Newsletter No. 56
Letter from Commission Chair
It has been four years since I became Chair of the Commission and it has been an honour to have been able to serve the Gender Commission in this capacity. I write this message with a tinge of sadness as I end my term in August 2016, but mainly filled with satisfaction because it has been an extremely fulfilling four years.
I am grateful that I was always supported by a wonderful Steering Committee and also many other geographers from around the world who organised sessions at each annual IGU conference, pre-IGU conference meetings and also independent workshops. We met to discuss our Commission’s 2012-16 theme of “Scaling Gender: From the Body to the Globe” in Hamburg and Cologne (2012), Nara and Kyoto (2013), Warsaw, Krakow, Rondônia and Delhi (2014), as well as Milwaukee and Moscow (2015). I was honoured to present a plenary talk on “A Continuing Agenda for Gender” at the 2015 IGU Conference in Moscow, as part of the Commission being conferred the IGU’s inaugural “Commission Excellence Award” in 2014 in recognition of our activities and achievements for 2012 and 2013. Our listserve also grew steadily, from about 550 subscribers in 2012 to approximately 700 currently.
Among the exciting initiatives put in place during this period were: the organization and funding support to run regional workshops on “Feminist Methods for Constructing Geographical Knowledge” to train feminist geographers in countries of the Global South; the institution of a new process for the renewal of Steering Committee members by inviting self-nominations; and the establishment of a Young and Emerging Scholars (YES!) task force to establish a platform for the networking and mentoring of early career feminist geographers (read more about this in this Newsletter). The last is the most exciting as it will ensure continuity for the Commission!
As full as the last four years have been for the Commission, I am sure that the next four will be even more exciting. Our theme for 2016-2020 will be “A Continuing Agenda for Gender: Respecting Difference, Fostering Dialogue”, highlighting the continued push to create space for pluralism in the discipline. I am most delighted to announce that Lynda Johnston has agreed to take on the position of Gender Commission Chair for 2016-2020. I am fully confident that she will take the Commission to new heights. I would also like to warmly welcome Marianne Blidon (France), Linda Peake (Canada), Yvonne Underhill-Sem (New Zealand), Elena Vacchelli (UK) and Yoko Yoshida (Japan) to the Steering Committee.
I must also thank all the Steering Committee members who worked alongside me during my term as Chair: Orna Blumen (Israel), Anindita Datta (India), Lynda Johnston (New Zealand), Ann Oberhauser (USA), Joseli Maria Silva (Brazil), Anke Strüver (Germany) – all of whom will be continuing on the Committee – and especially Holly Hapke (USA), Mireia Baylina (Spain), Claire Dwyer (UK), Ragnhild Lund (Norway) and Marcella Schmidt di Friedberg (Italy) – all of whom will be completing their term, alongside me, in August 2016. I am also extremely grateful to Janice Monk for the very important work of tirelessly compiling the Commission’s twice yearly Newsletter, and Joos Droogleever Fortuijn for her vital role in managing the Commission’s website.
I look forward to meeting many of you at one of the many sessions being (co-)organised by the Commission at the International Geographical Congress in Beijing (21-25 August 2016); some 70 abstracts have been submitted to our sessions! But before that, I hope to see you at the Gender Commission’s pre-IGC
Knowledges” in Barcelona (14-16 July 2016). I anticipate lively discussion of gender and feminist issues
conference at both meetings.
Please refer to our website for fuller details of the activities and plans noted above (the Report on the Gender and Geography Commission’s Activities, 2012-2016, will soon be made available).
Shirlena Huang National University of Singapore
Launching YES! in 2016:
Networking and Mentoring for Early Career Feminist Geographers:
This year sees the launch of YES!, the IGU - Gender and Geography Commission’s task force for Young and Emerging Scholars. YES! mirrors the Youth Task force forming at the IGU level and will act as a networking, sharing and mentoring platform for early career feminist geographers. We plan to survey the Commission’s members to gauge key needs, however commission website that includes ideas currently in the pipeline include networking forums at the 2016 and 2017 IGU and pre-conferences, and a blog or resource page on the gender commission website that includes information on professional development, research, teaching, and well-being. We are particularly keen to promote new membership in the Commission from early career scholars and to foster transnational collaborative networks.
