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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2011-04-01
    Description: Participative environmental management and social capital in Poland Social Geography, 6, 39-45, 2011 Author(s): A. Hunka and W. T. de Groot Eastern European countries, such as Poland, often illustrate social capital studies. Upon entering the European Union, social capital in Poland was seen as a problem in implementing new regulations, particularly in the field of environmental policy. Equally important, environmental issues often present a high degree of complexity – and European legislation requires multi-stakeholder involvement in decision-making processes. Thus, the dilemma: on the one hand, there is a demand to engage and consult many actors; on the other hand, the actors function in administrative culture with a ubiquitous top-down approach taken by institutional decision makers. This paper attempts to address the problem from the perspective of social capital theory. An overview of administrative culture and examples of decision-making processes shows the way decisions are currently made. We also propose a way to achieve more participative environmental management.
    Print ISSN: 1729-4274
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    Topics: Geography
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  • 2
    facet.materialart.
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    Copernicus
    Publication Date: 2011-10-07
    Description: Families and food: beyond the "cultural turn"? Social Geography, 6, 63-71, 2011 Author(s): P. Jackson This paper provides some personal reflections on the ''cultural turn'' in human geography including a tentative chronology of events. It outlines some of the characteristics of the ''cultural turn'' and some of the criticisms that have been levelled against it. In the body of the paper, I attempt to assess the value of the ''cultural turn'', conceptually and methodologically, as applied to two recent research projects on the geography of food and families. The paper concludes that the ''cultural turn'' greatly enriched the study of human geography through its analysis of discourse, representation and practice. But other approaches are required to explain broader changes in political-economy and the materiality of nature. While the ''cultural turn'' contributed to our understanding of materiality and our place in a more-than-human world, geographers are now also embracing other approaches such as those informed by actor-network theory and geographies of emotion, embodiment and affect. The paper concludes with an agenda for future research on the political and moral economies of food, focusing on contemporary consumer anxieties at a range of geographical scales.
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2012-09-01
    Description: Community development and social actor theories: a case study in Montréal (Canada) Social Geography, 7, 37-46, 2012 Author(s): G. Sénécal Research focusing on community development processes is increasingly making use of the notion of actor. Actors are engaged in a system of actions. A range of sociological theories has given rise to the various stances adopted by social actors, including the theatrical actor, the strategic actor, the actor-network, or the reflexive actor. We review these theories in an attempt to define an analytical framework by employing what we call a bricolage methodology. The aim is to gain insight on the interactions that bind together the various stakeholders by function (acting and the actors' roles) in the fields of action (the scenes of interaction and real interventions) and on effects (the results of these actions). We then propose to apply our analytical framework to a case study on the process of developing an action plan in the Villeray district of Montréal (Québec, Canada).
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2012-07-24
    Description: The Night Light Development Index (NLDI): a spatially explicit measure of human development from satellite data Social Geography, 7, 23-35, 2012 Author(s): C. D. Elvidge, K. E. Baugh, S. J. Anderson, P. C. Sutton, and T. Ghosh We have developed a satellite data derived ''Night Light Development Index'' (NLDI) as a simple, objective, spatially explicit and globally available empirical measurement of human development derived solely from nighttime satellite imagery and population density. There is increasing recognition that the distribution of wealth and income amongst the population in a nation or region correlates strongly with both the overall happiness of that population and the environmental quality of that nation or region. Measuring the distribution of wealth and income at national and regional scales is an interesting and challenging problem. Gini coefficients derived from Lorenz curves are a well-established method of measuring income distribution. Nonetheless, there are many shortcomings of the Gini coefficient as a measure of income or wealth distribution. Gini coefficients are typically calculated using national level data on the distribution of income through the population. Such data are not available for many countries and the results are generally limited to single values representing entire countries. In this paper we develop an index for the co-distribution of nocturnal light and people that is derived without the use of monetary measures of wealth and is capable of providing a spatial depiction of differences in development within countries.
