMRG
Thursday 3
September
13.10
Forum
Seminar
Room 2
Research Group AGM
Code
Day
Time
Room
Social and Cultural Geography
Research Group
SCGRG
Thursday 3
September
18.45
Forum
Seminar
Room 1
Space, Sexualities and Queer
Research Group
SSQRG
Wednesday 2 13.10
September
Forum –
Seminar
Room 3
Transport Geography Research
Group
TGRG
Wednesday 2 13.10
September
Forum –
Seminar
Room 2
Urban Geography Research Group
UGRG
Thursday 3
September
Peter Chalk
Room 1.2 &
1.3
16.50
12. 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 the Forum Street, near the Registration desk.
13. Posters
Posters submitted by researchers will be on display in the Peter Chalk Foyer throughout the
conference. For abstracts please see www.rgs.org/AC2015Posters. Poster authors have
been requested to stand near their posters for questions during breaks and the lunchtime
period on Wednesday 2 and Thursday 3 September.
1
Diffusion patterns of grassroots innovations for sustainability across space and time –
Giuseppe Feola, Anisa Butt, Mina Rose Him (University of Reading, UK)
2
Contested subterranean waterscapes: vertical geographies of past and present water
conflicts in Derbyshire’s Derwent Valley – Carry van Lieshout (University of Nottingham, UK)
3
The Progression of Renal Disease and Environmental Exposure to Trace Elements in the
Soils and Streams of Northern Ireland – Chloe Jackson, Jennifer McKinley, Ulrich Ofterdinger
(Queen's University Belfast, UK), Damian Fogarty (Belfast Health and Social Care Trust, UK),
Peter M. Atkinson (University of Southampton, UK)
4
Oneiric neoliberalism of the urban life. Santiago de Chile and the Milton Friedman's spatial
project – Francisco Vergara (University College London, UK)
5
Hydropolitics in La Plata River basin: changing scalar perspectives in water governance –
Luis Paulo Batista da Silva (Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil)
6
Airport policy and planning in South East England - Paul Le-Blond (Loughborough University,
UK)
7
Where there is food, there are people: exploring the social sustainability of street food in
Hanoi – (Natalia Stutter, Cardiff University, UK)
14. Publishing workshops
There are a number of publishing-related workshops taking place throughout the
conference, which all delegates are invited to attend. On Wednesday 2 September, Elsevier
are holding a series of ‘Meet the Editors Review workshops’ in Peter Chalk Room 2.5
throughout the day, where delegates will have a chance to speak to current editors about
publishing in Elsevier journals. Please ask at the Registration desk for a full schedule of
timings.
On Thursday 3 September, Wiley are holding a workshop on ‘How to Get Your Published
Work Cited and Read’, in the Forum Alumni Auditorium at 11.10.
On Friday 4 September, the Journal of Geography in Higher Education are holding a
workshop on writing successfully for the journal, in Peter Chalk Room 2.1 at 11.10
15. Postgraduate and international delegate events
A number of events at the conference are aimed at postgraduate delegates, particularly
those who are attending the conference for the first time. These begin with the Postgraduate
Forum Annual Conference Training Symposium (PGF-ACTS) on Tuesday 1 September,
beginning at 13:00. This pre-conference workshop aims to help postgraduate delegates
make the most of the conference, as well as providing workshops on impact and publishing.
On Thursday 3 September, there will be a Postgraduate Networking Event at 9.00 in the
Newman Building Lecture Theatre F/Red; for more details on this informal morning session,
please ask at the Registration desk. That evening, postgraduate delegates are invited to
attend the Area drinks reception in the Peter Chalk Foyer.
On Friday 4 September, the Postgraduate Forum will hold an informal meeting in Forum
Seminar Room 11 at13.10; those wishing to find out more about the work of the
Postgraduate Forum are invited to attend.
The Postgraduate Forum and the Exeter postgraduate community will also be hosting a
number of informal lunch-time meet-ups and evening socials; for more information please
ask at Registration, or find one of the group in the lobby area outside the library.
On Wednesday the Developing Areas Research Group (DARG) will host an informal lunch
meet-up for international delegates; please meet at the Registration desk at 13.00.
16. Instructions to speakers for uploading
presentations
Please follow these instructions when uploading your presentation:
1.
Insert your USB memory stick into the USB socket of the laptop/computer
2.
Double click on the my computer icon on the desktop
3.
Locate your USB stick, which should be labelled “Removable Disk” or similar and
double click to open
4.
Drag the PowerPoint file you require onto the desktop.
Once you have uploaded your presentation, double click the remove hardware icon in the
bottom right hand corner of the screen. Then select ‘Stop’ and press OK. You will then get a
message “Safe to remove hardware”.
Files will be removed from computers each night.
There will be AV technicians from the University of Exeter around to help. If you have any
problems please go to the Registration desk in the Forum Street or conference assistance
desk in the Peter Chalk building.
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.
17. Instructions to session Chairs
To those of you chairing a session, thank-you.
Below are a few suggestions to help you chair the session:
x
Before the session begins, please check the programme book and addendum for the
speakers in your session. If there are any changes we will attempt to ensure that you
are notified before the session. You can also check at the Registration Desk for
updates.
x
Please ensure that you 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 any announcements, and cards you
can hold up to warn speakers before they run out of time.
x
Before the session starts, please ensure all the speakers have arrived and that they
are aware of the running order and have all the necessary AV equipment.
x
Please ensure that the session starts promptly and speakers keep to their allocation
time (over-running presentations is the most common complaint we receive in
conference feedback).
We recommend that you:
x
Suggest speakers sit towards the front
x
Sit at the front of the room during all presentations where you can see both the
audience and the speaker.
x
Please ask delegates 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.
If you require assistance please call Reception [number]. In case of an emergency you may
also go straight to the Registration desk or the information desk at your location. First
Aiders are available at these locations.
17.1. Timings
Speakers will only need a very brief introduction of name, institution and paper title. A
session of 1 hour 40 minutes allows 5 speakers 20 minutes each, which must include
questions. Please keep to the times and ensure that the session does not over run.
In the ‘Chair’s kit’ in each room, we have provided signs for you to hold up: ‘5 minutes to go’,
‘2 minutes to go’ and ‘Please stop now’. Please use these, as they can be an effective way
of managing the 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.
18. Building directions and information
A map showing the location of the buildings used in the conference is on the back cover of
this book. Please ask at the Registration Desk if you need more assistance.
Join the RGS-IBG Postgraduate
Forum for the following sessions
and activities at the conference
Tuesday 1st September: Postgraduate Forum- ACTS. Training and networking
opportunity for postgraduates attending the RGS-IBG Annual Conference (1pm,
FOR, LT).
Thursday 3rd September: Postgraduate Networking Event (Th1, NEW, LT-F).
Friday 4th September: Postgraduate Forum Meeting – find out more about our work
and how to get involved (Fri Plenary and Lunch, FOR, S11).
All are welcome to join the early‐career researchers
drinks reception, sponsored by Area and the PGF.
Thursday 3rd September at 18:45, in the Peter Chalk
Centre Foyer.
Get connected during the conference...
Join other postgraduates and early‐career researchers for coffee or lunch—
see the Conference Noticeboard (near Registration) or follow us on Twitter
to find out about meeting places and other events.
Follow @PGF_RGSIBG on Twitter for live tweets during the conference.
Use the conference hashtag #RGSIBG15 when tweeting.
www.pgforum.org.uk
19. Sessions – Tuesday 1 September
13.00-17.15│FOR
LT
TBC│FOR S10
11.00-17.00│
10.00-18.00│OFF
Postgraduate Forum Annual Conference Training Symposium
(PGF-ACTS)
Affiliation: PGF
View programme online: http://www.rgs.org/PGFACTS /
Geographies of Justice Research Group Teaching workshop
[pre-booking required]
Affiliation: GJRG
View programme online: http://www.rgs.org/AC2015Workshops
The GEES Network Annual Meeting: Teaching Focused in
Higher-Education [pre-booking required]
View programme online: http://www.rgs.org/AC2015Workshops
'Surfaces of Distinction: Food waste, Visceral Learning and
accepting the 'ugly' as food [pre-booking required]
Affiliation: SCGRG
View programme online: http://www.rgs.org/AC2015Workshops
1
Chair's opening plenary
TuE│FOR LT
See also: 28
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/1
Convenors and chairs
Sarah Whatmore (University of Oxford, UK)
1
The Anthropocene: Towards a bright future or global collapse? – Will Steffen (Australian
National University, Australia)
2
The Anthropocene: 4 degrees and beyond – what does this mean for biodiversity and the
ecosystem services it provides to humankind? – Kathy Willis (Kew Gardens, UK)
This event will be followed by the Opening drinks reception in the Forum Street, sponsored
by the Department of Geography at Exeter
Elsevier Journals
Come and take part in one of our
Editor Speed Review sessions
Wednesday 2nd September
Peter Chalk Building, Room 2.2
Book a 15 minute session with the editor of your
choice to discuss publishing with the journal
Please bring your abstract if you have one!
Phil Steinberg, Political Geography
Kye Askins, Emotion Space and Society
Anne Chin, Anthropocene
Miles Ogborn, Journal of Historical Geography
And More!
Drop in to make an appointment and also to:
● Find out how to get published including open access options
● Learn about our range of journals
I
● Find out how to get your research noticed
elsevier.com/geography
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–
20. Sessions – Wednesday 2 September
2
W1│FOR LT
Convenors and chairs
Understanding institutional responses to climate change
challenges in vulnerable rural areas
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/2
Alison Browne (University of Manchester, UK), Kate Walker-Springett, Roos
den Uyl (University of Exeter, UK)
1
Understanding decision making capacity (or the lack of it) to address climate change in
vulnerable rural areas – Roos den Uyl, Duncan Russel (University of Exeter, UK)
2
Practitioner perspectives on flood recovery and water governance in Somerset, UK – Mark
Robins, Richard Bradford (Royal Society for the Protection of Birds, UK), Phillip Brewin
(Somerset Drainage Boards Consortium, UK)
3
Flooding and Farming: different challenges but same responses? – Kate Walker-Springett,
Catherine Butler (University of Exeter, UK), Karen Parkhill (University of York, UK)
4
Governing for drought and water scarcity adaptation in the context of flooding recovery:
The curious case of Somerset, UK – Alison Browne (University of Manchester, UK)
5
Transforming institutional support for remote indigenous communities of Central
Australia to adapt to climate change – Douglas Bardsley, Nathaneal Wiseman (University of
Adelaide, Australia)
3
W1│FOR S1
Historical and cultural geographies of story and storytelling (1):
Story, memory, performance and place
See also: 29
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/3
Affiliation
HGRG
Convenor
James Ryan, Nicola Thomas (University of Exeter, UK)
Chair
James Ryan (University of Exeter, UK)
1
The purpose of stories: a renewed geographical empiricism – Mitch Rose (Aberystwyth
University, UK)
2
“The last goodbye from Madras”: the small stories of Muriel’s postcard albums – Ceri Price
(University of Bristol, UK)
3
“We cannot but speak the thing, which we have seen and heard”: believing stories in
Caribbean slave societies – Miles Ogborn (Queen Mary University of London, UK)
4
Materialising myth: Storytelling through photography in the memorial landscape – Lisa
Hardie (University of Brighton, UK)
5
Emphatic Localism – Hayden Lorimer (University of Glasgow, UK)
4
Music of the Rural / The Rural of Music: Folk & Beyond
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/4
W1│FOR S2
Affiliation
RGRG
Convenors and chairs
Keith Halfacree (Swansea University, UK), Richard Yarwood (Plymouth
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–
1
The Branded Landscapes of Music Festivals in the UK: Sponsorship, Ideology and the
Rural – Chris Anderton (Southampton Solent University, UK)
2
Local Music, Dance and Festivals in the Rural Areas of the Eastern Black Sea Region,
Turkey – Mehmet Somuncu, Serdar Ceylan (University of Ankara, Turkey)
3
The Construction of a Rural Reality in Irish Traditional Music Practice – Verena Commins
(National University of Ireland, Galway, Ireland)
4
"There’s a Western Skyline that I swear I can see": Americana’s Stories of Contemporary
Rural Lives – Keith Halfacree (Swansea University, UK)
5
Rurality, National Identity and Music: Englishness and "Folk Against Fascism" – Richard
Yarwood (Plymouth University, UK)
5
W1│FOR S3
Surfaces of Distinction: Materiality and viscerally knowing food
(1)
See also: 31, 59
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/5
Affiliation
SCGRG, PyGyRG
Convenors
Rebecca Sandover (University of Exeter, UK), Emma-Jayne Abbots
(University of Wales, Trinity St. David, UK), Mike Goodman (University of
Reading, UK)
Chair
Emma-Jayne Abbots (University of Wales, Trinity St. David, UK)
1
Tasting poverty – Laura Colebrooke, Mara Miele (Cardiff University, UK)
2
The qualities of movement: ‘Local food,’ urban redevelopment, and a politics of possibility
in Oklahoma City – Eric Sarmiento (University of Oxford, UK)
3
A feast of leftovers or the leftovers of a feast: Materials and Space in Community Gardens
– Gabriel Wulff (University of Brighton, UK)
4
Growing Roots and Cooking up Change – Rebecca Sandover (University of Exeter, UK)
5
Food and wellbeing: Send A Cow in Africa – Rebecca Schaaf (Bath Spa University, UK)
6
W1│FOR S4
Children and Nature in the Anthropocene (1): Building and
living with natures: more-than-human geographies of children,
young people and families in urban environments
See also: 32, 60, 86, 173
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/6
Affiliation
GCYFRG
Convenors
John Horton (University of Northampton, UK), Sophie Hadfield-Hill, Cristiana
Zara (University of Birmingham, UK), Peter Kraftl (University of Leicester, UK)
Chair
Cristiana Zara (University of Birmingham, UK)
1
Internalising risks and rationalities: learning disabled young people’s perceptions of
urban green space – Nadia von Benzon (Lancaster University, UK)
2
Narratives, emotions and encounters: shifting natures in the context of a new urban
environment – Sophie Hadfield-Hill, Cristiana Zara (University of Birmingham, 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–
3
Environmental Analysis of Children’s Play in Fast Growing Cities of Urban India – Sruthi
Atmakur-Javdekar (City University of New York, USA)
4
Everyday encounters - urban greenspace in tackling inequalities – Haney King (Natural
England, UK)
7
Cooperative energy: practising a just low carbon transition? (1)
W1│FOR S5
See also: 33
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/7
Affiliation
EnGRG
Convenors
Patrick Devine-Wright (University of Exeter, UK), Thomas Bauwens
(University of Liege, Belgium), Gill Wyatt (Exeter Community Energy, UK)
Chair
Patrick Devine-Wright (University of Exeter, UK)
1
Cooperatives: New voice for citizens in ownership and management of networked
infrastructures – Arwen Colell (Environmental Policy Research Center Berlin, Germany), Luise
Neumann-Cosel (BürgerEnergie Berlin eG, Germany)
2
Community energy generation in the UK: the link between ownership of renewable energy
developments and social acceptance – Feibei Chen (University of Manchester, UK)
3
The effect of cooperative ownership on social acceptance of onshore wind power: a multimethod analysis – Thomas Bauwens (University of Liege, Belgium)
4
The role of local energy initiatives in the energy transition – Udo Pesch, Eefje Cuppen,
Stephanie Bijnsdorp (Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands)
8
W1│FOR S6
Losing Ground – Gaining Ground. The Emotional, Affective &
Gendered Consequences of Loss / Recovery of Nature, Home &
Place in Rural Modern / Non-modern Settings (1): Finding and
Losing Identity in (Remote) Rural Communities
See also: 34
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/8
Affiliation
RGRG, GFGRG
Convenors
Linda Price (Queen's University Belfast, UK), Daniel Keech (University of
Gloucestershire, UK), Owain Jones (Bath Spa University, UK)
Chair
Linda Price (Queen's University Belfast, UK)
1
Shades of Belonging: An Analytical Framework on Dimensions of Belonging among Irish
farm offspring – Anne Cassidy (National University of Ireland, Galway, Ireland)
2
"New Walks in An Old Field": Excavating speech-acts and events that illuminate gender
and wellbeing – Issie MacPhail (University of the Highlands and Islands, UK)
3
Encounters in the valley: Love and emotions in micro-processes of gentrification and
repopulation in remote rural areas – Angel Paniagua (CSIC, Spain)
4
Hutopia: ‘There’s mair tae it than trudging up and doon daft wet hills’ – Rachel Hunt
(University of Glasgow, 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–
9
Liveable Lives (1): Theorising Liveability/Livability
W1│FOR S7
See also: 35
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/9
Affiliation
SSQRG, GJRG
Convenors
Kath Browne (University of Brighton, UK), Niharika Banerjea (University of
Southern Indiana, USA), Nick McGlynn (University of Brighton, UK)
Chair
Kath Browne (University of Brighton, UK)
1
Multispecies Livability: Feminist articulations of livable lives beyond the human – Kathryn
Gillespie (University of Washington, USA)
2
Monstrous Microbes – Patricia Lopez (Dartmouth College, USA)
3
The “Homofeminine” Lesbian: Am I (Un)Intelligible – Isabelle Coy-Dibley (Independent
Researcher)
4
Liveable Lives? The Tolerant City and the Liveable Cities Index – Helen Wilson (University of
Manchester, UK)
5
Researching Liveable Lives: Reflections on Transnational LGBTQ Methodologies – Kath
Browne, Nick McGlynn (University of Brighton, UK), Niharika Banerjea (University of Southern
Indiana, USA)
10
W1│FOR S8
Algorithmic Practices: Emergent interoperability in the
everyday (1)
See also: 36
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/10
Affiliation
HPGRG
Convenors
Chris Speed, Eric Laurier (University of Edinburgh, UK), Monika Buscher
(Lancaster University, UK)
Chair
Chris Speed (University of Edinburgh, UK)
1
From coordinates to code: algorithms in everyday mobile mapping practices – Clancy
Wilmott (University of Manchester, UK)
2
Big Data as Biography. Surveillance and Privacy in the Age of the Algorithm – Jeremy
Crampton (University of Kentucky, USA)
3
Analogy and Conceptual Blending are Algorithmic Processes that Form a Toolkit for the
Representation of Data – Jack Ox (University of New Mexico, USA)
11
GIS for sustainable transport (1): Paper presentations
W1│FOR S9
See also: 37
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/11
Affiliation
TGRG, GIScRG
Convenors
Robin Lovelace, Eusebio Odiari (University of Leeds, UK)
Chair
Robin Lovelace (University of Leeds, UK)
1
Using GIS to encourage transport planners to discuss resilience to fuel shocks – Ian
Phillips (University of Leeds, 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
Evaluating Impacts of New Road Projects on Environment Using GIS Index – Hye-Jin Cho
(Korea Institute of Civil Engineering and Building Technology, Korea)
3
An evaluation of the OSM dataset for sustainable transport planning – Robin Lovelace
(University of Leeds, UK)
4
Exploring the Spatial Diffusion of Electric Vehicles in the UK – Craig Morton, Godwin
Yeboah, Caitlin Cottrill, Jillian Anable (University of Aberdeen, UK)
12
Fairness and Social Justice for Rural Communities (1)
W1│FOR S10
See also: 38
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/12
Affiliation
RGRG
Convenor and chair
Sonja Rewhorn (University of Chester, UK)
1
Identifying the Role of Politics in the Dynamics of Rural Policy Making – Chris Elton
(Independent researcher, UK)
2
Rural gentrification and the class complexion of the British countryside 10 years on –
Martin Phillips (University of Leicester, UK), Darren Smith, Chloe Kinton (Loughborough
University, UK), Helene Ducros (University of Leicester, UK)
3
Ladders & Snakes, jigsaws, mosaics – the serious game of capturing a local voice for rural
health service community co planning – Sarah Bowyer (University of the Highlands and
Islands, UK)
4
Digital rural-urban equity: Attitudes and opinions from small and micro businesses
towards Next Generation Broadband (NGB) in rural areas and their relative competiveness
– Megan Palmer-Abbs (University of Aberdeen, UK)
5
Rural regeneration and rural "statecraft" and "scalecraft" – Simon Pemberton (Keele
University, UK)
6
Rural proofing – a new way for rural fairness? – Sonja Rewhorn (University of Chester, UK)
13
W1│FOR S11
Responsibility: Enacting care over time and space in the
Anthropocene (1): Paternalism, philanthropy and guilt
See also: 39
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/13
Affiliation
GJRG
Convenors
Clare Holdsworth (Keele University, UK), Matt Baillie Smith (Northumbria
University, UK), Charles Levkoe (Wilfrid Laurier University, Canada)
Chair
Clare Holdsworth (Keele University, UK)
1
Responsibility and its malcontents: Careful thoughts for thoughtful actions in Canada's
settler colonial contexts – Vanessa Sloan Morgan (Queen’s University, Canada)
2
The Boundaries of Responsibility and Community Support: Lessons from Post-Colonial
Mozambique – Beth Oppenheim-Chan (University of Cape Town, South Africa)
3
The Power of Laughter: Comic Relief, celebrity and performances of care – Christine
Barnes (King's College London, UK)
4
Working’ multiple responsibilities: Filipina domestic helpers in Hong Kong – Maren K.
Boersma (University of Hong Kong, China)
Wed
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 responsibility of responding to post-natal depression: examining the role of
discourses of parental determinism in shaping care – Jennifer Lea (University of Exeter, UK)
14
W1│NEW LTA
The city and the margins: Ethnographic challenges across
makeshift urbanism (1)
See also: 40
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/14
Convenors
Michele Lancione, Tatiana Thieme (University of Cambridge, UK), Elisabetta
Rosa (Aix-Marseille Université, France)
Chair
Michele Lancione (University of Cambridge, UK)
1
The cinema of Pedro Costa as laboratory for a non-representational urban ethnography –
Brais Estévez-Vilariño (Autonomous University of Barcelona, Spain), Aurelio Castro-Varela
(University of Barcelona, Spain)
2
Exposing the "good": when participatory methods meet normative ideas – Charles Barlow
(University of Cambridge, UK)
3
Liminal Statuses in Liminal Places: Intercultural Interactions for refused asylum seekers in
Newcastle upon Tyne, UK – Jennifer Smith (Newcastle University, UK)
4
Photographing Sant’Elia. Visual experimentations of urban marginality – Matteo Puttilli,
Maurizio Memoli (University of Cagliari, Italy), Silvia Aru (University of Cagliari, Italy)
5
Ethnographic Explorations in Shenzhen, South China – Tung-Yi Kho (School of Oriental and
African Studies, UK / Renmin University, China)
15
W1│NEW LTB
Behavioural Change in the Anthropocene (1): Exploring
Empirical Case Studies on Sustainable Lifestyles
See also: 41
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/15
Convenors
Mary Jo Lavelle (National University of Ireland, Galway, Ireland), Stewart Barr
(University of Exeter, UK)
Chair
Mary Jo Lavelle (National University of Ireland, Galway, Ireland)
1
Not just a one man mission: the enablers of, and barriers to, sustainable lifestyles –
Stephen Axon (Liverpool Hope University, UK)
2
Changing the focus on users and energy consumption: From ‘resource man’ to comfort
conventions – Line Valdorff Madsen (Aalborg University, Denmark)
3
‘Every Little Helps’: The Contextualisation of the Rationalities that Determine Consumer
Behaviour Conducive to Food Waste Using an Experimental Methodology – Craig Anderson
(University of Stirling, UK)
4
Tales of transformation: researching stability and change in energy practices over the
lifecourse – Mary Greene (National University of Ireland, Galway, Ireland)
5
Responsibility to whom? Thinking about (inter)generations, behaviour change and
sustainability – Catherine Harris, Lucy Jackson, Gill Valentine (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
16
W1│NEW LTCD
Evening
18:45–
The field formerly known as Urban Studies? (1) "Planetary
urbanisation" under scrutiny
See also: 42
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/16
Affiliation
UGRG
Convenors
Mark Boyle (National University of Ireland, Maynooth, Ireland), Brendan
Gleeson (Melbourne University, Australia), Cian O’Callaghan (National
University of Ireland, Maynooth, Ireland), Lauren Rickards (RMIT University,
Australia)
Chair
Mark Boyle (National University of Ireland, Maynooth, Ireland)
1
Planetary Urbanization in Question – Linda Peake (York University, Canada), Sue Ruddick
(University of Toronto, Canada), Roza Tchoukaleyska (York University, Canada)
2
Electric City, Electric Earth: Night, Lighting and the Temporal Limits to the City – Robert
Shaw (Durham University, UK)
3
Planetary urbanization and the void: Vacant space and the remaking of the city – Cian
O’Callaghan (National University of Ireland, Maynooth, Ireland)
4
Planetary urbanisation and the Anthropocene: paradoxical and intersecting – Lauren
Rickards (RMIT University, Australia), Brendan Gleeson (Melbourne University, Australia)
17
Spaces of Participatory Transport Planning (1)
W1│NEW LTE
See also: 43
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/17
Affiliation
TGRG
Convenors
Frances Hodgson, Karen Lucas, Joanna Elvy (University of Leeds, UK)
Chair(s)
Frances Hodgson (University of Leeds, UK)
1
Understanding Travellers’ Satisfaction with and Attitudes towards TfL Bus Services by
Twitter – Weijia Chen, Amy Weihong Guo, Phil Blythe (Newcastle University, UK)
2
How competence-based stakeholder inclusion can facilitate decision making in interregional transportation planning issues – Geert te Boveldt, Imre Keseru, Cathy Macharis
(Free University of Brussels, Belgium)
3
Crowd Wise: testing a new approach to participatory transport planning – Tom Cohen
(University College London, UK), Perry Walker (OpenupUK.org, UK), Joanna Elvy (University of
Leeds, UK)
4
Sustainable Mobility, Delightful Neighbourhood? Creating and evaluating inspirational
participation in street design – Clara Crivellaro, Daniel Mallo, Rorie Parsons, Armelle
Tardiveau, Geoff Vigar (Newcastle University, UK), Emma Cockburn, Kieran McSherry (Sustrans,
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
18
W1│NEW LTF
Evening
18:45–
Mobility, mutation and translation processes of EU renewable
energy policies (1)
See also: 44
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/18
Convenors
Jarmo Kortelainen, Moritz Albrecht (University of Eastern Finland, Finland)
Chair
Jarmo Kortelainen (University of Eastern Finland, Finland)
1
Introduction to the research projects: Developing bioenergy governance & Contesting
bioenergy governance – Jarmo Kortelainen, Moritz Albrecht (University of Eastern Finland,
Finland)
2
Spatial design of mobile policies – Jarmo Kortelainen (University of Eastern Finland, Finland)
3
Bioenergy development from Brussels’ offices to local sites of materialization: Loosing
the other end out of sight? – Moritz Albrecht (University of Eastern Finland, Finland)
4
The renewable energy directive in the national context in Finland – Teijo Rytteri (University
of Eastern Finland, Finland)
5
The 2020 race and the materialisation of a bio-economy – Jani Lukkarinen (University of
Eastern Finland, Finland)
19
Innovative Methodologies in Postgraduate Research (1)
W1│PCC 1.1
See also: 45
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/19
Affiliation
PGF
Convenors
Will Andrews, Greg Philip Thomas (Aberystwyth University, UK)
Chair
Hilary Geoghegan (University of Reading, UK)
1
Methods for exploring the architectural geography of an asylum reception center – Ragne
Øwre Thorshaug (Norwegian University of Science and Technology , Norway)
2
Urban development model of an ordinary city in the constant state of change - the MASANT methodological approach – Marija Cvetinovic (Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de
Lausanne, Switzerland)
3
Driving spirit: automotive affectus and non-representationality – Jonathan Kershaw
(Coventry University, UK)
4
Eye-tracking: Retracing visual perception in the everyday environments of people with
Tourette syndrome – Diana N.M. Beljaars (Cardiff University, UK)
5
Mixed methods in studying everyday cycling in the context of ageing and wellbeing:
Opportunities and challenges – Wilbert Den Hoed (Newcastle University, UK)
6
Participatory research on nature’s impact on health – Valentine Seymour (University College
London & Extreme Citizen Science (ExCiteS) Research Group, UK)
7
Kinaesthetic Life-Maps: Apprehending visceral memories and place encounters – Nerida
Godfrey (University of New South Wales, Australia)
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
20
18:45–
Knowledge, governmentality and power
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/20
W1│PCC 1.4
Chair
Sarah Mills (Loughborough University, UK)
1
Maps, Big Data, Smart Development?: The role of Big Data analysis in reopening the
digital divide in International Development – Doug Specht (University of Westminster,
UK/VOZ)
2
Governmentality, Geopolitics and Procedural Rhetoric in Video Games: A Practice Based
Methodological Toolkit – Evren Eken (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
3
Colonialism, Exiles and the Holy Land: British-German Encounters and the Emergence of
Israeli Spatiality – Shira Wilkof (University of California Berkeley, USA)
4
Little Wars: The Geopolitics of 20th Century Board Games – Alexander Harby (University of
Nottingham, UK)
5
Territory and National Identity in Contemporary Argentina – David Keeling (Western
Kentucky University, USA)
21
Water and sustainability
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/21
W1│PCC 1.5
Chair
Noel Castree (University of Wollongong, Australia)
1
Sharing water: the social and technological infrastructures of resourceful water practices
in community gardens – Ellen van Holstein (University of Wollongong, Australia)
2
Socio-economic issues influencing rural water management practices: a case study of
Bihar Plains in Mid Gangetic Basin, India – Nupur Bose, Shatrunjay Kumar Singh, Ashok K.
Ghosh (Anugrah Narayan College, India)
3
Understanding organizational capacity for effective public information and consultation:
the case of Water Framework Directive implementation in Malta – Francesca Xerri, Paul
Jeffrey, Heather M. Smith (Cranfield University, UK)
4
Environmental hazards in El Minya archeological sites, Egypt – Gehan El Bayomi (Helwan
University, Egypt)
5
Governance approach to integrated management system in the Geum Estuary, South
Korea – Keumjoo Park (Center for Watershed Research, South Korea)
22
Climate change and policy (1): behaviour management
W1│PCC 1.6
See also: 48
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/22
Chair
Jenny Pickerill (The University of Sheffield, UK)
1
Mental models of sea-level change: a mixed methods analysis on the Severn Estuary, UK –
Merryn Thomas, Nick Pidgeon, Lorraine Whitmarsh, Rhoda Ballinger (Cardiff University, UK)
2
Achieving energy efficiency and environmental care through behaviour change: The case
of Gamification for energy policy – Andres Schuschny (Economic Commission for Latin
America and the Caribbean), Ana Isabella Dominguez (Economic Commission for Latin America
and the Caribbean, Chile)
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
Developing surge capacity within contingency bureaucracies - exploring variety,
emergence and information constraints under conditions of crisis – Denis FischbacherSmith (University of Glasgow, UK)
4
Governing the soul'? Biopolitics and the Transition Town Movement in Australia – Uschi
Bay (Monash University, Australia)
5
The humpty dumpty problem: climate ‘repair’ in the Anthropocene – Duncan McLaren
(Lancaster University, UK)
23
Cultivating Ecologies (1)
W1│PCC 2.1
See also: 49
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/23
Convenors
Stephanie Lavau (Plymouth University, UK), Franklin Ginn (University of
Edinburgh, UK)
Chair
Franklin Ginn (University of Edinburgh, UK)
1
A bunch of plant stories – Lesley Head, Natascha Klocker, Olivia Dun, Ananth Gopal
(University of Wollongong, Australia)
2
Growing closer or growing apart? Following the growth of plants and people across
human-nonhuman divides – Hannah Pitt (University of Cardiff, UK)
3
Rendering other times: “Magic plants” and the less-than/more-than human – Mat Keel
(University of California, Los Angeles, USA)
4
Thinking through pollen – Nick Bingham (Open University, UK)
24
Housing and planning
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/24
W1│PCC 2.4
Chair
Fiona Nash (RGS-IBG)
1
Fluid homes, sand castles: A materialist, multi-elemental account of housing in a coastal
master planned estate – Charles Gillon (University of Wollongong, Australia)
2
On the move or staying put? An analysis of residential mobility and ageing-in-place in
Perth, Western Australia – Mariana Atkins, Matthew Tonts (University of Western Australia,
Australia)
3
Homeownership and the Actuarial Self: Ageing, Downsizing and House Prices in New
Zealand – Laurence Murphy, Michael Rehm (University of Auckland, New Zealand)
4
Material geographies of straw bale building and stories of the creation of “straw-culture” –
Lucy Jones (Centre for Alternative Technology, UK)
5
Moving in time is not enough for a decent life as a pensioner: The case of elderly moving
to the seaside in Belgium – Pascal De Decker (Catholic University of Leuven, Belgium), Elise
Schillebeeckx (Catholic University of Leuven / University of Antwerp, Belgium), Emma Volckaert
(Catholic University of Leuven, Belgium)
25
Elsevier Editor Speed Review Sessions (1)
W1│PCC 2.5
See also: 51, 79, 105
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/25
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
26
W1│PCC 1.2&3
Evening
18:45–
The World System Model: experiencing the complex challenge
of the Anthropocene, World Games Interactive Event (1)
See also: 52
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/26
Convenors
Anthony Hodgson (University of Hull, UK), Allan Brimicombe (University of
East London, UK), Ioan Fazey (University of Dundee, UK), David Adams
(Adams Associates, UK), Alison Williams (Ravensbourne College, UK)
Chair
Anthony Hodgson (University of Hull, UK)
1
The World System Model: experiencing the complex challenge of the Anthropocene –
Anthony Hodgson (University of Hull, UK), Ioan Fazey (University of Dundee, UK), David Adams
(Adams Associates, UK)
2
The World System Model: Experiencing complexity on the ground – Allan Brimicombe
(University of East London, UK)
3
People, ecosystems and their services – systemic interactions – Ioan Fazey (University of
Dundee, UK)
4
Large group processes: A collaborative experience – David Adams (Adams Associates, UK)
5
Psycho-spatial dynamics: a systemic reading of people and place – Alison Williams
(Ravensbourne College, UK)
27
W1│PCC 2.2&3
Alternative experiments: spaces of learning and innovation at
the grassroots (1)
See also: 53
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/27
Affiliation
PERG, EGRG
Convenor(s)
Noel Longhurst (University of East Anglia, UK), Jana Wendler (University of
Manchester, UK)
Chair(s)
Jana Wendler (University of Manchester, UK)
1
Enacting alternative social structures: experiments, games and arts in the intentional
community of Damanhur – Francesca Fois (University of Nottingham, UK)
2
Transition Initiatives as a Social Learning Process for Sustainability – Gerald Taylor Aiken
(University of Luxembourg, Luxembourg)
3
Alternative currencies: A non-capitalist monetary Utopia in the making? – Phedeas
Stephanides (University of East Anglia, UK)
4
Equity and inclusion in community-based initiatives of the post-carbon society: The
environmental (in)justice of socio-environmental grassroots innovations – Lucia Arguelles
Ramos, Isabelle Anguelovski (Autonomous University of Barcelona, Spain)
Space for Reviews
One year from its launch at AC2014, we want to highlight an opportunity to publish reviews
in Geo: Geography and Environment. Geo welcomes high quality review papers which
provide theoretical, methodological and topical analysis for advanced researchers in the
field, or offer critical perspectives that engage cross-disciplinary collaborations, explore
policy implications and address issues of global concern (see guidelines for authors). We
are especially interested in reviews exploring what it means to assemble communities of
knowledge differently and making use of the opportunities for online, open access
publication.