YES! is currently collectively organized by Kamalini Ramdas, Milena Janiec. and Caroline Faria. Kamalini is based in the Department of Geography at the National University of Singapore. Her interests are located at the nexus of gender, sexuality and community politics. She is particularly focused on theorising the spatialities that emerge out of feminist care ethics and how these enable us to reimagine family, community and state-society relations more broadly. Milena is about to complete her PhD from the University of South Florida, and is examining the spatial component of intersectional identity and the impacts of migration on the changing sociocultural fabric of cities and farms in Japan. This forms part of a broader body of research examining gender, work, and migration in an East Asian context (including China, Japan, and South Korea). Lastly, Caroline is based in the Department of Geography and the Environment at the University of Texas at Austin. She works on the relationship between gender and nationalism in East Africa, with a focus on transnational South Sudanese feminist organizing, the emergent beauty trade in South Sudan, and most recently the globalization of this industry between the wider East African - Gulf region.
YES! plans to meet for the first time during the 2016 pre-conference in Barcelona and will hold a
masterclass panel during the pre-conference meeting for the IGU in 2017. If you’re interested in
participating and/or have your own ideas to share please contact Kamalini, Milena and Caroline at
geokr@nus.edu.sg and we will add you to our growing mailing list. If you are a senior faculty and have
ideas of ways to support us, let us know. Please help us spread the news about YES! We look forward to working with you!
News from Around the World
We are delighted to report that Maria Dolors Garcia-Ramon, Autonomous University of Barcelona will be awarded the Lauréat d’Honneur from the International Geographical Union (IGU) during the upcoming 33rd IGU Congress in Beijing (August 21-25, 2016). This award was established in 1976 in order to recognize individuals who have achieved particular distinction in the work of the IGU or in international geography and environmental research. She will be the fifth woman so honored. Among geographers who have received the highly prestigious award in the past are Peter Haggett, Paul Claval. Yi-Fu-Tuan, and Janice Monk. (see http://igu-online.org/about-us/roll-of-honour/. Maria Dolors has also been selected to receive the prestigious Vautrin-Lud Award for 2016. The award, known as “Nobel Prize of Geography”, will be conferred during the Festival International de Géographie in Saint-Dié-des Vosges (France) from 30th September to 2nd October 2016: http://www.fig.saint-die-des-vosges.fr/
The collaboration between the Department of Geography, Delhi School of Economics, University of Delhi and the Department of Gender Studies, Lund University,Sweden under the Linnaeus Palme program, has now seen the first student exchanges. Indian students working on gender related themes traveled to Sweden and Swedish students came India to complete the course on Gender and Space with ref to India. Anindita Datta, coordinator on the Indian side, completed the teaching exchange at the Department of Gender Studies at Lund University. Dr Datta has also received funding from the University of Delhi for her project on mapping the history of geographies of gender and feminist geographies in India. The project is currently in its first phase tracing the history of women geographers who first entered the male dominated discipline.
Congratulations to Ann Oberhauser who has been appointed to the position of Director of Women and Gender Studies at Iowa State University. We wish her well in this new role and also appreciate that she has been selected as the Treasurer of the IGU Commission on Gender and Geography. Ann will be taking over from Holly Hapke whose work in that role for several years is greatly appreciated.
Janet Momsen is preparing the 3rd edition of her text Gender and Development (Routledge) for completion this summer.
The current edition of the German-language newsletter for feminist-gender geographies (Feministische Geo-Rundmail No. 67) focuses on the theme of gender perspectives on carceral geographies (Geographische Geofängnisforschung aus Geschelecterperspective) and also includes an extended tribute to the late Doreen Massey who played a sustained role in supporting the development of feminist perspectives in German geography. The newsletter is circulated by Marina Richter (marina.richter@unifr.ch). The next issue will feature work on qualitative methods and feminist methods (in English or German). For information on submissions to that issue contact Jeannine Wintzer (Jeannine.wintzer@giub.ch or Marina Richter.
Congratulations to Parvati Raghuram (Open University, UK) who is to receive the Murchison Award at the forthcoming annual conference of the Royal Geographical Society (with the IBG) for her sustained contributions research on migration and globalization particularly in relation to highly skilled fields such as IT, medicine and education. Her recent work has emphasized the numbers of women in the IT industry drawing comparisons with the UK and India and looking at the impact of migration between the two countries.
