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Newsletter No. 58

[Link to pdfs in English, French, Spanish]

INTERNATIONAL GEOGRAPHICAL UNION COMMISSION ON GENDER AND GEOGRAPHY

NEWSLETTER NUMBER 58 May, 2017

Message from the Chair

I’m delighted to be able to share with you the new IGU Commission on Gender and Geography Website: https://igugender.wixsite.com/igugender

We are indebted to several people for this new webpage. We would not have this new website if it hadn’t been for one of our YES! Members Dr Caroline Faria. Caroline offered to oversee its creation. She contracted a web designer – Cara McConnell, and a graphic designer – Nora Greene, to work on the brand.

Cara – a geography student at the University of Texas – asked Steering Committee Members to provide three words to best describe the Commission on Gender and Geography. This exercise, and some further brainstorming, came up with: “vibrant, modern, simple, professional, clean, easy to maintain, non-binary, feminist, intersectional, across boundaries, global network, inclusiveness, solidarity”.

Nora - a feminist and graphic design major at the University of Texas - shares her description of her concept for the logo: “The icon in the logo is an abstracted torch, symbolizing hope, strength, enlightenment, life, truth, knowledge; and references the Olympic torch. The icon is vibrant and modern which enhances and suits the Gender Commission. The flame alludes to the infinity symbol -- connecting in the middle - representing the Gender Commission's goal of exchanging ideas and collaboration across borders. Finally, the gradient illustrates growth, highlighting the Commission's mission to expand feminist and gender studies in geography.”

Please take some time to explore the new webpage and let us know what you think of it. It is an important place to share our research, publicise conferences on gender organised by members, find colleagues for collaboration and networking.

It is easy to join the IGU Gender and Geography Commission – just follow the link that says ‘join us’. Do send me any ideas and aspirations you have for the webpage. We would like to keep it fresh and relevant. Please share the webpage link with your collaborators and communities so that we can encourage more people to join the Commission.

Finally, a huge thank you goes to Dr. Joos Droogleever Fortunuijn for maintaining and updating our previous webpage. Joos, and the University of Amsterdam, hosted our website for many years, for which we are deeply grateful.

Lynda Johnston

University of Waikato

lynda.johnston@waikato.ac.nz

News from Around the World

Congratulations to Ruth Fincher, University of Melbourne, and an early chair of the IGU Commission on Gender and Geography, who received the 2017 Life Time Achievement Award from the American Association of Geographers. The award recognizes Ruth’s sustained research, teaching, and leadership on key policy issues related to housing, women and immigration, her contributions to academic administration, her service as a Vice-President of the International Geographical Union (IGU) and as IGU representative to the International Council of Scientific Unions. Ruth has also been honored by the Institute of Australian Geographers, by her University, and by the Australian government which conferred on her a national award within the Order of Australia. We appreciate Ruth’s many contributions and are proud to see this recognition of her contributions to social justice as a feminist geographer.

GenMob – Gender and Mobility Space-Time Inequality (June 2015 to December 2016) has been promoted by CEG/IGOT, University of Lisbon financed by the European Economic Area grants for Integration of Gender Equality and promotion of the balance between work and professional life. Its purpose is to develop instruments and methods of promoting gender equality at the local level. Intimate Migrations is a project about the experiences of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender migrants in Scotland from Central Eastern Europe (CEE) and the Former Soviet Union (FSU. It was funded by the Economic Social Research Council and hosted by the University of Glasgow. For more information about the project see www.intimatemigration.net. The final published report can be download from the link be downloaded from https://intimatemigrationsdotnet.files.wordpress.com/2016/12/intimate-migrations-final-report-2016.pdf

Recent Conferences

The Manipal International Seminar

The IGU Commission on Gender and Geography endorsed an international seminar “Gendering Qualitative Methods: People, Power and Place” held at Manipal University (India) in December, 2016. It was organized by Public Health Evidence South Asia (PHESA) in collaboration with Dr. T.M.A. Pal and Dr. Ajay Bailey (University of Gronigen) and Dr. Anindita Datta (Delhi University. Among presentations and sessions were the keynote by Dr. Anita Mannur on “The Tiffin Box and Indian Modernity: Gender, Space and Mobility in Mumbai’s Foodscape” and by Shirleen Jejeebhoy on “Gender and young people’s reproductive health in India. Other sessions addressed theoretical concerns including identity and reflexivity; gender, migration and aging, and negotiating gender in the field.