We produce reviews in our PhDs, our grant proposals and our publications. To review is to
assess and appraise. Reviews have a temporal element: looking back to assess and
forward to propose change. A review is also a spatial practice: the review synthesises by
defining and appraising a field. Yet, margins can be reinscribed and peripheries created in
this process of producing knowledge. Situated epistemological differences may get recast as
conceptual or methodological ‘problems’ to be solved by further integration with the
theoretical core. There can be good reasons for an emphasis on consensus or periods of
normal science. However, postcolonial, feminist and geopolitical critiques attune us to the
active processes through which knowledge practices are made marginal and the
implications of overly dominant scientific cultures. New practices of review have the potential
to make these geographies of knowledge production more visible and so create the
conditions for a different circulation and assemblage of ideas.
Innovations across the social and natural sciences, arts and humanities are advancing
alternative resources for constructing and disseminating reviews. From the sciences:
systematic reviews demonstrate how criteria for inclusion and exclusion can be made more
explicit and accountable; large-scale data sets offer opportunities for developing and
tracking the back-and-forth of new modes of co-operation; network analysis software can
map evolving patterns of inter-citations and the relational transformation of their content.
These have not featured widely in geographical reviews, but used reflexively, they have
potential across the social and natural sciences. From the digital arts and humanities there
are promising experiments in developing online platforms to support collaborative working
and review; innovative visualisations of data, concepts and relations; and alternative forms
and frames for data mining that value difference in previously unseen data.
Geo: Geography and Environment has space for review and we want to encourage
reflection on these spaces of review. We welcome your conversations and all submissions,
especially those mapping the ways in which communities of knowledge emerge and creating
innovative, interdisciplinary and inclusionary spaces through review.
Gail Davies and Anson Mackay (Co-Editors in Chief)
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
28
Chair's opening plenary: discussion panel
W2│FOR LT
See also: 1
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/28
Convenors
Sarah Whatmore (University of Oxford, UK),
Chair
Tony Brown (University of Southampton, UK)
Evening
18:45–
1
Panel discussion – Lesley Head (University of Wollongong, Australia), Noel Castree (University
of Wollongong, Australia), Stephen Tooth (Aberystwyth University, UK), Andrew Barry (University
College London, UK), Will Steffen (Australian National University, Australia), Kathy Willis (Kew
Gardens, UK), Tony Brown (University of Southampton, UK), Kevin Walsh (University of York,
UK)
29
Historical and cultural geographies of story and storytelling (2):
Storytelling, communities and change
W2│FOR S1
See also: 3
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/29
Affiliation
HGRG
Convenors
James Ryan, Nicola Thomas (University of Exeter, UK)
Chair
Nicola Thomas (University of Exeter, UK)
1
Tales of the unexpected: stories of extreme weather events – Georgina Endfield (University
of Nottingham, UK), Lucy Veale (University of Nottingham, UK)
2
Gathering around stories: testing novel interdisciplinary tools for change in energy
systems – Mel Rohse (University of Birmingham, UK), Joe Smith (The Open University, UK),
Rosie Day (University of Birmingham, UK)
3
Storytelling for drought resilience: local communities, memories and legacy – Liz Roberts
(University of the West of England, UK), Caitlin DeSilvey (University of Exeter, UK), Lindsey
McEwen (University of the West of England, UK), Antonia Liguori (Loughborough University, UK)
4
Earthwords: Stories in Stone – Rose Ferraby (University of Exeter, UK)
30
Wet Geographies I: Under the Sea: Geographies of the Deep
W2│FOR S2
See also: 58, 84
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/30
Affiliation
PolGRG, SCGRG, CMRG
Convenors and chairs
Rachael Squire (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK), Cordelia
Freeman (University of Nottingham, UK)
1
Guarding and Teaching the Deep: The Kuwait Dive Team and Environmental Volunteerism
– Rebecca Farnum (King's College London, UK)
2
Deepening the simplified sea – Elspeth Probyn (University of Sydney, Australia)
3
Ceremonies of Possession: Performing sovereignty in the Canadian Arctic – Rosanna
White (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
4
Giving new depth to territory: reconfiguring volume through oceanic thinking – Philip E.
Steinberg (Durham University, UK), Kim Peters (Aberystwyth University, UK)
5
Discussant – Alex Jeffrey (University of Cambridge, UK)
Wed
31
W2│FOR S3
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–
Surfaces of Distinction: Materiality and viscerally knowing food
(2)
See also: 5, 59
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/31
Affiliation
SCGRG, PyGyRG
Convenors
Rebecca Sandover (University of Exeter, UK), Emma-Jayne Abbots
(University of Wales, Trinity St. David, UK), Mike Goodman (University of
Reading, UK)
Chair
Rebecca Sandover (University of Exeter, UK)
1
The Anthropocenic Diet: Edible insects, cultured meat and the materialities of ‘non-foods’
– Alexandra Sexton (King's College London, UK)
2
Playing With Our Food: Encounters with the matter of margarine – Suzanne Hocknell
(University of Exeter, UK)
3
"Oh geez. That needs to go". Rethinking food waste through the materialities and
visceralities of everyday refrigeration practices – Gordon Waitt (University of Wollongong,
Australia), Catherine Phillips (University of Queensland, Australia)
4
Visceral Knowledges in the Tasting Laboratory: Comparative tasting and the qualification
of Australian wines – Jeremy Brice (Newcastle University, UK)
5
Austerity Sure Tastes Good: Visceral Mediation and Virtual Food in the Anthropocene –
Emma-Jayne Abbots (University of Wales, Trinity St. David, UK), Mike Goodman (University of
Reading, UK)
32
Children and Nature in the Anthropocene (2) Learning to be
affected: Mapping young people’s more than human relations
W2│FOR S4
See also: 6, 60, 86, 173
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/32
Affiliation
GCYFRG
Convenors
Affrica Taylor (University of Canberra, Australia), Emma Renold (Cardiff
University, UK)
Chair
Affrica Taylor (University of Canberra, Australia)
1
Red Kite Sensations – James Searle (Durham University, UK)
2
“It’s a wolf!”: The Howl, vibratory affects and the more-than-human in the schoolyard, and
beyond – Ian Thomas (Cardiff University, UK)
3
Graphic Moves: Artful intra-ventions on co-produced participatory research on young
people and place – Gabrielle Ivinson (University of Aberdeen, UK), Emma Renold (Cardiff
University, UK)
4
More-than-human assemblages of family pedestrian mobility – Susannah Clement
(University of Wollongong, Australia)
5
Kids, roos and racoons: awkward encounters and mixed affects – Veronica PaciniKetchabaw (University of Victoria, Canada), Affrica Taylor (University of Canberra, Australia)
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–
33
Cooperative energy: practising a just low carbon transition? (2)
W2│FOR S5
See also: 7
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/33
Affiliation
EnGRG
Convenors
Patrick Devine-Wright (University of Exeter, UK), Thomas Bauwens
(University of Liege, Belgium), Gill Wyatt (Exeter Community Energy, UK)
Chair
Patrick Devine-Wright (University of Exeter, UK)
1
Roundtable Discussion – Patrick Devine-Wright (University of Exeter, UK), Udo Pesch (Delft
University of Technology, The Netherlands), Arwen Colell (Environmental Policy Research
Center Berlin, Germany), Luise Neumann-Cosel (BürgerEnergie Berlin eG, Germany), Thomas
Bauwens (University of Liege, Belgium), Gill Wyatt (Exeter Community Energy, UK), Feibei Chen
(University of Manchester, UK), Eefje Cuppen (Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands),
Stephanie Bijnsdorp (Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands), Ben Dodd (Green Fox
Community Energy Co-operative, UK)
34
W2│FOR S6
Losing Ground – Gaining Ground. The Emotional, Affective &
Gendered Consequences of Loss / Recovery of Nature, Home &
Place in Rural Modern / Non-modern Settings (2): Losing and
Recovering Self(in)Place
See also: 8
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/34
Affiliation
RGRG, GFGRG
Convenors
Linda Price (Queen's University Belfast, UK), Daniel Keech (University of
Gloucestershire, UK), Owain Jones (Bath Spa University, UK)
Chair
Daniel Keech (University of Gloucestershire, UK)
1
Learning to live and love in rural New Zealand – Anne Galloway (Victoria University of
Wellington, New Zealand)
2
The dynamics of nature-culture assemblages around natural World Heritage Sites:
Ecologies of place around the Galapagos and St Kilda archipelagos – Daisy Sutcliffe
(University of Glasgow, UK)
3
Madreterra, Mother-earth, Motherland: Precarity, Nativism and Crisis in the New
Borderlands of "Fortress Europe" – Alessandro Tiberio (University of California, Berkeley,
USA)
4
Discussant – Daniel Keech (University of Gloucestershire, UK)
35
Liveable Lives (2): Spaces Where Lives Are Lived?
W2│FOR S7
See also: 9
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/35
Affiliation
SSQRG, GJRG
Convenors
Kath Browne (University of Brighton, UK), Niharika Banerjea (University of
Southern Indiana, USA), Nick McGlynn (University of Brighton, UK)
Chair
Nick McGlynn (University of Brighton, UK)
1
Other Spaces: The Lived Space of a Waste Picking Community – Nandini Sen (Goethe
University Frankfurt, 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
18:45–
2
Being more than liveable: At the limits of representation? – Ellie Byrne (Cardiff University,
UK), Claire McKechnie-Mason (Glasgow Centre for Population Health, UK), Issie MacPhail
(University of the Highlands and Islands, UK)
3
Brazilian Travesties making lives livable in their processes of ageing and death – Joseli
Maria Silva, Maria Rodó-de-Zárate (Universidade Estadual Ponta Grossa, Brazil)
36
W2│FOR S8
Algorithmic Practices: Emergent interoperability in the
everyday (2)
See also: 10
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/36
Affiliation
HPGRG
Convenors
Chris Speed, Eric Laurier (University of Edinburgh, UK), Monika Buscher
(Lancaster University, UK)
Chair
Eric Laurier (University of Edinburgh, UK)
1
Language in the Age of Algorithmic Reproduction – Pip Thornton (Royal Holloway, University
of London, UK)
2
Assembling spatio-algorithmic collectives while Cruising on Grindr – Michael Liegl
(Lancaster University, UK)
3
Describe in single words, only the good things that come in to your mind… – Mike Phillips,
Davide Marocco, Christos Melidis, Birgitte Aga, Christopher Hunt (Plymouth University, UK)
4
Technical debt and the role of auto-disciplinary algorithms in San Francisco’s digital
media sector – Daniel Cockayne (University of Kentucky, USA)
5
"A cybernetic ecology where we are free of our labours"? Practices of autonomy and
heteromation – Sam Kinsley (University of Exeter, UK)
37
W2│FOR S9
GIS for sustainable transport (2): Practical workshop on open
source GIS
See also: 11
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/37
Affiliation
TGRG, GIScRG
Convenor(s)
Robin Lovelace, Eusebio Odiari (University of Leeds, UK)
Chair(s)
Robin Lovelace (University of Leeds, UK)
38
Fairness and Social Justice for Rural Communities (2)
W2│FOR S10
See also: 12
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/38
Affiliation
RGRG
Convenor and chair
Sonja Rewhorn (University of Chester, UK)
1
Small Towns – Places not to be overlooked in the (rural) economy – Valerie Carter
(ECOVAST)
2
The tyranny of geography: the injustice of measuring rural deprivation through small area
statistics – John H. McKendrick (Glasgow Caledonian 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–
3
Policy Justice, Governance, and Rural Communities: Insights from research into Bovine
Tuberculosis in West Wales – Hilary Carberry (Aberystwyth University, UK)
4
Naturalness and justice in rural flood management – Steven Emery (University of
Birmingham, UK)
5
Facilitating knowledge exchange between practitioners in the Global South – a pathway to
achieving fairness and social justice for rural communities? – Carmen Dienst (Wuppertal
Institute for Climate, Environment and Energy GmbH, Germany), Jon Sumanik-Leary
(Loughborough University, UK), Julia Terrapon-Pfaff, Willington Otriz, Daniel Vallentin, Frederik
Santer (Wuppertal Institute for Climate, Environment and Energy GmbH, Germany)
6
I think we've been sold a pup’: a critical investigation of renewable rural community
energy in the English East Midlands – Jen Dickie, Martin Phillips (University of Leicester, UK)
7
Post-war’ Democracy: cultural politics of governance in rural Nepal - Tulasi Sharan Sigdel
(Kathmandu University, Nepal)
39
W2│FOR S11
Responsibility: Enacting care over time and space in the
Anthropocene (2): Food, care and more than human
responsibilities
See also: 13
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/39
Affiliation
GJRG
Convenors
Clare Holdsworth (Keele University, UK), Matt Baillie Smith (Northumbria
University, UK), Charles Levkoe (Wilfrid Laurier University, Canada)
Chair
Clare Holdsworth (Keele University, UK)
1
Mourning the Sixth Great Extinction – Nic Beuret (University of Leicester, UK)
2
Responsibility for Food System Sustainability: The Motivations of Non-Wage Farm
Workers and Implication for Food Movements – Charles Levkoe (Wilfrid Laurier University,
Canada), Michael Ekers (University of Toronto, Canada)
3
Towards a ‘relation of approach’? Perspectives on the practice of care and responsibility
through feeding rough sleepers – Jane Midgley (Newcastle University, UK)
4
Response-ability and cultivating cultures of care: Insights from the laboratory animal
house – Beth Greenhough (University of Oxford, UK), Emma Roe (University of Southampton,
UK)
5
The veterinary surgeon as sensitive scientist: more-than-human responsibilities in a rural
veterinary practice – Megan Donald (University of Glasgow, UK)
40
W2│NEW LTA
The city and the margins: Ethnographic challenges across
makeshift urbanism (2)
See also: 14
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/40
Convenor(s)
Michele Lancione, Tatiana Thieme (University of Cambridge, UK), Elisabetta
Rosa (Aix-Marseille Université, France)
Chair(s)
Elisabetta Rosa (Aix-Marseille Université, France)
1
Apprentice waste worker: the license to ‘deep hanging out’ in the slums of Nairobi through
embodied ethnography – Tatiana Thieme (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
Evening
18:45–
2
Performative Visual Ethnography: Taking 'flicks' and making friends in graffiti subcultures
– Cameron McAuliffe (University of Western Sydney, Australia)
3
Marginal ethnography in practice: children, young people and families in a new city
development – Sophie Hadfield-Hill (University of Birmingham, UK)
4
Extending Beijing’s “Greenbelt”. Locate reflexivity on the frontier of urbanisation – Yimin
Zhao (London School of Economics and Political Science, UK)
41
W2│NEW LTB
Behavioural change in the Anthropocene (2): Unpacking
mobility research and theoretical perspectives towards
sustainability
See also: 15
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/41
Convenors
Mary Jo Lavelle (National University of Ireland, Galway, Ireland), Stewart Barr
(University of Exeter, UK)
Chair
Stewart Barr (University of Exeter, UK)
1
Re-conceptualising Behaviour, Re-thinking Behavioural Change: Dynamics of Everyday
Urban Travel – Anna Plyushteva (University College London, UK)
2
EV-Driving in Time and Space – Driving in Electric Vehicles is a matter of contextual
conditions – Freja Friis (Aalborg University, Denmark)
3
The unnecessary car use - a consumer diary study – Lena Eskilsson (Lund University,
Sweden), Ola Thufvesson (Lund University, Sweden)
4
Mobility biographies and milestones: Key concepts, methodological innovation and initial
insights – Richard Manton (NUI Galway, Ireland), Henrike Rau (Ludwig-Maximilians-University
Munich, Germany)
5
Alternative consumption practices and the creative consumer – Cecilia Fredriksson (Lund
University, Sweden)
42
W2│NEW LTCD
The field formerly known as Urban Studies? (2) Rethinking the
urban through its new manifestations
See also: 16
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/42
Affiliation
UGRG
Convenors
Mark Boyle (National University of Ireland, Maynooth, Ireland), Brendan
Gleeson (Melbourne University, Australia), Cian O’Callaghan (National
University of Ireland, Maynooth, Ireland), Lauren Rickards (RMIT University,
Australia)
Chair
Brendan Gleeson (Melbourne University, Australia)
1
The global startup city and the renaissance of the urban – Ugo Rossi (Università di Torino,
Italy), Arturo Di Bella (University did Catania, Italy)
2
Without the City? Suburbia’s central place in rethinking the urban – David Gilbert (Royal
Holloway, University of London, UK)
3
Shaping urban citizenship and the role of (e) valuation in regeneration – Luna Glucksberg,
Rob Imrie (Goldsmiths, 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
18:45–
4
Planetary urbanisation, migrants and emerging geographies of care and responsibility –
Mark Boyle (National University of Ireland, Maynooth, Ireland)
43
Spaces of Participatory Transport Planning (2)
W2│NEW LTE
See also: 17
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/43
Affiliation
TGRG
Convenors
Frances Hodgson, Karen Lucas, Joanna Elvy (University of Leeds, UK)
Chair
Karen Lucas (University of Leeds, UK)
1
Can citizens be given a meaningful role in defining the transport research agenda? – Tom
Cohen, Sarah Bell (University College London, UK)
2
‘Blethering on a Bus’: A novel engagement method to enhance and encourage community
involvement in the transport planning process – Sara Tilley (University of Edinburgh, UK)
3
Discussion: Stimulating the debate on social capital in participatory transport planning –
Frances Hodgson, Karen Lucas, Joanna Elvy (University of Leeds, UK)
44
Mobility, mutation and translation processes of EU renewable
energy policies (2)
W2│NEW LTF
See also: 18
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/44
Convenors
Jarmo Kortelainen, Moritz Albrecht (University of Eastern Finland, Finland)
Chair
Moritz Albrecht (University of Eastern Finland, Finland)
1
EU-Canada Relations: Transnational Energy Translation Loo – Matthew Sawatzky
(University of Eastern Finland, Finland)
2
The DEBEG bioenergy conflict database: A tool for research and conflict resolution? –
Maxim Trishkin (University of Eastern Finland, Finland)
3
Roundtable discussion – Jarmo Kortelainen, Moritz Albrecht (University of Eastern Finland,
Finland)
45
Innovative Methodologies in Postgraduate Research (2)
W2│PCC 1.1
See also: 19
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/45
Affiliation
PGF
Convenors
Will Andrews, Greg Philip Thomas (Aberystwyth University, UK)
Chair
Sarah Mills (Loughborough University, UK)
1
Determined netnography – Heather Jeffrey (Middlesex University, UK)
2
On focus groups and getting people talking about water consuming practices – Claire
Hoolohan (University of Manchester, UK)
3
Humans of the Royal Welsh Agricultural Show: “The Royal Welsh Agricultural Show, one
story at a time” – Greg Philip Thomas (Aberystwyth 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–
4
Community-based Action Research: Applying Participatory Methods in Housing Research
– Emma Griffin (University of the West of England, UK)
5
Innovative research methods: Role of intermediaries in the translation of research – Sam
Slatcher (Durham University, UK), Wahida Shaffi (Near Neighbours Programme, UK)
6
Innovative Aspects of Researcher Positionality: The Twin Issues of Appearance and
Personality – Samantha Wilkinson (The University of Manchester, UK), Catherine Wilkinson
(University of Liverpool, UK)
7
Exploring comedy spaces through practicing stand-up – Phil Emmerson (University of
Birmingham, UK)
46
Community, migration and identity
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/46
W2│PCC 1.4
Chair
Sophie Blackburn (King's College London, UK)
1
“Processes of Becoming”: Delineating the trafficked person through the UK’s National
Referral Mechanism – Sharon Leahy (University of St Andrews, UK)
2
Exploring Memory and Place-Identity Through Narrative Inquiry: Case Study of Partisans’
Square in Užice, Serbia – Sofija Kaljevic (West Virginia University, USA)
3
Talking nation in the age of globalization – an institutional perspective – Marco Antonsich
(Loughborough University, UK)
4
Re-narrativizing regional identities through humour – Juha Ridanpaa (University of Oulu,
Finland)
5
Beyond the gateway: Asian migrants in small city New Zealand – Wardlow Friesen
(University of Auckland, New Zealand)
47
New dimensions of state space transformation
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/47
W2│PCC 1.5
Convenors
Juho Luukkonen, Kaj Zimmerbauer, Satu Kivela (University of Oulu, Finland)
Chair
Sami Moisio (University of Helsinki, Finland)
1
Social practices and the transformation of the Finnish state space – Juho Luukkonen
(University of Oulu, Finland)
2
Constitution of mundane state spaces: statization of everyday life through health care
dispositif – Satu Kivela (University of Oulu, Finland)
3
Supranational regionalization and identities in planning – Kaj Zimmerbauer (University of
Oulu, Finland)
4
Discussant – Martin Jones (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
48
Climate change and policy (2): risk and governance
W2│PCC 1.6
See also: 22
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/48
Chair
Neil Adger (University of Exeter, UK)
18:45–
1
The universal failure of the Water Framework Directive? A comparative-historical
perspective on the words-deeds gap – Laura De Vito (University of Bristol, UK)
2
New risk and the second modernity: bushfires, biodiversity and peri-urban planning in the
Mt Lofty Ranges, South Australia – Douglas Bardsley (University of Adelaide, Australia),
Delene Weber, Guy M. Robinson, Emily Moskwa (University of South Australia, Australia),
Annette Bardsley (University of Adelaide, Australia)
3
‘Jumping scales’: constructing spaces of action in the Fossil Fuel Global Divestment
Day/Movement – Robyn Mayes, Carol Richards (Queensland University of Technology,
Australia), Michael Woods (Aberystwyth University, UK)
4
A spatial turn for degrowth? – Claudia Carter, David Adams (Birmingham City University, UK)
5
Determining waste reuse behaviour among UK organisations: A content analysis study –
Purva Tavri, Sarah Sayce, Victoria Hands (Kingston University, UK)
49
Cultivating Ecologies (2): “walk and talk” tour of the university
campus
W2│PCC 2.1
Convenors
1
See also: 23
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/49
Stephanie Lavau (Plymouth University, UK), Franklin Ginn (University of
Edinburgh, UK)
“Walk and talk” tour of the university campus – Stephanie Lavau (Plymouth University, UK),
Franklin Ginn (University of Edinburgh, UK), Nina Nygren (University of Tampere, Finland), Fikile
Nxumalo (University of Victoria, Canada)
50
"Not drowning but fighting": Decolonising the anthropocene
W2│PCC 2.4
See also:
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/50
Convenors
Kathryn Yusoff (Queen Mary University of London, UK), Anja Kanngieser
(Goldsmiths, University of London, UK), Angela Last (University of Glasgow,
UK)
Chair
Kathryn Yusoff (Queen Mary University of London, UK)
1
"Concrete poetry": Wilson Harris’s "The Eye of the Scarecrow", materiality, language and
politics in the Caribbean anthropocene – Patricia Noxolo (University of Birmingham, UK)
2
Racialised bodies and the vitality of the sea: Experimental interventions in Darwin,
Australia – Michele Lobo (Deakin University, Australia)
3
Propositions for the anthropocene – Nabil Ahmed (Goldsmiths, University of London, UK)
4
Anthropocene discourse: Geopolitics after environment – Simon Dalby (Balsillie School of
International Affairs, Canada)
5
Staring into the void while islands sink [Performance Lecture] – Anja Kanngieser
(Goldsmiths, University of London, UK), Angela Last (University of Glasgow, 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
51
Elsevier Editor Speed Review Sessions (2)
W2│PCC 2.5
See also: 25, 79, 105
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/51
52
W2│PCC 1.2&3
Evening
18:45–
The World System Model: experiencing the complex challenge
of the Anthropocene, World Games Interactive Event (2)
See also: 26
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/52
Convenors
Anthony Hodgson (University of Hull, UK), Allan Brimicombe (University of
East London, UK), Ioan Fazey (University of Dundee, UK), David Adams
(Adams Associates, UK), Alison Williams (Ravensbourne College, UK)
Chair
Anthony Hodgson (The University of Hull, UK)
53
Alternative experiments: spaces of learning and innovation at
the grassroots (2)
W2│PCC 2.2&3
See also: 27
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/53
Affiliation
PERG, EGRG
Convenors
Noel Longhurst (University of East Anglia, UK), Jana Wendler (University of
Manchester, UK)
Chair
Noel Longhurst (University of East Anglia, UK)
1
Contingent Energies: The material politics of community-based renewable energy
production in Aberdeenshire – Annabel Pinker (James Hutton Institute, UK)
2
Spatial Experimentations amongst Political Youths in Hong Kong: Ethnographic
Examinations of Woofer Ten and Occupy Central – Sonia Lam (University of Oxford, UK)
3
The temporalities of eco-communities – Jenny Pickerill (University of Sheffield, UK)
4
The promise of alternative experiments – Jana Wendler (University of Manchester, UK)
art programme linked to the Wet Geographies(3) sessions
There’s a Hole in the Bottom of the Sea: Ash Wednesday, 1962.
Exhibition by artist Lynn Imperatore. In the Forum throughout the week.
Still or sparkling. PIDGE Theatre. Š—”•†ay lunchtime, in the Newman Building - Lecture Theatre F (Red).
‘Part performance lecture, part poetry, part love-song –
Still or Sparkling? is funny one moment and moving the
next. It’s global and it’s personal and it’s all about water.’
A screening of short artist Ƥlms, ednesday Ƭ Friday lunchtimes
13.10, Newman Building - Lecture Theatre F (Red).
Funded by the Geographies of reativity Ƭ
Knowledge Research Group, University of Exeter.
Curated by Veronica Vickery. www.water-worlds.org.
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–
Chair's plenary: ‘Feral geographies: life in capitalist ruins’
54
WP│FOR LT
Convenors and chairs
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/54
Jamie Lorimer, Sarah Whatmore (University of Oxford, UK)
1
Feral geographies: life in capitalist ruins – Anna Tsing (University of California, Santa Cruz,
USA)
2
Discussion Panel – Stephen Hinchliffe, Gail Davies (University of Exeter, UK), Cheryl McEwan
(Durham University, UK)
55
Cultivating Wellness in Geography: invitation to a conversation
WP│FOR S5
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/55
Convened by Kate Maclean (Birkbeck, University of London, UK), Linda
Peake (York University, Canada)
WP│FOR S6.4
Book launch: Smith, D. P., Finney, N., Halfacree, K.H. and
Walford, N., eds, Internal Migration Processes: Geographic
Perspectives (Ashgate, London)
Affiliation: PopGRG
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/104
56
Waterworlds Art Programme - Film Screening (1)
WP│NEW LTF
See also: 161, 231, 253, 257
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/56
Convenors
Veronica Vickery (University of Exeter, UK)
1
Sea (2011) – Gareth Polmeer (Royal College of Art, UK)
2
That Oceanic Feeling – Rona Lee (Northumbria University, UK)
3
Limulus – Karen Kramer (Independent Artist)
4
Alchemical Waters – Ruth Le Gear (Independent Artist)
5
Dropped in the Ocean (2014) – Jess Allen (Independent Artist)
6
Ocean Apolcalypse – Michael Mulvihill (Independent Artist)
7
The Free Sea (2014) - Hanna Husberg, Laura McLean (Independent Artists)
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–
History and Philosophy of Geography Research Group AGM
WP│FOR S1
Affiliation: HPGRG
Transport Geography Research Group AGM
WP│FOR S2
Affliation: TGRG
Space, Sexualities and Queer Research Group AGM
WP│FOR S3
Affiliation: SSQRG
Lunches will be served in the Devonshire House Great Hall and Terrace restaurants. You
will find a ticket for lunch in your name badge. Please come to the Registration Desk if you
have questions and/or there are any problems
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
57
Evening
18:45–
Geomorphology and the Anthropocene
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/57
W3│FOR S1
Affiliation
BSG
Convenor and chair
Tony Brown (University of Southampton, UK)
1
Geomorphology and the Anthropocene Discussion Panel – Tony Brown (University of
Southampton, UK), Stephen Tooth (Aberystwyth University, UK), Paolo Tarolli (University of
Padova, Italy), Rolf Aalto (University of Exeter, UK)
58
Wet Geographies II – Water in the Anthropocene: creative
approaches to understanding and re-thinking human-water
relationships (Alternative Knowledge) (1)
W3│FOR S2
See also: 30, 84
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/58
Affiliation
SCGRG
Convenors
Liz Roberts, Katherine Jones (University of the West of England, UK)
Chair
Katherine Jones (University of the West of England, UK)
1
Lived-experience: Developing the sailor-citizen – Mike Brown (University of Waikato, New
Zealand)
2
Practices of immersion – John Hartley (Falmouth University, UK)
3
Sounding water: creative approaches to fluvial geographies – Robert St. John (University of
Glasgow, UK)
4
Giving "voice" to ageing women in the anthropocene: understanding tacit water needs of
perimenopausal women – Amita Bhakta, Julie Fisher, Brian Reed (Loughborough University,
UK)
5
Underground water: techno-political ecology in "unauthorised" Delhi – Matt Birkinshaw
(London School of Economics and Political Science, UK)
59
W3│FOR S3
Surfaces of Distinction: Materiality and viscerally knowing food
(3): Practitioners Panel on Food Waste, Materiality and
Knowing food
See also: 5, 31
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/59
Affiliation
SCGRG, PyGyRG
Convenors
Rebecca Sandover (University of Exeter, UK), Emma-Jayne Abbots
(University of Wales, Trinity St. David, UK), Mike Goodman (University of
Reading, UK)
Chair
Mike Goodman (University of Reading, UK)
1
Practitioners Panel - Creating dialogue on Food Waste, Materiality and Knowing Food –
Moya Kneafsey (Coventry University, UK), Oliver Dowding (Shepton Farms Ltd), Molly Conisbee
(Independent Food Campaigner), Caitlin Shepherd, Vanessa Reid (This is Rubbish), Kevin
Cotter, Andy Bragg (West Town Farm, UK), Michael Winter (University of Exeter, UK)
Wed
60
W3│FOR S4
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–
Children and Nature in the Anthropocene (3) Impacts of young
people connecting with nature
See also: 6, 32, 86, 173
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/60
Affiliation
GCYFRG
Convenors
Frances Harris (University of Hertfordshire, UK), Roger Cutting, Sue Waite
(Plymouth University, UK)
Chair
Sue Waite (Plymouth University, UK)
1
Reconnecting children and nature: the place of forest school – Frances Harris (University of
Hertfordshire, UK)
2
Connecting children with nature: a (wild) legal perspective – Helena Howe (University of
Sussex, UK)
3
Wild Wood! Creative child-centred methodologies in researching wellbeing in outdoor
learning: insights from a longitudinal study – Mel McCree (Free Range Creativity, UK)
4
That’s not MY Gruffalo! – Tracy Hayes, Caroline Larmour (University of Cumbria, UK)
61
W3│FOR S5
Risk and Complexity in Finance and Beyond (1): Geographies
of Risk
See also: 87
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/61
Affiliation
EGRG
Convenors
Philip Garnett (University of York, UK), John H. Morris (Durham University,
UK)
Chair
Philip Garnett (University of York, UK)
1
Risk and Complexity Keynote – Louise Amoore (Durham University, UK)
2
Beyond Risk Society? Big Data, Complexity and the New Imaginary of Resilience – David
Chandler (University of Westminster, UK)
3
A Politics of Redeployment: Risk Vectors and Fluid Apparatuses – Nat O'Grady (University
of Southampton, UK)
4
Complexity as Risk in Credit Derivatives – John H. Morris (Durham University, UK)
62
W3│FOR S6
Beyond gateways cities: immigrants’ local incorporation
pathways in small and medium-sized cities (1) Migration
beyond gateways cities: small towns and rural areas
See also: 88
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/62
Convenor
Eduardo Barberis (University of Urbino Carlo Bo, Italy), Adriano Cancellieri
(Università IUAV di Venezia, Italy), Roberta Marzorati (University of MilanoBicocca, Italy)
Chair
Adriano Cancellieri (Università IUAV di Venezia, Italy)
1
Diversity adds up: Explaining immigrants’ new destinations in Spain – Carmen Lamela
(Universidade da Coruña, Spain)
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
Countryside ghettoes? Segregation in small towns in Central Italy – Eduardo Barberis
(University of Urbino Carlo Bo, Italy), Emmanuele Pavolini (Università di Macerata, Italy)
3
Ghettos in Small Towns? The Research on Ethnic Segregation and Stigmatisation
Processes in Small Town Germany – René Kreichauf (Independent Researcher)
4
Agricultural migrant workers in rural towns: comparing local administration policy
interventions in Southern and Northern Italy – Anna Mary Garrapa, Roberta Marzorati,
Michela Semprebon (University of Milan Bicocca, Italy)
5
Governing migration: small-size cities between limits of scale and social innovation –
Elena Ostanel, Giovanna Marconi (University IUAV of Venice, SSIIM Unesco Chair, Italy)
63
W3│FOR S7
Urban Sustainabilities (1): interrogating "smart" and "eco"
urbanism(s)
See also: 89
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/63
Convenors
Federico Caprotti (King's College London, UK), Federico Cugurullo (University
of Manchester, UK)
Chair
Federico Caprotti (King's College London, UK)
1
Smart and Eco – Federico Caprotti (King's College London, UK)
2
Locating Social Sustainability in Smart City Developments: from Concept to Practice –
James Evans, Andrew Karvonen, Krassimira Paskaleva (The University of Manchester, UK)
3
Untitled – Shiuh-Shen Chien (National Taiwan University, Taiwan)
4
"Smart urbanism", urban complexities and sustainability pathways in Southern cities –
Elisabeth Peyroux (Université Toulouse II-Le Mirail, France), Karin Pfeffer, Isa Baud (University
of Amsterdam, The Netherlands), Dianne Scott (University of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa), Eric
Denis (Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), France)
5
Smartness for whom? The social impacts of cities’ smartness. Evidence from Southern
Europe – Davide Caselli (University of Turin, Italy)
64
W3│FOR S8
Middle classes and the politics of space in transforming cities
(1)
See also: 90
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/64
Affiliation
UGRG
Convenors
Ryan Centner, Claire Mercer, Hyun Bang Shin (London School of Economics
and Political Science, UK)
Chair
Hyun Bang Shin (London School of Economics and Political Science, UK)
1
Urban middle classes in middle-income countries: Stages, projects, and tactics of
transformation – Ryan Centner (London School of Economics and Political Science, UK)
2
"New Middle Class" and Politics of Space in Gezi Uprising – Aykut Kılıç (Istanbul Technical
University, Turkey)
3
Fractured mobility: SkyTrain and the politics of the middle class in Bangkok – Petchpilai
Lattanan, Pushpa Arabindoo (University College 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
65
18:45–
Local belonging and the dynamics of change to places
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/65
W3│FOR S9
Affiliation
PERG
Convenor and chair
Patrick Devine-Wright (University of Exeter, UK)
1
Stewardship and place: the role of commitment and contribution in local belonging –
Sophie Yarker (Newcastle University, UK)
2
Elective belonging and the region: WH Auden in Rookhope – John Tomaney (University
College London, UK)
3
Placing the people: Localism and neighbourhood planning – Jane Wills (Queen Mary
University of London, UK)
4
Mapping common ground: from Parish Mapping to Ecosystem Services – Patrick DevineWright (University of Exeter, UK), Rob Fish (University of Kent, UK), Susana Batel (Cis-IUL,
University Institute of Lisbon, Portugal / University of Exeter, UK), Jos Smith (University of Exeter,
UK)
5
Beyond a "structural" approach to the study of varieties of people-place relations – a
narrative interview study – Etienne Bailey, Patrick Devine-Wright (University of Exeter, UK),
Susana Batel (Cis-IUL, University Institute of Lisbon, Portugal / University of Exeter, UK)
66
W3│FOR S10
Suspending the Anthropocene (1) Impasse, Lost Futures, Déjà
vu
See also: 92
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/66
Affiliation
HPGRG
Convenors
Maan Barua, Joe Gerlach, Thomas Jellis (University of Oxford, UK)
Chair
Thomas Jellis (University of Oxford, UK)
1
Suspending subjectivity in the Anthropocene: themes of impasse, independence and cruel
optimism in the passive present – Jonathan Pugh (Newcastle University, UK)
2
Salmon-netting on the Tweed: regulating a co-evolved ‘nature’ for the Anthropocene –
Tessa Holland (Newcastle University, UK)
3
Déjà-vu: the Anthropocene in the registers of contemporary artists – Bergit Arends (Royal
Holloway, University of London, UK)
4
Enfolded Futures – Julian Brigstocke (Cardiff University, UK)
5
Suspending the Anthropocene – Maan Barua, Joe Gerlach, Thomas Jellis (University of
Oxford, UK)
67
Geographies of risk, health and wellbeing
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/67
W3│FOR S11
Affiliation
GHRG
Convenors
Matthew Callender (University of Northampton, UK), Ailie Tam (University of
East Anglia, UK)
Chair
Ailie Tam (University of East Anglia, 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
Exploring different geographical and organisational understandings of risk when
supporting ‘at risk’ families – Matthew Callender, Judith Sixsmith (University of Northampton,
UK), Mei Lan Fang (Simon Fraser University, Canada)
2
Shaping the family: anti-obesity discourses and family life – Louise MacAllister (University of
Exeter, UK)
3
Improving health outcomes in coastal southwest Madagascar: integrating family planning
services with fisheries management and alternative livelihood initiatives – Laura Robson,
Vik Mohan, Caroline Savitzky, Charlotte Gough (Blue Ventures)
4
Exploration of HIV risk environments in rural south western Uganda – Ailie Tam (University
of East Anglia, UK)
5
Discussant – Judith Sixsmith (University of Northampton, UK)
68
The Metropocene: radical challenge or business as usual?