With over 60 sessions sponsored or co-sponsored by the Geographic Perspectives on Women Speciality Group, gender and feminist geographic work was well represented at the 2016 meeting of the American Association of Geographers in San Francisco at the March 29-April 2. Among co-sponsoring groups of sessions were political and economic geography, sexuality and space, population geography, political geography, cultural geography, health geography and others. Particularly of interest and attended by an overflow audience was the session organized by Marianne Blidon (France) to share perspectives across national settings. Panelists included Mona Domosh (USA), Lynda Johnston (New Zealand), Marcella Schmidt di Friedberg (Italy) and Ebru Ustendag (Canada), together with Anindita Datta (India) who participated by Skype. They reflected on contexts and personal experiences to examine different challenges over time and place of identifying and practicing as a feminist geographer. While in some countries, naming as feminist geographer has lost its meaning. In others, it is not always audible. The Friday-evening annual off-site reception honoring authors of books in feminist geography was once again attended by an overflow crowd.
Sara Kindon (Victoria University of Wellington, NZ) has received three internationally-competitive
research fellowships to support her leave (sabbatical) in 2016. During March, she was the Lillian
Robinson Visiting Scholar hosted by the Simone de Beauvoir Institute, Concordia University, Montreal -Canada's first and longest-running feminist research centre. While there, Sara presented on her current research project (with Marcela Palomino Schalscha and Katia Guiloff) using arpilleras with Latin American women living in New Zealand. From April to June, Sara will be a University Visiting Research Fellow at Newcastle University, UK hosted by the School of Geography, Politics and Sociology. There she will contribute various seminars associated with her work in refugee resettlement and decolonising methodologies, and host a research sandpit with various invited colleagues from across the UK. Also in May, August and September, Sara will be the Inaugural Visiting Fellow with the Migration, Displacement and Belonging Research Group at the Centre for Trust, Peace and Social Relations, Coventry University, UK where she will develop a collaborative project using participatory and visual methods.
The Society of Woman Geographers held a Mid-West Regional Conference in Chicago on March 19, with presentations by members featuring their work in historical , political, environmental, and education issues, the latter addressing uses of GIS in a major university and also aspects of teaching students abroad “Service Learning: Volunteer Tourism or Do-Goodism.” In April the Society selected six women doctoral candidates and three minority women masters students for fellowships to support their research. The fellowships, open to women students in geography and related fields in the US and Canada, are funded by a generous bequest from the late Evelyn Pruitt. Competition for the doctoral awards is keen, while interest from minority women master’s candidates is growing. For further information on the Society, established in 1925 is headquartered in Washington DC but with international membership, see the website iswg.org
Workshop Report: The Politics of Motherhood in the Neoliberal University
The University of Newcastle (Australia) (UoN) Mother Research Collective, with support from the UoN Centre of Excellence for Equity in Higher Education, recently hosted a two-day interdisciplinary workshop addressing the politics of motherhood in the neoliberal university March 31-April 1, 2016. The workshop brought together diverse mother-subjects from both Australia and abroad to contribute to shattering the silence in which mother-academics and mother-students are presently situated. Among invited speakers was geographer Danielle Drozdzewski (University of New South Wales). Discussions highlighted that there is no singular mother-subject and that our gendered, raced, classed and sexualised experiences come into conflict with the highly individualised entrepreneurialism of the new academy in different ways.
The group is an interdisciplinary collective spanning student and faculty from junior to senior academics. It is investigating the inequities of motherhood and academia whilst we live and contest the everyday reality of being mother-students and mother-academics. It aims to create different conditions of academic and care labour by working together across difference and attempting to forge collectivity. Their first undertaking was auto-ethnographic and participatory research with mother-subjects at the University of Newcastle, focusing on questions of (in)equity at the intersections of motherhood and academia. To contact the UoN Mother Research Collective email: mothercollective@riseup.net
Bibliography on Ecologies of Social Difference
The University of British Columbia’s Ecologies of Social Difference Thematic Network (Social Justics@UBC Netowrk) has released an annotated bibliography on the intersections of inequality. Social difference and critical nature studies/poltical ecology/environmental justice. Search terms in compiling the bibliography included gender, feminism, race, class, caste, ethnicitiy, environment, political ecology and ecology. The bibliography can be found at www.esd.ubc.ca
New Books
Browne, Kath and Eduardo Ferreira (eds) 2015. Lesbian geographies: Gender, Place and Power. Aldershot: Ashgate.
Datta, Anindita. 2015. Proceedings International Conference Reorienting Gender: Geographies of Resistance , Agency, Violence and Desire in Asia, Delhi: RK Books.