Feminist Geography Conference in Chapel Hill, North Carolina (May, 2017)

Nearly 140 participants from around the United States and several European, South and East Asian, Middle Eastern, African, and Latin American countries gathered at the University of North Carolina - Chapel Hill in May 2017 for the Feminist Geography conference titled “Insides and Outsides of Feminism.” The conference included workshops, panels, and papers that focused on exploring and challenging the boundaries of feminism in a period of social and political uncertainty and change. Four keynote panelists, Kia Caldwell (UNC-CH), Lorraine Dowler (Penn State), LaToya Eaves (Middle Tennessee State), and Kumarini Silva (UNC-CH), spoke about racialized spaces in society, banal everyday violence on campuses, disrupting our comfort zones, and many other thought-provoking topics. Conference presenters drew from their research, pedagogy, and activism to encourage colleagues to rethink our approaches to teaching against the global turn to the right, working with networks to share mentoring strategies, and embracing difficult conversations across diversity of race, gender, and other social identities. (See https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kKvYFkMJbv8).

Conference highlights included participation of the Association of Waorani Women of the Ecuadorian Amazon (AMWAE), an Amazonian group in Ecuador who brought handicrafts and shared stories about their ecological knowledge and livelihoods. (See panel photo below.) Additional workshops were organized around crowd sourced mapping in feminist geography and practicing joyful memories and collaborations in our professional and personal lives. (See https://www.facebook.com/femgeog/) for more highlights.

This conference was built on and continued conversations from the previous feminist geography conference in Omaha, Nebraska in 2014. The group looks forward to and is still seeking a venue for the next conference. The organizers “hope that this will be the beginning point for new conversations, collaborations, and initiatives to further develop the spirit of feminist geography.” We are greatly indebted to the organizers from the Department of Geography at UNC-CH for their tireless and stellar work in making this a successful conference. (Report by Ann M. Oberhauser)

Study Day and 4th Bienniale masculins/féminas de gégraphie, May 31, 2017

At the Study Day, Tovi Fenster (University of Tel Aviv) presented on “Gender and City: Reflections on 30 Years of Research and Study” held at the Geography Institute if University of Paris 1-Pantheon Sorbonne. This stimulating presentation offered a reflection on her research and an overview of the evolution of research in planning. Participants in the study day included Camilo León-Quijano (EHESS), “Photographie et methods participatives de l’image: une ethnographie visuaelle de genre à’Medellin”; Lucille Barriotte (Univversité Paris Est) “Diffusion international et infusion organisationnelle del’approche de genre en urbanisme”; Claire Hancock (Université Paris Est) “Intégrer l’approche de genre dans la gestion urbainem perspectives européennes compares”; David Sayagh(IFSTAR) “Construction de capabilités sexuées aux practiques de vélo en milieu urbain” et Claire Brisson (Université Paris IV) “Maculinité(s) noire(s): Géographies d’un stigmata sur la plage d’Ipanema.”

The 4th Biennale masculins-féminins de géographie is to be held at l’Institute de géographie de Paris from June 1-June 3, 2017. It will be organized by Rachele Borghi (MCF, Université Paris-Sorbonne, UMR ENeC), Carla Carvalhais (ITA, UMR ENeC), Emmanuelle Dedenon (ITA, UMR ENeC), de Paris from June 1-June 3, 2017. It will be organized by Rachele Borghi (MCF, Université Paris-Sorbonne, UMR ENeC), Carla Carvalhais (ITA, UMR ENeC), Emmanuelle Dedenon (ITA, UMR ENeC), Soumeya Khelfa (Doctorante, Université Paris-Sorbonne, UMR ENeC), Mauve Létang (Doctorante, Université Paris-Sorbonne, UMR ENeC), Cha Prieur (Docteur.e, chercheur.e indépendant.e, UMR ENeC) et Marion Tillous (MCF, Université Paris 8 Saint-Denis, UMR LEGS). The theme is “Géographies féministes. Théories, pratiques, engagements.” For further information see https://biennalemasfem4.sciencesconf.org/

American Association of Geographers Annual Meeting,

Boston, April 4-9, 2017

The Geographic Perspectives on Women (GPOW) group sponsored or co-cosponsored over 60 paper and panel sessions at the 2017 annual meeting of the American Association of Geographers held in Boston in April, 2017. For a full listing of those sessions see http://communiy.aag.org/communities/community-home?CommunityKey=861b324d-62a9-4f44-b33b2aba6f99090b.