W3│NEW LTA
See also:
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/68
Convenors and chairs
Simon Marvin (Durham University, UK), Mark Whitehead (Aberystwyth
University, UK)
1
Urbanatura: A Material Geopolitics for the Urbanthropocene – Timothy Luke (Virginia
Polytechnic Institute & State University, USA)
2
Panel Discussion – Simon Marvin (Durham University, UK), Mark Whitehead (Aberystwyth
University, UK), Timothy Luke (Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State University, USA), Aidan
While (University of Sheffield, UK), Rob Krueger (Worcester Polytechnic Institute, USA)
69
Communism and catastrophe (1): Panel Discussion
W3│NEW LTB
See also: 95
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/69
Convenor and chair
Arun Saldanha (University of Minnesota, USA)
1
Panel Discussion – Anja Kanngieser (Goldsmiths, University of London, UK), Kathryn Yusoff
(Queen Mary University of London, UK), David Featherstone (University of Glasgow, UK), Keith
Woodward (University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA)
70
Materialising (geo-)politics (1): Bodies/affects/nature
W3│NEW LTCD
See also: 96
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/70
Affiliation
PolGRG
Convenors
Jason Dittmer (University College London, UK), Martin Muller (University of
Zurich, Switzerland)
Chair
Jason Dittmer (University College London, UK)
1
Affect Theories to Analyse Extraordinary Rendition – Oriane Simon (University of New South
Wales in Canberra)
2
Foreclosing intra-active collective politics through technocracy: the British response to
Ash Dieback – Judith Tsouvalis (The University of Nottingham, UK)
3
Lookout Armageddon: Battlefield Landscapes and the Geopolitical Imaginations of
Christian Zionists – Tristan Sturm (Queen's University Belfast, 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–
71
Urban Transport Visions and Pathways
W3│NEW LTE
See also:
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/71
Affiliation
TGRG
Convenors
Miles Tight (University of Birmingham, UK), Paul Timms (University of Leeds,
UK)
Chair
Paul Timms (University of Leeds, UK)
1
Imaginary Lines metro network: a vision with possible applications in urban planning –
Anastasia Zoi Souliotou (Paris 8 University, France), Theodore Tsekeris (Centre of Planning and
Economic Research (KEPE), Greece)
2
Going Dutch? model-based visions of the – Robin Lovelace (University of Leeds, UK)
3
Future Resilience in Urban Transport – Nik Lomax, Ian Phillips, Leon Black, Gary Graham,
Apollo Apollo Tutesigensi, Tim Cockerill (University of Leeds, UK)
4
Visions from the past: an exploration of historical views of urban transport futures – Paul
Timms (University of Leeds, UK), Miles Tight, Fiona Rajé (University of Birmingham, UK)
5
The car-free city – utopian future or a step too far? – Miles Tight (University of Birmingham,
UK), Paul Timms (University of Leeds, UK), Fiona Rajé (University of Birmingham, UK)
72
The Ends of Geography’s Worlds (1)
W3│NEW LTF
See also: 98
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/72
Affiliation
HPGRG
Convenor and chair
Derek McCormack (University of Oxford, UK)
1
Of origins and endings: deconstructing the refrain of the "end of the world" – Pepe
Romanillos (University of Exeter, UK)
2
Another world is impossible: geophilosophy after Deleuze, Guattari, Baudrillard, and
Badiou – Marcus Doel (Swansea University, UK)
3
The World as Phantasm: decentering cartographic reason – J. D. Dewsbury (University of
Bristol, UK), Scott Sharpe (University of New South Wales, Australia)
4
Microbial Worlds and the Deconstruction of Anthropocentric Spacetime – Astrid Schrader
(University of Exeter, UK)
5
"There is no world, there are only islands" – John Wylie (University of Exeter, UK)
73
Community, agriculture and development (1)
W3│PCC 1.1
See also: 99
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/73
Chair
David Simm (Bath Spa University, UK)
1
Development of a new approach to classifying and evaluating forest development, using
Environmental Impact Assessment – Peter Sang-Hoon Lee, Sanghyuk Lee, Sol Ae Lee,
Seung Yong Ji, Jaeyong Choi (Chungnam National University, South Korea)
2
The role and innovative potential of community gardens and community supported
agriculture in Wales for sustainable transitions – Tezcan Mert-Cakal (Cardiff 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–
3
Environmental Changes at the forest fringe of a fragmented forest: case of Bukit Timah
Nature Reserve, Singapore – Kalyani Chatterjea (Nanyang Technological University,
Singapore)
4
Watershed delineation of the Brahmani river basin using GIS and image processing
technology – Anamika Singh, Nupur Bose (Anugrah Narayan College, India), Adlul Islam (Indian
Council of Agricultural Research, India)
5
Drought Assessment in North Karnataka, India – A. S. Rayamane, Ashok Hanjagi,
Balakrishnan Manikiam (Bangalore University, India)
74
Governance and development
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/74
W3│PCC 1.4
Chair
Emma Mawdsley (University of Cambridge, UK)
1
Assembling adaptation: A critical examination of consultants and how they shape the way
government plans for a changing climate – Svenja Keele (University of Melbourne, Australia)
2
A critical geopolitical approach to the study of diplomacy: the making of collective
EUropean foreign policy in Kenya – Veit Bachmann (Goethe University Frankfurt, Germany)
3
Sexual Violence in Conflict and India's Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act Quagmire –
Rituparna Bhattacharyya (Alliance for Community Capacity Building in North East India)
4
The Future of DFID: Domestic and international challenges/opportunities for the UK –
Emma Mawdsley (University of Cambridge, UK)
5
Dealing with the threats from within: insider threats and the securitisation policy agenda –
Denis Fischbacher-Smith (University of Glasgow, UK)
75
Migration, labour and livelihood
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/75
W3│PCC 1.5
Chair
Sharon McLennan (Massey University, New Zealand)
1
Urbanising the Highlands of Western China: New Livelihoods, Mobilities, and Social
Structures – Ingo Breuer (Sichuan University, China)
2
The Rise and Fall of the Migration Industry: The Case of Recruitment Companies for
Agricultural Labor Migration from Thailand to Israel – Yahel Ash Kurlander (Haifa University,
Israel/Zürich University, Switzerland.)
3
Male Out-Migration and Work Participation of Woman: A Case Study of Khul Gad Micro
Watershed of Kumoun Himalaya – Suman Singh (Banaras Hindu University, India)
4
Global work and the contact zone: Exploring development voluntourism in Honduras and
Fiji – Sharon McLennan (Massey University, New Zealand)
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
76
Evening
18:45–
Climate change and local knowledges
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/76
W3│PCC 1.6
Chair
Nina Laurie (Newcastle University, UK)
1
Narratives for climate adaptation and response and indigenous peoples on the Great
Barrier Reef catchments – Ilisapeci Lyons, Rosemary Hill, Cathy Robinson (CSIRO), Gerry
Turpin (Department of science, information technology, innovation and the arts, Australia),
Samarla Deshong (Koinmerburra Aboriginal Corporation, Australia), Gary Mooney (Yuwibara
Aboriginal Corporation)
2
Adapting to climate change in shifting landscapes of belief – Conor Murphy (National
University of Ireland, Maynooth, Ireland), Mavuto Tembo (Mzuzu University, Malawi), Adrian
Phiri, Olusegun Yerokun (Mulungushi University, Zambia), Bernie Grummell (National University
of Ireland Maynooth, Ireland)
3
Questioning el Niño disaster narratives: sediment episodes, archives and community
stories from Northern Peru – Nina Laurie, Andrew Henderson (Newcastle University, UK),
Mario Morellón Marteles (Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Spain)
4
Rethinking Agricultural Research from Farmers' Perspective: A Case from Turkey – Zuhre
Aksoy, Özlem Öz (Boğaziçi University, Turkey)
5
Environmental Protection, Traditional Knowledge and International Institutions: The Case
of Genetic Resources – Zuhre Aksoy (Bogazici University, Turkey)
77
Ecological Restoration in the Anthropocene
W3│PCC 2.1
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/77
Convenors
Jonathan Prior (Cardiff University, UK), Laura Smith (University of Exeter, UK)
Chair
Kim Ward (Plymouth University, UK)
1
The ethical entanglements of re-wilding the skies: Osprey nest-building in Scotland – Ben
Garlick (University of Edinburgh, UK)
2
Towards autonomous nature through rewilding? An assessment of the Scottish beaver
reintroduction trial – Kim Ward (Plymouth University, UK), Jonathan Prior (Cardiff University,
UK)
3
What is the place of human values in restoring environments? – Ella Furness (Cardiff
University, UK)
4
Anticipate redemption: Theo-ethical entanglements in Glen Canyon restoration – Laura
Smith (University of Exeter, UK)
78
An ontology of tourism transport
W3│PCC 2.4
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/78
Affiliation
GLTRG
Convenors
James Johnson, Sharon Wilson (University of Sunderland, UK)
Chair
James Johnson (University of Sunderland, UK)
1
Infrastructures of Intensities – Annika Staehle (University of Hamburg, Germany)
2
Rethinking tourism mobilities as political – Anna de Jong (University of Wollongong,
Australia)
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
Body Waving: The Embodied Rhythm in Elephant Riding Experience – Qingming Cui,
Honggang Xu (Sun Yat-sen University, China)
4
Going off the rails: transgendered discourses of mobility and landscape in train travel –
Sian Taylder (University of Exeter, UK)
5
Contagious Atmosphere – Ming Lin (Lancaster University, UK)
79
Elsevier Editor Speed Review Sessions (3)
W3│PCC 2.5
See also: 25, 51, 105
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/79
80
W3│PCC 1.2&3
Geographies of Amateur Creativities: Spaces, Practices and
Experiences (1)
See also: 106
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/80
Affiliation
SCGRG, HGRG
Convenors
Katie Boxall, Cara Gray (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
Chair
Katie Boxall (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
1
Woolly-hats and Rivet-counters Revisited: articulating a new understanding of
enthusiastic world-making – Hilary Geoghegan (University of Reading, UK)
2
The glue that binds: ecologies of the knitting circle – Joanna Mann (University of Bristol, UK)
3
Clothing literacy: Exploring amateur practice through the wardrobes of young adults –
Elyse Stanes (University of Wollongong, Australia)
4
The Shifting Grounds of Play and Work: Urban Gardening Practices in London – Jan van
Duppen (Open University, UK)
81
Postgraduate research in Energy Geographies
W3│PCC 2.2&3
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/81
Affiliation
PGF, EnGRG
Convenors
Llinos Brown (University of Central Lancashire, UK), Erin Roberts (Cardiff
University, UK)
Chair
Karen Parkhill (University of York, UK)
1
The Sustainability of the Unfit: The transition of Estonian energy system and the
dominance of oil shale – Jani Lukkarinen (University of Eastern Finland, Finland)
2
Creating a "Secure" Energy Landscape: Governing Flows of Natural Gas in the UK
Transmission and Distribution Systems – Peter Forman (Durham University, UK)
3
Discourses of Energy Systems Justice: Impressions from the Nuclear System – Kirsten
Jenkins (University of St Andrews, UK)
4
Community energy on Tyneside: an attempt to kickstart activity in 2 low income areas –
Craig Woolf (Heriot-Watt University, UK)
5
Consequences of oil exploration and exploitation in the Niger Delta Nigeria – Emmah Etim
Ima (University of Birmingham, UK)
RGS-IBG Grants for Postgraduates
A range of grants are available each year for postgraduate students carrying out
geographical research, in the UK or overseas.
Information on all grants available can be found at www.rgs.org/grants
RGS-IBG Postgraduate Research
Awards – Deadline 23 November
each year
Several awards of £2,000 for PhD
students conducting fieldwork/ data
collection in physical environment;
conservation/ sustainability; or
society/ economy.
Hong Kong Research Grant –
Deadline 23 November each year
£2,500 for research by
postgraduates in the Greater China
region.
Geographical Club Award –
Deadline 23 November each year
£1,000 for a postgraduate student to
undertake fieldwork or data
Collection
Henrietta Hutton Research Grants
– Deadline 18 January each year
Two fieldwork grants of £500 for
undergraduate or
postgraduate students.
Monica Cole Research Grant –
Deadline 18 January each year
£1,000 for a physical
geographer undertaking original
fieldwork overseas.
Geographical Fieldwork
Grants – Deadline 31 January
each year
Several awards of up to £3,000 for
students working in teams of 3 or more on
overseas fieldwork.
Dudley Stamp Memorial Award –
22 February each year
Several awards of up to £500 for
PhD students or early career
researchers undertaking research
overseas.
Slawson Awards – Deadline 22
February each year
Two to three awards of up to £3,000
for PhD students conducting
overseas research on development
issues.
Frederick Soddy Award –
Deadline 18 January each year
Up to £6,000 to support a PhD
student/group of PhD students carrying
out fieldwork/research on ‘the study
of the social, economic, and cultural
life of a region’, anywhere in the world.
E: [email protected] W: www.rgs.org/grants
Wed
82
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
Evening
18:45–
Antipode Lecture
W4│FOR LT
1
Session 1
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/82
Offshore Humanism – Paul Gilroy (King's College London, UK)
83
W4│FOR S1
Floods in a Changing Climate: Science, Politics and
Transformation
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/83
Convenors
Catherine Butler, Neil Adger (University of Exeter, UK)
Chair
Neil Adger (University of Exeter, UK)
1
The December 2013 storm surge on the North Norfolk Coast: impacts and responses –
Irene Lorenzoni, Marisa Goulden, James Waters (University of East Anglia, UK)
2
Exploring the dynamics of change in the aftermath of crisis: The case of the 2013/14
winter floods – Catherine Butler, Kate Walker-Springett (University of Exeter, UK)
3
Battening down the hatches: How extreme events shape decision-making for short-term
and long-term adaptation planning – Tara Quinn, Katrina Brown (University of Exeter, UK)
4
The experience of flooding and its influence on climate change perceptions – Christina
Demski, Stuart Capstick, Nick Pidgeon (Cardiff University, UK)
5
Sharing the pain: perceptions of fairness affect private and public response to hazards –
Neil Adger, Tara Quinn (University of Exeter, UK), Irene Lorenzoni (University of East Anglia,
UK), Conor Murphy (National University of Ireland, Maynooth, Ireland)
6
Floods in a Changing Climate: Science, Politics and Transformation - Discussion – Neil
Adger (University of Exeter, UK)
84
W4│FOR S2
Wet Geographies II: Water in the Anthropocene: creative
approaches to understanding and re-thinking human-water
relationships (Discourses and engagement) (2)
See also: 30, 58
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/84
Convenors
Liz Roberts, Katherine Jones (University of the West of England, UK)
Chair
Liz Roberts (University of the West of England, UK)
1
Re-envisioning the Hydro Cycle: The Hydro Spiral as a Participatory Tool for Water
Education and Management – Rebecca Farnum (King's College London, UK), Ruth MacDougall
(University of East Anglia, UK), Charlie Thompson (USGS)
2
Waste not… How water reuse may be shifting our relationship to sewage – Heather M.
Smith, Daniel Goodwin (Cranfield University, UK), Jos Frijns (KWR Watercycle Research
Institute, Netherlands)
3
Lt. Breaker Morant and The Baron’s Chair: Materiality, Memory and Exclusion in an
Australian Water Community – Lia Bryant (University of South Australia, Australia)
4
Experiences of "Mundane" and "Crisis" Water(s): Challenging social practice theory’s
exclusion of "water" in accounts of water demand – Alison Browne, Claire Hoolohan
(University of Manchester, UK)
5
Swimming as Healthy Blue Space Practice – Ronan Foley (National University of Ireland,
Maynooth, 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
85
Evening
18:45–
Global agricultural networks: configurations and implications
W4│FOR S3
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/85
Affiliation
RGRG
Convenor and chair
Imogen Bellwood-Howard (Georg-August University Göttingen, Germany)
1
"Nobody likes to be dismissed": rethinking human value in global agricultural networks –
Natascha Klocker, Olivia Dun, Lesley Head (University of Wollongong, Australia)
2
U.S. Organic Dairy Politics: ‘Check-off’ shows farmer-processor-marketer positionality in
the Global North & South – Bruce Scholten (Durham University, UK)
3
Biofuel Networks in Karnataka, India – Rebecca Enderby (King's College London, UK)
4
Multiscalar Networks in Urban Vegetable Production – Imogen Bellwood-Howard (GeorgAugust University Göttingen, Germany)
5
Power and Place in the Global Sugar Assemblage – Michael Woods (Aberystwyth University,
UK)
86
Children and Nature in the Anthropocene (4): Impacts of young
people connecting with nature
W4│FOR S4
See also: 6, 32, 60, 173
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/86
Affiliation
GCYFRG
Convenors
Frances Harris (University of Hertfordshire, UK), Roger Cutting (Plymouth
University, UK), Sue Waite (Plymouth University, UK)
Chair
Frances Harris (University of Hertfordshire, UK)
1
When Love of the Countryside Becomes Love of the Country: The Political Manipulation of
Young People Through Environmental Engagement – Roger Cutting (Plymouth University,
UK)
2
Plotting GeoBioCultural Relations through Bioregional and Place Based Education – Alun
Morgan (Plymouth University, UK)
3
Sources contributing to experiences that shape the meanings children place on nature –
Doreen Jodhan, Priya Kissoon (University of the West Indies, West Indies)
4
Integrating the Physical and Psychological: Adolescent Experiences of a Therapeutic
Wilderness – Jennifer Pipitone, Chitra Raghavan (City University of New York, USA)
5
Fit for purpose: reviewing natural benefits for children, families and young people – Sue
Waite (Plymouth University, UK)
87
Risk and Complexity in Finance and Beyond (2) Working with
Complexity
W4│FOR S5
See also: 61
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/87
Affiliation
EGRG
Convenors
Philip Garnett (University of York, UK), John H. Morris (Durham University,
UK)
Chair
John H. Morris (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–
1
Cybernetics and Crises in Urban Capitalist Production – Spencer Cox (University of
Minnesota, USA)
2
Total Systemic Failure? – Philip Garnett (University of York, UK)
3
Governing riots through risk: a complex genealogy – Vanessa Schofield (Durham University,
UK)
88
Beyond gateways cities: immigrants’ local incorporation
pathways in small and medium-sized cities (2) Migration
beyond gateways cities: medium-sized cities and metropolitan
outskirts
W4│FOR S6
See also: 62
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/88
Convenors
Eduardo Barberis (University of Urbino Carlo Bo, Italy), Adriano Cancellieri
(Università IUAV di Venezia, Italy), Roberta Marzorati (University of MilanoBicocca, Italy)
Chair
Roberta Marzorati (University of Milano-Bicocca, Italy)
1
Dealing with diversity in the periphery. Exploring the arrival and transition infrastructure in
a small city on the outskirts of Brussels – Elise Schillebeeckx (Catholic University of Leuven /
University of Antwerp, Belgium)
2
Types and perceptions of diversity. A comparison between three different
neighbourhoods in Antwerp – Ympkje Albeda, Stijn Oosterlynck, Gert Verschraegen
(University of Antwerp, Belgium)
3
At the Margins of the City. Immigrants and Minorities Segregation Patterns in Stockholm,
Sweden – Jonathan Rokem (University College London, UK)
4
Arriving in Burgos: migrants in a Northern Spanish city – Luis Garzón (Universidad de
Burgos, Spain)
5
Incorporating through economic-political cooperation? Governance, policy and immigrant
entrepreneurship in two medium-sized cities in Germany – Charlotte Raeuchle, Henning
Nuissl (Humboldt-University Berlin, Germany)
89
W4│FOR S7
Urban Sustainabilities (2): interrogating sustainable urban
designs
See also: 63
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/89
Convenors
Federico Caprotti (King's College London, UK), Federico Cugurullo (University
of Manchester, UK)
Chair
Federico Cugurullo (University of Manchester, UK)
1
Traditional architecture VS high-tech urban design in eco-city projects: the challenge of
Masdar City – Federico Cugurullo (University of Manchester, UK)
2
Sustainable building approaches in two city regions – A discursive inquiry of policy
legitimation strategies – Bérénice Jung (University of Luxembourg, Luxembourg)
3
Sustainable transport design in Curitiba’s BRT system – Elena Bonicelli, Brian Deal
(University of Illinois, 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
Evening
18:45–
4
"Eco-" by design, "eco-" by practice? A qualitative study of urban design and everyday life
in two eco-developments in the Sydney metropolitan area – Alasdair Jones (London School
of Economics and Political Science, UK), Susan Parham (University of Hertfordshire, UK)
5
The “eco” and “low-carbon” cities agenda and the pursuit of sustainable urban
development: a critical review of experience in Europe and China – Olivia Bina, Luis Balula
(University of Lisbon, Portugal)
90
Middle classes and the politics of space in transforming cities
(2)
W4│FOR S8
See also: 64
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/90
Affiliation
UGRG
Convenors
Ryan Centner, Claire Mercer, Hyun Bang Shin (London School of Economics
and Political Science, UK)
Chair
Ryan Centner (London School of Economics and Political Science, UK)
1
Urban middle class(es) shifting moralities in neoliberal Buenos Aires – Carolina Sternberg
(DePaul University, USA)
2
Postcolonial suburbia: the middle classes in Dar es Salaam – Claire Mercer (London School
of Economics and Political Science, UK)
3
Challenging the white suburban nexus. Belonging in the multicultural suburb – Alan Mace
(London School of Economics and Political Science, UK)
4
How suburban space reshapes racial issues in a black, middle class suburb in the United
States – Greg Smithsimon (Brooklyn College, USA)
91
City-Region Building: Process, Practice, People, Politics
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/91
W4│FOR S9
Convenors
Martin Jones (University of Sheffield, UK), Ian Rees Jones (Cardiff University,
UK)
Chair
Martin Jones (University of Sheffield, UK)
1
Variegated city regionalisms: the geopolitics of city-region building – Andrew E. G. Jonas
(University of Hull, UK), Sami Moisio (University of Helsinki, Finland)
2
Agglomeration economics and the emerging politics of multiple spatial imaginaries in
northern England – Graham Haughton, Iain Deas, Stephen Hincks (University of Manchester,
UK)
3
Governing beyond the metropolis: placing the rural in city-region development – John
Harrison (Loughborough University, UK), Jesse Heley (Aberystwyth University, UK)
4
Spaces of new localism: civil society stakeholder engagement and economic development
– Martin Jones (University of Sheffield, UK), David Beel (University of Aberdeen, UK), Ian Rees
Jones (Cardiff University, UK)
5
Metro-politics and the framing of city-region interdependencies: challenges in the
development of the Cardiff Capital Region – David Waite, Gillian Bristow, Adrian Healy
(Cardiff 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
92
W4│FOR S10
Suspending the Anthropocene (2) Or, Cannibalizing the
Holocene, Panel Session
See also: 66
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/92
Affiliation
HPGRG
Convenors
Maan Barua, Joe Gerlach, Thomas Jellis (University of Oxford, UK)
Chair
Joe Gerlach (University of Oxford, UK)
1
18:45–
Panel Session – Eduardo Viveiros de Castro (University of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil), Maan Barua,
Thomas Jellis (University of Oxford, UK)
93
The Urban Governmentalities of Forced Migration
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/93
W4│FOR S11
Affiliation
PolGRG, UGRG
Convenors
Jonathan Darling, Lucas Oesch (University of Manchester, UK)
Chair
Jonathan Darling (University of Manchester, UK)
1
The production of campscapes: Palestinian refugee camps and informal settlements in
Beirut – Diana Martin (University of Portsmouth, UK)
2
The variegated geography of the urban arrival infrastructure and its potential for
emancipatory newcomer policies – Bruno Meeus (KU Leuven, Belgium)
3
The refugee camp as a space of multiple ambiguities – Lucas Oesch (University of
Manchester, UK)
4
Time on the street: Refused asylum seekers and the politics of abandonment – Mark
Rainey (Goldsmiths, University of London / Queen Mary, University of London, UK)
5
Exercising the right to the city - the challenge for urban slum dwellers – Aisling O'Loghlen
(Heriot-Watt University, UK)
94
Hoyle Lecture
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/94
W4│NEW LTA
Affiliation
TGRG
Convenor
Karen Lucas (University of Leeds, UK)
1
Transport, technology and the Anthropocene: views from the periphery – Gina Porter
(Durham University, UK)
95
Communism and Catastrophe (2): Panel Discussion
W4│NEW LTB
See also: 69
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/95
Convenor and chair
Arun Saldanha (University of Minnesota, USA)
1
Panel Discussion – Sue Ruddick (University of Toronto, Canada), Noel Castree (University of
Wollongong, Australia), Nigel Clark (Lancaster University, UK), Andrew Baldwin (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–
96
Materialising (geo-)politics (2): Security/war/governance
W4│NEW LTCD
See also: 70
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/96
Affiliation
PolGRG
Convenors
Jason Dittmer (University College London, UK), Martin Muller (University of
Zurich, Switzerland)
Chair
Andrew Barry (University College London, UK)
1
Engineering the Earth: Planetary Geoengineering and Geo-Politics – Rory Rowan
(University of Zurich, Switzerland)
2
Securing Natural Gas Flows: The Political Geographies of vital materials in transit – Peter
Forman (Durham University, UK)
3
Madreterra, Mother-earth, Motherland: Precarity, nativism and crisis in the new
borderlands of Fortress Europe – Alessandro Tiberio (University of California, Berkeley, USA)
4
Scorched Earth: The Violent Geopolitical Legacies of the Vietnam War – Ian Shaw
(University of Glasgow, UK)
5
Transnational militarism: Everyday diplomacies of interoperability in NATO – Jason Dittmer
(University College London, UK)
97
W4│NEW LTE
Grid networks: understanding the dynamics of public
acceptance across European contexts
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/97
Affiliation
EnGRG
Convenors
Patrick Devine-Wright (University of Exeter, UK), Susana Batel (Cis-IUL,
University Institute of Lisbon, Portugal / University of Exeter, UK), Jarry
Porsius (Free University Amsterdam), Silke Rühmland (IZES gGmbH,
Germany)
Chair
Patrick Devine-Wright (University of Exeter, UK)
1
"Uncertainty trolls" in high voltage grid development: regulatory strategies and public
opposition – Marte Qvenhild, Gerd Jacobsen (SINTEF Energy Research, Norway)
2
Explaining public acceptance of UK transmission grid development – combining place and
project-based research pathways – Etienne Bailey, Patrick Devine-Wright (University of Exeter,
UK), Susana Batel (Cis-IUL, University Institute of Lisbon, Portugal / University of Exeter, UK)
3
Acceptance of new transmission lines - results of a longitudinal case study in Lower
Saxony, Germany – Silke Rühmland (IZES gGmbH, Germany), Maximillian Mueller (WHU Otto
Beisheim School of Management, Germany), Jan Hildebrand, Irina Rau (IZES gGmbH,
Germany), Petra Schweizer-Ries (IZES gGmbH, Germany / University of Applied Sciences,
Bochum, Germany)
4
“I’m a NIMBY”, “we are all NIMBYs” or “we are custodians of this area”? The different
uses of NIMBY as a discursive resource for members of local communities to negotiate
responses to high voltage power lines in the UK – Susana Batel (Cis-IUL, University Institute
of Lisbon, Portugal / University of Exeter, UK), Patrick Devine-Wright (University of Exeter, UK)
5
My neighbourhood, my country or my planet? Investigating the influence of multiple place
attachments upon public attitudes to electricity infrastructures and intentions to protest
local siting – Patrick Devine-Wright (University of Exeter, UK), Susana Batel (Cis-IUL, University
Institute of Lisbon, Portugal / University of Exeter, 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
98
The Ends of Geography’s Worlds (2)
W4│NEW LTF
See also: 72
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/98
Affiliation
HPGRG
Convenor and chair
Derek McCormack (University of Oxford, UK)
Evening
18:45–
1
World Grammars: The Politics of Comparison in Post 9/11 Novels – Angharad Closs
Stephens (Durham University, UK)
2
The tropistic unity of individual & world after Gilbert Simondon – Tom Keating (University of
Bristol, UK)
3
The Fire Machine and the Cinder World – Paul Harrison (Durham University, UK)
99
Community, agriculture and development (2)
W4│PCC 1.1
See also: 73
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/99
Chair
Clare Tompsett (University of Bergen, Norway)
1
Analysis of Floods in Northern Karnataka, India using Remote Sensing – Ashok Hanjagi, A.
S. Rayamane, Balakrishnan Manikiam (Bangalore University, India)
2
The political numbers and paper boundaries of top-down decentralisation: What size for a
community forest? – Clare Tompsett, Keshav Paudel (University of Bergen, Norway)
3
The uneven playing field of civil society conservation areas in the Peruvian Amazon:
motivations and the politics of the application process – Judith Schleicher (University of
Cambridge, UK)
4
Satellite Applications for Climate Change Studies with Special Reference to Agriculture –
Balakrishnan Manikiam, Ashok Hanjagi, A. S. Rayamane (Bangalore University, India)
100
Geographies of art and media
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/100
W4│PCC 1.4
Chair
James Ryan (University of Exeter, UK)
1
Physiological architecture: Spaces that remind us of interdependency – Lucy Jones (Centre
for Alternative Technology, UK)
2
Inside Out: The study of Contemporary Western Esoteric Theatre from the Inside Space –
Alison Rockbrand (University of Exeter, UK)
3
Curating the Anthropocene through journalism – Dominic Hinde (University of Edinburgh,
UK)
4
The essence of Kalastajatorppa revisited: A cinematographic journey into time and space
– Matti Itkonen (University of Jyväskylä, Finland)
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
101
Evening
18:45–
GIS and the Anthropocene: Educational Perspectives
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/101
W4│PCC 1.5
Affiliation
HERG, GIScRG
Convenors
Patrick Rickles, Claire Ellul (University College London, UK)
Chair
Claire Ellul (University College London, UK)
1
Fostering Cross-Curricular Application of GIS in Schools – Sara Price, Paul Davies, Patrick
Rickles (University College London, UK), Rich Treves (University of Southampton, UK), Muki
Haklay (University College London, UK)
2
Evolving Technology, Shifting Expectations, Cultivating Pedagogy for a Rapidly Changing
GIS Landscape – Britta Ricker, Jim Thatcher (University of Washington Tacoma, USA)
3
The Role of 'New GIS' in Geography Curriculum Development in Schools – Mary Fargher
(University College London, UK)
4
BeniAtlas: A Platform for Learning about the City – Elisabeth van Overbeeke (University of
Waterloo, Canada), Othy Vitswamba (Christian Bilingual University of Congo, DR Congo), Archip
Lobo (BeniAtlas Project)
5
Teaching GIS to Interdisciplinary Researchers – GIS Lessons For You – Patrick Rickles,
Claire Ellul (University College London, UK)
102
Urban planning
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/102
W4│PCC 1.6
Chair
Claudia Carter (Birmingham City University, UK)
1
Subaltern And Non Statutory Urbanisation Of India in Contemporary Urban Theory, Policy
and Praxis – Anupreet Singh Tiwana (Punjabi University, India)
2
Assessing the potential for ecosystem-based thinking at the landscape scale focusing on
city regions – Claudia Carter (Birmingham City University, UK)
3
Social impacts of urban growth in a rapidly developing country – China – Jianquan Cheng,
Craig Young (Manchester Metropolitan University, UK), Qiyan Wu (Nanjing Normal University,
China), Jie Zhou (Wuhan University, China)
4
Saudi Arabia’s neoliberal urban mega-projects: Catalysts for social change? – Sarah Moser
(McGill University, Canada)
5
A study on urban morphological up gradation for G9 Markaz Islamabad – Javaria Manzoor
Shaikh (Hanyang University, South Korea), Faisal Arshad (COMSATS, Islamabad), Mahwish
Khuwaja Ghulam Rasool (Indus Valley School Karachi, Pakistan)
6
An analysis of factors affecting Community Participation in Planning Processes of
Emerging Urban Centres of Paidha Town in Northern Uganda - Kayom Wilson, (Independent
Researcher
103
Health, environment and migration
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/103
W4│PCC 2.1
Chair
Sarah Curtis (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–
1
Relocation, relocation: Perspectives towards the spatio-temporal impacts of transitioning
health services in Staffordshire – Stephen Axon (Liverpool Hope University, UK)
2
‘This weather always gets me down’: patients’ reflections on the role of the natural
environment as risk factor and curative agent for mental health – Nicole Baur (University of
Exeter, UK)
3
Health as an indicator of the paradox of the globalization: risks and wellbeing of migrants
in Almería (Andalusia, Spain) – Betty Rouland (Université de Rouen, France/Faculté de Lettres
de Sfax, Tunisia)
4
Migration and childbearing – the case of Polish female migrants in Norway – Anna
Łobodzińska (Jagiellonian University, Poland)
There is no session 104
105
Elsevier Editor Speed Review Sessions (4)
W4│PCC 2.5
See also: 25, 51, 79
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/105
106
W4│PCC 1.2&3
Geographies of Amateur Creativities: Spaces, Practices and
Experiences (2)
See also: 80
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/106
Affiliation
SCGRG, HGRG
Convenors
Katie Boxall, Cara Gray (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
Chair
Cara Gray (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
1
The Haunted Spaces of Amateur Theatre: Immateriality, Materiality and Performative
Memories – Helen Nicholson (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
2
Making suburban faith: creativity and material culture in faith communities in West
London – Claire Dwyer, Nazneen Ahmed, Laura Cuch (University College London, UK), David
Gilbert, Natalie Hyacinth (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
3
Shifting Position: Pro-Am Movement – Nerida Godfrey (University of New South Wales,
Australia)
107
W4│PCC 2.2&3
Privilege in the Production of Geographies of Sexualities /
Queer Geographies
See also:
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/107
Affiliation
SSQRG
Convenor and chair
Robert M. Vanderbeck (University of Leeds, UK)
1
Panel Discussion – Kath Browne (University of Brighton, UK), Camila Bassi (Sheffield Hallam
University, UK), Joseli Maria Silva (Universidade Estadual Ponta Grossa, Brazil), John Paul
Catungal (University of British Columbia, Canada), Gavin Brown (University of Leicester, UK),
Joe Hall (University of Hull, UK)
Geography and Social Sciences
SPACING
IRELAND
PLACE, SOCIETY AND CULTURE IN A POST-BOOM ERA
CAROLINE CROWLEY AND DENIS LINEHAN
MUP are inviting proposals for monographs and other formats.
