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Newsletter No. 60


[Links to pdf versions in English, French and Spanish]

Janice Monk, Damaris Rose and Fran Klodawsky at the IGU pre-conference in Montreal, August 2018

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INTERNATIONAL GEOGRAPHICAL UNION COMMISSION ON GENDER AND GEOGRAPHY

NEWSLETTER 60 NOVEMBER, 2018

Message from the Chair

My heartfelt thanks goes to Janice Monk for her 30 years as Editor of the IGU Commission on Gender and Geography Newsletter. For over three decades, Jan’s dedication to producing our Newsletter has been truly remarkable and I am sure everyone will agree, she has gone above and beyond expectations. Our Commission is diverse and one way to show our diversity is through the Newsletter. Jan has played a vital role showcasing our strengths and connecting us through the Newsletter. Thank you Jan!

I’d also like to take this opportunity to thank Joos Droogleever Fortuijn for stepping in and taking on the job as Newsletter Editor. Joos is a strong supporter of the Commission, and has served as a Steering Group Member and Chair. She is Vice President of the IGU. We are in good hands, thanks to Joos.

Earlier this year I attended the joint New Zealand Geographical Society (NZGS) and Institute of Australian (IAG) Geography Conference, which took place in Auckland Aotearoa New Zealand, 11 – 14 July 2018. I also was delighted to be part of organising and hosting (with Annie Bartos and Yvonne Underhill-Sem) the Gendered Geographies of Care and Mentoring Symposium. We started the Symposium in the Women’s Bookstore. Professor Robyn Longhurst (ex Chair of our Commission) was a key note speaker, as was Aotearoa New Zealand’s Member of Parliament, and Minister of Social Development and Disabilities Carmel Sepuloni. The Symposium – which approximately continued on the following day and involved workshops on care and mentoring.

Gender, Sex, Space and Place specialist sessions were part of the NZGS / IAG Conference Programme in Auckland 11 - 15th July 2018. The presentations were inspiring, reminding all of us about the importance of critical geographical research. The range of approaches and depth of empirical evidence are important contributions to feminist and queer geographies. It was a pleasure to listen to all presenters.

I also was able to attend the IGU’s Regional Conference and Annual Meeting of the Canadian Association of Geographers in Quebec City, Canada, 6 – 10 August 2018, ‘Appreciating Difference’. Prior to this (4 – 6 August), the Feminist Geographies in/during Troubled Times: Dialogues, Interventions and Praxis Conference took place at the University of Montreal. Huge thanks goes to the organisers: Marianne Blidon (Université de Paris-Sorbonne); Caroline Desbiens (Université Laval); Patricia Martin (Université de Montréal); Tiffany Muller-Myrdahl (Simon Fraser University); Julie Podmore (John Abbott College); Valerie Preston (York University); Laura Shillington (John Abbott college); Laurence Simard-Gagnon (Queen’s University); and, Ebru Ustundag (Brock University). Yvonne Underhill-Sem, Alicia Sudden and Minister Carmel Sepuloni, Annie Bartos, Brittany Goodwin, Sally Crawford and Robyn Longhurst.

The Commission is always interested in co-hosting events. In 2019 we are pleased to support the IV Latin American Seminar on Geography, Gender and Sexualities will be held at the Buenos Aires Center University - Tandil – Argentina, 13-15 November 2019 (see https://geografiadegenero.wixsite.com/geografiadegenero). All enquiries to Diana Lan, dlan@fch.unicen.edu.ar

To keep up to date with events, please visit our website https://igugender.wixsite.com/igugender.

Ngā mihi nui

Lynda Johnston, University of Waikato

lynda.johnston@waikato.ac.nz

Future events

The IGU Commission on Gender and Geography co sponsors the 7th International Conference on Gender Studies Gender, Space & Place and Culture.

The 7th International Conference on Gender Studies will be held in Famagusta, North Cyprus on 10-12 October, 2019 by the Center for Women's Studies of the Eastern Mediterranean University. The goal of the conference is to provide a place for scholars, experts, professionals and activists with interdisciplinary backgrounds related to gender and space relations to exchange new ideas and latest researches. We seek to create a ground to examine relations between various disciplines such as urban planning, architecture, politics, gender and women’s studies, anthropology, environmental studies, sociology, and history.

One of the earliest findings of feminist geographers is how gender relations varied and altered through space (Massey, 1994). Feminist academics and researchers who study on gender and space aim to examine and reveal the latent mutual constitution between gender discrimination and space segregation (Dias ve Blecha, 2008). Spatial relations are constitutive parts of social life; the spatial concepts and approaches developed by feminists would provide new insights and perspectives for various disciplines. So, looking at the mutual constitution between gender and space would also provide new ideas on the current changes in social sciences. In North Cyprus and Turkey, although there is a limited number of studies entitled itself in the category of feminist geography, in recent years there is an increasing interest focusing and examining gender and space relations by various disciplines, such as gender and women’s studies, political science, sociology, anthropology, history. Increasing numbers of articles and graduate degree dissertations, which based on peculiar field studies, display the specialty on gender space relations. Researchers and activists at all stages of their careers are that are interested in presenting papers engage with discussions on current and emerging theoretical or methodological innovations on gender and space studies. We aim to promote intergenerational and intersectional dialogues among feminist scholars, researchers, and activists around the theme of practicing gender and space.

The conference will aim to explore, but not limited to, following themes: * Exploring Feminist Geographies: Theories, Methods and Strategies * Gender and the City: Feminist Analyses of Urban Space * Gendered Spaces of the Public and Private: Negotiations and Boundaries * Gender and Workplace: Spatial Analyses of Work * Gender and Changing Meanings of Home * Neoliberalism, Gender, Spaces of Power and Resistance * Gender and New Geographies of Inequality: Gentrification, Urban Renewal and Housing * Gender, Development and Rural Geographies * Geographies of Gender, Migration and Transnational Spaces * Gendered Geographies of Displacement and Dislocation * Gender, Place and Memory * Religion, Space and Place: Doing Feminist Geographies of Religion Eastern Mediterranean University, Center for Women's Studies, Room: BE 159, Famagusta, Turkish Republic of North Cyprus, (Via Mersin 10, Turkey) Doğu Akdeniz Üniversitesi, Kadın Araştırmaları ve Eğitimi Merkezi, BE 159, Gazimağusa, KKTC, (Mersin 10, Türkiye) Tel: 00- 90 392 630 2269 Fax: 00- 90 392 365 4038 E-mail: cws-kaem@emu.edu.tr http://cws.emu.edu.tr * Emotional Geographies: Body, Sense and Space * Gender, Body and Spaces of Disability * Queer Spaces and Geographies of Sexualities * Spaces of Masculinities and Manhood * Representations of Gendered Spaces in Literature and the Visual Arts

Submissions are subject to blind peer review at every stage. Papers without gender perspective will be rejected. Abstracts and papers will be accessible to all participants on the conference website once the complete program is set.