In addition the GPOW annual evening reception served as the occasion to recognize the authors of 16 books published by feminist geographers in 2016-2017. Those published in 2017 include the following:

Longhurst, Robyn. Skype: Bodies, Screens and Spaces. London, Routledge.

Moss, Pamela and Courtney Donovan. Writing Intimacy into Feminist Geography. London: Routledge.

Parker, Brenda. Masculinities and Markets: Raced and Gendered Urban Politics in Milwaukee. Athens: University of Georgia Press.

Trauger, Amy. We Want Land to Live: Space, Territory and the Politics of Food Sovereignty. Athens: University of Georgia Press.

Also released at the AAG meeting was the 15 volume AAG International Encyclopedia of Geography (Douglas Richardson et al eds) which includes an array of entries that address such topics as Feminist Methodology, Heteronormativity, Women’s Organizations in Geography (entries by Linda Peake), Life Course Approaches (Irene Hardill and Janice Monk) and Geographic Education: Promoting Diversity and Broadening Participation (Janice Monk).

NEW BOOKS

The landmark volume Geografías feministas de diversas latitudes: Orígenas, desarollo y tématicas contempóraneas edited by Maria Veronica Garcia Ibarra and Irma Escamilla Herrera has been published by Universidad Nacional Edita: Universidad Nacional Autónoma de Mexico, Instituto de Geografía Colección: Geografía para el siglo XXI. Series: Textos Universitarios, setiembre de 2016 (primera edición)

Following the “Presentación” by the editors, are chapters by an array of Latin American, North American and European geographers.

Lise Nelson. “Geografia feminista anglosajona”. Reflexiones hacia una geografía global.”

Diana Lan. “Los estudios de género en la geografia argentina”

Susana Veleda da Silva. “Geografías feministas brasileñas: un punto de vistas.”

Anna Ortiz y Maria Dolors García Ramón. “ Nuevas tendencias en la geografia del género en España. Una revisión actualizada de investigaciones en el último decenio.”

Claire Hancock y Amandine Chapuis “Geografia de género, geografia feminista en Francia. ¿Una geografía paradójica?

Carolin Schurr. “¿Otras geografias son posibles?. Geografías feministas en Suiza, Austria y Alemania”

Rachele aka Zarra Bonheur, Monica Camuffo y Cesare Di Feliciantonio “Geografia de género en Italia,¿ misión imposible?”

María Verónica Ibarra e Irma Escamilla Herrera “La geografía feminista, de género y de la sexualidad en México, un saber en crecimiento”

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Additional New Books

Bain, A., and Peake, L. (eds.) 2017 Urbanization in A Global Context. Toronto: Oxford University Press

McDowell, Linda. 2016 Migrant Women’s Voices: Talking about life and work in the U.K. since 1945. London: Wiley Bloomsbury.

Perry, Noam and Ruth Kark. 2017. Ethnographic Museums in Israel. Israel Academic Press. (This volume addresses the ethnic diversity of origins represented in Israel ranging for example to various European regions to Morocco, India, Uzbekhistan and including Arabs and Druse.

Rangelova, Radost. 2016. Gendered Geographies in Puerto Rican Cultural Spaces: Spaces, Sexualities, and Solidarities. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press.

Tyner, Judith. 2015. Stitching the World: Embroidered Maps and Women’s Geographic Education. New York: Routledge.

Project Report

Stella, Francisca, Anna Gawlewicz and Moya Flynn. 2016. “Intimate Migrations: Lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender migrants in Scotland.” See www.intimatemigrations.net or www://intimatemigrationsdotnet.files.wordpress.com/2016/12/intimate-migrations-final-report-2016.pdf (project addresses migrants from Central Eastern Europe and former Soviet Union.