Please contact our editors:
Tom Dark: Urban Geography/Sociology, Cultural Geography/
Sociology, Environment, interdisciplinary Social Sciences
Emma Brennan: History/History of Art and Design
Matthew Frost: Cultural Studies
Tony Mason: Politics, International Relations, Political Economy
t: +44 (0)161 275 2310 f: +44 (0)161 275 7711 e: [email protected]
www.manchesteruniversitypress.co.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
108
Evening
18:45–
The Many Faces of Flooding: Policy, Science, and Art
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/108
WE│FOR LT
Convenors
Catherine Butler, Neil Adger, Saffron O'Neill, Kate Walker-Springett, Louisa
Evans (University of Exeter, UK)
Chair
Neil Adger (University of Exeter, UK)
1
Filmic art piece – Emma Critchley (Independent Artist)
2
Panel Debate: How are we as the UK effectively and fairly adapting and building resilience
to future flood events? – Daniel Johns (Committee on Climate Change), Sarah Curtis (Durham
University), David Wilkes (Arup UK), Steven Guilbert (Devon Maritime Forum/Devon County
Council), Sarah Diacono (Somerset County Council )
This event will be followed by a drinks reception in the Forum Street.
Antipode Drinks Reception
WE│DEV HALL
Hoyle Lecture drinks reception
Affiliation: TGRG
WE│PCC FOY
Energy Geographies Research Group AGM
Affiliation: EnGRG
WE│FOR S1
Developing Areas Research Group AGM
WE│FOR S2
Affiliation: DARG
Publishing
and Getting Read
A Guide for Researchers in Geography
• Advice about how to publish your
research in a wide range of forms;
• Think strategically about
publication profiles and plans;
• Understand your opportunities
and responsibilities as an author;
• How to get your published
research read.
Download your copy
www.rgs.org/guides
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–
Sessions – Thursday 3 September
109
Social and Cultural Geography Lecture
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/109
Th1│FOR LT
Convenor
1
Mary Gilmartin (National University of Ireland, Maynooth, Ireland)
Undulations of urban life: experiences and temporalities of growing up on the streets in
Accra, Ghana – Lorraine van Blerk (University of Dundee, UK)
110
Th1│FOR S1
Individual and collective imaginaries of energy: storying energy
in the past, present and future (1)
See also: 135
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/110
Affiliation
EnGRG
Convenors
Mel Rohse, Rosie Day (University of Birmingham, UK), Joe Smith (Open
University, UK)
Chair
Mel Rohse (University of Birmingham, UK)
1
Thrifty pleasures: telling energy efficiency narratives of older, lower income households –
Gordon Waitt, Kate Roggeveen, Ross Gordon, Katherine Butler, Paul Cooper (University of
Wollongong, Australia)
2
Living with Sellafield: stories of everyday nuclearity – Karen Bickerstaff (University of Exeter,
UK)
3
Imagining Fire: Wood-Sheds, Smoking Chimneys and Spatialities of Urban Heating
Practices in Latvia – Kristīne Krumberga, Dāvis Valters Immurs (University of Latvia, Latvia)
4
Co-creating stories of energy, place and everyday lives in South Wales – Rosie Day, Mel
Rohse (University of Birmingham, UK)
5
Trans-missions: walking an energy story along the powerlines of Herefordshire – Jess
Allen (Independent Artist)
111
Th1│FOR S2
Critical geographies of the sharing economy (1) Sharing
communities
See also: 136, 163
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/111
Affiliation
EGRG
Convenors
Ramon Ribera-Fumaz (Universitat Oberta de Catalunya, Spain), Filippo
Celata (University of Rome La Sapienza, Italy)
Chair
Filippo Celata (University of Rome La Sapienza, Italy)
1
Critical geographies of the sharing economy – Filippo Celata (University of Rome La
Sapienza, Italy), Ramon Ribera-Fumaz (Universitat Oberta de Catalunya, Spain)
2
Sharing for intentional de-growth – Helen Jarvis (Newcastle University, UK)
3
Is it all about sharing? Communities in the shadow of the sharing economy – Cary
Yungmee Hendrickson (University of Rome La Sapienza, Italy / Universitat Autonoma de
Barcelona, Spain), Venere Stefania Sanna (University of Roma La Sapienza, Italy)
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
The changing geographies of shared machine shops in the context of social history, the
Netherlands, 1999-2011 – Maxigas - (Universitat Oberta de Catalunya, Spain)
5
Exceeding the limits of the local: The trans-local spatiality and extra-local potential of local
community currencies – Phedeas Stephanides (University of East Anglia, UK)
112
Transitioning to Low Carbon Mobilities (1)
Th1│FOR S3
See also: 137
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/112
Affiliation
TGRG, GLTRG
Convenors
Debbie Hopkins, James Higham (University of Otago, New Zealand)
Chair
James Higham (University of Otago, New Zealand)
1
Considering the Future of Automobility in British Society: A qualitative analysis of
stakeholder focus group consultations – Craig Morton (University of Aberdeen, UK), Tom
Budd (Cranfield University, UK), Giulio Mattioli (University of Leeds, UK), Gillian Harrison
(European Commission), Lucy Mahoney (University of Oxford, UK)
2
How do we go from here? The consumption of the car and the pursuit of a low carbon
automobility – Jonathan Kershaw (Coventry University, UK)
3
A comparative analysis of current socio-technical systems and their potential transition to
electric mobility – Hanna Hüging, Thorsten Koska (Wuppertal Institute for Climate, Environment
and Energy, Germany)
4
Exploring low-carbon transport cultures in Chinese migrant households in Sydney,
Australia – Sophie-May Kerr (University of Wollongong, Australia)
5
A transition towards sharing – Anna Geurts (University of Sheffield, UK)
6
Non-drivers in a system of automobility – Debbie Hopkins (University of Otago, New Zealand)
113
Th1│FOR S4
Food Matters - Thinking through Food Justice and Sovereignty:
current debates and future trajectories
See also: 138, 165, 190
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/113
Affiliation
GJRG
Convenors and chairs
Agatha Herman (University of Reading, UK), Ana Moragues-Faus (Cardiff
University, UK)
1
Panel discussion – Julian Agyeman (Tufts University, USA), Megan Blake (University of
Sheffield, UK), Mike Goodman (University of Reading, UK), Moya Kneafsey (Coventry University,
UK), Paul Milbourne (Cardiff University, UK), Roberta Sonnino (Cardiff University, UK), Chiara
Tornaghi (University of Leeds, 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
114
18:45–
Place, Space and Conflict
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/114
Th1│FOR S5
Affiliation
CMRG
Convenor and chair
Jeremy Evans (University of Brighton, UK)
1
Governing marine protected areas: resilience through diversity – Peter Jones (University
College London, UK)
2
Diagnosing large-scale marine protected areas: A comparative analysis of the social,
ecological and institutional drivers of successful governance – Louisa Evans (University of
Exeter, UK)
3
Questioning Environmental Conflict: Considering Space and Place in Cooperation and
Peacebuilding – Rebecca Farnum (King's College London, UK)
4
"I don’t feel that the Tawe is part of Swansea": Reconnecting a river and its communities
through an Ecosystems Services based approach – Kate Evans (Swansea University, UK),
Winter Dotto (Swansea Environmental Forum, UK)
5
Local learning systems of the benthos: Low impact fishing Europe, (LIFE) labour
processes, space and conflict – Jeremy Evans (University of Brighton, UK)
115
Creative placemaking and beyond (1)
Th1│FOR S6
See also: 140
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/115
Convenors
Cara Courage (University of Brighton, UK), Anita McKeown (National College
of Art and Design, Ireland)
Chair
Cara Courage (University of Brighton, UK)
1
Challenging the Masterplan – Co-Design and Co-Production in the shadow of
Olympicopolis – Graeme Evans (Middlesex University, UK)
2
Temporary architecture as a contemporary typology for place making – Torange Khonsari
(Royal College of Art / London Metropolitan, UK)
3
Art led small social open spaces in Mumbai – Aditi Nargundkar Pathak, Prathima Manohar
(The Urban Vision, India)
4
Performing place; The mediating role of the arts and creativity in shaping social identities
in the rural – Marie Mahon (National University of Ireland, Galway, Ireland)
116
Domesticating Geopolitics (1)
Th1│FOR S7
See also: 141
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/116
Affiliation
SCGRG, PolGRG
Convenors
Tara Woodyer, Diana Martin (University of Portsmouth, UK), Sean Carter, Phil
Kirby (University of Exeter, UK)
Chair
Sean Carter (University of Exeter, UK)
1
Playing war: the action figure’s role in the domestic co-constitution of geopolitical
cultures – Tara Woodyer (University of Portsmouth, UK), Sean Carter (University of Exeter, UK),
Diana Martin (University of Portsmouth, 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
Securing Disunion: Nationalism, identity and (in)security in the campaign for an
independent Scotland – Kate Botterill, Peter Hopkins (Newcastle University, UK), Gurchathen
Sanghera (University of St Andrews, UK), Rowena Arshad (University of Edinburgh, UK)
3
Ephemera(l) geopolitics: the material cultures of British military recruitment – Matthew
Rech (Newcastle University, UK)
4
Paying homage to the "Heavenly Mother": intimate geopolitics of the Mazu Pilgrimage in
the midst of rapprochement between China and Taiwan – J J Zhang (University of Hong
Kong, China)
5
The everyday geopolitics of Space Shuttle mission patches – Andrew Maclaren (University
of Aberdeen, UK)
117
Th1│FOR S8
Being and becoming citizens: spaces of political engagement
(1)
See also: 142
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/117
Affiliation
GCYFRG, PolGRG
Convenors
Jonathan Duckett, Sarah Mills (Loughborough University, UK)
Chair
Sarah Mills (Loughborough University, UK)
1
Is 16 the new 18?: Our Nation, Our Future, Our Vote? – Jonathan Duckett (Loughborough
University, UK)
2
Revisiting "Interstitial" Political Identities: What are the possibilities of political
engagement for young people in Singapore? – Tracey Skelton (National University of
Singapore, Singapore)
3
Beyond the boundary: exploring the impacts of youth citizenship encounters on into
adulthood – Naomi Maynard (Durham University, UK)
4
Becoming a citizen in Zambia: Negotiating the ambiguity of the childhood to adulthood
transition – Caroline Day (University of Portsmouth, UK)
5
Childhood, political engagement and the politics of age: why do we always focus on the
teens? – Sevasti-Melissa Nolas, Christos Varvantakis, Vinnarasan Aruldoss (University of
Sussex, UK)
118
Exploring the Migration Industries (1)
Th1│FOR S9
See also: 143
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/118
Affiliation
PopGRG
Convenor and chair
Sophie Cranston (Loughborough University, UK)
1
‘Flexible’ workers for ‘flexible’ jobs? The influence of recruitment agency and employer
practices on the function of migrant labour in the UK – David McCollum, Allan Findlay
(University of St Andrews, UK)
2
The opaque role of skilled migrant intermediaries on reputation – William Harvey (University
of Exeter, UK), Dimitria Groutis, Diane Vandenbroek (University of Sydney, Australia)
3
Navigating Migration Industries: Fragmented Facilitations and Differentiated Im/Mobilities
in the Context of West African Migration to the EU – Joris Schapendonk (Radboud University
Nijmegen, The Netherlands)
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
How migration industries shape experiences of immigrants’ mobility in the Republic of
Cyprus? – Bozena Sojka (Bath University, UK)
5
Enabling and Structuring Elite Transnational Lifestyles: Intermediaries of the Super-Rich –
Sin Yee Koh (Universiti Brunei Darussalam, Brunei), Bart Wissink (City University of Hong Kong,
China)
119
What can a feminist geopolitics do?
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/119
Th1│FOR S10
Affiliation
GFGRG
Convenors
Deborah Dixon, Angela Last (University of Glasgow, UK)
Chair
Deborah Dixon (University of Glasgow, UK)
1
"Untitled" – Kye Askins (University of Glasgow, UK)
2
"Situating" geopolitics: A feminist approach – Claudia Eger, Caroline Scarles (University of
Surrey, UK)
3
Unveiling the seeds of war planted in the progression toward peace, or Why we need
feminist geopolitics to understand the failure of the Israeli/Palestinian peace process –
Merav Amir (Queen’s University Belfast, UK)
4
Reconsidering the material: a case for forensic geopolitics? – Jo Sharp (University of
Glasgow, UK)
120
Th1│FOR S11
Contested Spaces of Citizenship: Camps, memories and
marginal subjects
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/120
Convenors
Gaja Maestri, Sarah Hughes, Sam Slatcher (Durham University, UK), Nick Gill
(University of Exeter, UK)
Chair
Nick Gill (University of Exeter, UK)
1
The Roma Way to Citizenship: Overcoming Residential Segregation Through Different
Spatial Tactics – Gaja Maestri (Durham University, UK)
2
The Role of Identities in building resilience of agricultural communities under occupation
– Muna Dajani (London School of Economics and Political Science, UK)
3
Creative practices of resistance: exploring the dynamics of a music workshop within a UK
Immigration Removal Centre – Sarah Hughes (Durham University, UK)
4
Contested spaces of memory as contested spaces of citizenship? – Daniel James (London
School of Economics and Political Science, UK)
5
Urban marginality, Roma migrants’ spatial practices and discrete forms of resistance. The
case of Turin (Italy) – Elisabetta Rosa (Aix-Marseille Université, France)
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
121
Th1│NEW LTA
Evening
18:45–
Future Fossils? Specimens from the 5th millennium "Return to
Earth" expedition (1): From Matrimandir to oil-field bacteria
See also: 146, 198
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/121
Affiliation
HPGRG
Convenors
Beth Greenhough, Jamie Lorimer (University of Oxford, UK), Kathryn Yusoff
(Queen Mary University of London, UK)
Chair
Jamie Lorimer (University of Oxford, UK)
1
Introduction: Future Fossils? – Beth Greenhough, Jamie Lorimer (University of Oxford, UK),
Kathryn Yusoff (Queen Mary University of London, UK)
2
Matrimandir – Tariq Jazeel (University College London, UK)
3
Body bags – Uli Beisel (Bayreuth University, Germany)
4
Geo-social heartbreak – Hayden Lorimer (University of Glasgow, UK)
5
Atomic age rodents: in search of the first animals of the Anthropocene – Dominic Walker
(University of Exeter, UK)
6
Crude categories: metagenomics, oil field bacteria and geological life – Maria Fannin
(University of Bristol, UK)
122
Th1│NEW LTB
Critical spaces of disaster risk governance and avenues to
transformation (1): Household and local scale
See also: 147
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/122
Affiliation
CCRG, DARG
Convenors
Sophie Blackburn (King's College London, UK), John Paolo Dalupang (Ateneo
de Manila, Philippines), Jordana Ramalho (London School of Economics and
Political Science, UK), Mark Pelling (King's College London, UK)
Chair
Sophie Blackburn (King's College London, UK)
1
Making Waves: Shifting Social Contracts through Tsunami Rehabilitation and Recovery in
South India – Sophie Blackburn (King's College London, UK)
2
Domestic Spaces of Disaster Governance: bridging the gap between the private and the
public – Jordana Ramalho (London School of Economics and Political Science, UK)
3
Adaptation and the limits of capacity – Colette Mortreux (University of Melbourne, Australia)
4
Street-Connected Young People’s Involvement in Disaster Risk Reduction in Hazard Prone
Areas of Jamaica – Jade Catterson (University of Dundee, UK)
123
Th1│NEW LTCD
Enhancing student learning and graduate attributes through
research: a reflexive examination
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/123
Affiliation
HERG
Convenors and chairs
Jennifer Hill (University of the West of England, UK), Helen Walkington
(Oxford Brookes University, UK)
1
Learning about learning, learning about the University: academic-student partnership in
gender research – Sarah Dyer (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
Evening
18:45–
2
Students as Co-Learners: Reflections on the Geography and Environment Research
Assistantship – Fiona Tweed, Tim Harris (Staffordshire University, UK)
3
Assumptions, preconceptions and judgements: understanding the ‘more-than-pedagogic’
agendas of students during field-based research exercises – Mark Holton (Plymouth
University, UK)
4
Enhancing the undergraduate fieldwork learning experience through the use of mobile
information technology (IT) devices in inquiry-based learning – Tim Harris, Fiona Tweed
(Staffordshire University, UK)
5
Developing self-authorship through participation in student research conferences –
Jennifer Hill (University of the West of England, UK), Helen Walkington (Oxford Brookes
University, UK)
124
Th1│NEW LTE
Smart cities, limits and potentialities (1) Solutions and policies
in building urban smartness
See also: 149
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/124
Affiliation
PERG
Convenors and chairs
Gian Maria Valent (DISSGEA-University of Padova, Italy), Marco Tononi
(University of Padova / University of Brescia, Italy), Sara Bonati (University of
Madeira, Portugal / University of Brescia, Italy)
1
European territorial ecosystems prone to smart-cities development: Grenoble (France)
case study – Natacha Seigneuret, Magali Talandier (Pacte Lab Grenoble University, France)
2
Smart city element enabling disaster resilience: insights from L’Aquila (Italy) – Grazia Di
Giovanni (Gran Sasso Science Institute, Italy)
3
Co-benefits of Smart and Sustainable Energy District Projects: analyzing, defining and
suggesting an assessment framework – Adriano Bisello (University of Padua, Italy), Farnaz
Mosannenzadeh (University of Trento, Italy), Daniele Vettorato, Simon Pezzutto (European
Academy of Bolzano, Italy), Giuseppe Stellin (University of Padua, Italy)
4
Muddling through and strategic policy in developing a ‘smart city’ response to climate
change: The case of Canberra, Australia – Brian Weir (University of Canberra, Australia)
Postgraduate Networking Event
Affiliation: PGF
Th1│NEW LTF
125
More-than-human geographies of conservation
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/125
Th1│PCC 1.1
Chair
Chris Philo (University of Glasgow, UK)
1
Of wildcats and wild cats: extinction, conservation and regeneration in the Anthropocene
– Aurora Fredriksen (University of Manchester, UK)
2
Role of Displaced People in Conservation of Sariska Tiger Project, India – Muraree Lal
Meena (Banaras Hindu University, India)
3
Of People and Predators: Mediating Conflicts and Fostering Coexistence with Carnivores
in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem – Hannach Jaicks (City University of New York, 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
Evening
18:45–
4
The Eclosion of Forest Health Stakeholdership in the Anthropocene – Norman Dandy
(Forest Research, UK), Emily Porth (Forest Research, UK)
5
UK re-wilding: accelerating replacement of indigenous equine conservation grazers with
‘prehistoric baseline’ breeds – David Murray (Independent researcher, UK)
126
Urban contested spaces
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/126
Th1│PCC 1.4
Chair
David Featherstone (University of Glasgow, UK)
1
Rethinking contestations over Istanbul’s neoliberal transformation: Challenges of Cohabitation in Tophane-Karaköy neighbourhood – Mine Eder, Özlem Öz (Boğaziçi University,
Turkey)
2
Bricolage in social entrepreneurship for urban regeneration:the case of Bradford City of
Film Ltd – Tingyu Kang (National Chengchi University, Taiwan)
3
Tahrir Blues : Militarisation of Cairo’s Spaces of Freedom – Wael Salah Fahmi (Helwan
University, Egypt)
4
The perspective of urban planners in response to gated communities in China – Kaihuai
Liao (University of Kiel, Germany/Guangzhou Institute of Geography, China), Rainer Wehrhahn
(University of Kiel, Germany), Werner Breitung (Xi’an Jiaotong-Liverpool University, China)
5
Gray Spacing through the Sacred: Charisma and the Consecration of the Urban
Landscape in the Israeli Periphery – Nimrod Luz (Western Galilee College, Israel)
127
Everyday mobilities and transport
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/127
Th1│PCC 1.5
Chair
Kate Pangbourne (University of Aberdeen, UK)
1
The use of urban planning and built environmental interventions to promote active
transportation: a systematic review – Antony Chum (London School of Hygiene and Tropical
Medicine, UK), Anna Labetski (University College London, UK), Tyler Vaivada (Sick Kids
Hospital, UK), Arianne Bohnert, Inthuja Selvaratnam (St Michael's Hospital, UK)
2
Young and hypermobile – Jan Henrik Nilsson (Lund University, Sweden)
3
A socioeconomic and spatial analysis to explain greenhouse gas emission due to
individual travels - A joint analysis of local and long distance travels of high emitters in
France – Jean-Pierre Nicholas (Université de Lyon, France), Damien Verry (CEREMA, France)
4
Understanding travel habits and usage patterns of digital technologies in family
households – Sarah-Anne de Kremer, Tracy Ross (Loughborough University, UK), Tim Ryley
(Griffith University, Australia)
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
128
Th1│PCC 1.6
Convenors and chairs
18:45–
At a Crossroads or New Strategies? The Role of Protected
Areas in the Anthropocene
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/128
Richard Stones (University of Exeter, UK), Andreas Skriver Hansen
(University of Gothenburg, Sweden)
1
From Responsibility to Resilience: Moving Away From "Human Emotion Management" –
Richard Stones (University of Exeter, UK)
2
A New Kind of National Park in Canada: Rouge National Urban Park (RNUP) – Paul Harpley
(York University, Canada)
3
Now or Never – Disciplinary Cooperation in the Management of Marine Protected Areas –
Andreas Skriver Hansen (University of Gothenburg, Sweden)
129
Th1│PCC 2.1
Current and emerging research in transport (1): Active travel
and commuting
See also: 154
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/129
Affiliation
TGRG, PGF
Convenors
Joanna Elvy (University of Leeds, UK), Clare Woroniuk (Newcastle University,
UK)
Chair
Joanna Elvy (University of Leeds, UK)
1
Cycles of Opportunity? Cycling cultures, travel behaviour and the significance of the local
polity – Rorie Parsons (Newcastle University, UK)
2
Commuting and the Role of Working Practices – Julian Burkinshaw (University of Leeds, UK)
3
Towards active travel beyond walking and cycling: the potential of run-commuting for
transport geography – Simon Cook (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
4
Active commuting and psychological wellbeing: the role of historic environments – Anna
Bornioli (University of the West of England, UK)
130
Th1│PCC 2.4
Urban Precarities (1): Precarity and urban imaginaries in
declining, derelict and unregulated spaces
See also: 155
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/130
Affiliation
UGRG
Convenors
Ella Harris, Mel Nowicki (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
Chair(s)
Ella Harris (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
1
Precarious pasts: Regeneration, gentrification, and contested urban imaginaries – Emma
Fraser (University of Manchester, UK)
2
Precarious geographies of temporary urbanism – Mara Ferreri (Queen Mary University of
London, UK)
3
Short-cycling urban waste circuits: reimagining routes out of the periphery of volatile
recycling markets – Francisco Calafate-Faria (Goldsmiths, 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
Evening
18:45–
4
Madreterra, Mother-earth, Motherland: Precarity, nativism and crisis in the new
borderlands of ‘Fortress Europe’ – Alessandro Tiberio (University of California, Berkeley, USA)
5
Infiltrating Urbanism: extra-legal solutions from Delhi – Vandini Mehta (SPA (School of
Planning and Architecture), Delhi)
131
Community and resilience (1)
Th1│PCC 2.5
See also: 156, 184
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/131
Chair(s)
Catherine Butler (University of Exeter, UK)
1
The ways in which flood risk governance both enhance and constrain societal resilience
to flooding in England – Meghan Alexander, Sally Priest, Paula Micou (Middlesex University,
UK)
2
The influence of socio-cultural factors on the adaptation responses of Papua New Guinea
smallholder farmers to environmental stressors – George Curry, Gina Koczberski, Joachim
Lummani (Curtin University, Australia), Robert Nailina, Esley Peters (Papua New Guinea Cocoa
and Coconut Institute, Papua New Guinea)
3
Community resilience following the Christchurch NZ 2010/2011 earthquakes – Karen
Banwell, Simon Kingham (University of Canterbury, New Zealand)
4
Everyday mobility and climate resilience in small-scale farming communities – Alex Arnall
(University of Reading, UK)
5
Forging new channels in UK flood strategy: children’s voice in the politics of flood risk
management – Marion Walker, Alison Lloyd Williams (Lancaster University, UK), Virginia
Howells (Save the Children, UK), Maggie Mort, Amanda Bingley (Lancaster University, UK)
132
Th1│PCC 1.2&3
Verticality and the Anthropocence: politics & law of the
subsurface (in collaboration with the British Geological Survey)
(1)
See also: 157
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/132
Convenors
Nigel Clark, Saskia Vermeylen, Nils Markusson, Alexandra Gormally
(Lancaster University, UK)
Chairs
Saskia Vermeylen, Alexandra Gormally (Lancaster University, UK)
1
Vertical property regimes in Britain’s metal mining areas: an historical perspective – Carry
van Lieshout (University of Nottingham, UK)
2
Overshadowed and undermined: agriculture in vertical perspective – Lauren Rickards
(RMIT University, Australia)
3
Overburden(ed) or undermined? : drill bits encounter the rhizome in middle England –
Alan Webster (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
133
Th1│PCC 2.2&3
Evening
18:45–
QUEER(ED) ART (1): Artistic Practices of Sexual Difference and
Radical Possibilities
See also: 158
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/133
Affiliation
SSQRG
Convenors and chairs
Martin Zebracki (University of Leeds, UK), Andrew Gorman-Murray (University
of Western Sydney, Australia)
1
Glitter and the Queer Art of Excess – Lisa Metherell (Birmingham City University, UK)
2
Keeping It Clean: How Rhetorics of Childhood Purity Construct Geographies of Exclusion
– Simone West (Stony Brook University, USA)
3
No Goddess! No Mistress! No Corsets!: Queering Female Sexual Dominance and the
Femdom Revolution – Itziar Bilbao Urrutia (University of Birmingham / Independent Artist, UK)
4
My Abnormal Body: A Personal Search for Identity as Constructed in Relation to Others –
Paulina Trejo Mendez (Erasmus University Rotterdam, The Netherlands)
5
Dis-Orienting Sexuality: Moving Beyond the Bi – Cara Judea Alhadeff (Independent
Researcher / Artist), Andrew Gorman-Murray (University of Western Sydney, Australia), Martin
Zebracki (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
134
Evening
18:45–
How to Get Your Published Work Read and Cited
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/134
Th2│FOR LT
Convenor and chair
Gemma Johnson (Wiley)
135
Individual and collective imaginaries of energy: storying energy
in the past, present and future (2)
Th2│FOR S1
See also: 110
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/135
Affiliation
EnGRG
Convenors
Mel Rohse, Rosie Day (University of Birmingham, UK), Joe Smith (Open
University, UK)
Chair
Rosie Day (University of Birmingham, UK)
1
Opening up public energy stories? – Helen Pallett (University of East Anglia, UK)
2
Personal and professional stories of energy in the development of smart energy
technologies – Samantha Staddon (University of Edinburgh, UK)
3
Stories from the recent past – Margaret Gearty (New Histories / Ashridge Business School,
UK)
4
¡Electrification or death! Historicising electricity, oil dependence, and centralised energy
infrastructure in the Cuban Revolution – Gustav Cederlöf (King's College London, UK)
5
(Energy) futures for Stocksbridge – Prue Chiles (Newcastle University, UK), Anna
Krzywoszynska (Durham University, UK)
136
Th2│FOR S2
Critical geographies of the sharing economy (2) Sharing
Networks
See also: 111, 163
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/136
Affiliation
EGRG
Convenors
Filippo Celata (University of Rome La Sapienza, Italy), Ramon Ribera-Fumaz
(Universitat Oberta de Catalunya, Spain)
Chair
Duncan McLaren (Lancaster University, UK)
1
Who shares what and why? An identification of user and supplier profiles and motivations
to participate in multiple sharing economies – Koen Frenken, Lars Böcker, Toon Meelen,
Peter van der Glind, Mendel Giezen (Utrecht University, The Netherlands), Frans Sengers
(Eindhoven University of Technology, The Netherlands)
2
On the economics of sharing – Filka Sekulova (Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona, Spain)
3
Rendering actually existing economic alternatives visible: post-socialist sharing networks
in Czechia – Petr Danek (Masaryk University, Czech Republic), Petr Jehlicka (Open University,
UK), Nada Johanisová, Eva Fraňková (Masaryk University, Czech Republic)
4
Crowd-mapping alternative economies: The case of TransforMap – Adrien Labaeye
(Humboldt University in Berlin, Germany), Dominik Reusser (Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact
Research, Germany), Jon Richter (Free University Berlin, Germany), David Weingartner
(OuiShare Network)
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–
137
Transitioning to Low Carbon Mobilities (2)
Th2│FOR S3
See also: 112
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/137
Affiliation
TGRG, GLTRG
Convenors
Debbie Hopkins, James Higham (University of Otago, New Zealand)
Chair
Debbie Hopkins (University of Otago, New Zealand)
1
The Role of "the National" in Shaping Low Carbon Mobility Transitions: Insights from the
UK and the Netherlands – Bruno Turnheim (King’s College London / University of Sussex, UK),
Mike Hodson (University of Manchester, UK)
2
Innovationscapes in urban mobility: can cities lead the way in sustainability transitions in
passenger transport? – Tim Schwanen (University of Oxford, UK)
3
Challenges for a low-carbon transition: a political economy perspective – Melanie Stroebel
(University of Manchester, UK)
4
A turning point in two centuries of tourism travel and its CO2 emissions? – Paul Peeters
(NHTV Breda University of Applied Sciences, The Netherlands)
5
The transition to walking cities: The significance of urban tourism and leisure – Yael Ram
(Ashkelon Academic College, Israel), Michael Hall (University of Cantebury, New Zealand)
138
Th2│FOR S4
Food Matters (1): geographical perspectives on food in the
Anthropocene - Food systems & (re)distribution networks
See also: 113, 165, 190
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/138
Affiliation
GJRG
Convenors
Mags Adams, Richard Armitage, Michael Hardman (University of Salford, UK)
Chair
Rebecca St. Clair (University of Salford, UK)
1
Surplus eating: food (re)distribution in Greater Manchester – Mags Adams, Charlie Spring
(University of Salford, UK)
2
Moving from alternative to normative, or, how food geographies might help good practice
go further – Hannah Pitt (University of Cardiff, UK), Mat Jones (University of the West of
England, UK)
3
An Italian way to Alternative Food Networks in Urban Food Systems? The case of Turin –
Egidio Dansero, Giacomo Pettenati, Alessia Toldo (University of Turin, Italy)
4
"Our business plan? To put ourselves out of business": food waste cafes and the ethics of
"surplus food redistribution" – Charlie Spring, Mags Adams, Michael Hardman (University of
Salford, UK)
5
An exploration through affect and affective atmospheres of food poverty in the
Anthropocene at faith-based food banks in Bristol – Stephanie Denning (University of Bristol,
UK)
6
Access to urban agricultural resources in Northern Ghana – Imogen Bellwood-Howard
(Georg-August University Göttingen, Germany)
7
Exploring interactions energy in food supply chains and food related practices in different
local authority areas – Claire Hoolohan, Carly McLachlan (University of Manchester, UK)
8
Discussant – Rebecca Whittle (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
139
Th2│FOR S5
Evening
18:45–
Offshore renewable energy and the public: Engagement,
perceptions and acceptability (1)
See also: 166
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/139
Affiliation
CMRG, EnGRG
Convenors and chairs
Emma McKinley (University of Chichester, UK), Bouke Wiersma (University of
Exeter, UK)
1
Channel MOR: ORE for the Channel’s communities – Emma McKinley (University of
Chichester, UK)
2
Offshore Renewables: the current status of social sciences research – Glen Wright
(Australian National University, Australia)
3
Engagement, Information and Acceptance of Tidal Energy Development: The Nova Scotia
Experience – Shelley MacDougall, John Colton (Acadia University, Canada)
4
Almost Liftoff: Struggling to Deploy a Pilot Tidal Energy Project in Puget Sound,
Washington – Neal McMillin (University of Washington, USA)
5
Experiences of fishermen on their level of involvement in consultations on marine
renewable energy developments – Kieran Reilly, Anne Marie O'Hagan, Gordon Dalton
(University College Cork, Ireland)
6
Community benefits from offshore renewables. Definitions, mechanisms and good
practices – David Rudolph, Claire Haggett, Mhairi Aitken (The University of Edinburgh, UK)
140
Creative placemaking and beyond (2)
Th2│FOR S6
See also: 115
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/140
Convenors
Cara Courage (University of Brighton, UK), Anita McKeown (National College
of Art and Design, Ireland)
Chair
Anita McKeown (National College of Art and Design, Ireland)
1
Thriving cities: Arts and the anthropocene – Anna Marazeula Kim (University of Virginia,
USA)
2
Psychospatial dynamics: A model for complexity in placemaking (1) – Alison Williams
(Ravensbourne College, UK), Derek Jones (Open University, UK), Katharine Leigh, Laura Malinin
(Colorado State University, USA)
3
Psychospatial dynamics: A model for complexity in placemaking (2) – Alison Williams
(Ravensbourne College, UK), Derek Jones (Open University, UK), Katharine Leigh, Laura Malinin
(Colorado State University, USA)
4
Plenary Discussion – Anita McKeown (National College of Art and Design, Ireland)
141
Domesticating Geopolitics (2)
Th2│FOR S7
See also: 116
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/141
Convenors
Tara Woodyer, Diana Martin (University of Portsmouth, UK), Sean Carter, Phil
Kirby (University of Exeter, UK)
Chair
Tara Woodyer (University of Portsmouth, 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
Soldiers’ bodies, authority and the militarisation of everyday life – Leila Dawney
(Goldsmiths, University of London / University of Brighton, UK)
2
Violence, the Body and the Spaces of Intimate Terrorism – Jo Little (University of Exeter, UK)
3
Performing diplomatic decorum: mimicry from the margins – Fiona McConnell (University of
Oxford, UK)
4
Orienteering inside ‘The Idea of North’: aesthetic escape routes and Spivakian speech acts
– Issie MacPhail (University of the Highlands and Islands, UK)
5
Discussion
142
Th2│FOR S8
Being and becoming citizens: spaces of political engagement
(2)
See also: 117
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/142
Affiliation
PolGRG, GCYFRG
Convenors
Jonathan Duckett, Sarah Mills (Loughborough University, UK)
Chair
Jonathan Duckett (Loughborough University, UK)
1
#generationcitizen: National Citizen Service and the politics of age – Sarah Mills, Catherine
Waite (Loughborough University, UK)
2
Devolution, education and youth identities in Scotland and Wales – Rhys Jones, Elin Royles
(Aberystwyth University, UK), Lindsay Paterson, Fiona O'Hanlon (University of Edinburgh, UK)
3
The "Living Rights" of Young People in Scotland – Gurchathen Sanghera (University of St
Andrews, UK), Peter Hopkins, Kate Botterill (Newcastle University, UK), Rowena Arshad
(University of Edinburgh, UK)
4
Instilling sustainable citizen(ship) in a divided society: Contesting belonging in Lebanon –
Daniel Hammett (University of Sheffield, UK), Lynn Staeheli, Dima Smaira, Konstantin
Kastrissianakis (Durham University, UK)
5
Young People, Military Families and Citizenship: War Babies or Heroic Citizens? – Richard
Yarwood, Naomi Tyrrell (Plymouth University, UK)
143
Exploring the Migration Industries (2)
Th2│FOR S9
See also: 118
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/143
Affiliation
PopGRG
Convenor and chair
Sophie Cranston (Loughborough University, UK)
1
Producing Migrant Categories: The Third Culture Kid Industry – Sophie Cranston
(Loughborough University, UK)
2
Investigating the Geographies of Selling a UK Higher Education – Suzanne Beech
(University of Hull, UK)
3
Facilitating labour migration from Latvia: strategies of various categories of intermediaries
– Oksana Zabko (Baltic Institute of Social Sciences, Riga), Aadne Aasland (Norwegian Institute
for Urban and Regional Research, Norway), Silvi Birgit Endresen (University of Oslo, Norway)
4
Exploring a migrant finance industry: low paid migrants and financial access in London –
Kavita Datta (Queen Mary University of London, UK)
Thurs
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–
Securing Circulation: Privatized Migration Management in Singapore – Joshua Kurz
(National University of Singapore, Singapore)
144
Th2│FOR S10
Curating environmental transformation: remembering,
memorialising and recording environmental change
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/144
Affiliation
HGRG
Convenors
Georgina Endfield, Lucy Veale (University of Nottingham, UK)
Chair
Lucy Veale (The University of Nottingham, UK)
1
The Anthroposcenic: Emblematic Landscapes of Environmental Transformation – David
Matless (University of Nottingham, UK)
2
Understanding 200 years of changing global weather using millions of historical
observations – Philip Brohan, Rob Allan (Met Office Hadley Centre, UK)
3
Curation and contextualisation of Welsh weather extremes by 18th and 19th century
diarists – Sarah Davies, Cerys Jones, Marie-Jeanne Royer (Aberystwyth University, UK)
4
Extreme Weather and the Growth of Charity: The Shipwrecked Fishermen and Mariners’
Royal Benevolent Society, 1839-1914 – Cathryn Pearce (University of Greenwich, UK)
5
Discussant – Georgina Endfield (University of Nottingham, UK)
145
Th2│FOR S11
Mixed Methods, Qualitative and Feminist Geographical
Information Systems/Science (GIS)
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/145
Affiliation
GIScRG, GFGRG
Convenors
Beth Brockett (Lancaster University, UK), Chris Perkins (University of
Manchester, UK), Janet Speake (Liverpool Hope University, UK), Rob Berry
(University of Gloucestershire, UK)
Chair
Beth Brockett (Lancaster University, UK)
1
Counter-mapping with GIS: illegal arbitrary detentions in Bogota, Colombia – Jairo
Matallana-Villarreal (University of Kent, UK / ELTE University, Hungary)
2
Mapping the invisible: representing soil carbon in a farm landscape – Beth Brockett
(Lancaster University, UK), Alison Browne (University of Manchester, UK), Andy Beanland (World
Business Council for Sustainable Development)
3
"More than a feeling": GIS modeling of public perception of tranquillity – Keith Wilkinson,
Denise Hewlett (The University of Winchester, UK)
4
Using GIS to study writing on the English Lake District: A corpus-driven analysis –
Christopher Donaldson (University of Birmingham, UK), Ian Gregory (Lancaster 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
146
Th2│NEW LTA
18:45–
Future Fossils? Specimens from the 5th millennium "Return to
Earth" expedition (2): From slum fragments to shattered hard
drives
See also: 121, 198
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/146
Affiliation
HPGRG
Convenors
Beth Greenhough, Jamie Lorimer (University of Oxford, UK), Kathryn Yusoff
(Queen Mary University of London, UK)
Chair
Beth Greenhough (University of Oxford, UK)
1
Slum fragments: recovering Anthropecenic urbanism? – Colin McFarlane (Durham
University, UK)
2
Container Architectures: Human Settlement Transformations in the Anthropocene – Ella
Harris (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
3
What remained rose "elegantly with the seas" – Elizabeth Johnson (University of Exeter, UK),
Stephanie Wakefield (City University of New York, USA)