Harcourt, Wendy and Ingrid Nelson. 2015. Practicing Feminist Political Ecologies: Moving Beyond the ‘Green Economy. London. Zed Books
Radcliffe, Sarah. 2015. Dilemmas of Difference: Indigenous Women and the Limits of Postcolonial Development Policy. Chapel Hill, NC. Duke University Press.
Raju, Saraswati and Santosh Jatrana (eds) 2016. Women Workers in India. New Delhi. Cambridge University Press.
Wiest, Karen (ed,) 2016. Women and Migration in Rural Europe.: Labour Markets, Representations, and Policies. London: Palgrave Macmillan.
Theme Issue
The Canadian Geographer on “Cultivating an Ethic of Wellness in Geography”. With Linda Peake, Beverley Mullings, and Kate Parizeau . Contributions by Alison Mountz, Kate McLean et.al., Lawrence Berg et.al., David Conradson, Marcia England, Eric Windhorst and Alison Wiliams, and Laurence Simard-Gagnon.
Recent Book Chapters and Articles
An, Ning, Chen Liu, and Hong Zhu. 2016. “Popular geopolitics of Chinese Nanjing massacre films: A feminist approach.” Gender, Place and Culture 23(6): 786-800.
Aparecido de Souza, Marcos. 2016. “Farda se gênero: évalores e atitudes na policia military do Paraná. Revista Latino-American de Geografia e Género 7: 3.
Baylina, Mireia, Maria Dolors Garcia-Ramon and Monserrat Villarino, et al. 2016.” Women assess rurality – a tailored rural idyll”, in: Wiest, K. (eds): Women and migration in rural Europe: Labour markets, representations and policies, Basingstoke, Hampshire, Palgrave Macmillan. xvi, 257 Seiten (New geographies of Europe). 25-43.
Becher,Caroline and Jo Klanovicz. 2016. Mulheres Camponesas e os Desafious so Accesso às Políticas Públicas para Igualdade de Gênero.” Revista Latino-American de Geografia e Género 7: 159-77.
Bliss. Laura. 2016 (a) and 2016(b) a: “The Hidden Histories of Maps Made by Women: Early North America” b): How women mapped the upheaval of 19th Century America. http://www.citylab.com/design/2016/03/women-in-cartography-early-north-america/471609/ (accessed March 23,2016).
Brown, Michael and Larry Knopp. 2016. Sex, drink, and state anxieties: Governance through the gay bar.” Social and Cultural Geography 17(3): 335-58.
Burford, J. and S. Kindon. 2015. Queering accounts od ‘MSM’ practioner agency: Recognizing collateral benefits.” Development in Practice 25(2): 145-59.
Burgos-Suárez, Lucelly Carolina, Rafael Ortiz-Pech, and Lilian Albornoz-Mendoza. 2016. “Situación del Rezago Educativo en Yucatan, México con Enfoque de Género (1990-2010) Revista Latino-American de Geografia e Género 7 (3): 76-92.
Caretta, M.A. 2015. Member checking: a participatory method to test and analyze preliminary results
Chant, Sylvia. 2016. “Women, girls and world poverty” Empowerment, equality and essentialism.” International Development Planning Review 38(1): 1-24. (doi.org/10.3828/idpr2016.1)
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Caretta, M.A. 2015. East African Hydropatriarchies: An analysis of changing waterscapes in smallholder
irrigation farming. Stockholm University, Faculty of Social Sciences, Department of Human Geography.
ISBN: 978-91-7649-206-2.diva2:853702
in cross-cultural, cross-language research. Online first. Qualitative Research DOI:
10.1177/1468794115606495
Caretta, M.A., and Y. Riaño. 2016. “ Feminist participatory methodologies in geography: Creating spaces
of Inclusion.” Qualitative Research, doi:10.1177/1468794116629575
Caretta, M.A. and E. Vacchelli, 2015. “Re-thinking the boundaries of the focus group. A reflexive analysis
on the use and legitimacy of group methodologies in qualitative research.” Sociological Research
Online. DOI: 10.5153/sro.3812.
Choi, Andrea. 2016. “Equity, race, and whiteness in Canadian geography.” The Canadian Geographer DOI: 10.1111/cag 12266.
Christie, Maria Elisa, Mary Park, and Michael Mulwanet. 2016. “Gender and coral reef knowledge: Linking farmers’ perceptions with soil fertilizer in two villages in the Philippines.” Singapore Journal of Tropical Geography 37(1): 6-24.