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2012-05-26
    Description: Just passing through: the risky mobilities of hazardous materials transport Social Geography, 7, 13-22, 2012 Author(s): J. Cidell The scientific construction of risk is usually based on the probability of an event occurring in a specific location from a specific hazard. Hazardous waste transport is an example of a risk source that is fixed in neither time nor space, with materials traveling through the landscape. Residents living along fixed transportation routes likely to experience an increase in the amount and potency of hazardous materials traveling through their communities draw on distant places and spaces in order to define the risk they face as they try to make absent places and materials present. However, because those places and spaces are distant and absent, regulatory officials can resist their inclusion by arguing that only what is on site matters. This site of struggle over sources and construction of risks can best be understood through Law and Mol's spatiality of fire space. Using two North American case studies, this paper draws on the concepts of fire space and mobilities to explain the nature of the risk that mobile materials pose, including the disconnect between citizens' objections to increased hazardous materials transport and the environmental review and regulatory processes meant to prevent catastrophes from occurring.
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2012-03-03
    Description: Investigating community behaviour after the 2004 Chuetsu earthquake: a case study of Kawaguchi, Japan Social Geography, 7, 1-12, 2012 Author(s): M. Gismondi Every year, earthquakes cause economic and human losses around the globe. In Japan, a great deal of attention has focused on improving the safety of structures and individuals in the last decade. The introduction here of several new related policies, together with continuous discussion of such policies, has raised the level of environmental security nationwide. Despite this significant effort, individual preparedness and awareness are still lacking, especially in rural areas, where technological advancements and policy applications often arrive late. In this paper, Kawaguchi in Niigata Prefecture, Japan was chosen as study area because of both the major damage experienced during the 2004 Chuetsu earthquake and the particularly dynamic socio-cultural activities of the community. Using interviews and questionnaires to collect information, this study aims to investigate the causes of local variations in community behaviour after the earthquake. Geographic location as well as everyday social relationships, social interactions and organisation are considered the main causes of the differences in community organisation during the recovery process. This study highlights the necessity for more localised emergency education in order to promote longer-lasting awareness and preparation in rural areas.
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2011-01-25
    Description: Der Konstruktivismus lernt laufen: „Doing more-than-representational geography“ Social Geography, 6, 1-13, 2011 Author(s): A. Strüver Dieser Beitrag beschäftigt sich mit verkörperten Subjekten als „laufenden“ Themen einer Sozial- und Kulturgeographie nach dem Cultural Turn, die die Errungenschaft der so genannten „Neuen Kulturgeographie“ radikalisiert, um dadurch den Repräsentationsbegriff um performative Praktiken sowie deren materialisierte Verkörperungen zu erweitern. Anhand der „Versportung“ von städtischen Alltagsräumen geht es dabei insbesondere um das ko-konstitutive Wechselverhältnis von verkörperten Subjekten und sozialräumlichen Verhältnissen mithilfe von Subjektkonzeptionen im Anschluss an Foucault und Butler. In Kombination mit dem interaktionistischen Subjekt- und Praxisverständnis der Mikrosoziologie wird schließlich die gesellschaftliche Raumproduktion vom Subjekt her gedacht – einem Subjekt, das sowohl konstituiert durch als auch Konstituens von Gesellschafts- und Raumstrukturen ist. Abstract. This contribution concentrates on embodied subjects as "on- going " topics of a social and cultural geography after and beyond the cultural turn – a geography that radicalises the achievements of the so called "new cultural geography" by way of extending the concept of representations in order to focus on performative practices, materialities and embodiments. Taking the "sportification" of urban everyday spaces as example, it elaborates on the co-constitutive interrelations between embodied subjects and sociospatial conditions with reference to Foucault's and Butler's conceptions of the subject. Eventually, these conceptions are combined with a rather micro-sociological and interactive notion of subjects and practices ("doings"), aiming at an understanding of the social production of space that gives special attention to the subject – a subject that is both constituted by and constitutive of social and spatial structures.