4
Perturbations: The Green Fluorescent Protein Medaka – Helen Pritchard (Queen Mary
University of London, UK)
5
“Tracing Uneven Geology” – Jeremy Bolen (School of Art Institute of Chicago, USA), Sarah
Nelson (University of Minnesota, USA), Emily Eliza Scott (ETH Zürich, Switzerland)
6
The Pacemaker: Tracing cyber (re)territorialisations – Andrew Dwyer (University of Oxford,
UK)
7
Accession number: ACA/GEO/21/IBG/CONF/2015/TEMPORAL-ANXIETY/BG-JL-KY/FF –
Franklin Ginn, Jacob Barber (University of Edinburgh, UK)
147
Th2│NEW LTB
Critical spaces of disaster risk governance and avenues to
transformation (2): City and regional scales
See also: 122
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/147
Affiliation
CCRG, DARG
Convenors
Sophie Blackburn (King's College London, UK), John Paolo Dalupang (Ateneo
de Manila, Philippines), Jordana Ramalho (London School of Economics and
Political Science, UK), Mark Pelling (King's College London, UK)
Chair
John Paolo Dalupang (Ateneo de Manila, Philippines)
1
The social construction of disaster management discourse and policy in a Metro Manila
City, Philippines – John Paolo Dalupang (Ateneo de Manila, Philippines)
2
Governing risk in informal urban spaces: a case study of the hillslopes programme,
Bogota, 1995-2010 – Arabella Fraser (King's College London, UK)
3
A comparison of the governance landscape of earthquake risk reduction in Nepal and the
Indian State of Bihar – Samantha Jones (Northumbria University, UK), Katie Oven (Durham
University, UK), Ben Wisner (Oberlin College, USA)
4
Adaptation to extreme weather events in complex local health care systems: the example
of older people’s health and care services in England – Sarah Curtis, Jonathan Wistow, Katie
Oven, Lena Dominelli, Christine Dunn (Durham 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
148
Th2│NEW LTCD
18:45–
The Impacts of Recent Changes to the School Geography
Curriculum: Policy Processes and Subject Knowledge
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/148
Affiliation
HERG
Convenor
Eleanor Rawling (University of Oxford, UK)
Chair
Jennifer Hill (University of the West of England, UK)
1
School Geography: Policy Processes and Curriculum Change – Eleanor Rawling (University
of Oxford, UK)
2
What’s Going On? : Teachers’ Responses to Curriculum Change – Mary Biddulph
(University of Nottingham, UK)
3
Reconsidering Geography at the Schools-HE boundary; the ALCAB experience – Martin
Evans (University of Manchester, UK)
4
What Impact will Changes in Teacher Education have on the Geography Curriculum in
Schools? – Graham Butt (Oxford Brookes University, UK)
5
Professional Engagement and Debate about Geography Subject Knowledge
149
Th2│NEW LTE
Smart cities, limits and potentialities (2) Social issues and
involvement of citizens in achieving urban smartness
See also: 124
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/149
Affiliation
PERG
Convenors and chairs
Gian Maria Valent (DISSGEA-University of Padova, Italy), Marco Tononi
(University of Padova / University of Brescia, Italy), Sara Bonati (University of
Madeira, Portugal / University of Brescia, Italy)
1
How smart are you? Cognitive and material processes of smart empowerment and
disempowerment in Southern Europe – Davide Caselli (University of Turin, Italy)
2
Spontaneous smartness. Smart city as an emerging effect of bottom-up, actor-networks’
agency – Chiara Certomà (Sant'Anna School of Advanced Studies, Italy), Francesco Rizzi
(Scuola Superiore Sant’Anna, Institute of Management, Italy)
3
Smart Cycling Citizens - Exploring Urban Living Labs for the human-centric Smart City –
James Evans, Andrew Karvonen, Gabriele Schliwa (University of Manchester, UK)
4
Turning smart cities into responsible communities: the Bergamo 2.035 experience –
Margherita Cisani (University of Padua, Italy)
5
Reconfiguring the smart city and the role of responsive street design – Kim Kullman, Rob
Imrie (Goldsmiths, University of London, UK)
150
Th2│NEW LTF
Exploring The Role of Transformative Research in Struggles for
Food Sovereignty: Interactive Workshop
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/150
Affiliation
PyGyRG
Convenors and chairs
Colin Anderson (Coventry University, UK), Charles Levkoe (Wilfrid Laurier
University, Canada), Josh Brem-Wilson (Coventry 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
151
18:45–
The Contemporary Growth of Regional Identity in Europe
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/151
Th2│PCC 1.4
Affiliation
PGF
Convenors
Ben Gilby, Robert Sheargold (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
Chair
Ben Gilby (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
1
Aspiration for One and All? – Andrew Climo (University of Oxford, UK)
2
A Feast of Cornish Culture – Julie Tamblin (Learn Cornish in Cornwall, UK)
3
Language and the Independentist Turn of Catalan Nationalism – Klaus Nagel (Universitat
Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona)
4
Northern Poetry with Verity Agababian – Verity Agababian (Campaign for the North)
5
Controversial Autonomist Dynamics in Northern Italy: Veneto Inside or Outside the socalled Padania? – Fabrizio Eva (University of Venice, Italy)
6
Where there were two Cornishmen, there was a “rastle”: Cornish Wrestling & Identity –
Mike Tripp (University of Exter, UK)
7
Plen an Gwari: places of Play, Inclusivity and Resistance – Will Coleman (GoldenTree
Productions, Bard of the Gorsedh Kernow, UK)
152
Neoliberalism, labour and education
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/152
Th2│PCC 1.5
Chair
Helen Walkington (Oxford Brookes University, UK)
1
Contestability in Research Funding: markets, objects, subjects – Matthew Henry, Carolyn
Morris (Massey University, New Zealand)
2
Multi-scalar governance of labour in global production networks: implications for casual
farmworkers in South African fruit – Matthew Alford (University of Manchester, UK)
3
Educating Geographers in an Era of the Anthropocene - Paradoxical natures - Paradoxical
Cultures – Thomas Skou Grindsted (Roskilde University, Denmark)
4
The role of Citizen Science in Environmental Education: a critical exploration of the citizen
scientist experience – Ria Dunkley (Cardiff University, UK)
153
Th2│PCC 1.6
New Pangeas: relational transformations and planetary
movements in the anthropocene
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/153
Convenors
Filippo Bertoni (Aarhus University, Denmark), Colin Hoag, Katy Overstreet
(AURA – Aarhus University, Denmark / University of California Santa Cruz,
USA), Thiago Cardoso (PPGAS/UFSC)
Chair
Filippo Bertoni (Aarhus University, Denmark)
1
Dynamic roundtable presentations and discussions – Filippo Bertoni (Aarhus University,
Denmark), Colin Hoag, Katy Overstreet (AURA – Aarhus University, Denmark / University of
California Santa Cruz, USA), Emil Holland (Aarhus University, Denmark)
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
154
Th2│PCC 2.1
18:45–
Current and emerging research in transport (2): Inclusive
mobility and networks
See also: 129
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/154
Affiliation
TGRG, PGF
Convenors
Joanna Elvy (University of Leeds, UK), Clare Woroniuk (Newcastle University,
UK)
Chair(s)
Clare Woroniuk (Newcastle University, UK)
1
A critical evaluation of ITSO Smart Ticketing, policy, practice and outcomes – Alison
Rumbles (Plymouth University, UK)
2
A holistic overview of Transport Vulnerabilities for the Elderly – the Maltese case study –
Deborah Mifsud, Maria Attard (University of Malta, Malta), Stephen Ison (Loughborough
University, UK)
3
The Improvement of Bus Networks Based on GIS Technology – Yuji Shi, Nick Hounsell,
Simon Blainey (University of Southampton, UK)
4
Inclusive Urban Mobility: social equity and mass transport systems in Quito, Ecuador –
Gayle Wootton (Cardiff University, UK)
155
Th2│PCC 2.4
Urban Precarities (2): Precarity in Urban Places of Work and
Residence: Experiences and Resistances
See also: 130
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/155
Affiliation
UGRG
Convenors
Ella Harris, Mel Nowicki (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
Chair
Mel Nowicki (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
1
Politics and practice in the corner shop: The compound precarity of ad hoc retailing – Mia
Hunt (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
2
Prejudices in the Global North and precarity in the Global South: Disability as risk for
exclusion – Julia Richter (Münster University, Germany)
3
From invasion, to upgrading… to displacement? What the 30-year history of a favela tells
us about urban change in Rio de Janeiro – Matthew Richmond (King's College London, UK)
4
Effects of gentrification on the identity of the historical environment of Istanbul: the case
of Galata – Aysegul Can (University of Sheffield, UK)
5
Milan before the Expo: New precarity, more precarity – Alessandro Froldi (Loughborough
University, UK)
156
Community and resilience (2)
Th2│PCC 2.5
See also: 131, 184
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/156
Chair
Stewart Barr (University of Exeter, UK)
1
Urban Energy System in Transition: A Case of Gandhinagar Model Solar City in India –
Thounaojam Somokanta (Central University of Gujarat, India)
2
Taking Environmental Competency Groups online – Catharina Landstrom, Sarah Whatmore
(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–
3
Increase of income in Latin America: An overview of the trade stimuli and consumption in
the configuration of a new consumer layer in Brazil – Jeferson Rezende (University of São
Paulo, Brazil), Sergio Rendon (São Paulo State University, Brazil), Heloísa Gomes (University of
São Paulo, Brazil)
4
Fracking Futures: Emerging comparative perspectives on new energy landscapes –
Timothy M. Murtha (Pennsylvania State University, USA), Olaf Schroth (University of Sheffield,
UK), Lacey Goldberg (Pennsylvania State University, USA), Brian Orland (University of Georgia,
USA)
157
Th2│PCC 1.2&3
Verticality and the Anthropocence: politics & law of the
subsurface (in collaboration with the British Geological Survey)
(2)
See also: 132
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/157
Convenors
Nigel Clark, Saskia Vermeylen, Nils Markusson, Alexandra Gormally
(Lancaster University, UK)
Chairs
Nils Markusson, Alexandra Gormally (Lancaster University, UK)
1
Exhuming the Poropolitics of Jakarta’s Ground Water Abstraction Complex (or, Why
Global Capital Auto-Colluded to Destroy a City of 30 Million Residents) – Etienne Turpin
(University of Wollongong, Australia)
2
Asteroid Mining and the Extra-Planetary Anthropocene – Rory Rowan (University of Zurich,
Switzerland)
3
Vertical Jurisprudence and the Imaginary of the Subsurface – Saskia Vermeylen (Lancaster
University, UK)
4
Geologic Intersectionality and the Politics of Strata – Nigel Clark (Lancaster University, UK)
158
Th2│PCC 2.2&3
QUEER(ED) ART (2): Radical Artistic Geographies Around the
Sexed World
See also: 133
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/158
Affiliation
SSQRG
Convenors and chairs
Martin Zebracki (University of Leeds, UK), Andrew Gorman-Murray (University
of Western Sydney, Australia)
1
Dining with Dykes: Responses to Ecce Homo’s Queer Christ in Sweden and Serbia –
Mariecke van den Berg (VU University Amsterdam, The Netherlands)
2
From the Closet to Outer-Space: The Queer Origins of Pop Art in mid-Twentieth-Century
Britain – Dominic Janes (University of the Arts / Birkbeck, University of London, UK)
3
Not All of Me & Landscape of Leather – Jakub Ceglarz (Birmingham City University, UK)
4
Radicalism and Subversion in the Argentinian Eighties: The Case of Liliana Maresca –
Katia Almerini (University Autónoma of Madrid, Spain)
5
Unbounding House and Home: Queering the Material and Visual Language of Domesticity
– Andrew Gorman-Murray (University of Western Sydney, Australia)
Geography titles from Reaktion Books
The Desert
Trees, Woods and Forests
A History of the Arctic
Lands of Lost Borders
Michael Welland
A Social and Cultural History
Charles Watkins
‘This handsome book is
informative, well-illustrated,
broad-ranging, and clever. The
author has managed to weave
together a whole array of
different strands that serve
to make deserts what they
are . . . Lovers of deserts
will love this book and will
also learn much from it.’
– Andrew Goudie,
Geoscientist Magazine
‘Charcoal, warships, fruit,
houses, shade and sheer
beauty – the manifold uses
of trees have bound them
inextricably to human culture.
Geographer Charles Watkins’
interdisciplinary exploration
of that long, convoluted
relationship is a fact-packed
dazzler . . . Sumptuously
illustrated.’ – Nature
Nature, Exploration and
Exploitation
John McCannon
Hb 400 pp
146 illus, 123 in colour | £25
Hb 312 pp
112 illus, 14 in colour | £27
‘A valuable and timely
addition . . . it’s never dull, and
[McCannon] possesses a keen
eye for detail, especially in
chronicling the region’s wildlife
and the painful transition from
exploration to exploitation . . .
a thoughtful, provocative
study that should be read
by anyone who cares about
the Arctic’s fate.’
– Geographical Magazine
Hb 354 pages | 31 illus | £25
‘The books in the Earth series are magnificent . . .
. . . full of information and explanation, and
beautifully illustrated, these books have a
strong narrative . . . They will get us reading
geography for pleasure.’
– Professor David Lambert, Chief Executive
of the Geographical Association and Professor
of Geography Education at the Institute of Education
Air Peter Adey • Cave Ralph Crane &
Lisa Fletcher • Desert Roslynn D. Haynes
Earthquake Andrew Robinson • Fire Stephen J. Pyne
Flood John Withington • Islands Stephen Royle
Moon Edgar Williams • Tsunami Richard Hamblyn
Volcano James Hamilton • Water
Veronica Strang • Waterfall Brian J. Hudson
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
159
ThP│FOR LT
Convenors and chairs
Evening
18:45–
Chair's plenary: ‘Anthropocene or Anglocene? Debating Cause
and Consequence in the Great Climacteric’
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/159
Joe Gerlach, Sarah Whatmore (University of Oxford, UK)
1
Anthropocene or Anglocene? Debating Cause and Consequence in the Great Climacteric
– Amita Baviskar (Delhi University Enclave, India)
2
Discussion Panel – Colin McFarlane (Durham University, UK), Emma Mawdsley (University of
Cambridge, UK), Tariq Jazeel (University College London, UK)
160
Attentive Geographies: Tools of the Trade, a guided walk
ThP│FOR S8
See also: 169, 194, 210
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/160
Affiliation
SCGRG, HPGRG
Convenors
Frances Rylands, Rose Ferraby, Nicola Thomas (University of Exeter, UK)
Chair
Rose Ferraby (University of Exeter, UK)
1
Tools of the Trade: notes from the built environment – David Anthony Paton (University of
Exeter, UK)
161
Water-worlds: Arts Performance by PIDGE
ThP│NEW LTF
See also: 56, 231, 253, 257
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/161
Affiliation
HPGRG, SCGRG
Convenor
Veronica Vickery (University of Exeter, UK)
1
Still or sparkling – Jess Burford, Sapphire Urwick (PIDGE Theatre, independent artist)
Quantitative Methods Research Group AGM
Affiliation: QMRG
ThP│FOR S2
Geography of Health Research Group AGM
Affiliation: GHRG
ThP│FOR S3
Higher Education Research Group AGM
Affiliation: HERG
ThP│FOR S4
Coastal and Marine Research Group AGM
Affiliation: CMRG
ThP│FOR S5
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–
Planning and Environment Research Group AGM
Affiliation: PERG
ThP│FOR S6
Population Geography Research Group AGM
Affiliation: PopGRG
ThP│FOR S9
Rural Geography Research Group AGM
Affiliation: RGRG
ThP│FOR S10
ThP│PCC 1.2&3
Geographies of Children, Youth and Families Research Group
AGM
Affiliation: GCYFRG
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a proposal with Commissioning Editor Katy Crossan
ASHGATE
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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
162
Th3│FOR S1
Convenors and chairs
Evening
18:45–
Negotiating Rights and Understanding Water Needs:
Knowledges and politics of water management in small towns
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/162
Eszter Kovacs (University of Cambridge, UK), Vishal Singh (Centre for
Ecology Development and Research, Dehradun, India), Bhaskar Vira
(University of Cambridge, UK)
1
Sustainability of Water Supply in Hill Towns in the Himalayas – Vishal Singh, Devendra
Chauhan (Centre for Ecology, Development and Research, India), Ngamindra Dahal (Southasia
Institute of Advanced Studies, Nepal), Anvita Pandey, Rajesh Thadani (Centre for Ecology,
Development and Research, India)
2
Water and Sewage provision between municipal and communitarian systems: the
influence of public funding and large scale infrastructures in Sacaba, Bolivia – Francesca
Minelli (University of Glasgow, UK)
3
Water Insecurity in the Western Himalayas: Analysing Small Town Water Governance in
India and Nepal – Eszter Kovacs (University of Cambridge, UK), Kamal Devkota, Hermant Ojha
(Southasia Institute of Advanced Studies, Nepal), Bhaskar Vira (University of Cambridge, UK)
4
The evolving political economy of catchment governance in Southern China: spatial
politics and emerging institutions – Andre Silveira (University of Cambridge, UK)
163
Critical geographies of the sharing economy (3) Sharing places
Th3│FOR S2
See also: 111, 136
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/163
Affiliation
EGRG
Convenors
Ramon Ribera-Fumaz (Universitat Oberta de Catalunya, Spain), Filippo
Celata (University of Rome La Sapienza, Italy)
Chair
Ramon Ribera-Fumaz (Universitat Oberta de Catalunya, Spain)
1
The super host: Care and community in online hospitality networks – Maartje Roelofsen
(University of Graz, Austria)
2
Home and away: the sharing economy and Icelandic tourism – Edward Huijbens (University
of Akureyri, Iceland), Orn Jónsson (University of Iceland, Iceland)
3
Cross-border collaborative consumption and negative reciprocity in hospitality exchange
– Michael O'Regan (Institute for Tourism Studies, China)
4
Unravelling Airbnb. The case of Barcelona – Albert Arias-Sans, Alan Quaglieri-Domínguez
(Rovira I Virgili University, Catalonia, Spain)
164
Geographies of Sport (1): Everyday sport
Th3│FOR S3
See also: 189, 213, 236, 259
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/164
Affiliation
GHRG
Convenors
Miranda Ward, Simon Cook (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
Chair
Miranda Ward (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
1
Towards a geography of everyday sport: blurring boundaries, finding opportunities –
Miranda Ward, Simon Cook (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
Evening
18:45–
2
Researching Action Sport with a GoPro™ Camera: An Embodied and Emotional Mobile
Video Tale of the Sea, Masculinity, and Men-who-Surf – Clifton Evers (University of
Nottingham Ningbo, China)
3
"The Smoother I row, the faster I go". Learning to flow in the practice of rowing – Kate
Evans (Swansea University, UK)
4
The materials of running and swimming: a discussion of difference, change and practice –
Joe Gillett (Lancaster University, UK)
5
Where everyday exercise meets the coast: seeking more than sport and fitness? – Sarah
Bell (University of Exeter, UK)
165
Th3│FOR S4
Food Matters (2): geographical perspectives on food in the
Anthropocene - Food systems & food security
See also: 113, 138, 190
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/165
Affiliation
GJRG
Convenors
Mags Adams, Richard Armitage, Michael Hardman (University of Salford, UK)
Chairs
Mags Adams, Rebecca St. Clair, Charlie Spring (University of Salford, UK)
1
(Peri-)Urban food systems in the Anthropocene – Wendy Miller (Plymouth University, UK)
2
Mediated meals: Mass media representations of in vitro meat, and the Anthropocene – Erik
Jönsson (Lund University, Sweden)
3
Constructing disconnections and undermining food justice: an analysis of media framings
of Food and Nutrition Security in the UK – Ana Moragues-Faus, Roberta Sonnino, Terry
Marsden (Cardiff University, UK)
4
Seeking Alterity in Agri-Food Governance in the Neoliberal Anthropocene: Alternative
Food Networks or Food Sovereignty? – Mark Tilzey (Coventry University, UK)
5
Political ecologies of seed cultivation in Colombia: Food comes from seeds, but where do
the seeds come from? – Diana Salazar (University College London, UK), Marlenny Diaz Cano
(Universidad Sergio Arboleda, Colombia)
6
Urban Agriculture and food insecurity – Veronica Barry (Birmingham City University, UK)
7
Spati-temporal Rhythms and Food Security in Islamabad, Pakistan – Saher Hasnain
(University of Oxford, UK)
8
Discussant – Rebecca Whittle (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
166
Th3│FOR S5
Evening
18:45–
Offshore renewable energy and the public: Engagement,
perceptions and acceptability (2)
See also: 139
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/166
Affiliation
CMRG, EnGRG
Convenors
Emma McKinley (University of Chichester, UK), Bouke Wiersma (University of
Exeter, UK)
Chair
Bouke Wiersma (University of Exeter, UK)
1
Placing tidal and offshore wind energy: A case study of place and technology meanings in
Guernsey – Bouke Wiersma, Patrick Devine-Wright, Saffron O'Neill (University of Exeter, UK)
2
Measuring willingness to pay for research and development of tidal energy: A study of
households in Washington State. – Hilary Polis (University of Washington, USA)
3
Understanding the Impacts of Offshore Wind Farms – Tara Hooper, Caroline Hattam, Eleni
Papathanasopoulou, Nicola Beaumont (Plymouth Marine Lab, UK)
4
Valuation of ecological and amenity impacts of an offshore windfarm as a factor in marine
planning – Tobias Börger, Tara Hooper, Melanie Austen (Plymouth Marine Lab, UK)
5
Will Wave Hub Affect Beach Water-Users? Perceived and Predicted Changes to Wave and
Beach Conditions. – Christopher Stokes (Plymouth University, UK)
167
Th3│FOR S6
Planning in the Wake of Austerity Urbanism: Re-thinking the
Role of Planning in Urban Governance (1)
See also: 192
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/167
Affiliation
PERG
Convenors
Mike Raco (University College London, UK), Federico Savini (University of
Amsterdam, The Netherlands)
Chair
Mike Raco (University College London, UK)
1
Planning for Tech City in post-recession London – Edward Jones (University College London,
UK)
2
Consulting for the community? Planning consultants in neighbourhood planning in
England – Gavin Parker, Emma Street (University of Reading, UK)
3
The political management of planning in the contemporary UK – Tim Marshall (Oxford
Brookes University, UK)
4
Contemporary Cities and new models of Community-based Planning in the Devolved UK –
Simon Pemberton (Keele University, UK), Deborah Peel (University of Dundee, UK)
5
The ‘Bristol Method’: Exploring Emerging Decision Making Experiments and Civic
Leadership in the European Green Capital 2015 Process – Aksel Ersoy (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
168
Playing War (1)
Th3│FOR S7
See also: 193
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/168
Evening
18:45–
Convenors
Tara Woodyer (University of Portsmouth, UK), Phil Kirby (University of Exeter,
UK)
Chair
Tara Woodyer (University of Portsmouth, UK)
169
Attentive Geographies: materials, processes, creations (1)
Th3│FOR S8
See also: 160, 194, 210
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/169
Affiliation
SCGRG, HPGRG
Convenors
Frances Rylands, Rose Ferraby, Nicola Thomas (University of Exeter, UK)
Chair
Rose Ferraby (University of Exeter, UK)
1
Knowing and Feeling: Practicing visual and material cultures in the corner shop – Mia Hunt
(Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
2
Tourism versus Everyday Life: everyday tourism as the art practice of everyday life – Bevis
Fenner (University of Southampton, UK)
3
On being a researcher-enthusiast of creative processes in modified car culture – Will
Andrews (Aberystwyth University, UK)
4
Keeping conversations going: making and sharing "Political Lego" – Ian Cook (University of
Exeter, UK)
5
Discussant – Caitlin DeSilvey (University of Exeter, UK)
170
Th3│FOR S9
Exploiting New Data for Population Research (1): Demographic
Insights
See also: 195
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/170
Affiliation
PopGRG, QMRG
Convenors
Adam Dennett (University College London, UK), Ian Shuttleworth (Queen's
University Belfast, UK), Nik Lomax (University of Leeds, UK), Christopher
Lloyd (University of Liverpool, UK)
Chair
Adam Dennett (University College London, UK)
1
Using Satellite Data on Night-time Lights Intensity to Estimate Contemporary Human
Migration Distances – Thomas Niedomysl, Ola Hall (Lund University, Sweden), Ulf Ernstsson
(Gothenberg University, Sweden), Maria Archila (Lund University, Sweden)
2
The Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings: potential for new insights into migration and
commuting – Anthony Champion (Newcastle University, UK)
3
Exploiting administrative data for population estimation and profiling – experiences and
applications – Gill Harper (Mayhew Harper Associates / Geocreate, UK)
4
Studying patterns of socio-economic segregation using diurnal mobility of mobile-phone
users in Sweden – Marcus Mohall, John Osth (Uppsala University, Sweden), Thomas
Niedomysl (Lund University, Sweden)
Thurs
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–
Geographical Inequalities, Spatial Scale and Small Area Statistics for England and Wales –
Christopher Lloyd (University of Liverpool, UK)
171
Th3│FOR S10
Exploring vulnerabilities in the Anthropocene: the energyclimate nexus (1) The demand side: energy poverty and
vulnerability
See also: 196
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/171
Affiliation
EnGRG, Anthropocene Review
Convenors
Sergio Tierado-Herrero, Saska Petrova, Stefan Bouzarovski (University of
Manchester, UK)
Chair
Sergio Tierado-Herrero (University of Manchester, UK)
1
Green Economy thinking in the Energy-Climate Nexus – Ed Brown, Jonathan Cloke
(Loughborough University, UK)
2
Fuel and water poverty in the Metropolitan area of Barcelona – A political-ecology
perspective – Hyerim Yoon, David Saurí Pujol (Autonomous University of Barcelona, Spain)
3
From energy transition to energy justice: a study of catholic actors reframing the debate –
Marie Drique (Lille Center for European Research on Administration Politics and Society
(CERAPS), France)
4
Which resilience is the focus in addressing energy vulnerability? – Janice Astbury (Durham
University, UK)
5
Unpacking the spaces and politics of energy poverty: Path-dependencies, deprivation and
fuel switching in post-communist Hungary – Stefan Bouzarovski, Sergio Tierado-Herrero,
Saska Petrova (University of Manchester, UK)
172
The Spaces of Road Transport Automation
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/172
Th3│FOR S11
Affiliation
TGRG
Convenors
Graham Parkhurst (University of the West of England, UK), Kate Pangbourne
(University of Aberdeen, UK)
Chair
Graham Parkhurst (University of the West of England, UK)
1
Social Dilemmas in Vehicle Automation – Alexandros Nikitas (Chalmers University of
Technology, Sweden / University of Huddersfield, UK), Georgios Nikitas (University of Surrey,
UK)
2
Automated Vehicle as a collective transport option for low demand areas and nonsystematic trips – Claudio Borsari (Movement Strategies, UK), James Cooper (AECOM)
3
Help or Hindrance? The Energy and Carbon Impacts of Highly Automated Vehicles – Zia
Wadud (University of Leeds, UK), Don MacKenzie (University of Washington, USA), Paul Leiby
(Oak Ridge National Laboratory, USA)
4
Will we still need traffic lights? How we might redesign the streets after transport
automation – Kate Pangbourne (University of Aberdeen, UK)
Thurs
5
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
Session 4
18:45–
On Autopilot or Out of Control? The Social Context and Policy Challenges of Mass
Adoption of Autonomous Vehicles – Graham Parkhurst (University of the West of England,
UK)
173
Children’s Geographies Lecture
Th3│NEW LTA
See also: 6, 32, 60, 86
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/173
Affiliation
GCYFRG
Convenor
Peter Kraftl (University of Leicester, UK)
Chair
Elsbeth Robson (University of Hull, UK)
1
Evening
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20 16:50–18:30
Childhood is measured by sounds and sights and smells, before the dark hour of reason
grows': children's geographies at 12 – Chris Philo (University of Glasgow, UK)
174
Producing Law, Making Space, Mobilising Subjects (1)
Th3│NEW LTB
See also: 199
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/174
Affiliation
PolGRG
Convenors
Romola Sanyal (London School of Economics and Political Science, UK),
Alex Jeffrey (University of Cambridge, UK), Fiona McConnell (University of
Oxford, UK)
Chair
Alex Jeffrey (University of Cambridge, UK)
1
The landscape of local in Toronto’s governance model – Alexandra Flynn (Osgoode Hall,
Canada)
2
In the face of epistemic injustices?: On the meaning of people-led war crimes tribunals –
Mark Boyle (National University of Ireland, Maynooth, Ireland), Audrey Kobayashi (Queen's
University, Canada)
3
Victim rights, victim collectives and the Khmer Rouge Tribunal – Rachel Hughes (University
of Melbourne, Australia)
4
Refugee Status and Urban Citizenship – Romola Sanyal (London School of Economics and
Political Science, UK)
175
Th3│NEW LTCD
Creating Global Students: Internationalisation of Curricula in
Higher Education
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/175
Affiliation
HERG
Convenors and chairs
David Simm (Bath Spa University, UK), Alan Marvell (University of
Gloucestershire, UK)
1
Building intercultural understanding into the curriculum – Colin Arrowsmith (RMIT
University, Australia)
2
Teaching on a transnational education programme: Opportunities and challenges for
academic staff – Katie Szkornik (Keele 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–
3
Transnational education: Staff and student experiences of a UK postgraduate programme
in the United Arab Emirates – Nicholas Almond (Liverpool Hope University, UK), Emma
Rawlings Smith (University of Leicester, UK)
4
Transcultural European Outdoor Studies: A case study of transcultural learning and
teaching – Chris Loynes (University of Cumbria, UK), Kirsti Pedersen-Gurholt (Norwegian
School of Sport Science, Norway), Peter Becker (Philipps-Universität, Marburg, Germany)
5
Seeing a different world from the rest of us: Volcanoes, blow holes and the curriculum of a
Lanzarote residential through the senses of an autistic undergraduate – Kirsty Lawie,
Frances Hasley, Duncan Reavey (University of Chichester, UK)
176
Bioaccumulation: Re-valuing life in the Anthropocene
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/176
Th3│NEW LTE
Convenors
Elizabeth Johnson (University of Exeter, UK), Helen Pritchard (Queen Mary
University of London, UK)
Chair
Kathryn Yusoff (Queen Mary University of London, UK)
1
Between the living and the dead: Locating value in the inspirational bioeconomy –
Elizabeth Johnson (University of Exeter, UK)
2
Oysters to the Rescue? "Living Infrastructure," Measure, and the Equivalence of
Catastrophes – Stephanie Wakefield (City University of New York, USA)
3
Shimmering affinities and queer loves – Helen Pritchard (Queen Mary University of London,
UK)
177
Elemental Experiments (1)
Th3│NEW LTF
See also: 202
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/177
Affiliation
SCGRG
Convenors
Derek McCormack, Sasha Engelmann (University of Oxford, UK)
Chair
Derek McCormack (University of Oxford, UK)
1
Elemental Experiments – Derek McCormack, Sasha Engelmann (University of Oxford, UK),
Bronislaw Szerszynski (Lancaster University, UK)
2
Between Measure and Experience: Elemental Experiments in Atmospheric Governance –
Anja Kanngieser (Goldsmiths, University of London, UK), Anna Feigenbaum (Bournemouth
University, UK)
3
The Air and the Body: A Search for a Politics of the Breath – Marijn Nieuwenhuis (University
of Warwick, UK)
4
Atmospheric Memory: experimenting with elemental notions of technology, retention and
space – James Ash (Newcastle 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
178
Th3│PCC 1.1
Evening
18:45–
New and Emerging Research within Gender and Feminist
Geography
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/178
Affiliation
GFGRG
Convenors
Ailie Tam (University of East Anglia, UK), Emma Kerry (University of Leeds,
UK)
Chair
Ailie Tam (University of East Anglia, UK)
1
Hair stories: The work of London’s hairdressers and the production of urban space –
Louise Rondel (Goldsmiths, University of London, UK)
2
Queering work-life balance: male primary carers reconfiguring care and work in the UK –
Eleni Bourantani (University of Southampton, UK)
3
Fieldwork as a Subaltern Feminist Researcher – methodological and epistemological
implications – Regina Hansda (University of Cambridge, UK)
4
Gendered geographies of citizen science – Khairunnisa Ibrahim (University of Oxford, UK)
5
Shampoo, bed sheets, cell phones and saving up for studies: A social project for rural
girls as domestic workers in Cusco, Peru – Chih-Chen Trista Lin (Wageningen University, The
Netherlands)
6
Enacting difference through role play: investigating the implications of gender and sociocultural differences for smallholder farmers’ adoption of innovations – Kerstin Schulz
(University of Goettingen, Germany), Pamela Ngwenya, Margareta Leela, Birgitte Kaufmann
(German Institute for Tropical and Subtropical Agriculture DITSL GmbH, Germany)
179
Th3│PCC 1.4
Spaces of Urban Vulnerability: Abjection and Resistance in the
Austericity
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/179
Convenors
Simon Parker (University of York, UK), Jonathan Darling (University of
Manchester, UK), Daryl Martin (University of York, UK)
Chair
Daryl Martin (University of York, UK)
1
Avoidance, indirect engagement, open resistance: social and community work in the postpolitical Austericity – Davide Caselli (University of Turin, Italy)
2
Negative politics: the conformity, struggles and radical possibilities of youth culture in
outer East London – Malcolm James (University of Sussex, UK)
3
The unsociable bench: sites of resistance in dehumanised urban spaces – Clare Rishbeth
(University of Sheffield, UK), Ben Rogaly (University of Sussex, UK)
4
Building on insecurity: the precarious lifeworld and embedded vulnerability of the already
marginalised – Sander van Lanen (University College Cork, Ireland)
5
Resistance in times of crisis: how austerity generates new strategies and solidarities
against Roma residential segregation in Rome – Gaja Maestri (Durham 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
180
Th3│PCC 1.5
18:45–
Urban Political Ecology Beyond Methodological Cityism (1):
Circulations of capital, matter, and meaning
See also: 205
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/180
Affiliation
UGRG
Convenors
Ingrid Behrsin (University of California, Davis, USA), Creighton Connolly
(University of Manchester, UK)
Chair
Creighton Connolly (University of Manchester, UK)
1
Urban Questions in the Countryside: The history of electricity networks as collective
consumption in early 20th century Belgium – Dieter Bruggeman, Michiel Dehaene (Ghent
University, Belgium)
2
Tales from Pianura: The creation of a social dump and its resisting community – Ilenia
Iengo (Norwegian University of Life Sciences, Norway)
3
Power Streams and Pipe Dreams: A More-than-Urban Political Ecology of European
Energy and Waste Infrastructures – Ingrid Behrsin (University of California, Davis, USA)
4
Discussant – Ingrid Behrsin (University of California, Davis, USA), Creighton Connolly
(University of Manchester, UK)
181
Th3│PCC 1.6
Investigating the Anthropo-Unseen: Mapping the Paranormal,
the Extraordinary and the Unknown (1) Placing the AnthropoUnseen
See also: 206
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/181
Convenors
Paul Kingsbury (Simon Fraser University, Canada), Sara MacKian, Steve Pile
(Open University, UK)
Chair
Paul Kingsbury (Simon Fraser University, Canada)
1
Unfinished anthropogenesis: the theosophy of earth and race – Arun Saldanha (University of
Minnesota, USA)
2
Suburban miracles: encountering the divine in W7 and off Highway 88 – Claire Dwyer
(University College London, UK)
3
Talking with the Dead: mediums, messages and the everyday life of spirit – Nadia Bartolini,
Sara MacKian, Steve Pile (The Open University, UK)
182
Understanding inequalities in transport and mobility (1)
Th3│PCC 2.1
See also: 207
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/182
Affiliation
TGRG
Convenors
Eda Beyazit (Istanbul Technical University, Turkey), Nihan Akyelken
(University of Oxford, UK)
Chair
Nihan Akyelken (University of Oxford, UK)
1
Mobility, equality and hardship: a challenge for distributive justice – Giulio Mattioli, Caroline
Mullen (University of Leeds, 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
Transport investment, regeneration and equity impacts. A case study of HS2 and Euston –
John Ward, Robin Hickman (University College London, UK)
3
Unequal mobilities and gender: women’s daily transport in Istanbul – Eda Beyazit (Istanbul
Technical University, Turkey), Nihan Akyelken (University of Oxford, UK)
4
Social or spatial entrapment? (Dis)benefits of regional economic restructuring – Nihan
Akyelken (University of Oxford, UK), Eda Beyazit (Istanbul Technical University, Turkey)
183
Th3│PCC 2.4
Uncalled for or Just (Un)Cool? Young People-Friendly
Research Methods (1)
See also: 208
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/183
Affiliation
PyGyRG
Convenors and chairs
Catherine Wilkinson (University of Liverpool, UK), Samantha Wilkinson
(University of Manchester, UK)
1
A ‘menu’ of approaches: a mixed methodology in participatory context – Adefemi Adekunle
(Newman University, UK)
2
“Big Brother welcomes you”: exploring innovative methods for research with children and
young people outside of the home and school environments – Catherine Harris, Lucy
Jackson (University of Sheffield, UK)
3
Video methods and visual impairment?: exploring the everyday mobilities of visually
impaired young people – Jennie Middleton (University of Oxford, UK)
4
Research with urban youth: exploring representations of Kilburn (NW London) through
action methods – Liza Griffin, Kamna Patel (University College London, UK)
5
Festivals: Spaces of Exception. Reframing and re-presenting young people in the U.K –
Eveleigh Buck-Matthews (Coventry University, UK)
184
Community and resilience (3)
Th3│PCC 2.5
See also: 131, 156
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/184
Chair
Karen Bickerstaff (University of Exeter, UK)
1
Scripting the Lives of Widows in the Briddhha Ashrams of Varanasi, India – Suman Singh
(Banaras Hindu University, India), Rituparna Bhattacharyya (Alliance for Community Capacity
Building in North East India)
2
How do consumers make the cultural geography of a 'low-end' street? The case of
Sodergatan: a high street at the urban margins – Devrim Umut Aslan (Lund University,
Sweden)
3
The eruv. Using a case study to understand French and British integration policies – Maria
Luisa Caputo (Pantheon-Sorbonne University, France)
4
Symbolic capital and the geographic concentration of UK independent bookshops –
Gemma O'Brien (University of Southampton, UK)
5
Resilience and transformation at the margins – Giuseppe Feola (University of Reading, 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–
Participatory Geographies Research Group AGM
Affiliation: PyGyRG
Th3│PCC 1.2&3
185
Th3│PCC 2.2&3
Convenors and chairs
Proximity and intraregional aspects of tourism (1): engaging in
proximate mobilities
See also: 209
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/185
Jelmer Jeuring (University of Groningen, The Netherlands), Inmaculada DiazSoria (University of Toulouse 2-Jean Jaurès, France)
1
Mobility contribution to intraregional tourism development – Serena Volo (Free University of
Bozen-Bolzano, Italy)
2
Between fantasy and reality: tourism mobility and contradictory image of Sanya, China –
Jingfu Chen (National University of Singapore, Singapore)
3
Proximity and differences: everyday shopping tourism in the Dutch-German borderlands –
Bianca Szytniewski (Utrecht University/Radboud University Nijmegen, The Netherlands)
Attentive
Geographies
An exhibition of work by Alice Angus of Proboscis with
the Geographies of Creativity and Knowledge Research
Group, University of Exeter.