Coen, Stephanie, Rajendra P. Subedi and Mark W. Rosenberg. 2016. “ Working out across Canada: Is there a gender gap? Canadian Geographer DOI:10.1111/cag12255.
Connell, John and Margaret Walton Roberts. 2016. “What about workers?: The missing geographies of health care?” Progress in Human Geography 40 (2): 158-76.
Costa, Felizardo Tchiengo Bartolomeu and José Sterza Justo. (2016) “Imigração e relações de gênero: Subjetividades emergentes ou em recomposição.” Revista Latino-American de Geografia e Género 7: 34- 53.
Cox, Rosie. 2016. “Materials, skills, and gender identities: Men, women and home improvement practices in New Zealand.” Gender, Place and Culture 26(4): 572-88.
Cruells. Marta and Sandra Ezquerra. 2015. “Processos de voluntad democratizadora: Expression feminist en el IS-M.” ACME 14(1): 42-60.
Cuomo, Dana and Vanessa Massaro. 2016. “Boundary making in feminist research: New methodologies for intimate ‘insiders’” Gender, Place and Culture 23( (1): 94-106.
Da Silva, Reijane Pinheiro. 2016. “Imigrantos Goianas na Irlanda: Agências e Interpretaçõe.” Revista Latino-American de Geografia e Género 7: 54-75.
Das, Tulshi Kumar, Rituparna Bhattacharyya, Md. Fahrhul Alam, and Pervin Amina. 2016. Domestic violence in Sylhet, Bangladesh: Analysing the e of abused women.” Social Change, 46(1), 106- 123.
Datta, Anindita. 2016. “Yeh Bhoogol shastra nahi hai: on (in)visibilizing gendered geographies of resistance and agency in India,” Social and Cultural Geography DOI: 10.1080/14649365.2015.1129434
---. 2015. “Re Assessing Gender, Gender Disparities and Gender Issues in North East India: A Socio Geographic Perspective.” In Sengupta S et al (eds) Dynamics of Gender Disparity- North East India lens. Publishers, Guwahati
De Freitas, Bruno and Marta Beatriz Junqueira, 2016. “ A Geofrafia dialogando comas ciências natural e es artes para compreensäo interdisciplinar e critica acerco questöes de gênero no context contemporáneo.” Revista Latino-American de Geografia e Género 7: 105-29.
Faria, Caroline and Sharlene Mollett. 2016. “Critical feminist reflexivity and the politics of whiteness in the ‘field’.” Gender. Place and Culture 23(1): 79-92.
Farias, Mónica. “Women’s magazines and socio-economic change: Para-Ti, identity and politics in urban Argentina.” Gender, Place and Culture 23(5): 607-23.
Fontenele de Souza, Daliane , Inez Sampaio Nery. 2016. “ A sexualidade da Mulher na Relaçäo Conjugal Violenta” Revista Latino-American de Geografia e Género 7: 178-94.
Garcia-Ramon, Maria Dolors. 2016. “Geografía del Género y los espacios de encuentro colonial”, Debate Feminista Link: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.df.2016.03.003 (on line)
Gibson, Chris. 2016. “How clothing design and cultural industries refashioned frontier masculinities: A historical geography of Western wear.” Gender, Place and Culture 23(5): 733-52.
Gilmartin, Mary and Bettina Migge. 2016. “Migrant mothers and the geographies of belonging.” Gender, Place and Culture 23(2)” 147-61.
Grant, Aimee. 2016. “’I...don’t want to see you flashing your bits around’: Exhibitionism, othering and good motherhood in perceptions of public breastfeeding.” Geoforum 71(1) 2016: 52-61.
Hall, Sara Marie and Mark Jayne. 2016. “Make, mend and befriend: Geographies of austerity, crafting and friendship in contemporary cultures of dressmaking.” Gender, Place and Culture 23(2): 216-34.
Hanson, Anne-Marie S. 2016. “Women’s ecological oral histories of recycling and development in coastal Yucatan.” Gender, Place and Culture 23 (4): 467-83.
Hartal, Gilly. 2015. “Becoming periphery: Israeli LGBT peripheralization.” ACME 14(2 571-97. Hawkins, Roberta, Karen Falconer Al-Hindi, Pamela Moss and Leslie Kern, 2016. “Practicing collective
biography. “ Geography Compass 10(4): 165-78.