Due to the international nature of the conference only abstracts written in English will be accepted for review.

Please send your abstracts (not more than 250 words) through e-mail; gspc@emu.edu.tr

Past events

The Canadian Women and Geography (CWAG) specialty group of the Canadian Association of Geographers and the IGU Commission on Gender and Geography organized a pre-conference on ‘Feminist Geographies in/during Troubled Times: Dialogues, Interventions and Praxis’ in Montreal, Canada on August 4-6 2018, in conjunction with the IGU Regional Conference in Québec wrote the report.

The Canadian Women and Geography (CWAG) specialty group of the Canadian Association of Geographers and the International Geographic Union (IGU) Commission on Gender and Geography hosted a feminist geography pre-conference with the University of Montreal on August 4-6, 2018 in Montreal, Quebec. The success of the conference was the result of the dedication and contributions of the organizing committee, which included Patricia Martin (Université de Montreal); Julie Podmore (John Abbott College); Laura Shillington (John Abbott College); Ebru Ustundag (Brock University); Marianne Blidon (Université de Paris-Sorbonne); Tiffany Muller Myrdahl (Simon Fraser University); Valerie Preston (York University); Laurence Simard-Gagnon (Queen’s University); and Caroline Desbiens (Université Laval).

The theme of the conference, Feminist Geographies in/during Troubled Times: Dialogues, Intervention and Praxis, focused on how to practice feminist geography while experiencing ecological and societal changes. This theme was explored through intergenerational and intersectional dialogues among researchers, scholars and activists from various parts of the world who participated in workshops, roundtables and panels. The topics discussed covered a range of subjects, including Indigenous mapping, mental health, the future of work, spaces and places, the international, bodies and embodiments, feminist-queer geography as well as many other topics.

The first day of the conference, August 4th began with a walking tour of Montreal’s former Red-Light District to explore the social, economic, cultural, racial and gendered history of Montreal. The tour ended at the feminist bookstore, L’Euguelionne, librarie feministe, for a welcome ceremony and party. This event not only was a chance to network in an informal setting, but it was a celebration of the retirement and contributions to feminist geographies of Dr. Fran Klodawsky (Carleton University) and Dr. Damaris Rose (Institut National de la Recherche Scientifique) with introductions by Dr. Valerie Preston (York University).

August 5th consisted primarily of the workshops, roundtables and panels as mentioned above. The day began with a welcome from members of the organizing committee and took place at the University of Montreal. At the end of the day, the conference then moved to Le Rond Point, Café Autogéré in Montreal for a special panel on social movements. This Francophone panel, organized by Laurence Simard Gagnon and Stéphane Guimont Marceau, consisted of activists who discussed the feminist, anti-racist work in which they are involved, such as working with domestic violence survivors; working in an anti-racist and anti-fascist group; working with the intersections of migrant justice, feminism, independent media and antiracist struggles; and working as an activist in the education system.

The final day, August 6th, began with an open session, Troubling CWAG: What’s in a Name, to discuss the future of CWAG’s name. After this session, there was the final session of panels, roundtables and workshops. The day finished with the Gender, Place and Culture editorial committee meeting. Overall, the conference was a success and enjoyed by all. New dialogues were initiated, questions asked, and solutions brought forward on how to practice feminist geography in troubled times. More importantly, spaces were created to explore the important connections between feminist geographies, queer and anti-racist geographies, political ecology and non-human geographies so that we can work in solidarity to address the societal and ecological changes that we are currently undergoing.

Janice Monk, Damaris Rose and Fran Klodawsky at the pre-conference in Montreal

News from around the world

The International Geographic Union has awarded Professor Robyn Longhurst its Lauréat d’honneur for her work which continues to profoundly reshape the discipline. The prestigious Lauréat d’honneur recognises individuals who have achieved particular distinction or outstanding service in the work of the Union or in international geography and environmental research. The Union’s citation for Professor Longhurst states:

"She is a leading scholar in gender, social and cultural geography. Her sustained intellectual and institutional contributions – nationally and internationally – continue to profoundly reshape the discipline. She served the Union’s Gender and Geography Commission for three terms, one of which as Chair, and is a global collaborator with numerous groups and institutions. Robyn's theoretically and empirically rich research focuses on the challenges and complexities of people, inequalities and injustices. Her research on gendered spaces - particularly pregnancy, mothering and social media - is ground-breaking. A committed educator, she has many awards for her geography teaching and research supervision and is a richly deserving recipient of the Lauréat d’honneur.

The Lauréat d’honneur has traditionally been dominated by men, so even in receiving the award, Professor Longhurst is continuing to help shape the organisation and change gender boundaries. "Although this award has been conferred upon me, and for this I’m deeply grateful, it actually reflects positively on the incredible work carried out by the Gender and Geography Commission,” she says. “It has been a privilege working with members of this highly successful Commission on issues of inequality over many years, and I see this award as being for all of those who contributed to this success. The award also reflects positively on the discipline of Geography in New Zealand.”

This is the first time in the Union’s long history that New Zealanders have received the award, with Professor Richard Le Heron from the University of Auckland also being honored alongside Professor Longhurst. “At the risk of it sounding like national pride, I think two New Zealanders receiving a Laureat this year is very special indeed.”

Robyn receives the award from Michael Meadows Secretary General, IGU.

Robyn and Commission members at the IGU’s Regional Conference and Annual Meeting of the Canadian Association of Geographers in Quebec City, Canada, 10 August 2018.

More good news about Robyn:

Robyn Longhurst has been elected as Fellow of the Royal Society of New Zealand (FRSNZ). Becoming a Fellow of the Royal Society Te Apārangi is a prestigious honour that recognises true international distinction in research and advancement in the areas of science, technology and the humanities.

As part of the announcement the Royal Society has said the following about Robyn:

"Professor Robyn Longhurst’s highly original scholarship on gender, space and ‘the body’ has transformed the way that human geographers and other social scientists understand people-place relationships since the mid 1990s. The concept of embodiment is now seen as integral to feminist research, as well as to all research on space and place. Professor in Geography and Deputy Vice-Chancellor Academic at the University of Waikato, she was elected Chair of the Gender and Geography Commission of the International Geographical Union and was awarded the Distinguished New Zealand Geographer Medal in recognition of her sustained intellectual and institutional contributions to international and New Zealand feminist geography. She has consistently challenged the canons of mainstream geography and published five insightful books that provided distinctive interventions in international research and scholarship and made visible the ways in which knowledge is produced. In 2018 she received the award of Lauréat d’honneur from the International Geographical Union for her contributions to gender, social and cultural geography."

https://royalsociety.org.nz/news/centenary-cohort-of-fellows-announced/

Other news:

A 5th edition of Joni Seager’s Women’s Atlas has been published: Seager, Joni (2018) The Women's Atlas. New York: Penguin Random House, 5th edition.