‘Attentive Geographies’ illuminates the challenges and
opportunities associated with framing creative practice as
research process.
In 2016, Uniformbooks will publish a collection of essays that
explores the ‘Attentive Geographies’ of the Geographies of
Creativity and Knowledge Research Group.
In the Forum Street throughout the conference.
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
Evening
18:45–
Progress in Human Geography Lecture
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/186
Th4│FOR LT
Convenor
1
Noel Castree (University of Wollongong, Australia)
Cloud Geographies: Computing, Calculation, Sovereignty – Louise Amoore (Durham
University, UK)
187
Sharing cities for justice and sustainability
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/187
Th4│FOR S1
Convenors
Julian Agyeman (Tufts University, USA), Duncan McLaren (Lancaster
University, UK)
Chair
Gordon Walker (Lancaster University, UK)
1
Sharing cities for sustainability and justice – A summary – Julian Agyeman (Tufts University,
USA), Duncan McLaren (Lancaster University, UK)
2
Discussion Panel – Simon Parker (University of York, UK), Anna Davies (Trinity College Dublin,
Ireland), Ramon Ribera-Fumaz (Universitat Oberta de Catalunya, Spain), Kathleen Stokes
(Nesta, UK), James Evans (University of Manchester, UK), April Rinne (World Economic Forum)
188
Th4│FOR S2
Development’s pasts and futures: A critical dialogue between
(Latin American) Area Studies and Geography, Panel Session
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/188
Affiliation
DARG
Convenor and chair
Nina Laurie (Newcastle University, UK)
1
Panel Discussion – Nina Laurie (Newcastle University, UK), Cordelia Freeman (University of
Nottingham, UK), Jessica Hope (University of Manchester/University College London, UK),
Dorothea Kleine (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK), Kate Maclean (Birkbeck, University
of London, UK), Marcela Palomino-Schalscha (Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand)
189
Geographies of Sport (2): Everyday sport
Th4│FOR S3
See also: 164, 213, 236, 259
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/189
Convenors
Miranda Ward, Simon Cook (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
Chair
Simon Cook (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
1
Lifeworld of the Mamils: An Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis of motives,
experiences and aspirations of emergent sports cyclists – Tim Jones (Oxford Brookes
University, UK)
2
Move it or lose it – Elaine Stratford (University of Tasmania, Australia)
3
‘Racing to work’: An ethnographic account of transport-as-exercise – Jonas Larsen
(Roskilde University, Denmark)
4
Towards more-than-representational geographies of health and fitness: reverberating
some qualities of movement space – Gavin Andrews (McMaster University, Canada)
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
190
Th4│FOR S4
Evening
18:45–
Food Matters (3): geographical perspectives on food in the
Anthropocene – Urban agriculture and embodied practice
See also: 113, 138, 165
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/190
Affiliation
GJRG
Convenors
Mags Adams, Richard Armitage, Michael Hardman (University of Salford, UK)
Chair
Charlie Spring (University of Salford, UK)
1
Informal Urban Agriculture: The Rise Global of Guerrilla Gardening – Michael Hardman
(University of Salford, UK), David Adams (Birmingham City University, UK), Richard Armitage
(University of Salford, UK), Peter Larkham (Birmingham City University, UK)
2
Evaluating the impact of formal urban agriculture: A case study in Wythenshawe –
Rebecca St. Clair, Michael Hardman, Richard Armitage, Graeme Sherriff (University of Salford,
UK)
3
Urban community gardens: Socionatural entanglements and relations of everyday care –
Helen Laura Coulson (Newcastle University, UK)
4
Discussant – Rebecca Whittle (Lancaster University, UK)
191
Th4│FOR S5
The Blue Economy and Blue Communities: A balance between
industry, stakeholders and conservation?
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/191
Affiliation
CMRG
Convenors and chairs
Emma McKinley (University of Chichester, UK), Tim Stojanovic (University of
St Andrews, UK)
1
Balancing the books: Development and Conservation in Chichester Harbour – Emma
McKinley (University of Chichester, UK)
2
Participatory governance across scales and purposes. To what extent can inshore fishing
communities shape their future? – Carole White (University of East Anglia, UK)
3
Meeting the collaboration gap through the Celtic Seas Partnership – Natasha Barker
Bradshaw (WWF, UK), Lynne McGowan, Sue Kidd (University of Liverpool, UK), Lyndsey Dodds,
Jenny Oates (WWF, UK)
4
Stakeholder engagement - the missing element of maritime policy implementation –
Natasha Barker Bradshaw, Jenny Oates (WWF, UK)
192
Th4│FOR S6
Planning in the Wake of Austerity Urbanism: Re-thinking the
Role of Planning in Urban Governance (2)
See also: 167
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/192
Convenors
Mike Raco (University College London, UK), Federico Savini (University of
Amsterdam, The Netherlands)
Chair
Mike Raco (University College London, UK)
1
Can Planning Reclaim Localism? – Emma Ormerod (Durham University, UK)
2
The university, knowledge and the city – Richard Gale, Huw Thomas (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–
3
Reconceptualising Green Space: Green Space Governance in a Changing London –
Meredith Whitten (London School of Economics and Political Science, UK)
4
Rescaling Urban Risk Management: Exploring the Impacts of Economic Restructuring on
Urban Risk in Genoa, Italy and Rethymno, Crete – Arabella Fraser, Mark Pelling (King's
College London, UK)
5
Neoliberal Planning In Times Of Crisis: The Case Study Of The Balearic Islands – Ismael
Yrigoy, Antoni Artigues, Macià Blázquez (University of the Balearic Islands, Spain)
193
Playing War (2)
Th4│FOR S7
See also: 168
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/193
Convenors
Tara Woodyer (University of Portsmouth, UK), Phil Kirby (University of Exeter,
UK)
Chair
Tara Woodyer (University of Portsmouth, UK)
194
Attentive Geographies: materials, processes, creations (2)
Th4│FOR S8
See also: 160, 169, 210
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/194
Affiliation
SCGRG, HPGRG
Convenors
Frances Rylands, Rose Ferraby, Nicola Thomas (University of Exeter, UK)
Chair
Frances Rylands (University of Exeter, UK)
1
Derbyshire Pub Quiz- Landscape explorations in subversion and imagined places through
a one-act play – George S. Jaramillo (University of Edinburgh, UK), Gregory Bonsignore (Artist /
Playwright)
2
Photography, affect and landscape as visual practice – Liz Orton (Artist), Sophy Rickett
(Artist)
3
Material Touchstones: Weaving Histories through Site-Specific Dance Performance –
Victoria Hunter (University of Chichester, UK)
4
Discussant – Nicola Thomas (University of Exeter, UK)
195
Th4│FOR S9
Exploiting New Data for Population Research (2): Global and
Health Insights
See also: 170
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/195
Affiliation
PopGRG, QMRG
Convenors
Adam Dennett (University College London, UK), Ian Shuttleworth (Queen's
University Belfast, UK), Nik Lomax (University of Leeds, UK), Christopher
Lloyd (University of Liverpool, UK)
Chair
Nik Lomax (University of Leeds, UK)
1
Electricity consumption and household characteristics: Implications for census-taking in a
smart metered future – Ben Anderson, Andy Newing, Sharon Lin (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
Evening
18:45–
2
Filling Some Black Holes? Alternative Ways of Measuring the Global Impact of World
Cities in the Middle East – Evgenia Bystrov (University of Bayreuth, Germany)
3
Understanding Disparities in the Child Mortality across Indigenous and Others Population
in the State of Madhya Pradesh, India – Tufail Jarul (Jawaharlal Nehru University, India)
196
Th4│FOR S10
Exploring vulnerabilities in the Anthropocene: the energyclimate nexus (2) Looking over the nexus: from resource
extraction to climate impacts
See also: 171
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/196
Affiliation
EnGRG, Anthropocene Review
Convenors
Sergio Tierado-Herrero, Saska Petrova, Stefan Bouzarovski (University of
Manchester, UK)
Chair
Sergio Tierado-Herrero (University of Manchester, UK)
1
Human-environment vulnerabilities in the Barton Moss ‘fracking’ energy landscape
conflict – Craig Thomas (University of Manchester, UK)
2
Fiddling while the roof burns? Tales of coal, justice and grassroots resistance to energy
boom in Turkey – Ethemcan Turhan (Istanbul Policy Center / Sabancı University)
3
New Geographies Of Vulnerability Or New Geographies Of Green Energy: The Emerged
Stresses On The River Valleys of Turkey With The Transformation Of Water-Energy and
Climate Nexus – Ayşen Eren (Boğaziçi University, Turkey)
4
Adapting to climate change: rethinking vulnerabilities and capacities at the household
scale – Stephanie Toole (University of Wollongong, Australia)
5
Discussant – Catherine Butler (University of Exeter, UK)
197
Maintaining Mobility: Geographies of transport and ageing
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/197
Th4│FOR S11
Affiliation
TGRG
Convenors and chairs
Charles Musselwhite (Swansea University, UK), Angela Curl (University of
Glasgow, UK)
1
Renegotiating slow(er) mobilities in the Age Friendly City – Wilbert Den Hoed, Jayne Jeffries
(University of Newcastle, UK)
2
Home or away? Making a link between mobility, the geography of activities, and the
wellbeing of older people – Ian Shergold (University of the West of England, UK)
3
The indirect health and mental wellbeing benefits of the concessionary travel scheme in
Scotland – Wojciech Hupert, John Galilee (Transport Scotland, UK)
4
Bike-sharing and Older People: Is it Really an Oxymoron? – Alexandros Nikitas (Chalmers
University of Technology, Sweden / University of Huddersfield, UK)
5
"‘Later life transitions and velo-mobility: Maintenance and meaning" – Emma Street
(University of Reading, UK), Heather Jones, Kiron Chatterjee (University of the West of England,
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
198
Th4│NEW LTA
18:45–
Future Fossils? Specimens from the 5th millennium "Return to
Earth" expedition (3): Reflections on "Return to Earth"
See also: 121, 146
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/198
Affiliation
HPGRG
Convenors
Beth Greenhough, Jamie Lorimer (University of Oxford, UK), Kathryn Yusoff
(Queen Mary University of London, UK)
Chair
Nigel Clark (Lancaster University, UK)
1
Future Fossils? Specimens from the 5th millennium "Return to Earth" expedition:
Reflections on "Return to Earth" – Sarah Whatmore (University of Oxford, UK), Andrew Barry
(University College London, UK), Arun Saldanha (University of Minnesota, USA), Elizabeth
Povinelli (Columbia University, USA), Kathryn Yusoff (Queen Mary University of London, UK)
199
Producing Law, Making Space, Mobilising Subjects (2)
Th4│NEW LTB
See also: 174
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/199
Affiliation
PolGRG
Convenors
Romola Sanyal (London School of Economics and Political Science, UK),
Alex Jeffrey (University of Cambridge, UK), Fiona McConnell (University of
Oxford, UK)
Chair
Romola Sanyal (London School of Economics and Political Science, UK)
1
(Dis)assembling: the 1961 Licensing Act, scale, and producing minority national spaces –
Rhys Dafydd Jones (Aberystwyth University, UK)
2
Governing asylum and the spatiotemporal trajectories of cases in-the-making – Ephraim
Poertner (University of Zurich, Switzerland)
3
Biopolitics, political subjectivity and Sharia in Aceh, Indonesia – Christine Schenk
(University of Geneva, Switzerland)
4
A time geography of law? – Alex Jeffrey (University of Cambridge, UK)
5
Discussant – Fiona McConnell (University of Oxford, UK)
200
Th4│NEW LTCD
The University in the Anthropocene: Higher Education and
Community Engagement in Environmental Management
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/200
Affiliation
HERG
Convenor and chair
Rebecca Farnum (King's College London, UK)
1
Keynote: Reflections on the Value of University Engagement – Timothy O'Riordan
(University of East Anglia, UK)
2
Bright Futures: Partnerships between Universities, Scholars, and Schools for
Environmental and Social Sustainability – Cherish Watton (University of Cambridge, UK),
Rebecca Farnum (King's College London, UK)
3
Intrepid Explorers: sharing experiences and learning from field research – Kate Baker
(King's College 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
Evening
18:45–
4
Making a difference: transformative learning approaches to support University students’
confidence and motivation to act as agents of change – Marisa Goulden (University of East
Anglia, UK)
5
Integrating International Volunteering across the University & in the Curriculum – Chloe
Hudson, Oriel Kenny, Su Robinson (Leeds Beckett University, UK)
201
Transnational Energy Investments in the South
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/201
Th4│NEW LTE
Affiliation
EnGRG, EGRG
Convenors
Jon Phillips (King's College London, UK), Joshua Kirshner (University of York,
UK)
Chair
Ed Brown (Loughborough University, UK)
1
Gas to Power: negotiating transnational energy governance in Ghana – Jon Phillips (King's
College London, UK)
2
Community development and renewable energy: exploring the role and potential of the
private sector in South Africa – Cheryl McEwan (Durham University, UK)
3
Mozambique’s high carbon transition: exploring the role of India – Joshua Kirshner
(University of York, UK)
4
India’s hydropower investments in Bhutan: Environmental impacts and the role of civil
society – Supriya Roychoudhury (-), Shashank Srinivasan (WWF, India)
5
New Paradox in Development, ‘Energy Access’: impact on energy market in Bangladesh –
Raihana Ferdous (Durham University, UK)
202
Elemental Experiments (2)
Th4│NEW LTF
See also: 177
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/202
Affiliation
SCGRG
Convenors
Derek McCormack, Sasha Engelmann (University of Oxford, UK), Bronislaw
Szerszynski (Lancaster University, UK)
Chair
Sasha Engelmann (University of Oxford, UK)
1
Further towards sonifications of elemental ecological systems/relationships: salt marsh
ecology experiments in temporal immersion and exchange – Michaela Palmer (University of
the West of England, UK), Owain Jones (Bath Spa University, UK)
2
Elemental Events: Pilgrims, Sound and the "flesh" – Richard Scriven (University College
Cork, Ireland)
3
Dancing Maps: exploring the elemental cartographic capacities of African and Caribbean
dance – Patricia Noxolo (University of Birmingham, UK)
4
Jelly – Elizabeth Johnson (University of Exeter, UK)
5
When horses won’t eat: Cosmic unwinding and the ends of the elemental – Franklin Ginn
(University of Edinburgh, 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
203
18:45–
New and Emerging Research in Historical Geography
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/203
Th4│PCC 1.1
Affiliation
HGRG
Convenors
Natalie Cox (University of Warwick, UK), Alice Insley (University of
Nottingham, UK), Julian Baker (University of Edinburgh, UK)
Chairs
Natalie Cox (University of Warwick, UK), Alice Insley (University of
Nottingham, UK)
1
‘To form a perfect geographer’: Major James Rennell and his ‘Geographical Illustrations’
of Africa, 1790-1802 – Natalie Cox (University of Warwick, UK)
2
Steam selection: the role of technological agency and enthusiastic knowledge in
locomotive preservation, 1958-1970 – Mark Lambert (University of Nottingham, UK)
3
Westminster-on-Sea: the political and cultural significance of Osborne House, c.1845-1901
– Lee Butcher (King's College London, UK)
4
“Supernatural Aspects of the Polar Regions:” Depictions of the Northern Lights in Arctic
Panoramas of the Mid-Nineteenth Century – Eavan O’Dochartaigh (National University of
Ireland, Galway, Ireland)
5
Exploring Glasgow’s ‘Excess Mortality’: Has Glasgow Been a More Vulnerable City Than
Liverpool? – Katharine Timpson (University of the West of Scotland, UK)
204
Th4│PCC 1.4
"Waste narratives" of the Anthropocene. Developing models of
arts –informed citizen science
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/204
Convenor
Irene Janze (Artist, Buro Jan-ZE*, The Netherlands)
Chair
Alex Plows (Bangor University, UK)
1
Introducing an “organic network” exploring boundary- crossing approaches to urban
waste innovation – Alex Plows (Bangor University, UK)
2
Sampling and mapping the Anthropocenic Leftoverlandscapes – Irene Janze (Artist, Buro
Jan-ZE*, The Netherlands)
3
Efficient recycling systems and bioplastics: the solutions for urban wastes in the future –
Marco Scopini (University of Ferrara, Italy)
4
Olympic Gold - Where has all the Waste gone? – Graeme Evans (Middlesex University, UK)
5
Urban ethnography in the ‘North’ of the urban South – Francisco Calafate-Faria (Goldsmiths,
University of London, UK)
205
Th4│PCC 1.5
Urban Political Ecology Beyond Methodological Cityism (2):
Planetary Urbanization, Landscapes, and Urban Metabolism
See also: 180
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/205
Affiliation
UGRG
Convenors
Ingrid Behrsin (University of California, Davis, USA), Creighton Connolly
(University of Manchester, UK)
Chair
Ingrid Behrsin (University of California, Davis, USA)
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
Biodiversity offsetting and extended urbanisation: operationalising landscapes beyond
the limits of the city – Andy Lockhart (University of Sheffield, UK)
2
The political effects of planetary urbanisation in rural Mozambique – Gediminas Lesutis
(University of Manchester, UK)
3
Nested Political Ecologies: The edible bird nest boom in Malaysian cities – Creighton
Connolly (University of Manchester, UK)
4
Space for Waste at the Fringes of Urbanity – Nicolas Schlitz (University of Osnabrück,
Germany)
5
Discussant – Ingrid Behrsin (University of California, Davis, USA), Creighton Connolly
(University of Manchester, UK)
206
Th4│PCC 1.6
Investigating the Anthropo-Unseen: Mapping the Paranormal,
the Extraordinary and the Unknown (2) Approaching the
Anthropo-Unseen
See also: 181
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/206
Convenors
Paul Kingsbury (Simon Fraser University, Canada), Sara MacKian, Steve Pile
(The Open University, UK)
Chair
Sara MacKian (Open University, UK)
1
Feeling Strange: creative and exploratory practices in the research of enchanted
geographies – James Thurgill (London College of Communication, UK), Clare Parfree (-)
2
Methodology of Spirit: Toward Mapping, Healing Colonial Trauma in the U.S.-Mexico
Borderlands – Kristina Gordon (University of Iowa, USA)
3
Investigating Paranormal Investigators – Paul Kingsbury (Simon Fraser University, Canada)
4
The Wonders of Fallibilism – Keith Woodward (University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA)
207
Understanding inequalities in transport and mobility (2)
Th4│PCC 2.1
See also: 182
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/207
Affiliation
TGRG
Convenors
Eda Beyazit (Istanbul Technical University, Turkey), Nihan Akyelken
(University of Oxford, UK)
Chair
Eda Beyazit (Istanbul Technical University, Turkey)
1
Towards a distributive justice framework in urban transportation – Rafael Henrique Moraes
Pereira (University of Oxford, UK)
2
Nonsense on stilts revisited: Transport appraisal, CBA and distributional impacts – Robin
Hickman (University College London, UK)
3
Transport and Social Inequality: Merseyside Local Area Travel Poverty Survey – Karen
Lucas, Ian Philips (University of Leeds, UK), Corinne Mulley, Liang Ma (University of Sydney,
Australia), John Bates (Independent Consultant)
4
Moving on from Transport and Social Exclusion: applying the Capability Approach to
studying the relationship between mobility, inequality and well-being – Miriam Ricci
(University of the West of England, 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–
Discussant – Eda Beyazit (Istanbul Technical University, Turkey), Nihan Akyelken (University of
Oxford, UK)
208
Th4│PCC 2.4
Uncalled for or Just (Un)Cool? Young People-Friendly
Research Methods (2)
See also: 183
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/208
Affiliation
PyGyRG
Convenors and chairs
Catherine Wilkinson (University of Liverpool, UK), Samantha Wilkinson
(University of Manchester, UK)
1
The Role of Participatory Visual Methods and Social Networks in the Internet within a
Multi-Methods Approach to Explore the Link between Young Colombians’ Aspirations and
Spaces – Sonja Marzi (University of East Anglia, UK)
2
Reflections on creating a youth-centred research protocol – Peter Hopkins (Newcastle
University, UK)
3
Deliberative Democracies in Global Justice Movements: an Ethnomethodlogical Approach
– John Haworth (University of East London, UK)
4
Your place or mine?: interpreting students’ multi-layered experiences of "walking
interviews" – Mark Holton (Plymouth University, UK)
5
"What if my friend asks who’s the weird lady looking at me?":Shadowing First Year
University Students – Denise Goerisch (University of Wisconsin, USA)
209
Th4│PCC 2.2&3
Proximity and intraregional aspects of tourism (2): negotiating
familiarity and difference
See also: 185
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/209
Affiliation
GLTRG
Convenors and chairs
Jelmer Jeuring (University of Groningen, The Netherlands), Inmaculada DiazSoria (University of Toulouse 2-Jean Jaurès, France)
1
‘We always, always come back here’: Familiar places and familiar tourists – David Bowen,
Jackie Clarke (Oxford Brookes University, UK)
2
The aestheticization of the mundane in intraregional tourism – Scott Swan (Florida State
University, USA)
3
Immigrants and hosting friends and relatives – Tom Griffin (Ryerson University, Canada)
4
The everyday life, proximities and multi-modal experiences of England’s canalscapes –
Maarja Kaaristo, Steven Rhoden (Manchester Metropolitan University, UK)
Gender and Feminist Geographies Research Group AGM
Affiliation: GFGRG
Th4│PCC 2.5
Urban Geography Research Group AGM
Th4│PCC 1.2&3
Affiliation: UGRG
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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
Evening
18:45–
There is no session 210
Social and Cultural Geography Research Group AGM
Affiliation: SCGRG
ThE│FOR S1
ThE│DEV HALL
Conference Dinner and Drinks Reception (for ticket holders
only)
Area Drinks Reception for Early Career Researchers
Sponsored by the RGS-IBG and Wiley
ThE│PCC FOY
ThE│PPC 1.2 &1.3
Verticality and the Anthropocence: politics & law of the
subsurface (in collaboration with the British Geological Survey)
Drinks Reception
Children's Geographies Drinks Reception
ThE│PCC 2.2 & 2.3
Support for postgraduates
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(with IBG) supports the professional
development of postgraduate
students through networks, training,
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and books, writing policy reports, writing for the media,
and communicating with wider audiences including
young people, schools and business.
As a postgraduate, you can submit papers to all
our journals, Area, The Geographical Journal,
Transactions of the IBG, WIREs Climate Change
and Geo, which are published by Wiley. Area awards
an annual prize for the best paper by an early career
researcher.
Grants
Our grants provide funding for geographical research,
fieldwork and teaching, and are available to teams and
individuals at all stages of their careers. The grants
available for postgraduates offer wide-ranging support
including for travel, desk and archival research, and
fieldwork.
Collaborative Doctoral Award student, Emily Hayes ©RGS-IBG
Networking and professional development
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. Some groups award
postgraduate dissertation prizes and many provide
funding for travel to conferences. Postgraduate Fellows
can join any of the groups for free.
The Postgraduate Forum (PGF) enables you to
make contact with other postgraduates in your field as
well as offering opportunities for you to develop your
professional skills and credentials through the PGF Mid
Term Conference as well as their website.
Postgraduates are encouraged to submit a paper or
poster to one of the sessions at the Society’s Annual
International Conference. The conference attracts
around 2,000 geographers from across the world and is
held at the end of August each year.
Keeping up to date
Geobyte is a regular news update for geographers and
contains announcements, information about upcoming
events, vacancies and postgraduate opportunities
in the geographical and research community, along
with other resources to support your professional
development. You can subscribe via email or RSS.
Join us as a Postgraduate Fellow
Become part of a network of researchers able to
exchange ideas through the Postgraduate Forum and
Research Groups. You will also receive discounts on
courses and conferences as a Postgraduate Fellow.
Postgraduate Fellowship is widely recognised as
a commitment to, and active involvement in, the
geographical research community.