Special Journal Issues and Theme Sections

Les Annales de la Recherche Urbaine 112 edited by Marianne Blidon, Virginie Bathellier and Bertrand Valllet is devoted to “Le genre urbain.”

Geographical Review of Japan 89 (1) January, 2017 presents a special issue “Rethinking Gender and Geography in Japanese contexts prepared by Keichi Kumagai and Yoko Yushido.

Kumagai Keichi and Yoshida, Yoko. 2017. “Preface to the Special Issue: Rethinking Gender and Geography in Japanese Contexts.” Geographical Review of Japan Series B 89(1): 1-3.

Yoshida, Yoko. 2017. “Geography of Gender: “Qualitative methods in Japan: Focusing on Studies that have analyzed life histories.” 89 (1): 4-13.

Kuramitsu, Minako.2017. “Samoan pioneer wives and home: The experiences of living in Japan.” 89(1) 14-26.

Kayagama, Honami. “Community building in Naha Shinto Shrine, Okinawa from the view of gender studies.” 89(1): 26-31.

Kumangai, Keichi. “Place, body and nature: Rethinking Japanese sense of Fudo and Minamata disease.” 89(1) 32-45.

TRIA 9((2) 2016 (published in Italy) is a theme issue focusing on “Engendering Habitat III: Facing the Global Challenge in Cities.” It is edited by Sonia De Gregorio Hurtado and Inés Novella Abrll. For further information on this journal which focuses on urban, environmental and planning themes (see www.tria.uni.it)

Canadian Geographer 60 (2) has a theme section on “Cultivating and Ethic of Wellness in Geography” co-edited by Linda Peake, Beverly Mullings, and Kate Parizeau. Among those papers are:

Beverly Mullings, Linda Peake, and Kate Parizeau “ Cultivating an Ethic of Wellness in Geography.” 161-67.

Parizeau, K., L. Shillington, R.Hawkins, F. Sultanta, A.Mountz, B. Mullings and L.Peake.: “Breaking the Silence: A Feminist Call to Action.” 192-204.

The Professional Geographer 69 (3) 2017 includes a FOCUS section “Feminist Research and Knowledge Production in Geography” (the seven articles included are listed below.)

Hemstra, Nancy and Emily Bills. “Introduction to Focus Section: Feminist Research and Knowledge Production in Geography.” 69 (3)284-90.

Mukherjee, Sanjukta. “Troubling Positionality: Politics of ‘Studying Up’ in Transnational Contexts.” 69 (3) 291-98.

Whitson, Risa. “Painting Pictures of Ourselves: Researcher Subjectivity in the Practice of Feminist Reflexivity.” 69 (3): 299-306.

Goerisch, Denise.”’Doing Good Work”: Feminist Dilemmas of Volunteering in the Field.” 69(3): 307-313.

Coddington, Kate. “Voice under Scrutiny: Feminist Methods, Anticolonial Responses and New Methodological Tools.” 69(3): 314-320.

Parker, Brenda. “The Feminist as Killjoy: Excavating Gendered Urban Power Relations,” 321-328

Hiemstra, Nancy. “Periscoping as a Feminist Methodological Approach for Researching the Seemingly Hidden.” 329-35.

Book Review Forum Richa Nagar: Muddying the waters: Coauthoriing feminisms across scholarship and activism.” Commentaries by Elora Halim Chowhury, Laura Pulido, Nik Heynen, Lainie Rini, Joel Wainwright, Naeem Inayatullah, and Richa Nagar. Gender, Place and Culture 23(12): 1800-1812.

Articles and Book Chapters

Aure, Marit and Mai Kamilla Munkjord. 2016. “Creating a man for the future: A narrative analysis of male in-migrants and their constructions of masculinities in a rural context.” Sociologia Ruralis 56(4): doi:10 1111/sofu 12111.

Baylina,M., Garcia-Ramon, M.D., et al. 2017.) “Work-life balance of professional women in rural Spain”, Gender, Place and Culture 24(1) 72-84

Baylina, M. , Garcia Ramon, M. D., and Villarino, J. 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. (New geographies of Europe) 25-43.