Maria Dolors Garcia-Ramon participated in a Round Table at the Insitute of Geography (IGOT) at Lisbon , October 11th, in a Hommage to the feminist geographer Prof. Isabel Margarida André who died in 2017. The title of her presentation was “Geography and Gender in Spain and its relation with Isabel M. André”.

Margareta Lelea participates in an Upgrade Plus project “Decentralised postharvest processing of underutilized species to improve food and nutrition security in West Africa” and is leader of the work package focused on capacity development and collaborative learning with women's groups who will create collective enterprises processing underutilized species of plants. This projects aims using a transdisciplinary research approach to empower the women in selected partner groups to have an active role in the knowledge production process with us.

Special journal issues

A special themed section that arose from an International Conference on “Feminist Geographies and Intersectionality: Places, Identities and Knowledges”, held in 2016 at the Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, is published in Gender, Place & Culture, 2018, 25:4. It was the IGU Commission on Gender and Geography International Pre-Conference for the 33rd International Geographical Union Congress in Beijing, August 2016. The section is edited by Maria Rodó-de-Zárate and Mireia Baylina, and includes the following contributions:

Rodó-de-Zárate, Maria and Mireia Baylina (2018) Intersectionality in feminist geographies, Gender, Place & Culture, 25:4, 547-553

Johnston, Lynda (2018) Intersectional feminist and queer geographies: a view from ‘down-under’, Gender, Place & Culture, 25:4, 554-564

Mollett, Sharlene and Caroline Faria (2018) The spatialities of intersectional thinking: fashioning feminist geographic futures, Gender, Place & Culture, 25:4, 565-577

Vaiou, Dina (2018) Intersectionality: old and new endeavours?, Gender, Place & Culture, 25:4, 578-584

Hopkins, Peter (2018) Feminist geographies and intersectionality, Gender, Place & Culture, 25:4, 585-590

Blidon, Marianne (2018) Reception and use of intersectionality. A reading from French perspective, Gender, Place & Culture, 25:4, 591-602

Delicado-Moratalla, L. (2018) Gendered and racial geopolitics of Nigerian prostitution, Gender, Place & Culture, 25:4, 603–606

Two special issues on “New Actors, Old Donors and Gender Equality Norms in International Development Cooperation”, edited by Signe Cold-Ravnkilde, Lars Engberg-Pedersen and Adam Moe Fejerskov, is published in Progress in Development Studies, 2018, Volumes 18:2 and 18:3, with the following contributions:

Cold-Ravnkilde, Signe, Lars Engberg-Pedersen and Adam Moe Fejerskov (2018) Global norms and heterogeneous development organizations: Introduction to special issue on New Actors, Old Donors and Gender Equality Norms in International Development Cooperation, Progress in Development Studies, 18:2, 77-94

Nyberg Sørensen, Ninna (2018) Diffusing gender equality norms in the midst of a feminicide pandemic: The case of AMEXCID and decentralized Mexican South-South cooperation, Progress in Development Studies, 18:2, 95-109

Crewe, Emma (2018) Flagships and tumbleweed: A history of the politics of gender justice work in Oxfam GB 1986–2015, Progress in Development Studies, 18:2, 110-125

Fejerskov, Adam Moe (2018) Development as resistance and translation: Remaking norms and ideas of the Gates Foundation, Progress in Development Studies, 18:2, 126-143

Engberg-Pedersen, Lars (2018) Do norms travel? The case of gender in Danish development cooperation, Progress in Development Studies, 18:3, 153-171

Jones, Ben (2018) ‘A More Receptive Crowd than Before’: Explaining the World Bank’s Gender Turn in the 2000s, Progress in Development Studies, 18:3, 172-188

Petersen, Marie Juul (2018) Translating global gender norms in Islamic Relief Worldwide, Progress in Development Studies, 18:3, 189-207

Barnett, Michael (2018) Gender equality, norms and practices: Post-script to special issue on new actors, old donors and gender equality norms in international development cooperation, Progress in Development Studies, 18:3, 208-213

A special issue on “Transnational families; cross-country comparative perspectives”, edited by Valentina Mazzucato and Bilisuma B. Dita, is published in Population Space and Place, 2018, volume 42:7, with the following contributions:

Mazzucato, Valentina and Bilisuma B. Dita (2018) Transnational families; cross-country comparative perspectives, Population Space and Place, 42:7, e2165

Caarls, Kim, Karlijn Haagsman, Elisabeth K. Kraus and Valentina Mazzucato (2018) African transnational families: Cross‐country and gendered comparisons, Population Space and Place, 42:7, e2162

DeWaard, Jack, Jenna Nobles and Katharine M. Donato (2018) Migration and parental absence: A comparative assessment of transnational families in Latin America, Population Space and Place, 42:7, e2166

Jordan, Lucy P., Bilisuma Dito, Jenna Nobles and Elspeth Graham (2018) Engaged parenting, gender, and children’s time use in transnational families: An assessment spanning three global regions, Population Space and Place, 42:7, e2159

Eremenko, Tatiana and Rachel Bennett (2018) Linking the family context of migration during childhood to the well-being of young adults: Evidence from the UK and France, Population Space and Place, 42:7, e2164

Wu, Qiaobing and Victor Cebotari (2018) Experiences of migration, parent-child interaction, and the life satisfaction of children in Ghana and China, Population Space and Place, 42:7, e2160

Liu, Mao-Mei, Fernando Riosmena and Mathew J. Creighton (2018) Sibling position, gender, and family networks in Mexican and Senegalese migration, Population Space and Place, 42:7, e2162

Eremenko, Tatiana and Amparo González-Ferrer (2018) Transnational families and child migration to France and Spain: The role of family type and immigration policies, Population Space and Place, 42:7, e2163

A special issue section on “Gendering the right to the city: critical perspectives”, edited by Elena Vacchelli and Eleonore Kofman, is published in Cities, 2018, volume 76, with the following contributions:

Vacchelli, Elena and Eleonore Kofman (2018) Towards an inclusive and gendered right to the city, Cities 76, 1-3

Chau, Huey Shy, Katharina Pelzelmayer and Karin Schwiter (2018) Short-term circular migration and gendered negotiation of the right to the city: The case of migrant live-in care workers in Basel, Switzerland, Cities, 76, 4-11

Vacchelli, Elena and Magali Peyrefitte (2018) From a/topia to topia: Towards a gendered right to the city for migrant volunteers in London, Cities, 76, 12-

Bastia, Tanja (2018) Transnational migration and the gendered right to the city in Buenos Aires, Cities, 76, 18-22