Find out more
You can find out more about all of
our support for postgraduates by
visiting our website
W www.rgs.org/postgraduates
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. W www.rgs.org E [email protected]
Fri
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20
Sessions – Friday 4 September
211
F1│FOR LT
Author meets critics: Alex Vasudevan, Metropolitan
Occupations: The Spatial Politics of Squatting in Berlin
RGS-IBG Book Series
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/211
Affiliation
RGS-IBG Book Series
Convenor and chair
David Featherstone (University of Glasgow, UK)
1
Author meets critics: Alex Vasudevan, Metropolitan Occupations: The Spatial Politics of
Squatting in Berlin– Alex Vasudevan (University of Nottingham, UK), John McMahon Crossan
(University of Glasgow, UK), Carl Griffin (University of Sussex, UK)
212
F1│FOR S5
Historical Geographies of Anarchism: situating struggles,
studying environments (1) Cities, technics and environments:
Anarchist visions of Anthropocene
See also: 235, 258
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/212
Affiliation
HGRG
Convenors
Gerónimo Barrera de la Torre (Research Institute “Dr. José María Luis Mora”,
México), Fabien Colombo (University of Bordeaux, France), Federico Ferretti
(University of Geneva, Switzerland), Francisco Toro (University of Granada,
Spain)
Chair
Federico Ferretti (University of Geneva, Switzerland)
1
Which historical geographies for anarchism? Early anarchist geographers and present
scientific challenges – Gerónimo Barrera de la Torre (Research Institute “Dr. José María Luis
Mora”, México), Fabien Colombo (University of Bordeaux, France), Federico Ferretti (University
of Geneva, Switzerland), Francisco Toro (University of Granada, Spain)
2
Elisée Reclus’ thought as an inspiration for contemporary degrowth theory – Francisco
Toro (University of Granada, Spain)
3
The Anarchists and the city: governance, revolution and the imagination – Carl Levy
(Goldsmiths, University of London, UK)
213
Geographies of Sport (3): Sport Facilities and Participation
F1│FOR S6
See also: 164, 189, 236, 259
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/213
Convenors and chairs
Anna McLauchlan (Independent Researcher), Remco Hoekman (Mulier
Institute / Radboud University Nijmegen, The Netherlands)
1
Motions in the City: Physical Activity and Mobility in a Segregated City – Karin Book (Malmo
University, Sweden)
2
Landscape of sport facilities in the Netherlands – Remco Hoekman, Koen Breedveld (Mulier
Institute / Radboud University Nijmegen, The Netherlands), Gerbert Kraaykamp (Radboud
University Nijmegen, The Netherlands)
3
Spatial influence of sport facilities in Krakow: What is important in its location planning? –
Lukasz Kowalski (Jagiellonian University, Poland)
4
Reach beyond the absolute: a spatial history of swimming in Glasgow 1804-2014 – Anna
McLauchlan (Independent Researcher)
Fri
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20
214
F1│FOR S10
What are appropriate delivery models for sustainable energy
access in the developing world? (1)
See also: 237
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/214
Convenors
Carmen Dienst (Wuppertal Institute for Climate, Environment and Energy
GmbH, Germany), Jon Sumanik-Leary (Loughborough University, UK)
Chair
Jon Sumanik-Leary (Loughborough University, UK)
1
Delivery Models for Decentralised Rural Electrification: Case Studies in Nepal, Peru and
Kenya – Annabel Leonie Yadoo, Heather Cruickshank (University of Cambridge, UK)
2
Developing market systems for pro-poor energy services: Practical Action’s experience –
Louise Waters (Practical Action Consulting, UK)
3
Sustainable energy for the poor: using delivery model analysis to understand and design
successful interventions – Ben Garside (Sustainable Markets Group IIED (International
Institute for Environment and Development)), Emma Wilson (Independent Researcher)
4
Delivery models for locally manufactured small wind turbines – Zoé Ben (Wind
Empowerment, Centre for Alternative Technologies, France)
5
Appropriate Delivery for Who? The Community Solar Imaginary – Ed Brown, Jonathan Cloke
(Loughborough University, UK), Alison Mohr (University of Nottingham, UK)
215
Assembling Globalization (1): Assembling Place and Power
F1│FOR S11
See also: 238
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/215
Convenors
Michael Woods, Laura Jones, Marcus Welsh (Aberystwyth University, UK)
Chair
Martin Jones (The University of Sheffield, UK)
1
Assemblage, Place, Power and Globalization – Michael Woods, Jesse Heley, Laura Jones,
Marcus Welsh (Aberystwyth University, UK)
2
Effecting the State Through its Others – Christopher Parker (Ghent University, Belgium)
3
The Socio-Relationality of Planning: the Assembling of Ben Gurion International Airport –
Mor Shilon (Technion, Israel)
4
Strategic informal practices by evicted dwellers in a globalising metropolis – Clara Rivas
Alonso (University of Leicester, UK)
5
The global assemblage of halal: proliferating understandings and tensions – John Lever
(University of Huddersfield, UK), Florence Bergeaud-Blackler (Aix Marseille University, France)
216
Sustainable Freight for City and Global Logistics
F1│NEW LTA
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/216
Affiliation
TGRG
Convenors and chairs
Tom Zunder, Clare Woroniuk (Newcastle University, UK)
1
What future for Rail freight in Europe? – Phillip Mortimer (TruckTrain Ltd, UK)
2
Addressing sub-optimisation of reverse logistics systems managing recycling and multitrip packaging streams: A comparative analysis from the UK multiple retail sector in its
potential to apply "Just in Time" paradigms to reverse logistics systems management –
Graeme Heron, Michael Morley (Newcastle University, UK)
Fri
3
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20
Last Mile Transport by De Facto Teleportation Utility – Robert DeDomenico (Independent
Researcher)
217
F1│NEW LTB
Geographies of debt and indebtedness: everyday and
comparative frames (1)
See also: 239
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/217
Affiliation
EGRG, PolGRG
Convenors
Christopher Harker (Durham University, UK), Samuel Kirwan (University of
Bristol, UK)
Chair
Samuel Kirwan (University of Bristol, UK)
1
Spacing Debt in Ramallah, Palestine – Christopher Harker (Durham University, UK)
2
Indebtedness in South Africa: mediated capitalism – Deborah James (London School of
Economics and Political Science, UK)
3
"Losing £££.losing sleep": young people's rest-less geographies of debt – John Horton
(University of Northampton, UK)
4
Geography of Assets and Debt – Beverley Searle (University of Dundee, UK), Stephan Köppe
(University College Dublin, Ireland)
218
Geo-aesthetics in an Anthropocenic World (1): Discussing
F1│NEW LTCD
See also: 240
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/218
Affiliation
SCGRG
Convenors
Deborah Dixon (University of Glasgow, UK), Dominic Walker (University of
Exeter, UK)
Chair
Deborah Dixon (University of Glasgow, UK)
1
Anthropocene as provocation: considering "what if" – Justin Westgate (University of
Wollongong, Australia)
2
Experimenting with artists: conceptions of an Anthropocenic unfolding – Dominic Walker
(University of Exeter, UK)
3
Cultures of the Anthropocene – Neal White (Bournemouth University, UK)
4
Art-Science: Is there any future in it? – Rhian Field (Aberystwyth University, UK)
5
Discussion – Deborah Dixon (University of Glasgow, UK)
219
F1│NEW LTE
Welfare responses in the meantimes: the geographies of food
banking (1)
See also: 241
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/219
Convenors
Jon May (Queen Mary University of London, UK), Paul Cloke, Andrew
Williams (University of Exeter, UK)
Chair
Jon May (Queen Mary University of London, UK)
1
Food Banks in the UK: Contested Spaces of Liminality – Nicola Livingstone (University
College London, UK)
Fri
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20
2
Food banking in the meantimes: emerging ethical and political subjects – Andrew Williams,
Paul Cloke (University of Exeter, UK), Jon May (Queen Mary University of London, UK), Mark
Goodwin (University of Exeter, UK)
3
"Enough is Enough": Responses to the growth of foodbanks in Belfast, Northern Ireland –
Jenny McCurry (Queen Mary University of London, UK)
220
Governing Experimental Spaces of Urban Transition (1)
F1│NEW LTF
See also: 242
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/220
Affiliation
PERG
Convenors
Mike Hodson, James Evans (University of Manchester, UK), Kes McCormick
(University of Lund, Sweden)
Chair
James Evans (University of Manchester, UK)
1
Experimenting for Urban Sustainability Transitions: A Systematic Literature Review –
Frans Sengers (Eindhoven University of Technology, The Netherlands), Anna Wieczorek (Vrije
Universiteit Amsterdam / Eindhoven University of Technology, The Netherlands), Rob Raven
(Utrecht University / Eindhoven University of Technology, The Netherlands), Frans Berkhout
(King's College London, UK)
2
Sustainable LivingLab: research and co-creation infrastructure: Analysing households’
ego-networks and resource use – Carolin Baedeker, Christa Liedtke, Kathrin Greiff, Marco
Hasselkuβ (Wuppertal Institute for Climate, Environment and Energy, Germany), Holger Rohn
(Trifolium Beratungsgesellschaft mbH)
3
Beyond Smart City: Governing the Digital Commons in Urban Sustainability Transitions –
Adrien Labaeye, Harald Mieg (Humboldt University of Berlin, Germany)
221
F1│PCC 1.1
New and Emerging Rural Researchers (1): Rural Society and
Change
See also: 243, 266
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/221
Affiliation
RGRG
Convenors
Michaela Kennard (University of Greenwich, UK), Rory Hill (University of
Oxford, UK)
Chair
Rory Hill (University of Oxford, UK)
1
Understanding the discourses that surround older people in rural communities – Andrew
Maclaren (University of Aberdeen, UK)
2
The UK Farm Shop: A typology and their effect on the farming family household dynamic
and farm business – Robert Geary-Griffin (University of Leicester, UK)
3
Interviewing women, stock and the Wairarapa landscape: A more-than-human
geographical re-visioning of farm fieldwork in Aotearoa/New Zealand – Rebecca Ream
(Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand)
4
Impacts of Next Generation Broadband (NGB) on Small & Micro size enterprises (SMEs) in
the North of East of Scotland: a mixed method approach – Megan Palmer-Abbs (University of
Aberdeen, UK)
5
How to create resilient rural businesses? Exploring the Perception of Rural Entrepreneurs
– Artur Steiner (Scotland’s Rural College, UK)
Fri
222
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20
Geographies of Islamophobia
F1│PCC 1.4
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/222
Affiliation
GJRG
Convenors
Peter Hopkins, Kate Botterill (Newcastle University, UK)
Chair
Kate Botterill (Newcastle University, UK)
1
A charitable response to Islamophobia? Somali migrants charitable practices in and
through the East End of London – Kavita Datta, Al James (Queen Mary University of London,
UK), Jane Pollard (Newcastle University, UK)
2
A threat on many levels? An exploration of the construction of a racialized Muslim Other
in US climate security discourse – Andrew Telford (Durham University, UK)
3
Anticipating Islamophobia: encountering race, religion, and rurality – Rhys Dafydd Jones
(Aberystwyth University, UK)
4
Muslims in the Bluegrass? Reactions to an Islamic Centre in Lexington, Kentucky –
Elizabeth Leppman (Independent researcher)
5
Islamophobia (almost) without Muslims - The Case of Poland – Konrad Pedziwiatr (Kraków
University of Economics, Poland / Södertörn University, Sweden), Kasia Narkowicz (University of
York, UK)
223
Living in Heterotopias: Communities, mobility and aesthetics
F1│PCC 1.5
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/223
Convenors
Jun-Hua Lin, Chiung-Wen Chang (National Dong Hwa University, Taiwan)
Chair
Heng-Chang Chi (National Dong Hwa University, Taiwan)
1
Constructing “a good lifestyle”: Second-hand shops and lifestyle migrations in Hualien,
Taiwan – Jun-Hua Lin (National Dong Hwa University, Taiwan)
2
Grounding or levitating contemplative migrants? A case of the HAPPIS community in
eastern Taiwan – Chiung-Wen Chang (National Dong Hwa University, Taiwan)
3
Moving East: Internal migrants search for a better life – Heng-Chang Chi (National Dong Hwa
University, Taiwan)
4
Preserving a "better life": The recreational boat as lived heterotopic space – Robyn Mayes,
Deanna Grant-Smith (Queensland University of Technology, Australia)
224
F1│PCC 1.6
Teaching as a postgraduate: challenges, adaptations and best
practices
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/224
Affiliation
PGF, HERG
Convenor(s)
Greg Philip Thomas (Aberystwyth University, UK), Will Andrews (Aberystwyth
University, UK), Jennifer Hill (University of the West of England, UK)
Chair(s)
Jennifer Hill (University of the West of England, UK)
1
Small Group Teaching – reflections from evaluation of practice – Sonja Rewhorn (University
of Chester, UK)
2
Responding to change: Postgraduate Teaching Assistants and the campaign for fair pay –
Joe Thorogood, Harry Stopes (University College London, UK)
Fri
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20
3
Re-thinking the why and how of learning: reflections on shared learning experiences in
academia – Andrew Cook (University of the West of England, UK)
4
Postgraduate tutors in Higher Education: some reflections from an academic staff member
– Jennifer Hill (University of the West of England, UK)
5
Whose voice is it anyway? : Delivery and development, what’s the difference and why
does it matter? – Rachel Hunt, Victoria Smillie (University of Glasgow, UK)
6
Blurred lines? Conflicts of being a postgraduate teaching assistant, a postgraduate/
undergraduate perspective – Greg Philip Thomas, Oliver Haine (Aberystwyth University, UK)
225
F1│PCC 2.1
Islands, Archipelagos and the Anthropocene (1) –
contemporary debates in island studies
See also: 247
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/225
Convenors
Jonathan Pugh (Newcastle University, UK), David Chandler (University of
Westminster, UK), Elaine Stratford (University of Tasmania, Australia)
Chair
Jonathan Pugh (Newcastle University, UK)
1
Small Islands, Catastrophic Risks: Feelings, Emotions, and Affects as Policy Resources –
Jonathan Pugh (Newcastle University, UK), Elaine Stratford (University of Tasmania, Australia),
David Chandler (University of Westminster, UK), Carol Farbotko (University of Tasmania,
Australia)
2
Island Urbanism in the Anthropocene: Do Island Cities Undermine Island Studies? – Ilan
Kelman (University College London, UK), Adam Adam Grydehøj (Island Dynamics), Charlotte
Barrow (University College London, UK)
3
Getting playful: ludic Island Studies? – Chris Perkins (University of Manchester, UK), Sybille
Lammes (University of Warwick, UK), Jana Wendler (University of Manchester, UK)
4
King Canute’s gated communities: Living dreams and nightmares in tourist destinations in
the Indian and Pacific oceans – Roy Smith (Nottingham Trent University, UK)
226
Distance, Proximity and the Geopolitical (1)
F1│PCC 2.4
See also: 248
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/226
Affiliation
HPGRG, PolGRG
Convenors
Sean Carter, Anna Jackman, Patrick Weir (University of Exeter, UK)
Chair
Anna Jackman (University of Exeter, UK)
1
A Topological Map of Gwadar – Nishat Awan (University of Sheffield, UK)
2
Separation, distance and connection: The changing political geography of the Nathu La
pass between Sikkim and Tibet – Ravi Baghel (University of Heidelberg, Germany)
3
Anti-Encounters: On Distance at Close Quarters – Nick Gill, Andy Burridge (University of
Exeter, UK)
227
F1│PCC 2.5
Producing Urban Life: Fragility and Socio-Cultural
Infrastructures (1) Fluid Infrastructures
See also: 249, 272
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/227
Fri
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20
Affiliation
UGRG
Convenors
Lizzie Richardson (University of Cambridge, UK), Robert Shaw (Durham
University, UK), Jonathan Silver (Durham University / London School of
Economics and Political Science, UK)
Chair
Lizzie Richardson (University of Cambridge, UK)
1
Producing Urban Life: Infrastructural Perspectives – Lizzie Richardson (University of
Cambridge, UK), Robert Shaw (Durham University, UK), Jonathan Silver (Durham University /
London School of Economics and Political Science, UK)
2
The micro-infrastructure of injectable drugs: pipes, canals and veins in contemporary
Bucharest – Michele Lancione (University of Cambridge, UK)
3
Circulating Uncertainty: Information and Insecurity in Karachi – Sobia Ahmad Kaker
(London School of Economics and Political Science / Newcastle University, UK)
4
Urban density and intensive heterogeneities: Navigating city life in Namuwongo, Kampala
– Colin McFarlane (Durham University, UK), Jonathan Silver (Durham University / London School
of Economics and Political Science, UK)
228
F1│PCC 2.6
Biodiversity, markets and human wellbeing (1): political
ecology and the social impacts of neoliberal conservation
governance
See also: 250
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/228
Convenors
George Holmes (University of Leeds, UK), Connor Cavanagh (Norwegian
University of Life Sciences, Norway)
Chair
George Holmes (University of Leeds, UK)
1
Rethinking the social impacts of conservation in an age of neoliberalism – George Holmes
(University of Leeds, UK), Connor Cavanagh (Norwegian University of Life Sciences, Norway)
2
Intimacies and Territorialities: Examining Novel Aspects of Neoliberal Conservation in
Laikipia County, Kenya – Walker DePuy, Ryan Unks, Laura German (University of Georgia,
USA)
3
Neoliberal Conservation and the Juridification of Environmental Politics – Derick Fay
(University of California, Riverside, USA)
4
Neoliberal conservation as a contested process: Critical challenges in post-crisis Europe
– Jose Cortes-Vasquez (University of Manchester, UK), Evangelia Apostolopoulo (University of
Cambridge, UK)
5
Discussant – Sian Sullivan (Bath Spa University, UK)
229
Gentle Geographies
F1│PCC 1.2&3
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/229
Affiliation
PyGyRG
Convenors
Matt Finn (University of Exeter, UK), Jayne Jeffries (University of Newcastle,
UK)
Chair
Kye Askins (University of Glasgow, UK)
1
Towards more gentle geographies – Matt Finn (University of Exeter, UK)
Fri
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20
2
Gentle Ways of Knowing – Jayne Jeffries (University of Newcastle, UK)
3
The possibilities and potential of a more gentle urban studies: reflections on a
collaboration with Just Space Economy and Planning – Myfanwy Taylor (University College
London, UK)
4
Towards a gentle geography of sound – Karla Berrens (Open University of Catalonia, Spain)
5
Letting them take you as they want: researcher positioning, power and ethic – Adefemi
Adekunle (Newman University, UK)
6
Mental Wellbeing and Gentle Methodologies - Anthony Dolan (Keele University, UK)
7
A Quiet Repositioning – Lisa Meaney (Independent Researcher)
8
Learning to be gentle – Jenny Pickerill (University of Sheffield, UK)
9
How to be a Geographer-Priest? Reflections on participatory research and the vocation of
gentleness – Lia Dong Shimada (Roehampton University, UK)
10
Discussant – Kye Askins (University of Glasgow, UK)
230
F1│PCC 2.2&3
Challenging expectations: responsibilities, quality of life and
demand reduction
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/230
Affiliation
EnGRG
Convenors
Karen Parkhill (University of York, UK), Karen Bickerstaff, Catherine Butler
(University of Exeter, UK)
Chair
Karen Bickerstaff (University of Exeter, UK)
1
Distributing demand: the needed, the normal and the underspent – Gordon Walker
(Lancaster University, UK)
2
Fear and loathing in UK’s energy futures: expectations, rights and responsibilities in
potential demand side management strategies – Dana Abi Ghanem, Sarah Mander, Clair
Gough (University of Manchester, UK)
3
Living the "Good Life"?: energy biographies, identities and competing normative
frameworks – Christopher Groves, Karen Henwood, Fiona Shirani (Cardiff University, UK),
Catherine Butler (University of Exeter, UK), Karen Parkhill (University of York, UK), Nick Pidgeon
(Cardiff University, UK)
4
Welfare, Employment and Energy Demand: Exploring the role of government policy in the
constitution of energy needs – Catherine Butler (University of Exeter, UK), Karen Parkhill
(University of York, UK), Karen Bickerstaff (University of Exeter, UK)
5
Discussant – Rosie Day (University of Birmingham, UK), Stefan Bouzarovski (University of
Manchester, UK), Carolyn Snell (University of York, UK)
231
F1│QUE LT4.1&2
Wet Geographies III (1): Water-worlds – art practices and wet
ecologies
See also: 56, 161, 253, 257
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/231
Affiliation
HPGRG
Convenor and chair
Veronica Vickery (University of Exeter, UK)
1
Watermeets – Minty Donald (University of Glasgow, UK)
Fri
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20
2
Drop in the Ocean – Jess Allen (Independent Artist)
3
Underwateredge - Walking the historic shoreline of The Pevensey Levels – Charlotte Still
(Independent artist), Clare Whistler (Independent artist)
4
Watermarked – Carol Laidler (Independent artist), Pat Jamieson (Independent artist)
5
Wandering Shards – Susan Trangmar (Independent artist)
6
Performance programme – Jess Burford, Sapphire Urwick (PIDGE Theatre, independent
artists), Lynne Imperatore (University of the West of England / HATCH Drawing Research
Project)
232
F1│QUE MT1
Knowing (and engaging) Nature Otherwise (1): Human and
More-Than-Human Relations at the Extractive Frontier in Latin
America
See also: 254
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/232
Convenors and chairs
Lexy Seedhouse (Newcastle University, UK), Juan Pablo Sarmiento Barletti
(Durham University, UK)
1
Socialism and Nature: The Law of the Rights of Mother Earth in Bolivia – Mauro Di Lullo
(University of Stirling, UK)
2
Hybrid Traditions: Naturing the Politics of Knowledge amongst Indigenous and
Agroecological Communities in Central America – Naomi Millner (University of Bristol, UK)
3
The Materialities of Social Change in Wirikuta and Cerro de San Pedro: Contrasting
Counter-Development Strategies in Search for Conservation in Two Neo-Extractive
Conflicts in Central Mexico – Oscar Felipe Reyna Jimenez (Wageningen University)
4
Between the Margins of the State and the Heart of Science: Climate Science and
Pastoralism in an Andean Community – Gustavo Valdivia (John Hopkins University, USA)
233
F1│QUE MT2&3
Time to move? Exploring the temporal geographies of
international migration (1): Histories, memories, and
disjunctures
See also: 255, 278
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/233
Affiliation
PopGRG
Convenors
Elizabeth Mavroudi (Loughborough University, UK), Anastasia Christou
(Middlesex University, UK), Ben Page (University College London, UK)
Chair
Ben Page (University College London, UK)
1
Chronicling Kenyan Asian diasporic histories: ‘newcomers’, ‘established’ migrants, and
the post-colonial practices of time-work – Jen Dickinson (University of Leicester, UK)
2
A time before diaspora in ancient Italy? – Elena Isayev (University of Exeter, UK)
3
"I don't know what to do with the past": Diasporic Greeks in Australia and relationships
between homeland memories, the passing of time and identity – Elizabeth Mavroudi
(Loughborough University, UK)
cartographica
Cartographica is an international, interdisciplinary and
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Cartographica provides a forum for the exchange of original
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surveying.
Recent Special issues
“Deconstructing the Map”: 25 Years On
(50.1, Spring 2015)
This special issue marks the 25th
anniversary of the publication of J.B. Harley’s
“Deconstructing the Map” (1989), which has
had a major influence in the fields of critical
cartography, the history of cartography, and
human geography more generally.
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)
Internet Mapping: Selected Papers
from the 25th Conference of
the International Cartographic
Association, Paris, 3–8 July 2011
(46.2, Summer 2011)
Cognitive Issues in Geographic
Information Visualization
(44.3, Fall 2009)
Cartographica is available in print and online at
Cartographica Online (bit.ly/cartonline) and Project Muse (bit.ly/cartopm)
5201 Dufferin Street,
Toronto, Ontario M3H 5T8 Canada
Tel: (416) 667-7810 Fax: (416) 667-7881
[email protected] www.utpjournals.com
Fri
Session 1
234
F2│FOR LT
Convenor and chair
1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20
Plenary lecture, sponsored by Transactions of the Institute of
British Geographers
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/234
Gavin Bridge (Durham University, UK)
Geographers and the discourse of an Earth transformed: influencing the intellectual
weather or changing the intellectual climate? – Noel Castree (University of Wollongong,
Australia)
235
F2│FOR S5
Historical Geographies of Anarchism: situating struggles,
studying environments (2) Transnational Anarchism and
Anarchist Geographers: situating theories, networks and
struggles
See also: 212, 258
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/235
Affiliation
HGRG
Convenors and chairs
Gerónimo Barrera de la Torre (Research Institute “Dr. José María Luis Mora”,
México), Fabien Colombo (University of Bordeaux, France), Federico Ferretti
(University of Geneva, Switzerland), Francisco Toro (University of Granada,
Spain)
1
North American coal dust and Italian anarchist propaganda: understanding the political
culture of the Cronaca Sovversiva by examining its audience – Andrew Hoyt (University of
Minnesota, USA)
2
Revolutions, and their places: the Anarchist Geographers and the problem of nationalities
in the Age of Empire – Federico Ferretti (University of Geneva, Switzerland)
3
Kropotkin and the politics of space: a contextualist approach – Pascale Siegrist (Universität
Konstanz, Germany)
4
Biopolitical Authority, Laughter, and Violence in fin-de-siècle French Anarchism – Julian
Brigstocke (Cardiff University, UK)
236
Geographies of Sport (4): Methods and Approaches to Sport
F2│FOR S6
See also: 164, 189, 213, 259
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/236
Affiliation
GHRG
Convenor and chair
Lisa Stansbie (University of Huddersfield, UK)
1
The Spectacle of The Sporting and Artistic Enduring Body – Lisa Stansbie (University of
Huddersfield, UK)
2
A spatial regression analysis of sport participation – Paul Widdop (Leeds Beckett University,
UK), David Cutts (Bath University, UK)
3
Serious Sport as a Benign Form of Popular Culture? – Paul Waltham (Bishop Burton College,
UK)
4
Tracking and trailing: Examining community engagement in dance and physical activity
via wearable technologies and qualitative mapping – Becky Watson, Brett Lashua, Pip
Trevorrow (Leeds Beckett University, UK)
Fri
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20
237
F2│FOR S10
What are appropriate delivery models for sustainable energy
access in the developing world? (2)
See also: 214
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/237
Convenors
Carmen Dienst (Wuppertal Institute for Climate, Environment and Energy
GmbH, Germany), Jon Sumanik-Leary (Loughborough University, UK)
Chair
Carmen Dienst (Wuppertal Institute for Climate, Environment and Energy
GmbH, Germany)
1
From niche experiments to energy delivery models? Experiences from Indonesia – Jens
Marquardt (Freie Universität Berlin, Germany)
2
Issues with models of energy access in rural India – Ankit Kumar (Durham University, UK)
3
Sustainable Energy for Sustainable Development: Towards a Community-driven – Ebun
Akinsete, Victor Osu, Joanneke Kruijsen (Robert Gordon University, UK)
4
Understanding the barriers to the introduction and uptake of improved cookstoves –
Charlotte Ray, Mike Clifford, Sarah Jewitt (University of Nottingham, UK), Temilade Sesan
(University of Ibadan, Nigeria)
5
Supporting African Municipalities in Sustainable Energy Transitions – Alex Ndibwami
(Uganda Martyrs University, Uganda), Simon Batchelor (Gamos Ltd), David Mann, Josephine
Namukisa (Uganda Martyrs University, Uganda)
238
Assembling Globalization (2): Politics, People, Systems
F2│FOR S11
See also: 215
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/238
Convenors
Michael Woods, Laura Jones, Marcus Welsh (Aberystwyth University, UK)
Chair
Michael Woods (Aberystwyth University, UK)
1
Globalisation and the politics of assemblage – Andy Davies (University of Liverpool, UK)
2
Using assemblage theory to interrogate the notion of "community resilience" – Martin
Mulligan (RMIT University, Australia)
3
Policies and practice of education for development and environmental sustainability:
examining the relevance of assemblage theory – Karen Nash (Bath University, UK)
4
Carbonscapes and beyond: Conceptualizing the instability of oil landscapes – Tarje
Wanvik, Håvard Haarstad (University of Bergen, Norway)
5
"Pinning a Butterfly to a Board"? Assemblage, Assembling, Plasticity – Amanda CrawleyJackson, Martin Jones (University of Sheffield, UK)
Fri
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20
239
F2│NEW LTB
Geographies of debt and indebtedness: everyday and
comparative frames (2)
See also: 217
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/239
Affiliation
EGRG, PolGRG
Convenors
Christopher Harker (Durham University, UK), Samuel Kirwan (University of
Bristol, UK)
Chair
Christopher Harker (Durham University, UK)
1
Visualising the household budget sheet—numbers as the language of indebtedness –
Johnna Montgomerie (Goldsmiths, University of London, UK)
2
Common financial statements: transformations of indebted subjects in the work of
Citizens Advice – Samuel Kirwan (University of Bristol, UK)
3
Challenging the poverty industry: Lessons from London’s transnational migrants’ credit
and debt practices and institutions – Kavita Datta, Camille Aznar (Queen Mary University of
London, UK)
4
Driving into Debt? Suburbanization, Automobility, and Household Finance – Alan Walks
(University of Toronto, Canada)
240
Geo-aesthetics in an Anthropocenic World (2): Collaborating
F2│NEW LTCD
See also: 218
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/240
Convenors
Dominic Walker (University of Exeter, UK), Deborah Dixon (University of
Glasgow, UK)
Chair
Dominic Walker (University of Exeter, UK)
1
Porous topologies of (im)perceptibilities as creative process – Sarah Casey, Rebecca Ellis
(Lancaster University, UK)
2
Seismic Sanctuaries: the photographic representation of geo-archaeologies – Stephen
Vaughan (Plymouth University / Bath Spa University, UK), Iain Stewart (Plymouth University, UK)
3
Transgression (Rising Waters) – Antony Lyons (-), Iain Biggs (University of the West of
England, UK)
241
F2│NEW LTE
Welfare responses in the meantimes: the geographies of food
banking (2)
See also: 219
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/241
Convenors
Jon May (Queen Mary University of London, UK), Paul Cloke, Andrew
Williams (University of Exeter, UK)
Chair
Andrew Williams (University of Exeter, UK)
1
Food Banks and Boxes - the challenges of responding to different "wants" and "needs"
for local food in Wales – Eifiona Thomas Lane, Rebecca Jones, Siȃn Pierce, David Beck, Hefin
Gwilym (Bangor University, UK)
2
Food-Waste-Hunger-Relief: The Paradox of Plenty in Appalachian Emergency Food
Networks – Bradley Wilson, Joshua Lohnes (West Virginia University, USA)
Fri
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20
3
On nigh expired yogurt and the use of food handouts – Tuur Ghys (University of Antwerp,
Belgium)
4
Influencing food practices (nutrition, budgeting, waste) of those in receipt of emergency
food aid – Emma Roe (University of Southampton, UK), Laura Colebrooke (Cardiff University,
UK)
242
Governing Experimental Spaces of Urban Transition (2)
F2│NEW LTF
See also: 220
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/242
Affiliation
PERG
Convenors
Mike Hodson, James Evans (University of Manchester, UK), Kes McCormick
(University of Lund, Sweden)
Chair
Kes McCormick (University of Lund, Sweden)
1
Lessons from local community initiatives: the role of self-organization in urban
governance – Mustafa Hasanov, Christian Zuidema, Justin Beaumont (University of Groningen,
The Netherlands)
2
Power, Privilege and the Parklet: Social Impact Design, Active Citizenship and the
Restructuring of San Francisco, CA – Zac Taylor (University of Leeds, UK)
3
Cooperatives: Reinvigorating civic governance for the Energiewende? – Arwen Colell
(Environmental Policy Research Center Berlin, Germany), Luise Neumann-Cosel (BürgerEnergie
Berlin eG, Germany)
4
Environmental Movement and Grassroots Innovation of Bamboo Bicycle: Introducing
Sustainability Transitions Thinking in Imphal City of Manipur – Thounaojam Somokanta
(Central University of Gujarat, India)
5
Experimenting/intervening/tracking: Intervening in the governance of sustainable
practices through mixed research methodologies – Alison Browne (The University of
Manchester, UK)
243
F2│PCC 1.1
New and Emerging Rural Researchers (2): Rural Society and
Place
See also: 221, 266
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/243
Affiliation
RGRG
Convenors
Michaela Kennard (University of Greenwich, UK), Rory Hill (University of
Oxford, UK)
Chair
Keith Halfacree (Swansea University, UK)
1
Scotland's community land initiatives: power, community and change in place-based rural
development – Tim Braunholtz-Speight (University of the Highlands and Islands, UK)
2
Relationality, networks and self-determination: Decolonisation and innovation through an
Indigenous tourism initiative in Chile – Marcela Palomino-Schalscha (Victoria University of
Wellington, New Zealand)
3
Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Trans Equalities and Slippery Rural/Urban Imaginaries in East
Sussex, England – Nick McGlynn (University of Brighton, UK)
Fri
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20
4
Survey, representation, design and reuse of the rural paths networks to develop the local
economy, fruition and knowledge of the regional landscape resources – Enrico Cicalò,
Maurizio Minchilli, Loredana Tedeschi, Laura Soro, Francesca Bua (Università degli Studi di
Sassari, Italy)
5
Involving the Locals in Planning their Future Health Services – a Health Geography
Approach – Sarah Bowyer (University of the Highlands and Islands, UK)
6
Beyond dominance/resistance: exploring lineage-state relations in the (re)construction of
lineage spaces – Chen Ningning (National University of Singapore, Singapore)
244
Doing Gender and Justice: Freedoms, Action and Participation
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/244
F2│PCC 1.4
Affiliation
GJRG
Convenors
Rachel Pain (Durham University, UK), Sally Lloyd-Evans (University of
Reading, UK)
Chair
Rachel Pain (Durham University, UK)
1
The gendering of everyday activism, co-production and ‘doing justice’: lessons from a UK
community research project – Sally Lloyd-Evans (University of Reading, UK)
2
Asylum seekers in Australia – creating a space to challenge new realities – Alex Haynes
(Monash University, Australia)
3
Performing solutions to gender-based violence and sexual health risk: Drama-based PAR
research with young people in Zambia – Mike Kesby (University of St Andrews, UK)
245
F2│PCC 1.5
Doing Community Development the Corporate Way: Evidence
from the Developing World
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/245
Affiliation
DARG
Convenors
Glenn Banks (Massey University, New Zealand), Emma Mawdsley (University
of Cambridge, UK)
Chair
Emma Mawdsley (University of Cambridge, UK)
1
Development spaces at the interface: corporate-community development in Pacific
tourism – Emma Hughes (Massey University, New Zealand)
2
Weighing up corporate ‘development’ intervention: Contextualising social justice in mine
impacted communities in PNG – Emma Richardson (Massey University, New Zealand)
3
Power, agency and the anticipation of dependency: Community expectations of corporate
community development in Melanesia – Glenn Banks (Massey University, New Zealand)
4
Magic Bullet or Sleight of Hand: Enrolling the Private Sector in Community Development –
Cheryl McEwan (Durham University, UK), Emma Mawdsley (University of Cambridge, UK),
Regina Scheyvens (Massey University, New Zealand)
Fri
246
F2│PCC 1.6
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20
Writing Successfully for Journal of Geography in Higher
Education Workshop
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/246
Affiliation
HERG
Convenors
Derek France (University of Chester, UK), Jennifer Hill (University of the West
of England, UK)
247
Islands, Archipelagos and the Anthropocene (2): contemporary
debates in island studies
F2│PCC 2.1
See also: 225
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/247
Convenors
Jonathan Pugh (Newcastle University, UK), David Chandler (University of
Westminster, UK), Elaine Stratford (University of Tasmania, Australia)
Chair
Elaine Stratford (University of Tasmania, Australia)
1
Islands, enclaves and violence: sociospatial perspectives on resource conflict in Island
Melanesia – Matthew Allen (Australian National University, Australia)
2
Panarchy in multiple stressors – Bahamian environmental knowledge and adaptivity of a
socio-ecological system – Beate Ratter (University of Hamburg, Germany), Arnd Holdschlag
(University of Hamburg, Germany)
3
Social capital in context – adaptation to climate change on small islands – Jan Petzold
(University of Hamburg, Germany)
4
The pace of humanity throughout the world archipelago: the case of the Formosan ‘island
hoping’ process – Christian Depraetere (Institut de Recherche pour le Développement, France)
5
Writing Islands in the Anthropocene: Literature, Cultural Geography, and the
De(con)struction of Islands – Daniel Graziadei (University of Munich, Germany), Johannes
Riquet (University of Zurich, Switzerland)
248
Distance, Proximity and the Geopolitical (2)
F2│PCC 2.4
See also: 226
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/248
Affiliation
HPGRG, PolGRG
Convenors
Sean Carter, Patrick Weir, Anna Jackman (University of Exeter, UK)
Chair
Patrick Weir (University of Exeter, UK)
1
The distant, proximate, oxymoronic drone – Anna Jackman (University of Exeter, UK)
2
Distant proximity in toxic assemblages: Locating responsibility in Cambodia’s pesticide
landscape – Angeliki Antonia Balayannis (University of Melbourne, Australia)
3
Bridging Distance in Documentary Film: Adam Curtis’ and Popular Geopolitics – Patrick
Weir (University of Exeter, UK)
4
The Cinematic Geopolitics of Co-existence: Proximity and co-presence in ‘Of Gods and
Men’ – Sean Carter (University of Exeter, UK)
Fri
249
F2│PCC 2.5
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20
Producing Urban Life: Fragility and Socio-Cultural
Infrastructures (2): Energies, Ecologies and Infrastructure
See also: 227, 272
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/249
Affiliation
UGRG
Convenors
Lizzie Richardson (University of Cambridge, UK), Robert Shaw (Durham
University, UK), Jonathan Silver (Durham University / London School of
Economics and Political Science, UK)
Chair
Robert Shaw (Durham University, UK)
1
“Oysters to the rescue!” Ecological infrastructure and the enrollment of life as political
technology – Stephanie Wakefield (City University of New York, USA)
2
Lighting the city: infrastructure fragility and the politics of urban invention – Don Slater
(London School of Economics and Political Science, UK)
3
Power cuts and urban life in Lebanon: informal infrastructures of electricity provision and
the everyday – Dana Abi Ghanem (University of Manchester, UK)
4
Constructing Data Politics: A Paper on Studying and Promoting Infrastructure Resilience
to Climate Change in Jakarta, Indonesia – Tomas Holderness, Etienne Turpin (University of
Wollongong, Australia)
250
F2│PCC 2.6
Biodiversity, markets and human wellbeing (2): political
ecology and the social impacts of the commodification of
nature
See also: 228
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/250
Convenors
George Holmes (University of Leeds, UK), Connor Cavanagh (Norwegian
University of Life Sciences, Norway)
Chair
Connor Cavanagh (Norwegian University of Life Sciences, Norway)
1
All that glitters is not gold. Power and participation in the process – Mary Gorret Nantongo
(Norwegian University of Life Sciences, Norway)
2
Discursive Dissonance? Investigating Market Enthusiasm Amongst Conservation
Professionals – Libby Blanchard, Chris Sandbrook (University of Cambridge, UK), Janet Fisher
(The University of Edinburgh, UK), Bhaskar Vira (University of Cambridge, UK)
3
Embedded Economies: Alternative Discourses of Payments for Ecosystem Services –
Elizabeth Shapiro (Duke University, USA)
4
Witchcraft, wilderness and rhinos: on frictions in market-based improvement – Sian
Sullivan (Bath Spa University, UK)
5
Discussant – Robert Fletcher (Utrecht University, The Netherlands)
Fri
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20
251
Athena SWAN Panel Discussion
F2│PCC 1.2&3
See also: 274
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/251
Convenors and chairs
Hilary Geoghegan (University of Reading, UK), Ian Cook (University of Exeter,
UK)
252
Surveilling Global Space
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/252
F2│PCC 2.2&3
Affiliation
HPGRG, TGRG
Convenors
Weiqiang Lin (University of Toronto, Canada / National University of
Singapore, Singapore)
Chair
Peter Adey (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK)
1
Sky Watch: Surveillance for Aeromobility – Weiqiang Lin (University of Toronto, Canada /
National University of Singapore, Singapore)
2
Surveilling Outer Space: Astronomy and Landscape – Oliver Dunnett (Queen's University
Belfast, UK)
3
Algorithmic Surveillance in Finance – John H. Morris (Durham University, UK)
4
Participatory Disease Surveillance, and Health: Changing the Surveillance Interface
between Participant and Researcher – James Lester (University of Cambridge, UK)
5
Rethinking Global Environmental Surveillance and the Resource Extraction/Deforestation
Nexus in Indonesia: On "Seeing from Above" and (Not) Seeing Space for Livelihoods –
Sameul Spiegel (University of Edinburgh, UK)
253
F2│QUE LT4.1&2
Wet Geographies III (2): Water-worlds – Wet Geographies Panel
Discussion
See also: 56, 161, 231, 257
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/253
Affiliation
HPGRG
Convenor
Veronica Vickery (University of Exeter, UK)
Chair
Philip E. Steinberg (Durham University, UK)
1
Wet Geographies III: Water-worlds – Wet Geographies Panel Discussion – Rona Lee
(Northumbria University, UK), Veronica Vickery (University of Exeter, UK), Rachael Squire (Royal
Holloway, University of London, UK), Elspeth Probyn (University of Sydney, Australia), Katherine
Jones (University of the West of England, UK), Rebecca Farnum (King's College London, UK)
Fri
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20
254
F2│QUE MT1
Knowing (and engaging) Nature Otherwise (2): Human and
More-Than-Human Relations at the Extractive Frontier in Latin
America
See also: 232
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/254
Convenors and chairs
Lexy Seedhouse (Newcastle University, UK), Juan Pablo Sarmiento Barletti
(Durham University, UK)
1
Extraction versus Environmentalism: current challenges, changing dynamics – Jessica
Hope (University of Manchester/University College London, UK)
2
The Political Ontology of a Social Conflict: Clashing Conceptions of Humanity, Territory,
and Ownership in the Peruvian Amazon – Juan Pablo Sarmiento Barletti (Durham University,
UK)
3
The Cosmopolitics of Consulta Previa: Indigenous Identities at the Extractive Frontier –
Lexy Seedhouse (Newcastle University, UK)
4
Business and Human Rights: A Comparative Study of Social Movements Responses to
Extractivism in Latin America – Juan Smart (University College London, UK)
5
Discussant – Nina Laurie (Newcastle University, UK)
255
F2│QUE MT2&3
Time to move? Exploring the temporal geographies of
international migration (2): Differences, changes and
spatialities
See also: 233, 278
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/255
Affiliation
PopGRG
Convenors
Elizabeth Mavroudi (Loughborough University, UK), Anastasia Christou
(Middlesex University, UK), Ben Page (University College London, UK)
Chair(s)
Elizabeth Mavroudi (Loughborough University, UK)
1
The When, Where and Hows of Immigration of Western Jews to Jerusalem – Hila Zaban
(SOAS, University of London, UK)
2
Mobility and temporal complexity: foreign English teachers in South Korea – Sergei Shubin
(Swansea University, UK), Francis Collins (University of Auckland, New Zealand)
3
Changing temporal perspectives on Polish migration: Implications for migrants’
interpretative frames and ‘social remittances’ – Marta Bivand Erdal (Peace Research Institute
Oslo, Norway)
4
In transit: labour, transnationalism and cultural transgressions of Sikhs in Lisbon –
Jennifer McGarrigle, Eduardo Ascensão (University of Lisbon, Portugal)
New from Policy Press at the University of Bristol
Whose land is our land?