Baylina, Mireia, Maria Dolors Garcia Ramon, Ana Maria Porto, Maria Rodo de Zarate, Isabel Salamaña and Montserrat Villarino. 2017. Work-life balance of professional women in rural Spain.” Gender, Place and Culture 24. 72-84.

Bhattacharyya, Rituparna.2016. “Living with Armed Forces Special Powers Act (AFSPA) as everyday life.” GeoJournal, 1-18, doi:10.1007/s10708-016-9752-9

Bhattacharyya, Rituparna 2016. Street violence against women in India: Mapping prevention strategies.” Asian Social Work and Policy Review, 10 (3), 311-325, DOI:10.1111/aswp.12099

Blidon, Marianne. 2017. “Il mercato dei Matrimoni. Geografia, genere e reality tv.” In Marcella Schmdt di Friedberg., Maria Marengo, Valeria Pecorelli (dir) Special issue, Sguardi di Genere Geotema no. 53

----. 2017. “Genre et ville, une réflexion à poursuivre.” Annales de la recherché urbaine.” 112: 7-15.

Bruzzone, Maria 2017.“Respatializing the domestic.: Gender, extensive domesticity and activist kitchen space in Mexican migration politics.” Cultural Geographies. (online before print)

Bowshead, Jane C. 2017. “Women on the move: Theorising the geographies of domestic violence journeys in England.” Gender, Place and Culture, 24 (1): 108-21.

Buechler, Stephanie. 2016. “Gendered vulnerabilities and grassroots adaptation initiatives in home gardens and small orchards in Northwest Mexico.” Ambio, 45(3), 322-334. DOI 10.1007/s13280-016-0832-3.é

Caretta, Martina and J.C. Jokinen. 2017. “Conflating privilege and vulnerability: A reflexive analysis of emotion and positionality in postgraduate fieldwork. The Professional Geographer 69 (2) 275-83.

Caretta, Martina and Florence Cheptum. 2017. “Leaving the field: de-linked lives of the researcher and the research assistant. Area n/a/https://doi.org/10.1111/area 12342

Carey, Mark, M. Jackson, Alessandri Antonello, and Jacklyn Rushing. 2016. “Glaciers, gender, science: A feminist glaciology framework for global environmental change research.” Progress in Human Geography 40 (6), 770-93.

Carswell, Grace. 2016.” Struggles over work take place at home: Women’s decisions, choices and constraints in the Truppur textile industry.” Geoforum 77: 134-45.

Chant, Sylvia. 2017. “Addressing world poverty through women and girls: A feminized solution.: Sights and Life 10 (2) 58-63.

----. 2016. Niñas en Desarollos, logros y precauciones en la epica de la “Smart Economies.” In Maria Dolors Molastont and Avra Santiago. (eds). La Infancia en Feminino: Las Niñas Indigenes y Figuras de la Fillación. Barcelona. Icaria Editore.

Chowhury, Elora Halm, Laura Pulido, Nik Heynen, Laini Rini, Joel Wainwright, Naem Inayalullah, and Richa Nagar. 2016. “ Muddying the waters: Coauthoring feminisms across scholarship and activisms.” Gender, Place and Culture 23: 12 1800-12.

Clark, Jessie Hanna. 2017. “Feminist geopolitics and the Middle East: Refuge, belief and peace.” Geography Compass 11(2): DOI 10:.1111/gec3 12304.

Cookson, Tara Patricia. 2016. “Working for inclusion? Conditional cash transfers, rural women and the reproduction of inequality.” Antipode 48(5): 1187-1205.

Desbiens, Caroline and Carole Lévesque. 2016. “From forced relocation to secure belonging:

Women making native space in Quebec’s urban areas.” Historical Geography 44: 89-101.

Di Feliciantonio, Cesare and Kaciano B. Gadelha. 2016. “ Affects,, bodies and desire: Querying methods and methodologies to research migration.” Tijdschrift voor Economische en Sociale Geografie DOI10:1111/tesg12235.

Domosh, Mona. 2017. “Genealogies of race, gender, and place.” Annals of the American Association of Geographers 107(3): 765-78.

Doshi, Sapana. 2017. “Embodied urban political ecology: five propositions.” Area 49(1): 125-28.

Evans, Sarah L. 2016. “Mapping Terra Incognita: Women;s particpation in Royal Geographical Society-supported expeditions 1913-1939.” Historical Geography 44: 30-44.