Hancock, Claire, Sophie Blanchard and Amandine Chapuis (2018) Banlieusard.e.s claiming a right to the City of Light: Gendered violence and spatial politics in Paris, Cities, 76, 23-28

Misgav, Chen and Tovi Fenster (2018) Day by day - protest by protest: Temporal activism and the feminist Mizrahi right to the city, Cities, 76, 28-35

Van den Berg, Marguerite and Danielle Chevalier (2018) Of “city lounges”, “bans on gathering” and macho policies - Gender, class and race in productions of space for Rotterdam's post-industrial future, Cities, 76, 36-42

Watt, Paul (2018) Gendering the right to housing in the city: Homeless female lone parents in post-Olympics, austerity East London, Cities, 76, 37-51

Fabula, Sz. and J. Timár (2018) Violations of the right to the city for women with disabilities in peripheral rural communities in Hungary, Cities, 76, 52-57

A special issue section on “Gendered, spatial and temporal approaches to Polish intra-European migration”, edited by Marta Bivand Erdal and Louise Ryan, is published in Gender, Place & Culture, 2018, 25:6 with the following contributions:

Bivand Erdal, Marta and Louise Ryan (2018) Gendered, spatial and temporal approaches to Polish intra-European migration, Gender, Place & Culture, 25:6, 843-849

Rzepnikowska, Alina (2018) Polish migrant women’s narratives about language, racialised and gendered difference in Barcelona, Gender, Place & Culture, 25:6, 850-865

Bell, Justyna and Markieta Domecka (2018) The transformative potential of migration: Polish migrants’ everyday life experiences in Belfast, Northern Ireland, Gender, Place & Culture, 25:6, 866-881

Bivand Erdal, Marta and Marek Pawlak (2018) Reproducing, transforming and contesting gender relations and identities through migration and transnational ties, Gender, Place & Culture, 25:6, 882-898

Lisiak, Agata and Magdalena Nowicka (2018) Tacit differences, ethnicity and neoliberalism: Polish migrant mothers in German cities, Gender, Place & Culture, 25:6, 899-915

Kloc-Nowak, Weronika (2018) From pioneer migration to family reunification: Polish women’s narratives of lifestyle preferences in Bologna, Italy, Gender, Place & Culture, 25:6, 916-931

A special issue section on “Space, power and sexuality: transgressive and transformative possibilities at the interstices of spatial boundaries”, edited by Magali Peyrefitte and Erin Sanders-McDonagh, is published in Gender, Place & Culture, 2018, 25:3 with the following contributions:

Peyrefitte, Magali and Erin Sanders-McDonagh (2018) Space, power and sexuality: transgressive and transformative possibilities at the interstices of spatial boundaries, Gender, Place & Culture, 25:3, 325-333

Buckingham, Susan, Monica Degen and Elodie Marandet (2018) ‘Lived bodies’ and the neoliberal city – a case study of vulnerability in London, Gender, Place & Culture, 25:3, 334-350

Sanders-McDonagh, Erin and Magali Peyrefitte (2018) Immoral geographies and Soho’s sex shops: exploring spaces of sexual diversity in London, Gender, Place & Culture, 25:3, 351-367

Radicioni, Silvia and Bernhard Weicht (2018) A place to transform: creating caring spaces by challenging normativity and identity, Gender, Place & Culture, 25:3, 368-383

Neville, Lucy (2018) ‘The Tent’s Big Enough for Everyone’: online slash fiction as a site for activism and change, Gender, Place & Culture, 25:3, 384-398

Ahearn, Ariell (2018) Winters without women: social change, split households and gendered labour in rural Mongolia, Gender, Place & Culture, 25:3, 399-415

Viqar, Sarwat (2018) Women’s public lives and sovereign arrangements in Karachi’s inner city, Gender, Place & Culture, 25:3, 416-433

Baker, Rachael (2018) A century of Grace; restorative spatial justice, pedagogy, and beloved community in twenty-first century Detroit, Gender, Place & Culture, 25:3, 434-454

A special issue section on “Gendered mobilities and transnational identities”, edited by Claire Dwyer, is published in Gender, Place & Culture, 2018, 25:1, with the following contributions:

Dwyer, Claire (2018) Introduction: gendered mobilities and transnational identities, Gender, Place & Culture, 25:1, 80-87

De Silva, Menusha (2018) Making the emotional connection: transnational eldercare circulation within Sri Lankan-Australian transnational families, Gender, Place & Culture, 25:1, 88-103

Lam, Theodora and Brenda S. A. Yeoh (2018) Migrant mothers, left-behind fathers: the negotiation of gender subjectivities in Indonesia and the Philippines, Gender, Place & Culture, 25:1, 104-117

Lin, Jun-Hua (2018) ‘Assisting you to become a local’: NGOs and constructed foreign spouses in Eastern Taiwan, Gender, Place & Culture, 25:1, 118-133

Strzemecka, Stella (2018) Towards transnational gender identity. A case study of Polish children growing up in Norway, Gender, Place & Culture, 25:1, 134-148

Feministisches Geo-RundMail, 2018, Vol. 77 published a special issue on “30 Jahre Feministische Geographie” with contributions of several feminist geographers from the German speaking community. Vol. 76, 2018, is a special issue on “Anarachafeminismus” and Vol. 75 a special issue on “Feministische Politische Geographie”.

New books

Arango, Luz Gabriela, Adira Amaya, Tania Pérez-Bustos and Javier Pineda (Eds.) (2018) Género y cuidado: teorías, escenarios y políticas. Bogotá: Universidad Nacional de Colombia, Universidad de los Andes y Universidad Pontificia Javeriana

Johnston, L. 2018: Transforming Gender, Sex, and Place: Gender Variant Geographies. Gender, Space and Society Series. London: Routledge

Lahiri-Dutt, Kuntala (ed.) (2018) Between the Plough and the Pick: Informal, Artisinal and Small-scale Mining in the Contemporary World. Canberra: ANU Press

Pineda, J. and L.G. Arango (2018) Género, trabajo y cuidado en salones de belleza. Bogotá: Universidad Nacional de Colombia, Colección General, Serie Estudios de Género

Stratford, Elaine (2018) Home, Nature, and the Feminine Ideal. Geographies of the Interior and the Empire. London: Rowman and Littlefield

Recent articles and book chapters

Abel, G.J. and N. Heo (2018) Subnational gender balances in South Korea, Environment and Planning A, 50:5, 941-944

Achandi, Esther L., Gaudiose Mujawamariya, Afiavi R. Agboh-Noameshie, Shewaye Gebremariam, Njaka Rahalivavololona and Jonne Rodenburg (2018) Women's access to agricultural technologies in rice production and processing hubs: A comparative analysis of Ethiopia, Madagascar and Tanzania, Journal of Rural Studies, 60, 188-198