The use and abuse of Britain’s forgotten acres
PETER HETHERINGTON
WHOSE LAND IS
OUR LAND?
The use and abuse of Britain's forgotten acres
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Fri
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20
256
FP│FOR LT
Convenors and chairs
Chair's plenary: ‘After Sexuality: Desert, Animist, Virus:
Figures of Geontopower’
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/256
Maan Barua, Sarah Whatmore (University of Oxford, UK)
1
After Sexuality: Desert, Animist, Virus: Figures of Geontopower – Elizabeth Povinelli
(Columbia University, USA)
2
Discussion Panel – Kathryn Yusoff (Queen Mary University of London, UK), Nigel Clark
(Lancaster University, UK), Beth Greenhough (University of Oxford)
257
Waterworlds Art Programme - Film Screening (2)
FP│NEW LTF
See also: 56, 161, 231, 253
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/257
Convenor
Veronica Vickery (University of Exeter, UK)
1
Sea (2011) – Gareth Polmeer (Royal College of Art, UK)
2
That Oceanic Feeling – Rona Lee (Northumbria University, UK)
3
Limulus – Karen Kramer (Independent Artist)
4
Alchemical Waters – Ruth Le Gear (Independent Artist)
5
Dropped in the Ocean (2014) – Jess Allen (Independent Artist)
6
Ocean Apolcalypse – Michael Mulvihill (Independent Artist)
7
The Free Sea (2014) - Hanna Husberg, Laura McLean (Independent Artists)
FP│FOR S5
Food Matters ‘Setting Up Meeting’
Convenors: Mags Adams, Richard Armitage, Michael Hardman (University of
Salford, UK)
FP│FOR S6
Geographies of Justice Research Group AGM
Affiliation: GJRG
FP│FOR S10
Geography of Leisure and Tourism Research Group AGM
Affiliation: GLTRG
FP│FOR S11
Postgraduate Forum Meeting
Affiliation: PGF
FP│PCC 1.1
Building a Network of British and French Geographers
Convenors: Catherine Robert (Embassy of France, UK), Rory Hill (University
of Oxford, UK)
Lunches will be served in the Devonshire House Great Hall and Terrace restaurants. You
will find a ticket for lunch in your name badge. Please come to the Registration Desk if you
have questions and/or there are any problems
RGS-IBG Grants for Early Career
Researchers
Thirtieth International Geographical Congress Award
The RGS-IBG is offering five grants of up to £750 to assist with the cost of
attending an international conference, organised by a geographical or related
organisation.
Deadline: 30 September 2015
Find out more: www.rgs.org/30igc
RGS-IBG Small Research Grants
Investigating hydrology of Greenland Ice Sheet © Alison Banwell 2011
Several awards of up to £3,000 for original desk-based or field-based research in
any area of geography.
Deadline: 18 January 2016
Find out more: www.rgs.org/smallresearchgrants
E: [email protected] W: www.rgs.org/grants
Fri
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20
258
F3│FOR S5
Historical Geographies of Anarchism: situating struggles,
studying environments (3) Places, states and politics: situating
critical traditions and present challenges
See also: 212, 235
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/258
Affiliation
HGRG
Convenors
Gerónimo Barrera de la Torre (Research Institute “Dr. José María Luis Mora”,
México), Fabien Colombo (University of Bordeaux, France), Federico Ferretti
(University of Geneva, Switzerland), Francisco Toro (University of Granada,
Spain)
Chair
Francisco Toro (University of Granada, Spain)
1
The social ecology tradition and the city – Federico Venturini (University of Leeds, UK)
2
Moment, Flow, Language, Non-Plan: the unique architecture of insurrection in a Brazilian
urban periphery – Rita Velloso (Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais – UFMG, Brazil)
3
Post-statist geographies: anarchy, history, and contingency – Anthony Ince (Stockholm
University, Sweden)
4
About other geographies and anarchisms – Gerónimo Barrera de la Torre (Research Institute
“Dr. José María Luis Mora”, México), Narciso Barrera-Bassols (Universidad Autónoma de
Querétaro, Mexico)
259
Geographies of Sport (5): The Role of Sport
F3│FOR S6
See also: 164, 189, 213, 236
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/259
Convenor and chair
Catherine Waite (Loughborough University, UK)
1
Playing place identity – Gaelic games and Irish geographies of belonging – Arlene
Crampsie (University College Dublin, Ireland)
2
The deprivation idyll in autobiographical accounts of everyday childhood sport – John H.
McKendrick (Glasgow Caledonian University, UK)
3
"Not Just Cricket": The possibilities and potential of sport as a field of geographical study
– Catherine Waite (Loughborough University, UK)
260
Travel after retirement: developing critical perspectives
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/260
F3│FOR S10
Affiliation
GLTRG
Convenors
Julia Hibbert (University of Bournemouth, UK), Rosie Day (University of
Birmingham, UK), Russell Hitchings, Sue Venn (University College London,
UK)
Chair
Rosie Day (University of Birmingham, UK)
1
Holidays post retirement – Paul Cleave (University of Exeter, UK)
2
Ageing, dementia and leisure travel: Experiences of carers and people with dementia –
Stephen J. Page, Anthea Innes, Clare Cutler (Bournemouth University, UK)
Fri
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20
3
Understanding the meaning and significance of participation in the IMERSO ‘Holidays for
the Elderly’ scheme in Spain – Diane Sedgley (Cardiff Metropolitan University, UK), Pitu
Espesso (University of Alicante, Spain)
4
Demand for travel in later life: aspirations and actualities in the Anthropocene – Julia
Hibbert (University of Bournemouth, UK), Rosie Day (University of Birmingham, UK), Russell
Hitchings, Sue Venn (University College London, UK)
5
Older peoples’ everyday mobilities: Who is the older (non) cyclist? – Emma Street, Philip
Black (University of Reading, UK)
261
Geographies of Politics and Anti-Politics
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/261
F3│FOR S11
Convenors
Nick Clarke, Jonathan Moss (University of Southampton, UK)
Chair
Jonathan Moss (University of Southampton, UK)
1
Popular understandings of politics in Britain, 1945-2014 – Nick Clarke, Will Jennings,
Jonathan Moss, Gerry Stoker (University of Southampton, UK)
2
The changing geography of Britain’s party system: From three two-party systems to… –
Ron Johnston (University of Bristol, UK), Charles Pattie (University of Sheffield, UK)
3
Exploring the political participation of a new electorate: The case of Polish migrants in
Northern Ireland – Jenny McCurry (Queen Mary University of London, UK)
4
Making Sense of Localism – Jane Wills (Queen Mary University of London, UK)
5
From "Out of Apathy" to the "post-political": The spatial practices of politicization and depoliticization – David Featherstone (University of Glasgow, UK)
262
Post-Disaster Cultures
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/262
F3│NEW LTB
Affiliation
SCGRG
Convenors
Paul Cloke (University of Exeter, UK), David Conradson (University of
Canterbury, New Zealand), Graham Tobin (University of South Florida, USA)
Chair
Graham Tobin (University of South Florida, USA)
1
Hope, Despair, Courage and Frustration: Affect and Materiality in a Post-disaster City –
David Conradson (University of Canterbury, New Zealand), Paul Cloke (University of Exeter, UK)
2
Alternative Narratives of “Nuclear Space”: an Informal Geography of Chernobyl – Thom
Davies (University of Birmingham, UK)
3
The Lived and Performed Experiences of Post-disaster for Older people – Sarah Tupper
(University of Exeter, UK)
4
Constructing the in-common? Exploring post-disaster third-sector cultures – Simon
Dickinson (University of Exeter, UK)
5
Communication Strategies for Post-disaster Health Priorities of the Non-profit Sector:
Christchurch, New Zealand – Nicole Hutton, Graham Tobin, Linda Whiteford (University of
South Florida, USA)
Fri
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20
263
F3│NEW LTCD
Governing the Anthropocene Workshop: Actors, institutions
and processes
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/263
Convenor and chair
Izabella Stacewicz (University of Reading, UK)
264
Determinism, environment and geopolitics: an interdisciplinary
conversation
F3│NEW LTE
Convenor and chair
1
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/264
Philip Conway (University of Bristol, UK)
Conversational roundtables: Determinism and representation chaired by Gwilym Eades
(Royal Holloway, University of London, UK); Possibilism and historical geography chaired by
Simon Dalby (Wilfrid Laurier University, Canada); Calculation and environmental science
chaired by Lauren Rickards (University of Melbourne, Australia); Complexity and potentiality
chaired by Jason Dittmer (University of Exeter, UK)
265
F3│NEW LTF
Convenors and chairs
The Influence of Place and Space on Young People’s Mobilities
in Urban and Rural Contexts
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/265
Sonja Marzi, Carole White (University of East Anglia, UK)
1
Growing up in a rural fishing community: social mobility opportunities and constraints. A
case from the United Kingdom – Carole White (University of East Anglia, UK)
2
Looking Towards the Future: Setting Young Colombians’ Aspirations for Social Mobility
into Context – Sonja Marzi (University of East Anglia, UK)
3
Physical Environments of Study Abroad: Student Experiences of Self and Place in
Morocco and Indonesia – Jennifer Pipitone, Chitra Raghavan (City University of New York,
USA)
4
Environmental Analysis of Children’s Play in Fast Growing Cities of Urban India – Sruthi
Atmakur-Javdekar (City University of New York, USA)
266
F3│PCC 1.1
New and Emerging Rural Researchers (3): The Rural
Environment and Production
See also: 221, 243
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/266
Convenors
Michaela Kennard (University of Greenwich, UK), Rory Hill (University of
Oxford, UK)
Chair
Rory Hill (University of Oxford, UK)
1
Community-based water resources management in the arid and semi-arid regions of
Northwest China – Haiyan Yu (University of Oxford, UK)
2
Farmers’ experiences of flooding and engagement with climate change in Gloucestershire
– initial qualitative findings – Alice Hamilton-Webb (Royal Agricultural University, UK)
3
What out-migration tells us about rural change in the Mekong Delta – Olivia Dun (University
of Wollongong, Australia)
Fri
4
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20
Examining disease risk communication for disease control management: the case of
implementation of biosecurity measures on English dairy farms – Sally Curzon (Royal
Agricultural University, UK)
267
F3│PCC 1.4
Scales of citizenship: Critical geographies of citizen
engagements
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/267
Convenors
Cathrine Brun (Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Norway),
Marta Bivand Erdal (Peace Research Institute Oslo, Norway)
Chair
Cathrine Brun (Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Norway)
1
Scales of citizenship: performing citizenship inside/outside and above/below the nationstate – Marta Bivand Erdal (Peace Research Institute Oslo, Norway), Cathrine Brun (Norwegian
University of Science and Technology, Norway)
2
Unsettled’ citizens: Experiences of Colombian and Palestinians Resettled Refugees in
Chile and Brazil – Marcia Vera Espinoza (University of Sheffield, UK)
3
"Yogya is not for sale": citizen protests against real estate activity in Yogyakarta,
Indonesia – Sonia Roitman (University of Queensland, Australia)
4
Glasgow’s Community Gardens: Neoliberal Spaces or Sites of Radical Potential? – John
McMahon Crossan, Andrew Cumbers, Robert McMaster, Deirdre Shaw (University of Glasgow,
UK)
268
F3│PCC 1.5
Social Media and Mobile Technology: The new era for learning,
teaching and communication
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/2 68
Affiliation
RGRG, HERG
Convenors and chairs
Derek France (University of Chester, UK), Sonja Rewhorn (University of
Chester, UK)
1
Social Media and Fieldwork – Derek France, Servel Miller, Katharine Welsh (University of
Chester, UK)
2
Reflections on using students’ own mobile devices as tools for fieldwork – Julie Peacock
(University of Leeds, UK)
3
Encouraging the use of social media on a fieldtrip – Alice Mauchline, Becky Thomas, Rob
Jackson (University of Reading, UK)
4
Is there anybody out there? Testing the effectiveness of social media communication
tools for co-creating and managing Student Environment Research Team (SERT) field
projects – Anita Diaz, Tom Dando, Kate Rickard, Suzanne Gibon, Grace Burger, Deborah Blake
(Bournemouth University, UK)
5
Twitter – the new frontier for rural geographies? – Sonja Rewhorn (University of Chester, UK)
6
Discussion – what are the top tips for using social media across learning and teaching of
Geography in Higher Education and beyond - Derek France, Sonja Rewhorn (University of
Chester, UK)
Fri
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20
269
F3│PCC 1.6
Provocations and Possibilities ‘in’ and ‘of’ the Anthropocene:
Postgraduate Snapshots
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/269
Affiliation
SCGRG, PGF
Convenors and chairs
Suzanne Hocknell (University of Exeter, UK), Emma Spence (Cardiff
University, UK)
1
Consistency vs Constancy: a Manifesto against Striating Ontologies in the Anthropocene
– Luc Tripet (Universite de Neuchatel, Switzerland), Yannick Rousselot (Universite de Geneve,
Switzerland)
2
Accommodating disability in sustainable living: embodied tensions of access in ecocommunities – Amita Bhakta (Loughborough University, UK)
3
Imagining Anthropocene futures: glimpses from Wales – Anna Pigott (Swansea University,
UK)
4
Understanding humans in the Anthropocene: Finding answers in Geoengineering and
Transition Towns – Leigh Martindale (Lancaster University, UK)
5
An Unusual Sight in Hanoi – Natalia Stutter (Cardiff University, UK)
6
Psychohistory and "the Anthropocene" – Jacob Barber (University of Edinburgh, UK)
7
Discussant – Katie Ledingham (University of Exeter, UK)
270
F3│PCC 2.1
Perceptions and understandings of climate change and
migration: Evidence from small islands
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/270
Convenor
Ilan Kelman (University College London, UK)
Chair
K Shadananan Nair (Centre for Earth Research and Environment
Management (CEREM), India)
1
Perceptions and understandings of climate change and migration from Lakshadweep,
India – Himani Upadhyay, Divya Mohan (The Energy and Resources Institute, India)
2
Challenging climate change and migration discourse: Different understandings of timescale and temporality in Maldives – Alex Arnall (University of Reading, UK), Uma Kothari
(University of Manchester, UK)
3
Comparing two Maldivian communities regarding climate change and migration: The
experiences of K. Guraidhoo and Dhuvafaaru – Andrea C Simonelli (Independent)
4
‘On the outer’: Outer islands and climate change in atoll-island states – Roger McLean
(University of New South Wales-Canberra, Australia)
5
Discussant – Christian Webersik (University of Agder, Kristiansand, Norway)
271
F3│PCC 2.4
Negotiating energy megaprojects within and beyond
boundaries: The role of communication, identities and
distributive justice
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/271
Affiliation
EnGRG
Convenors and chairs
Itay Fishhendler (The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel), Susana Batel
(Cis-IUL, University Institute of Lisbon, Portugal / University of Exeter, UK)
Fri
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20
1
Local responses to new energy technologies in the UK: The role of collective memories
and perceptions of distributive justice between the global north and the global south –
Susana Batel (Cis-IUL, University Institute of Lisbon, Portugal / University of Exeter, UK), Patrick
Devine-Wright (University of Exeter, UK)
2
The Megaproject in Action: A case of Dam Construction in Rwanda – Barnaby Dye
(University of Oxford, UK)
3
Stakeholders’ discourses about a new wind farm – a dynamic construction – Rafaella
Lenoir Improta (Universitat de Barcelona, Spain)
4
Controversy as informal assessment: exploring the relation between EIA and public
discourse – Eefje Cuppen, Marloes Huurman, Aad Correljé, Udo Pesch, Behnam Taebi (Delft
University of Technology, The Netherlands)
5
Marketing Renewable Energy through Geopolitics: Solar Farms in Israel – Itay Fishhendler,
Daniel Nathan, Dror Boymel (Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel)
272
F3│PCC 2.5
Producing Urban Life: Fragility and Socio-Cultural
Infrastructures (3) Radical Infrastructures
See also: 227, 249
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/272
Affiliation
UGRG
Convenors
Robert Shaw (Durham University, UK), Lizzie Richardson (University of
Cambridge, UK), Jonathan Silver (Durham University / London School of
Economics and Political Science, UK)
Chair
Jonathan Silver (Durham University / London School of Economics and
Political Science, UK)
1
The Fragile City: Precarious Living and Radical Infrastructure in Contemporary Europe –
Alex Vasudevan (University of Nottingham, UK)
2
The Artworks: Maintaining Uncertain Urbanisms – Ella Harris (Royal Holloway, University of
London, UK)
3
Occupy the waves: Political subjectification, institutions of commoning and the politics of
urban infrastructure – Lazaros Karaliotas (University of Glasgow, UK)
4
Redeveloping the market: infrastructural preservation and reproduction in urban Uganda –
Will Monteith (University of East Anglia, UK)
5
Discussant – Paul Simpson (Plymouth University, UK)
273
Exploring methodologies and critical geographies of education
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/273
F3│PCC 2.6
Convenors
Mark Holton (Plymouth University, UK), Mark Riley (University of Liverpool,
UK), Barbara Pini (Griffith University, Australia)
Chair
Mark Riley (University of Liverpool, UK)
1
At School, At Home and in the/a Field: Space and Supervision in Research with Learning
Disabled Children – Nadia von Benzon (Lancaster University, UK)
2
The emotional geographies of Turkish supplementary schools in London: Sense of
belonging – Ahmet Uysal (Istanbul University, Turkey)
Fri
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20
3
The Politics and Practice of Researching with Young People: Reflecting on Methodological
Uncertainty for Critical Geographies of Education in Ireland – Kathy Reilly, Valerie Ledwith
(National University of Ireland, Galway, Ireland)
4
Discussant – Barbara Pini (Griffith University, Australia)
274
Athena SWAN workshop/networking session
F3│PCC 1.2&3
See also: 251
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/274
Convenors
Ian Cook (University of Exeter, UK), Hilary Geoghegan (University of Reading,
UK)
275
Scale, politics and participation in water resources
management: exploring new/old geographies
F3│PCC 2.2&3
Convenor and chair
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/275
Amiera Sawas (King's College London, UK)
1
"Local ownership" of water, sanitation and hygiene in Pakistan: a tale of three designs –
Amiera Sawas (King's College London, UK)
2
Uneven Waterflows in Lilongwe: Socio-political Drivers, Infrastructural Development, and
the Uneven Access to Water I – Klaas Schwartz, Maria Rusca (UNESCO-IHE)
3
Uneven Waterflows in Lilongwe: Socio-political Drivers, Infrastructural Development, and
the Uneven Access to Water II – Maria Rusca, Klaas Schwartz (UNESCO-IHE)
4
"Water Poverty" a Malthusian Shibboleth? Water User Associations (WUA) and Political
Ecology of Water in the Jordan Valley – Daanish Mustafa (King's College London, UK)
5
Discussant – Amiera Sawas (King's College London, UK)
276
Reimagining the mobility transition
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/276
F3│QUE LT4.1&2
Convenors
Astrid Wood, Anna Nikolaeva, Peter Adey (Royal Holloway, University of
London, UK)
Chair
Tim Cresswell (Northeastern University, USA)
1
Thinking through the mobility transition – Peter Adey (Royal Holloway, University of London,
UK), Tim Cresswell (Northeastern University, USA)
2
Envisioning mobility futures in Canada from a multi-scalar transitions perspective –
Cristina Temenos, Jane YeonJae Lee (Northeastern University, USA)
3
Moving forward by looking backward: Reimagining the mobility transition in the UK –
Astrid Wood (Royal Holloway University of London, UK)
4
A “Quirky project” or an “Industry”? Challenges of imagining a mobility transition – Anna
Nikolaeva (Royal Holloway University of London, UK)
5
Sustainable motility: introducing a new concept – Andre Novoa (Northeastern University,
USA)
Fri
Session 1
Session 2
Plenary
Session 3
09:00–10:40 11:10–12:50 13:10–14:25 14:40–16:20
277
Circulating Approaches to Biopolitics in the Anthropocene
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/277
F3│QUE MT1
Affiliation
PolGRG
Convenors
Juliet Fall (University of Geneva, Switzerland), Christine Schenk (University of
Geneva, Switzerland), Camilla Royle (King's College London, UK)
Chair
Christine Schenk (University of Geneva, Switzerland)
1
Dialectics, Critical Realism, and Political Ecology: Comprehending (and Contesting) the
Socio-Natural Dynamics of Late Capitalism – Mark Tilzey (Coventry University, UK)
2
More-than-human biopolitics inside/outside the farm: marketing the semen of
Piedmontese bulls – Annalisa Colombino (University of Graz, Austria), Paolo Giaccaria
(University of Turin, Italy)
3
The dialectical biologists – Camilla Royle (King's College London, UK)
4
Biopolitics and the spatial foundations of the new global ecologies – Claudio Minca
(Wageningen University, The Netherlands), Juliet Fall (University of Geneva, Switzerland)
278
F3│QUE MT2&3
Time to move? Exploring the temporal geographies of
international migration (3): Borders, policies, futures
See also: 233, 255
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/278
Convenors
Elizabeth Mavroudi (Loughborough University, UK), Anastasia Christou
(Middlesex University, UK), Ben Page (University College London, UK)
Chair
Ben Page (University College London, UK)
1
Crossing over: experiences of people seeking asylum in Australia – Alex Haynes (Monash
University, Australia)
2
Time at the Border – Paolo Novak (SOAS, University of London, UK)
3
Planning for the Future? Reproductive Futurism and Family Strategies in International
Migrations – Sean H. Wang (Syracuse University, USA)
279
Fuller geographies
View abstracts online: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2015/279
F3│OFF
Affiliation
PyGyRG
Convenor and chair
Kye Askins (University of Glasgow, UK)
St Sidwells Community Centre, Sidwell Street, Exeter, EX4 6NN (a map will be available at the
Registration Desk)
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Index of authors, chairs and convenors
,QGH[
A
Aalto
Aasland
Abbots
Abi Ghanem
Adam
Grydehøj
Adams
Adams
Adams
Adekunle
Adey
Adger
Aga
Agababian
Agyeman
Ahmed
Ahmed
Aitken
Akinsete
Aksoy
Akyelken
Albeda
Albrecht
Alexander
Alford
Alhadeff
Allan
Allen
Allen
Almerini
Almond
Alonso
Amir
Amoore
Anable
Anderson
Anderson
Anderson
Anderton
Andrews
Andrews
Anguelovski
Angus
Antonsich
Apollo
Tutesigensi
Apostolopoulo
Arabindoo
Archila
Arends
Maxigas
111
Rolf
Aadne
EmmaJayne
Dana
Adam
57
143
5, 31, 59
David
David
Mags
Adefemi
Peter
Neil
Birgitte
Verity
Julian
Nabil
Nazneen
Mhairi
Ebun
Zuhre
Nihan
Ympkje
Moritz
Meghan
Matthew
Cara Judea
Rob
Jess
Matthew
Katia
Nicholas
Clara Rivas
Merav
Louise
Jillian
Ben
Colin
Craig
Chris
Gavin
Will
Isabelle
Alice
Marco
Apollo
48, 190
26, 52
138, 165, 190
183, 229
252, 276
48, 83, 108
36
151
113, 187
50
106
139
237
76
182, 207
88
18, 44
131
152
133
144
56, 110, 231
247
158
175
215
119
61, 186
11
195
150
15
4
189
19, 45, 169,
224
27
210
46
71
Evangelia
Pushpa
Maria
Bergit
228
64
170
66
230, 249
225
Arguelles
Ramos
Arias-Sans
Armitage
Arnall
Arrowsmith
Arshad
Arshad
Artigues
Aru
Aruldoss
Ascensão
Ash
Ash Kurlander
Askins
Lucia
27
Albert
Richard
Alex
Colin
Faisal
Rowena
Antoni
Silvia
Vinnarasan
Eduardo
James
Yahel
Kye
Astbury
Atkins
AtmakurJavdekar
Attard
Austen
Awan
Axon
Aznar
B
Bachmann
Baedeker
Baghel
Bailey
Baillie Smith
Baker
Baker
Balayannis
Janice
Mariana
Sruthi
163
138, 165, 190
131, 270
175
102
116, 142
192
14
117
255
177
75
51, 119, 229,
279
171
24
6, 265
Maria
Melanie
Nishat
Stephen
Camille
154
166
226
15, 103
239
Veit
Carolin
Ravi
Etienne
Matt
Julian
Kate
Angeliki
Antonia
Andrew
Rhoda
Luis
Niharika
Glenn
Karen
Jacob
Eduardo
Annette
Douglas
Natasha
74
220
226
65, 97
13, 39
203
200
248
Charles
Christine
Stewart
Gerónimo
14
13
15, 41, 156
212, 235, 258
Narciso
258
Baldwin
Ballinger
Balula
Banerjea
Banks
Banwell
Barber
Barberis
Bardsley
Bardsley
Barker
Bradshaw
Barlow
Barnes
Barr
Barrera de la
Torre
BarreraBassols
95
22
89
9, 35
245
131
146, 269
62, 88
48
2, 48
191
Charlotte
Andrew
Veronica
Nadia
Maan
Camila
Simon
Susana
John
Isa
Nicole
Thomas
Amita
Uschi
Andy
Justin
Nicola
David
Peter
Suzanne
David
Ingrid
Uli
Diana N.M.
Sarah
Sarah
Imogen
225
28, 96, 198
165
181
66, 92, 256
107
237
65, 97, 271
207
63
103
7, 33
159
22
145
242
166
241
175
143
91
180, 205
121
19
43
164
85, 138
Zoé
Florence
214
215
Frans
Karla
Rob
Filippo
Nic
Eda
Amita
Rituparna
Karen
Mary
Iain
Stephanie
Olivia
Nick
Amanda
Matt
Adriano
Marta
Leon
Philip
Sophie
Simon
Deborah
Megan
Libby
Macià
220
229
145
153
39
182, 207
58, 269
74, 184
110, 184, 230
148
240
7, 33
89
23
131
58
124
255, 267
71
260
46, 122, 147
154
268
113
250
192
Blythe
Böcker
Boersma
Bohnert
Bolen
Bonati
Bonicelli
Bonsignore
Book
Börger
Bornioli
Borsari
Bose
Botterill
Bourantani
Bouzarovski
Bowen
Bowyer
Boxall
Boyle
Boymel
Bradford
Bragg
BraunholtzSpeight
Breedveld
Breitung
Brem-Wilson
Breuer
Brewin
Brice
Brigstocke
Brimicombe
Bristow
Brockett
Brohan
Brown
Brown
Brown
Brown
Brown
Brown
Browne
Phil
Lars
Maren K.
Arianne
Jeremy
Sara
Elena
Gregory
Karin
Tobias
Anna
Claudio
Nupur
Kate
Eleni
Stefan
David
Sarah
Katie
Mark
Dror
Richard
Andy
Tim
17
136
13
127
146
124, 149
89
194
213
166
129
172
21, 73
116, 142, 222
178
171, 196, 230
209
12, 243
80, 106
16, 42, 174
271
2
59
243
Koen
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142, 259
91
60, 86
31, 110
146, 176, 249
25, 51, 79,
,QGH[
a
te Boveldt
Tedeschi
Telford
Tembo
Temenos
Terrapon-Pfaff
Thadani
Thatcher
Thieme
Thomas
Thomas
Thomas
Thomas
Thomas
Thomas
Thomas
,QGH[
Walker
Walker
Walker
Walker
WalkerSpringett
Walkington
Walks
Walsh
Waltham
Wang
Wanvik
Ward
Ward
Ward
Waters
Waters
Watson
Watton
Weber
Webersik
Webster
Wehrhahn
Weingartner
Weir
Weir
Welsh
Welsh
Wendler
West
Westgate
Whatmore
Dominic
Gordon
Marion
Perry
Kate
While
Whistler
White
White
White
Whiteford
Whitehead
Whitmarsh
Whitten
Whittle
Widdop
Wieczorek
Wiersma
Wilkinson
Wilkinson
Wilkinson
Wilkof
Williams
Williams
Willis
Wills
Wilmott
Aidan
Clare
Carole
Neal
Rosanna
Linda
Mark
Lorraine
Meredith
Rebecca
Paul
Anna
Bouke
Catherine
Keith
Samantha
Shira
Alison
Andrew
Kathy
Jane
Clancy
Helen
Alan
Kevin
Paul
Sean H.
Tarje
John
Kim
Miranda
James
Louise
Becky
Cherish
Delene
Christian
Alan
Rainer
David
Brian
Patrick
Katharine
Marcus
Jana
Simone
Justin
Sarah
105
121, 218, 240
187, 230
131
17
2, 83, 108
123, 152
239
28
236
278
238
182
77
164, 189
83
214
236
200
48
270
132
126
136
124
226, 248
268
215, 238
27, 53, 225
133
218
1, 28, 54,
156, 159,
198, 256
68
231
191, 265
218
30
262
68
22
192
138, 165, 190
236
220
139, 166
45, 183, 208
145
45, 183, 208
20
26, 52, 140
219, 241
1, 28
65, 261
10
Wilson
Wilson
Wilson
Wilson
Wilson
Winter
Wiseman
Wisner
Wissink
Wistow
Wood
Woods
Bradley
Emma
Helen
Kayom
Sharon
Michael
Nathaneal
Ben
Bart
Jonathan
Astrid
Michael
Woodward
Woodyer
Keith
Tara
Woolf
Wootton
Woroniuk
Wright
Wu
Wulff
Wyatt
Wylie
X
Xerri
Xu
Y
Yadoo
Craig
Gayle
Clare
Glen
Qiyan
Gabriel
Gill
John
241
214
9
102
78
59
2
147
118
147
276
48, 85, 215,
238
69, 206
116, 141,
168, 193
81
154
129, 154, 216
139
102
5
7, 33
72
Francesca
Honggang
21
78
214
Yarker
Yarwood
Yeboah
Yerokun
Yong Ji
Yoon
Young
Yrigoy
Yu
Yusoff
Annabel
Leonie
Sophie
Richard
Godwin
Olusegun
Seung
Hyerim
Craig
Ismael
Haiyan
Kathryn
Z
Zaban
Zabko
Zara
Zebracki
Zhang
Zhao
Zhou
Zimmerbauer
Zuidema
Zunder
Hila
Oksana
Cristiana
Martin
JJ
Yimin
Jie
Kaj
Christian
Tom
255
143
6
133, 158
116
40
102
47
242
216
65
4, 142
11
76
73
171
102
192
266
50, 69, 121,
146, 176,
198, 256
Research Group
British Society for Geomorphology
Climate Change Research Group
Coastal and Marine Research Group
Developing Areas Research Group
Economic Geography Research
Group
Energy Geographies Research
Group
Gender and Feminist Geographies
Research Group
Geographical Information Science
Research Group
Geographies of Children, Youth and
Families Research Group
Geographies of Justice Research
Group
Geography of Health Research
Group
Geography of Leisure and Tourism
Research Group
Higher Education Research Group
Historical Geography Research
Group
History and Philosophy of
Geography Research Group
Abbreviation
BSG
CCRG
CMRG
DARG
EGRG
GFGRG
Session Affiliations
57
122, 147
30, 114, 139, 166, 191
122, 147, 188, 245
27, 53, 61, 87, 111, 136, 163, 201, 217,
239
7, 33, 81, 97, 110, 135, 139, 166, 171,
196, 201, 230, 271
8, 34, 119, 145, 178
GIScRG
11, 37, 101, 145,
GCYFRG
6, 32, 60, 86, 117, 142, 173
GJRG
GHRG
9, 13, 35, 39, 113, 138, 165, 190, 222,
244,
67, 164, 236
GLTRG
78, 112, 137, 209, 260,
HERG
HGRG
101, 123, 148, 175, 200, 224, 246, 268
3, 29, 80, 106, 144, 203, 212, 235, 258
HPGRG
10, 36, 66, 72, 92, 98, 121, 146, 160,
161, 169, 194, 198, 226, 231, 248, 252,
253
5, 31, 59, 150, 183, 208, 229, 279
EnGRG
Participatory Geographies Research PyGyRG
Group
Planning and Environment Research PERG
Group
Political Geography Research Group PolGRG
Population Geography Research
Group
Postgraduate Forum
Quantitative Methods Research
Group
Rural Geography Research Group
Social and Cultural Geography
Research Group
Space Sexualities and Queer
Research Group
Transport Geography Research
Group
Urban Geography Research Group
27, 53, 65, 124, 149, 167, 220, 242
PopGRG
30, 70, 93, 96, 116, 117, 142, 174, 199,
217, 226, 239, 248, 277
104, 118, 143, 170, 195, 233, 255
PGF
QMRG
19, 45, 81, 129, 151, 154, 224, 269
170, 195
RGRG
SCGRG
4, 8, 12, 34, 38, 85, 221, 243, 268
5, 30, 31, 58, 59, 80, 106, 116, 160,
161, 169, 177, 194, 202, 218, 262, 269
9, 35, 107, 133, 158
SSQRG
TGRG
UGRG
11, 17, 37, 43, 71, 94, 112, 129, 137,
154, 172, 182, 197, 207, 216, 252
16, 42, 64, 90, 93, 130, 155, 180, 205,
227, 249, 272
,QGH[
21. Index of Research and Working Group affiliated
sessions
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