Fenster, Tovi and Tal Kulka. 2016. “Whose knowledge, whose power? Ethics on urban regeneration projects with communities.” Geografiska Annaler Human Geograpy Series B 98(2): 221-38. DOI: 10.1111/geob.12101

Ferguson, Jane M. 2017. “ Discrete to Excrete in the concrete jungle: Women bike messengers and their inventive urban strategies in three U.S. cities.” Gender, Place and Culture 24 (1): 85-96.

Ferretti, Federico. 2016. “Anaarchist geographers and feminism in late 19th century France: the contributions of Elisé and Elie Reclus.” .” Historical Geography 44: 68-88.

Finn, j. 2017. “Cuba’s kitchen spaces for food and life in Cuba.” Geohumanities 3(1): forthcoming

Gahman, Levi. 2017. “Crip theory and country boys.: Masculinity, dis/ability, and place in rural southeast Kansas.” Annals of the American Association of Geographers 107(3): 700-15.

Gallard, J.C., Andrew Gorman-Murray, Maureen Fordha,.2017. “Sexual and gender minorities in disasters.” Gender, Place and Culture. 24(1): 18-26.

Gaynor, Andrea, Jodi Frawley, and Kathleen Schwñerdtner Mañez. 2016. “Slim female records the same old story: Newspapers, gender and recreational fishing in Australia, 1957-2000.” Geoforum 77: 114-23.

Giesbrecht, Melissa, Allison Williams, Wendy Duggleby, Jenny Ploeg and Maureen Markle –Reid.” Exploring the daily geographies of diverse men caregiving for family members with multiple chronic conditions.” Gender, Place and Culture 23(11). 1586-98.

Greer, Kirsten and Sonje Bols. 2016. “ ‘She of the Loghouse Nest’L Gendering historical ecological reconstruction in northern Ontario.” Historical Geography 44:45-67.

Gorman-Murray, Andrew, Sally Morris, Jessica Koppel, Scott McKinnon and Dale Dominey Howes, 2017, Remembering and experiencing during a disaster: Memories of HIV-AIDS, gay male identities and the experience of recent disasters in Australia and New Guinea.” Gender, Place and Culture 24: 52-63.

Hancock, Claire. 2017. “Feminism from the Margin: Challenging the Paris/Banlieus Divide.” Antipode 49(3) 636-56.

Hardill, Irene and Janice Monk 2017. “Life Course Approach,” The AAG International Encyclopedia of Geography. DOI 10.1002/9781118786351.wbreg0618

Gofmann, Erin Trouth. 2017. “Who goes to Russia? Understanding gendered migration patterns.”Eurasian Geography and Economics 58:1-22.

Hopkins, Carmen Teeple. 2017. “Work intensification, injuries and legal exclusions for paid domestic workers In Montreal, Quebec.” Gender, Place and Culture 24 (2):201-12.

Hubbard, Phil, Alan Colless, and Andrew Gorman Murray,2016. “Introduction: Sex, and Commerce in the Contemporary City.” Urban Studies. DOI: 10.1177/004209801682685.

Johnson, Azeezat. 2017.“Getting Comfortable to feel at home: Clothing practices of black Muslim women in Britain,” Gender, Place and Culture 24(2):274-97.

Johnston, Lynda. 2017. “Queer Geographies.” In D. Richardson et al (eds) The International Encyclopedia of Geography. John Wiley and Sons. DOIL10:1002/9781118786352.

Jokela-Pansini. Maaret. 2016. “Spatial imaginaries and collective identity in women’s human rights stuggles in Honduras.” Gender, Place and Culture 23:10 1465-79.

Jokinen, Johanna Carolina and Martina Angela Caretta. 2016. “ When bodies do not fit: An analysis of postgraduate fieldwork.” Gender, Place and Culture 23 (12): 1665-76.

Lopez, Patricia J. and Kathryn Gillespie. 2016. “A love story: For buddy system research in the academy.” Gender, Place and Culture 23(12): 1689-1700.

Lui, Chen. 2017. “ Food practices, gendered intimacy, and family life in contemporary Guangzhou.” Gender, Place and Culture 24(1) 97-107.