Adams, Ellis Adjei, Luke Juran and Idowu Ajibade (2018) ‘Spaces of Exclusion’ in community water governance: A Feminist Political Ecology of gender and participation in Malawi’s Urban Water User Associations, Geoforum, 95, 133-142

Adams-Hutcheson, Gail (2018) Challenging the masculinist framing of disaster research, Gender, Place & Culture, 25:1, 149-153

Allegretti, Antonio (2018) Respatializing culture, recasting gender in peri-urban sub-Saharan Africa: Maasai ethnicity and the ‘cash economy’ at the rural-urban interface, Tanzania, Journal of Rural Studies, 60, 122-129

Anderson, Grant (2018) ‘Why can’t they meet in bars and clubs like normal people?’: the protective state and bioregulating gay public sex spaces, Social & Cultural Geography, 19:6, 699-719

Andrucki, Max J. and Dana J. Kaplan (2018) Trans objects: materializing queer time in US transmasculine homes, Gender, Place & Culture, 25: 6, 781-798

Bain, Carmen, Elizabeth Ransom and Lim Halimatusa’diyah (2018) ‘Weak winners’ of women’s empowerment: The gendered effects of dairy livestock assets on time poverty in Uganda, Journal of Rural Studies, 61, 100-109

Barbour, Madison and Julie Guthman (2018) (En)gendering exposure: pregnant farmworkers and the inadequacy of pesticide notification, Journal of Political Ecology, 25:1, 332-349

Basile, Suzy, Hugo Asselin and Thibault Martin (2018) Co-construction of a Data Collection Tool: A Case Study with Atikamekw Women, ACME: An International Journal for Critical Geographies, 17:3, 840-860

Basnet, S., L. Johnston and R. Longhurst (2018) Embodying ‘accidental ethnography’: Staying over with former Bhutanese refugees in Aotearoa New Zealand, Social and Cultural Geography DOI: 10.1080/14649365.2018.1480056

Bhagat, Ali (2018) Forced (Queer) migration and everyday violence: The geographies of life, death, and access in Cape Town, Geoforum, 89, 155-163

Bhattacharyya, Rituparna and Suman Singh (2018) Exclusion (and seclusion) geographies of disowned widows of India, GeoJournal, 83:4, 757-774

Brickell, Chris, Andrew Gorman-Murray and Anna De Jong, (2018) Queer trans-Tasman mobility, then and now, Australian Geographer, 49:1, 167-184

Browne, Kath, Catherine J. Nash and Andrew Gorman-Murray(2018) Geographies of heteroactivism: Resisting sexual rights in the reconstitution of Irish nationhood, Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, 43:4, 526-539

Byles, Julie, Cassie Curryer, Kha Vo, Peta Folder, Deborah Loxton and Deirdre MacLaughlin (2018) Changes in housing among older women: Latent class analysis of housing patterns in older Australian women, Urban Studies, 55:4, 917-934

Caretta, Martina (2018) Striving beyond Epistemic Authority: Results Dissemination in Smallholder Irrigation Farming Research, Annals of the American Association of Geographers, 108:3, 884-898

Caretta, M.A., D. Drozdzewski, J.C. Jokinen and E. Falconer (2018) “Who can play this game?” The lived experiences of doctoral candidates and early career women in the neoliberal university, Journal of Geography in Higher Education, 42:2, 261-275

Caron, Cynthia M. (2018) Creating the ‘Girl effects’: Including boys and men to promote girls’ land and asset ownership, Progress in Development Studies, 18:4, 223-234

Cavicchioli, Daniele, Danilo Bertoni and Roberto Pretolani (2018) Farm succession at a crossroad: The interaction among farm characteristics, labour market conditions, and gender and birth order effects, Journal of Rural Studies, 61, 73-83

Chea, Lyda and Roy Huijsmans (2018) Rural youth and urban-based vocational training: gender, space and aspiring to ‘become someone’, Children's Geographies, 16:1, 39-52

Clement, Susannah and Gordon Waitt (2018) Pram mobilities: affordances and atmospheres that assemble childhood and motherhood on-the-move, Children's Geographies, 16:3, 252-265

Cockayne, D.G. (2018) Underperformative economies: Discrimination and gendered ideas of workplace culture in San Francisco’s digital media sector, Environment and Planning A, 50:4, 756-772

Cook, Nancy and David Butz (2018) Gendered mobilities in the making: moving from a pedestrian to vehicular mobility landscape in Shimshal, Pakistan, Social & Cultural Geography, 19:5, 606-625

Crewe. L. and A. Wang (2018) Gender inequalities in the City of London advertising industry, Environment and Planning A, 50:3, 671-688

Cush, Peter, Aine Macken-Walsh and Anne Byrne (2018) Joint Farming Ventures in Ireland: Gender identities of the self and the social, Journal of Rural Studies, 57, 55-64

Davies, Megan, Nathaniel M. Lewis and Graham Moon (2018) Sexuality, space, gender, and health: Renewing geographical approaches to well‐being in lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer populations, Geography Compass, 12:5, e12369

Davis, Sasha and Jessica Hayes-Conroy (2018) Invisible radiation reveals who we are as people: environmental complexity, gendered risk, and biopolitics after the Fukushima nuclear disaster, Social & Cultural Geography, 19:6, 720-740

DeLaurentis IV, Vincent D. (2018) Gay Maps, Queer "Reads": Exposing Violence in the Spatial Representation of Gay D.C. in Search of Queer Spatial Potentials, ACME: An International Journal for Critical Geographies, 17:1, 109-143

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Delicado-Moratalla, L. (2018) Las claves de la prostitución nigeriana : una geopolítica feminist, Oñati Socio Legal Series, 5971, 1–21

De Vos, Rosanne and Izabela Delabre (2018) Spaces for participation and resistance: gendered experiences of oil palm plantation development, Geoforum, 96, 217-226

Diatlova, Anastasia (2018) Conceptualisation of home among Russian speaking women engaged in commercial sex in Finland, Gender, Place & Culture, 25:1, 61-79

Domosh, Mona and Kanchana N. Ruwanpura (2018) A conversation between Mona Domosh and Kanchana N. Ruwanpura: reflections on the past, present and future on GPC’s 25th anniversary, Gender, Place & Culture, 25:1, 4-12

Dutta, Arijita and Sharmistha Banerjee (2018) Does microfinance impede sustainable entrepreneurial initiatives among women borrowers? Evidence from rural Bangladesh, Journal of Rural Studies, 60, 70-81

Evans, Alice (2018) Cities as Catalysts of Gendered Social Change? Reflections from Zambia, Annals of the American Association of Geographers, 108:4, 1096-1114

Fenster, T. (2018) The Micro-Geography of a Home as a Contact Zone: Urban Planning in Fragmented Settler Colonialism, Planning, Theory and Practice, 19:4, 496-513