Holt, Maria. 2015. “An ‘invented people’: Palestinian refugee women and meanings of home.” ACME
14(2) 442-51.
Howson, P. and S. Kindon. 2016. “Analysing access to the local REDD+ benefits of Sungai Lamandau,
Central Kalimantan, Indonesia.” Asia Pacific Viewpoint 56(1): 96-110.
Hulya, Arik. 2016. “Security, secularism and gender: The Turkish military’s security discourse in relation
to political Islam.” Gender, Place and Culture 23(5): 641-58
Jackson, Lucy. 2016. “Intimate citizenship? Rethinking the politics and experience of citizenship as
emotional in Wales and Singapore.” Gender, Place and Culture 23(6): 817-33.
Kale, A, and S. Kindon. 2015. “Turning the Curve: Refugee Women Learning to Drive Programme. 2012- 2015. Evaluation Report, Victoria University of Wellington, Prepared for Good Shepherd Asia Pacific Trust and Changemakers Refugee Forum.
Garcia-Ramon, Maria Dolors, Mireia Bayllina et al. 2014-15 “Mujeres rurales profesionales: su
evaluación del medio rural en Cataluña y Galicia” Saitabi 64-5: 289-99.
Kaspar, Heidi and Sara Landolt. 2016. “Flirting in the field: Shifting positionalities and power relations in innocuous sexualisations of research encounters.” Gender, Place and Culture 23(1): 107-119.
Kindon, S. 2015. “Participatory video as a feminist practice of looking: Take two.”Area DOI: 10. 1111/area 12246. December
----. 2016. “Participatory action research” In Hay, I. Qualitative Research Methods in Human Geography. 3rd ed. Melbourne: Oxford University Press.
LaLiberté, Nicole and Carolin Schurr. 2016. “The stickiness of emotions in the field: Introduction.” Gender, Place and Culture 23(1): 72-78.
Lewis, Nathaniel M. 2016. “Urban encounters and sexual health among gay and bisexual immigrant men: perspectives from the settlement AIDS service centers.” Geographical Review 106 (2): 165-78.
Longhurst, Robyn. 2016. “Mothering, digital media and emotional geographies in Hamilton, New Zealand.” Social and Cultural Geography 17 (1): 120-135.
Lopez, D.J. “American Red Cross posters and the cultural politics of motherhood in World War I. Gender, Place and Culture 23 (6): 761-85.
Lullem Aija and Russell King, 2016. “Aging well: The time-space and possibility for older female Latvian migrants in the U.K.” Social and Cultural Geography 17(3): 4444-62.
Maalson, Sophie and Jessica McClean. 2016. “ Digging up unearthed down-under: A hybrid geography of musical space that essentialises gender and place.” Gender, Place and Culture 23(3): 418-34.
Maddrell, Avril. Kendra Strauss, Nicola J. Thomas and Stephanie Wise. 2016. “’Mind the Gap’: Gender disparaties still to be addressed in U.K. higher education geography.” Area 48(1): 48-56.
Maliepaard, Emiel. 2015. “Bisexual spaces: Exploring geographies of bisexualities.” ACME 14(1): 217-34.
Mazali, Rela. 2016. “Speaking of Guns: Launching gun control discourse and disarming security guards in
a militarized society,” International Feminist Journal of Politics. DOI:
10.1080/14616742.2016.1147874.
----. “Complicit Dissent, Dissenting Complicity: A Story and its Context,” in: Ghada Ageel ed., Apartheid
in Palestine: Hard Laws and Harder Experiences, University of Alberta Press, 2016, pp. 129-
48
----. 2015. “Silahlahlardan Soz Etmisken: Miltiarize Bir Toplumda Silah Denetimi Soylemini Dolasima
Sokmak Ve Guvenlik Guclerini Silahsizlandirmak.” In Kultur ve Siyasette Feminist Yaklasimlar, trans. Elif
Benici, Irem Az, Sayi 25 16-34. [Early version of “Speaking of Guns,” translated into Turkish]
----. 2016. “Speaking of Guns: Launching gun control discourse and disarming security guards in a
militarized society,” International Feminist Journal of Politics DOI: 10:
1080/14616742.2016.1147874.
----. 2016. “Complicit Dissent, Dissenting Complicity: A Story and its Context,” in: Ghada Ageel ed.,
Apartheid in Palestine: Hard Laws and Harder Experiences, University of Alberta Press, 129-148.