Marston, Sallie A. and Sapana Doshi.2016. “The Janice Monk Lecture in Feminist Geography: the first 10 years.” Gender, Place and Culture 23 (12): 1657-1664.

McClellan, W. 2017. “Queer ecologies of home: Heteronormativity, speciesism and the strange intimacies of crazy cat ladies.” Gender, Place and Culture 24:108-134.

McDowell, Linda. 2016. “Reflections on research practice: Writing Ddfference.” Australian Feminist Studies 31: (Issue 89). 355-62.

Misgav, Chen. 2016. “Gay-riatrics: spatial politics and activism of gay seniors in Tel-Aviv’s gay community centre.” Gender, Place and Culture23 (11) 1519-1534,

Misgav, Chen and Tovi Fenster, 2016, “Day by day – protest protest: Temporal activism and the feminist Mizrahi right to the city.” Cities ( December). DOI: 10.1016/cities.2016.12.007.

Modek, M. and Johnston, L. 2017.” Huba grubs, bull semen shots and koki: Visceral geographies of regional food festivals in Aotearoa.” New Zealand Geographer 73(1).25-34.

Mollett, Sharlene. 2017, “Irreconcilable differences: A postcolonial intersectional reading of gender, development and human rights in Latin America.” Gender, Place and Culture 24(1): 1-12.

Monk, Janice. 2017, Geography Education: Promoting Diversity and Broadening Participation,” in : AAG International Encyclopedia of Geography. D. Richardson et al (eds) John Wiley and Sons. DOI:10.1002/9781118786352.wbieg0893

Murphy, Amy Greer. 2017.”Austerity in the United Kingdom: The intersections of spatial and gender inequalities.” Area 49(1) 122-24.

Nayak, Anoop. 2017. “Purging the nations: race, conviviality and embodied encounters in the lives of British Bangladeshi Muslim young women.” Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers. DOI:10.1111/tran.12168.

Nichols, Carly E. 2016. “Time Ni Hota Hai: time poverty and food security in the Kumaon Hills, India.” Gender, Place and Culture 10: 1404-1419.

Parker, Brenda and Doreen Morrow. 2017. “ Urban homesteading and intensive mothering: Regendering care and environmental responsibility in Boston and Chicago.” Gender, Place and Culture 24(2): 247-59.

Paul, Tanusree and Saraswati Raju. 2017. Public spaces and Places: Gendered intersectionalities in Indian cities.” IIC Quarterly 43(4): 128-38.

----. “New urban economic spaces and the gendered world of work.” In Kolka, India (ed. Saraswati Raju and Sartosh Jantana. Delhi. Cambridge University Press.

Peake, L. 2017. “Feminisms and the urban.” In J. Short (eds). A Research Agenda for Cheltenham: Edward Elgar, 82-97.

----. 2017. “Women and women’s organisations in geography.” In The AAG International Encyclopaedia of Geography, edited by Richardson, D. Castree, N., Goodchild, M., Kobayashi, A., Liu, W., and R. Marston Malden, Oxford: John Wiley and Sons, Ltd), Vol. XIV, pp. 7,768-7,776.

----.2017. “Feminist methodology.” In The AAG International Encyclopaedia of Geography, edited by Richardson, D. Castree, N., Goodchild, M., Kobayashi, A., Liu, W., and R. Marston. Malden, Oxford: John Wiley and Sons, Ltd, Vol. V, pp. 2,331-2,340.

----. 217. “Anthropogeography.” In The AAG International Encyclopaedia of Geography, edited by Richardson, D. Castree, N., Goodchild, M., Kobayashi, A., Liu, W., and R. Marston. Malden, Oxford: John Wiley and Sons, Ltd, Vol. I, pp 174-176.

----.2017. “Heteronormativity.” In The AAG International Encyclopaedia of Geography, edited by Richardson, D. Castree, N., Goodchild, M., Kobayashi, A., Liu, W., and R. Marston. Malden, Oxford: John Wiley and Sons, Ltd, Vol. VII, pp. 3,315-3,318.

Peake, L. and G. Pratt, G.2017 “Why Women in Cities Matter” in Bain, A., and Peake, L. (eds.) Urbanization In A Global Context (Toronto: Oxford University Press).