Fenster, Tovi (2018) Creative destruction in urban planning procedures: the language of ‘renewal’ and ‘exploitation’, Urban Geography DOI: 10.1080/02723638.2018.1500244

Fenster, T. and Rachel Roni Schlesinger (2018) The Home as a Contact Zone: Performative Strategies and Practices in Promoting Israeli-Palestinian Recognition, Liminalities: A Journal of Performance Studies, 14:3, 64-83

Fenster, T. (2018) Jerusalem’s Imaginaries in the Neo-Liberal City: Re-Visiting Visual Representations in the ‘Holy City’ In: Helmuth Berking, Silke Steets and Jochen Schwenk (Eds.) Religious Pluralism and the City- Inquiries into Postsecular Urbanism. London: Bloomsbury

Fenster, T. (2017) Urban Citizenship. In: The Wiley-Blackwell Encyclopedia of Urban and Regional Studies. Wiley-Blackwell: Hoboken, New Jersey.

Fenster, T. (2018) Belly dancing in Israel: Body, Religion and Nationality. In: H. Rutenberg and D. Roginski (Eds.) Points of Contact: Dance, Politics and Jewish Arab Relations in Israel. Tel Aviv: Resling publishers, 69-98

Forsberg, Gunnel and Susanna Stenbacka (2018) How to improve regional and local planning by applying a gender-sensitive analysis: examples from Sweden, Regional Studies, 52:2, 274-284

Frater, Jillian and Simon Kingham (2018) Gender equity in health and the influence of intrapersonal factors on adolescent girls' decisions to bicycle to school, Journal of Transport Geography, 71, 130-138

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Fullagar, Simone and Wendy O'Brien (2018) Rethinking women's experiences of depression and recovery as emplacement: Spatiality, care and gender relations in rural Australia, Journal of Rural Studies, 58, 12-19

Garcia-Ramon, Maria Dolors (2017) Geografía del género y los espacios de encuentro colonial: una nueva mirada a las narrativas de viaje. In Galia Cozzi and Pilar Velazquezr (Eds.) Desigualdad de género y desigualdades espaciales. Centro de Investigaciones y Estudios de Género, UNAM, México, 9-36

Garzon-Ramirez, Sonia (2018) Unveiling the technocracy of a global South City, Gender, Place & Culture, 25:4, 607-611

Gebrehiwot, Mersha, Marine Elbakidze and Gun Lidstav (2018) Gender relations in changing agroforestry homegardens in rural Ethiopia, Journal of Rural Studies, 61, 197-205

Giacomelli, Stefano and Michael Gibbert (2018) “He likes playing the hero – I let her have fun shooting”. Gender games in the Italian forest during hunting season, Journal of Rural Studies, 62, 164-173

Gibb, Christine (2018) Doing and writing an accompanied feminist geography research project, Gender, Place & Culture, 25:3, 460-464

Gideon, Jasmine (2018) Gendering activism, exile and wellbeing: Chilean exiles in the UK, Gender, Place & Culture, 25:2, 228-247

Gieseking, Jen Jack (2018) Size Matters to Lesbians, Too: Queer Feminist Interventions into the Scale of Big Data, The Professional Geographer, 70:1, 150-156

Gillespie, Tom, Kate Hardy and Paul Watt (2018) Austerity urbanism and Olympic counter-legacies: Gendering, defending and expanding the urban commons in East London, Society and Space, 36:5, 812-830

Goh, Kian (2018) Safe Cities and Queer Spaces: The Urban Politics of Radical LGBT Activism, Annals of the American Association of Geographers, 108:2, 463-477

Goldie, Xavier (2018) Together, but separate: neighborhood-scale patterns and correlates of spatial segregation between male and female same-sex couples in Melbourne and Sydney, Urban Geography, 39:9, 1391-1417

Goodwin-White, Jamie (2018) “Go West, Young Woman?”: The Geography of the Gender Wage Gap through the Great Recession, Economic Geography, 94:4, 331-354

Gorman-Murray, Andrew and Peter Hopkins (2018) Andrew Gorman-Murray and Peter Hopkins in conversation: reflections on masculinities and sexualities research on GPC’s 25th anniversary, Gender, Place & Culture, 25:3, 317-324

Gorman-Murray, Gorman, Scott McKinnon, Dale Dominey-Howes, Catherine J. Nash and Rillark Bolton (2018) Listening and learning: giving voice to trans experiences of disasters, Gender, Place & Culture, 25:2, 166-187

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Gross, Zoë (2018) Unpacking the landscape of female sex tourism in Kenya: a film analysis of ‘Paradise: Love’, Gender, Place & Culture, 25:4, 507-524

Grundy, Emily and Michael Murphy (2018) Coresidence with a child and happiness among widows in Europe: Does gender of the child matter? Population Space and Place, 24:3, e2102

Gu, Chien-Juh (2018) Gender morality and emotion work in Taiwanese immigrant in-law relations, Gender, Place & Culture, 25:2, 248-267

Hammelman, Colleen (2018) Urban migrant women’s everyday food insecurity coping strategies foster alternative urban imaginaries of a more democratic food system, Urban Geography, 39:5, 706-725

Hanrahan, Kelsey B. (2018) Caregiving as mobility constraint and opportunity: married aughters providing end of life care in northern Ghana, Social & Cultural Geography, 19:1, 59-80

Hast, Susanna (2018) Bodily States on Screen: Gendering Spheres of Influence in ‘House of Cards’, Geopolitics, 23:2, 436-463

Heynen, Nik (2018) Urban political ecology III: The feminist and queer century, Progress in Human Geography, 42:3, 446-452

Holloway, Sarah L. and H. Pimlott-Wilson (2018) Reconceptualising play: Balancing childcare, extra-curricular activities and free play in contemporary childhoods, Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, 43:3, 420-434

Holloway, Sarah L., L. Holt and S. Mills (2018) Questions of agency: Capacity, subjectivity, spatiality and temporality, Progress in Human Geography DOI: 10.1177/0309132518757654

Jull, Janet, Audrey Giles, Yvonne Boyer, Dawn Stacey and Minwaashin Lodge (2018) Development of a Collaborative Research Framework: An Example of a Study Conducted By and With a First Nations, Inuit and Métis Women’s Community and Its Research Partners, ACME: An International Journal for Critical Geographies, 17:3, 671-686

Kamp, Alanna (2018) Chinese Australian women’s ‘homemaking’ and contributions to the family economy in White Australia, Australian Geographer, 49:1, 149-165

Katz, Cindy (2018) The Angel of Geography: Superman, Tiger Mother, aspiration management, and the child as waste, Progress in Human Geography, 42:5, 723-740