McDowell, Linda. 2016. “Youth, children and families in austere times: Change, politics and a new
gender contract.”Area 11 JAN 2016 | DOI: 10.1111/area.12255
McLean, Jessica, Sophie Maalson and Alana Gree. “Learning about feminism in digital spaces: Online
methodologies and participatory mapping.” Australian Geographer 47 (2): 157-77. Meah, Angela. 2015. “Extending the contested spaces in the modern kitchen.” Geography Compass 10
(3): 41-55.
Meah, Angela and Peter Jackson. 2016. “The complex landscape of fathering in the UK.” Soclal and
Cultural Geography 17(4): 491-510.
MIlani, Maria Luisa. 2016. “ Inserçäo da Mulher Negra Brasileira no Mercado de Trabalho no Período de
1980-2010. Revista Latino-American de Geografia e Género 7: 178-94.
Miralles-Guasch, Carme, Montserrat Martínez Melo and Oriol Marquet. 2016. “A gender analysis of everyday mobility in urban and rural territories: from challenges to sustainability.” Gender, Place and Culture 23(3): 398-417.
Moore, Frances. 2016, “A band of public-spirited women: Middle class female philanthropy and citizenship in Bolton, Lancashire before 1918.” Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 41(2):149-62.
Morrissey, Karyn. 2016. “Gender differences in the association between common mental disorders and regional deprivation in Ireland.” The Professional Geographer 68(1): 129-37.
Muñoz, Lorena. 2016. “Entangled sidewalks: Queer street vendors in Los Angeles.” The Professional Geographer 68(2): 302-08.
Nash, Angela and Peter Jackson. 2016. Re-imagining the kitchen as a site of memory.” Social and Cultural Geography 17(4): 511-32.
Naybor, Deborah, Jessie P.H. Poon and Irene Cass. 2006. “Mobility disadvantage and livelihood opportunities of marginalized widowed women. Annals of the American Association of Geographers 106(2): 404-12.
Nyasimi, M., Peake, L. 2015. “Review of SDG 5: Achieve gender equality and empower all women and girls” in ICSU, ISSC Review of Targets for the Sustainable Development Goals: The Science Perspective (Paris: International Council for Science (ICSU)), pp. 29-32.
Parizeau, Kate, Laura Shillington, Roberta Hawkins, Farhana Sultana, Alison Mountz, Beverly Mullings, and Linda Peake. 2016. “Breaking the silence: A feminist call to action.” The Canadian Geographer DOI: 10. 1111/cag.12265.
Patiño-Dies, Maria. 2016. “La construccíon social de los espacios del miedo: Práticas e imaginarious de las mujeres en Lavapiés (Madrid). Documents d’Anàlisi Geogràfica 62(2): 403-26.
Peake, Linda. 2015 “The Suzanne Mackenzie Memorial Lecture: Rethinking the politics of feminist knowledge in Anglo-American geography.” The Canadian Geographer/Le Geographe Canadien59(3) 257- 66.
----. “The twenty-first century quest for feminism and the global urban.” International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, DOI:10.1111/1468-2427.12276. Part of theme issue edited by Ananya Roy and Jennifer Robinson, on “Global Urbanisms and the Nature of Urban Theory”.
----. 2015. Review of Mapping Desire by David Bell and Gill Valentine, 'Classic in human geography', Progress in Human Geography DOI:10.1177/0309132515585060
----. 2015. “On feminism and feminist allies in urban geography.” Urban Geography. DOI: 10.1080/02723638.2015.1105484.
Peres Gonçalves, Josiane, Viviane de Souza Correia de Carvalho Pineiro da Silva. 2016. Estudo da
Representaçöes Socials de Professores Homens de Mato Grosso do Sul Sobre o Trabalho Reakizado com crianças.” Revista Latino-American de Geografia e Género 7: 93-104.
Petarly, Renate Rauta. 2016. “ Economia, solidária e feminist: apontamentos sobre a representaçäo social de trabalho doméstico peias mulheres de Arauuaína TO. Revista Latino-American de Geografia e Género 7: 148-58.
Porto, A.M. M. Villarino, M. Baylina, M., M.D Garcia-Ramon and I. Salamaña., .(2015) “Formación de las mujeres, empoderamiento e innovación rural” Boletin de la Asociación de Geógrafos Españoles, 68, (385-405.
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