Penzellmayer, Katherina. 2016. “Places of difference: Narratives of heart-felt warmth ethnicisation, and female care-migrants in Swiss live-in care.” Gender, Place and Culture 23 (12): 1701-12

Quieros, Margarida, Nuno Marques a Costa, Marco Vále, Júlia Guerreiro, Fabo Rodrigues, Nelson Mileu, Ambal Almeida. 2017. :Gender equality in the city: A methodological approach to mobility in space/time.” TRIA (Special Issue)

Radcliffe, Sarah. 2017.”Geography and Indigeneity II: Critical geographies of indigenous body politics” Progress in Human Geography DOI: 10 1177/0309132517691631.

Ratele, Kopano. 2016. “Contesting traditional masculinities and men’s sexuality in Kwadukufa, South Africa.” Tijdschrift voor Economische en Sociale Geografie DOI: 10.1111/tesg12233.

Roche, Michael. 2016. “Frances B. Lysnar: New Zealand’s first woman FRGS.” The Geographical Journal 182(4): 429-37 “conomische en Sociale Geografie DOI: 10.1111/tesg 12234.

Rothenberg, Tamar, Mona Domosh, and Karen M. Morin. 2016. “Introduction to the Special Issue: Feminist Historical Geographies.” Historical Geography 44: 27-29.

Ryan, Caitlin, 2017. “Gendering Palestinian Dispossessed: Evaluating land loss in the West Bank.” Antipode 49(2) 477-98.

Salamaña, Isabel, Mireia Baylina, Maria Dolors Garcia Ramon, Ana María Porto, Montserrat Villarino. 2016. “Dones, trajectories de vida I noves ruralitats. Documents d’Analisi Geografica 62(3): 661-81.

Salih, Ruba, 2017. “Bodies that walk, bodies that talk, bodies that love: Palestinian refugees, affectivity, and the politics of the ordinary. Antipode 49(3): 742-60.

Santos, Sofia, 2017. “Mobility and spatial Planning in the Lisbon metropolitan area.” Finistera 52 57-72.

Rodrigues, Julia Guerreiro Fábo , Nelson Mileu and Anibal Almeida “Gender equality in the city: A methodological approach.” Finisterra.

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Savoldi, Francesca. “Women, technology and the spatiality of fear: The challenge of participatory mapping and perception of safety in urban spaces.

Stevenson, Olivia, Hester Parr, and Penny Woolnough. 2017. “Missing women: Policing absences.” Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 42(2):220-232.

Tofuor, Theresa and Chizu Sato. 2017. “What motivates single women to migrate from northern Ghana to Accra.” Norsk Geografisk Tijdschrift/Norwegian Journal of Geography 71(1): 46-59,

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Veleda da Silva, Susana Maria and César Augusto Avila Martius. 2016. “O trabalho feminine assalariado de pescado na Galicia” Finisterra (Lisboa). 51: 25-43.

Veleda da Silva, Susana, Costa, B.P., Silva, J.M., M.Ornat, B.P. Costa, M.G.N Suvloa and J.P. Ralts.2016 “Geografia e diversidade: Gênero, sexualidades, etnicudaes, e racialidades.” Revista da ANPEGE 12: 223-37.

Veleda da Silva, Susana Maria y C. A. Martins, 2016. O trabalho assalariado de pescado na Galícia. “ Finisterra 51 25-43.

Werner, Marion, Kendra Strauss, Brenda Parker, Kate Derickson, and Anne Bonds. 2017. “Feminist political economy in Geography: Why now, what is different, and what for?” Geoforum 79:1-4.

Wisner, Ben, Greg Bergen and J.C. Gallard. 2017. “We’ve seen the future and it’s very diverse: Beyond gender and disaster in Hollywood.” Gender, Place and Culture 24(1): 27-36.

Wright, Melissa. 2017. “Epistemological ignorance and fighting for the disappeared: Lessons from Mexico.” Antipode 49(1):249-69.

Yamashita, Azusa, Christopher Gomes and Kelly Dombroski. 2017. “Segregation, exclusion and LGBT people in the disaster impacted areas: Experience from the Higashinhon Dai-Shensai (Great East-Japan Disaster.”Gender, Place and Culture 24(1) 64-71.

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