Keahey, Jennifer (2018) Gendered livelihoods and social change in post-apartheid South Africa, Gender, Place & Culture, 25:4, 525-546

Kim, Yulii and HaeRan Shin (2018) Governing through mobilities and the expansion of spatial capability of Vietnamese marriage migrant activist women in South Korea, Singapore Journal of Tropical Geography, 39:3, 364-381

Klein, Nicholas J., Erick Guerra and Michael J. Smart (2018) The Philadelphia story: Age, race, gender and changing travel trends, Journal of Transport Geography, 69, 19-25

18

Kley, Stephanie A. and Michael Feldhaus (2018) Effects of female commuting on partnership stability in suburban and other residential regions, Population Space and Place, 24:2, e2093

Klingorová, Kamila and Banu Gökarıksel (2018) ‘God was with me everywhere’: women’s embodied practices and everyday experiences of sacred space in Czechia, Gender, Place & Culture, 25:1, 37-60

Lahiri-Dut, Kuntala (2018) Extractive Peasants: Refraiming informal, Artisinal and Small-scale Mining Debates, Third World Quarterly DOI: 10.1080/01436597.2018.1458300

Lahiri-Dutt, Kuntala and Arnab Roy Chowdhury (2018) In the realm of the diamond king: myth, magic, and modernity in the diamond tracts of Central India, Annals of the American Association of Geographers DOI: 10.1080/24694452.2018.1449629

Landesman, Tucker (2018) The imperative of feminist thought in urban geography: an example from Rio de Janeiro, Gender, Place & Culture, 25:3, 455-459

Leap, Braden (2018) Not a zero-sum game: inequalities and resilience in Sumner, Missouri, the Gooseless Goose Capital of the World, Gender, Place & Culture, 25:2, 288-308

Lee, Jieun, Igor Vojnovic and Sue C. Grady (2018) The “transportation disadvantaged’’: Urban form, gender and automobile versus non-automobile travel in the Detroit region, Urban Studies, 55:11, 2470-2498

Lees, Clare A and Gillian R. Overing (2018) Women and Water: Icelandic Tales and Anglo-Saxon Moorings, GeoHumanities, 4:1, 97-111

Lewis, Sophie (2018) International Solidarity in reproductive justice: surrogacy and gender-inclusive polymaternalism, Gender, Place & Culture, 25:2, 207-227

Lin, Chi-Chen Trista, Claudio Minca and Meghann Ormond (2018) Affirmative biopolitics: Social and vocational education for Quechua girls in the postcolonial ‘‘affect sphere’’ of Cusco, Peru, Society and Space 36:5, 885-904

Lin, Yi (2018) Intimate relationships and mobility intentions of Thai international students in Chinese universities; A gendered analysis, Population Space and Place, 24:5, e2120

Lo, A.W.-T. and D. Houston (2018) How do compact, accessible, and walkable communities promote gender equality in spatial behavior? Journal of Transport Geography, 68, 42-54

Loyola-Hernández, Laura (2018) The porous state: female mayors performing the state in Yucatan Maya municipalities, Political Geography, 62, 48-57

Lulle, Aija (2018) Relational ageing: On inter-gender and generational dynamism among Latvian women, Area, 50:4, 452-458

Lyons, Hannah (2018) The Intangible Nation: Spatializing experiences of Britishness and belonging for young British Muslim women, Geoforum, 90, 55-63

19

Madhavan, Sangeetha, Shelley Clark, Malcolm Araos and Donatien Beguy (2018) Distance or location? How the geographic distribution of kin networks shapes support given to single mothers in urban Kenya, The Geographical Journal, 184:1, 75-88

Masamha, Blessing, Vusilizwe Thebe and Veronika N.E. Uzokwe (2018) Mapping cassava food value chains in Tanzania's smallholder farming sector: The implications of intra-household gender dynamics, Journal of Rural Studies, 59, 82-92

McDowell, Linda (2018) Moving stories: precarious work and multiple migrations, Gender, Place & Culture, 25:4, 471-488

McGlynn, Nick (2018) Slippery geographies of the urban and the rural: Public sector LGBT equalities work in the shadow of the ‘Gay Capital’, Journal of Rural Studies, 57, 55-64

Masood, Ayesha (2018) Negotiating mobility in gendered spaces: case of Pakistani women doctors, Gender, Place & Culture, 25:2, 188-206

McKinnon, Scott (2018) Maintaining the school closet: the changing regulation of homosexuality and the contested space of the school in New South Wales, 1978–84, Australian Geographer, 49:1, 185-198

McLean, Heather (2018) In praise of chaotic research pathways: A feminist response to planetary urbanization, Society and Space, 36:3, 547-555

Meemken, Eva-Marie and Matin Qaim (2018) Can private food standards promote gender equality in the small farm sector? Journal of Rural Studies, 58, 39-51

Meszaros, Julia (2018) Race, space, and agency in the international introduction industry: how American men perceive women’s agency in Colombia, Ukraine and the Philippines, Gender, Place & Culture, 25:2, 268-287

Miller, Edward V. (2018) Gender differences in intercity commuting patterns in the Fox River Valley, Illinois, 1912-1936, Journal of Historical Geography, 60, 89-99

Molina, Irene (2018) Planning for Patriarchy? Gender Equality in the Swedish Modern Built Environment. In: Alexandra Staub (ed.) The Routledge Companion to Modernity, Space and Gender. New York: Routledge, 26-40

Momsen, Janet (2018) Gender identities, class and colonialism in nineteenth century Western Canada. In: Jeannine Wintzer and Béla Filep (Eds.) Geographie als Grenzüberschreitung: Festschrift für Prof. Dr Doris Wastl-Walter. Bern: Geographischen Gesellschaft, 99-112

Monk, Janice (2018) Placing Gender in Geography: Directions, Challenges and Opportunities, Revista Finisterra, 53:108, 3-14

Moore, Francesca (2018) Historical Geography, feminist research and the gender politics of the present, Geography Compass, 12:9, e12398

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Moss, Pamela, Katherine Brickell, Kanchana N. Ruwanpura and Margaret Walton-Roberts (2018) Happy anniversary gender, place and culture!, Gender, Place & Culture, 25:1, 1-3

Mott, Carrie (2018) Building Relationships within Difference: An Anarcha-Feminist Approach to the Micropolitics of Solidarity, Annals of the American Association of Geographers, 108:2, 424-433

Mountz, Alison (2018) Political geography III: Bodies, Progress in Human Geography, 52:5, 759-769

Mukhamedova, Nozilakhon and Kai Wegerich (2018) The feminization of agriculture in post-Soviet Tajikistan, Journal of Rural Studies, 57, 128-139

Niedomysl, Thomas, Martin Prowse and Anders Lund Hansen ( 2018) Doctoral dissertations in human geography from Swedish universities 1884-2015: demographics, formats, and productivity, Journal of Geography in Higher Education, 42:3, 357-355

O’Reilly, Zoë (2018) ‘Living Liminality’: everyday experiences of asylum seekers in the ‘Direct Provision’ system in Ireland, Gender, Place & Culture, 25:6, 821-842

Owasu, Lucy and Thomas Yeboah (2018) Living conditions and social determinants of healthcare inequities affecting female migrants in Ghana, GeoJournal, 83:5, 1005-1007

Owusu, Alex Barimah, Paul W.K. Yankson and Stephen Frimpong (2018) Smallholder farmers’ knowledge of mobile telephone use: Gender perspectives and implications for agricultural market development, Progress in Development Studies, 18:1, 36-51

Pacault, Marine and Merle Patchett (2018) The last plumassier: storying dead birds, gender and Paraffection at Maison Lemarié, Cultural Geographies, 25:1, 123–134

Pelzelmayer, Katharina (2018) Bodies That Work, Discourses That Care: powerful narratives of elder care on the move, Gender, Place & Culture, 25:6, 932-935

Pineda, J., M. Piniero and A. Ramirez (2019) Coffee production and women’s empowerment in Colombia, Human Organization,78:1 (forthcoming)

Plyushteva, Anna and Tim Schwanen (2018) Care-related journeys over the life course: Thinking mobility biographies with gender, care and the household, Geoforum, 97, 131-141

Porsani, J., M.A. Caretta and K. Lehtilä (2018) Large-scale land acquisitions aggravate the feminization of poverty: findings from a case study in Mozambique, GeoJournal,

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Porto, A.M, M. Villarino, M. Baylina, M.D. Garcia-Ramon and I. Salamaña (2017) Genre, éducation des femmes, et innovation rurales en Espagne. In C.H. Margetic, H. Roth et M. Pouzenc (Eds.) Les campagnes européennes: espaces d’innovation dans un monde urbain. Toulouse: Presses Universitaires du Midi, 29-38

Pradhan, Mamata and Nitya Rao (2018) Gender justice and food security: The case of public distribution system in India, Progress in Development Studies, 18:4, 252-266

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Prati, Gabriele (2018) Gender equality and women's participation in transport cycling, Journal of Transport Geography, 66, 369-375

Radcliffe, S.A. (2018) Tackling complex inequalities and Ecuador's Buen Vivir: Leaving no one behind and Equality in diversity, Bulletin of Latin American Research, 37:4 DoI: 10.1111/blar.12706

Radcliffe, S.A. (2018) Geography and Indigeneity II: Critical geographies of indigenous bodily politics, Progress in Human Geography, 42:3, 436-445

Radcliffe, S.A. (2019) Pachamama: Subaltern Geographies and Decolonial Projects in Andean Ecuador. In T. Jazeel and S. Legg (Eds.) Subaltern Geographies. Athens/London: University of Georgia Press

Rahman, Shahidu (2018) Revisiting empowerment: Rising female empowerment in the Bangladesh garment sector, Human Geography, 11:2

Richardson, Lizzie (2018) Feminist geographies of digital work, Progress in Human Geography, 42:2, 244-263

Rose, Damaris (2018) Les approches québécoises sur les femmes et le logement: recherche et activisme féministes. In: Anne Lambert, Pascale

Dietrich-Ragon et Catherine Bonvalet (Eds.) Le monde privé des femmes Genre et habitat dans la société française. Paris: Éditions INED, 51-78

Samari, Goleen and Anne R. Pebley (2018) Longitudinal determinants of married women’s autonomy in Egypt, Gender, Place & Culture, 25:6, 799-820

Singh-Peterson, Lila and Manoa Iranacolaivalu (2018) Barriers to market for subsistence farmers in Fiji – a gendered perspective, Journal of Rural Studies, 60, 11-20

Sniekers, Marijke (2018) Defining dreams: young mothers’ agency in constructions of space, Social and Cultural Geography, 19:8, 1073-1096

Sovacool, Benjamin K., Johannes Kester, Lance Noel and Gerardo Zarazua de Rubens (2018) The demographics of decarbonizing transport: The influence of gender, education, occupation, age, and household size on electric mobility preferences in the Nordic region, Global Environmental Change, 52, 86-100

Stenbacka, Susanna, Ann Grubbström and Gunnel Forsberg (2018) Gendered youth strategies for inclusion in a changing society: Breaking or reproducing the local gender contract? Area, 50:4, 520-528

Swin, Janet K., Theresa K. Vescio, Julia L. Dahl and Stephanie J. Zawadzki (2018) Gendered discourse about climate change policies, Global Environmental Change, 48, 216-225

Ticar, Jessica Ellen (2018) Embodied transnational lives among Filipina/o/x youth in urban educational spaces, Gender, Place & Culture, 25:4, 612-616

Torres, Rebecca Maria (2018) A crisis of rights and responsibility: feminist geopolitical perspectives on Latin American refugees and migrants, Gender, Place & Culture, 25:1, 13-36

Tuitjer, Gesine (2018) A house of one’s own – The Eigenheim within rural women’s biographies, Journal of Rural Studies, 64, 156-163

Van den Berg, Marguerite (2018) The discursive uses of Jane Jacobs for the genderfying city: Understanding the productions of space for post-Fordist gender notions, Urban Studies, 55:4, 752-766

Waitt, Gordon (2018) Energy, households, gender and science: A feminist retrofit framework for transdisciplinary research, Area, 50:3, 314-321

Warren, Saskia (2018) Placing faith in creative labour: Muslim women and digital media work in

Britain, Geoforum, 97, 1-9

Williams, Glyn, Umesh Omankuttan, J. Devika and Berit Aasen (2018) Enacting participatory, gender-sensitive slum redevelopment? Urban governance, power and participation in Trivandrum, Kerala, Geoforum, 96, 150-159

Worth, Nancy (2018) Mothers and daughters and learning to labour: Framing work through gender and generation, The Canadian Geographer (forthcoming)

Yeoh, Brenda S. A. and Kanchana N. Ruwanpura (2018) A conversation between Brenda S.A. Yeoh and Kanchana N. Ruwanpura: reflections from the ‘margins’ on Gender, Place and Culture’s 25th anniversary, Gender, Place & Culture, 25:2, 159-165

Yu, Ting-Fai (2018) Class as a method to localise queer studies in Hong Kong, Gender, Place & Culture, 25:2, 309-312

Zebracki, Martin (2018) Urban preservation and the queerying spaces of (un)remembering: Memorial landscapes of the Miami Beach art deco historic district, Urban Studies, 55:10, 2261-2285

Zurndorfer, Harriet (2018) Escape from the country: the gender politics of Chinese women in pursuit of transnational romance, Gender, Place & Culture, 25:4, 489-506

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