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2011-01-27
    Description: Erzählter Raum und Erzählraum: (Kultur)Raumkonstruktion zwischen Diskurs und Performanz Social Geography, 6, 15-27, 2011 Author(s): A. Harendt and D. Sprunk Ziel des Aufsatzes ist es, die mediale Erzeugung geographischer Wirklichkeiten durch so genannte Weltenkenner im Sinne einer Geographie der Medien zu untersuchen. Es gilt die Frage zu beantworten, mit welchen Zuschreibungen ausgewählte Weltenkenner territoriale Raumausschnitte belegen und welche raumbezogenen Gegenwartsdiagnosen von ihnen gegeben werden. Weiterhin sind die Gründe für ihre Autorität und Popularität zu klären. Über zwei theoretische Zugänge – Diskurs einerseits und Performanz andererseits – wird sich der raumbezogenen Deutungs- und Sinnstiftungsarbeit deutschsprachiger Weltenkenner angenähert. Die theoretische Verbindung der verbalen Diskurs- und Argumentebene mit der bild- und körperbezogenen Performanzebene kombiniert sprachliche und nicht-sprachliche Weisen der Welterzeugung. Beide, so unsere These, sind konstitutiv für eine Analyse der Weltenkenner und ihrer Wirklichkeitskonstruktionen. Für das Zusammendenken der beiden Ebenen schlagen wir die Konzepte des Erzählten Raumes und Erzählraums vor. Abstract. The aim of the article is to analyze the construction of geographical realities in the media by so called world "insiders". Which attributes do the world insiders ascribe to spatial territories and which dia- and prognoses of the contemporary world do they offer? In addition, the question has to be raised as to why their interpretations are so appealing and popular. Two theoretical approaches – discourse and performance/performativity – form the framework of the analysis. The theoretical link between the discursive and argumentative level on the one hand and the performative level on the other hand combines verbal and non-verbal geography-making. Our claim is that both levels are essential for an analysis of the world insiders and their ways of world construction. To integrate these two levels we suggest the concepts of Narrative space and Narrated space.
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2011-06-02
    Description: Vollzug und Sprache Physischer Geographie und die Frage geographischen Takts Social Geography, 6, 47-61, 2011 Author(s): B. Zahnen Der Aufsatz versteht sich als ein Beitrag zu der sozial- oder kulturwissenschaftlichen Diskussion der Humangeographie um die Möglichkeit der Einbeziehung einer Dimension der Natur bzw. der „Materialität“, zugleich aber auch als ein theoretischer Entwurf einer „Physischen Geographie im starken Sinne“, die nicht mehr in dichotomer Entgegensetzung zur Humangeographie zu verstehen ist und die Möglichkeit bietet, genuin geographische Prozesse und Seinsweisen als solche zu verstehen. Ausgehend davon, dass es Physische Geographen bzw. Geowissenschaftler gibt, die ihr Tun als „Gespräch mit der Erde“ bezeichnen, deckt der Aufsatz zum einen auf, inwiefern dieses Tun aufgrund einer grundlegenden Ebene, die sich aus dem Prozess der eigenen Erfahrung übergänglicher Naturgebilde der Erde ergibt, als etwas qualifiziert werden kann, das eine gewisse Form „doppelter Hermeneutik“ involviert. Zum anderen wird gezeigt, dass aufgrund dieser grundlegenden Ebene die Möglichkeit des revidierten Verständnisses von Physischer Geographie – also der „Physischen Geographie im starken Sinne“ – in dem derzeitigen physisch-geographischen Tun eines naturwissenschaftlichen Selbstverständnisses bereits angelegt ist. Ferner wird deutlich, dass sich in diesem Zuge neue Zugangsmöglichkeiten zur Geschichte des Fachs ergeben. In diesem Sinne wird die alte Idee eines „geographischen Takts“ neu beleuchtet und entfaltet. Abstract. The paper can be understood as a contribution to the discussion about how to involve "nature" or "materiality" in the undertakings of social or cultural scientists or human geographers, but at the same time as a theoretical conception of "physical geography in a strong sense" which can no longer be understood as being in dichotomic opposition to human geography and makes it possible to understand genuinely geographical processes and qualities [Seinsweisen] as such. Taking as a starting point the fact that there are physical geographers and earth scientists who characterise their doing as a "conversation with the earth", the paper reveals in which way it is appropriate to qualify this doing as involving a kind of "double hermeneutics": namely due to a foundational layer which arises from the process of experiencing transitional formations of the natural appearances of the earth. The paper also shows that due to this foundational layer, the chance of a revised understanding of physical geography – i.e. of "physical geography in the strong sense" – is already inherent in current physical geography as a natural science. Moreover, the paper shows that its insights open up new ways to understand pivotal traits of the history of geography. In this sense, the old idea of a "geographical tact" is illuminated and unfolded in a new way.
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2011-03-23
    Description: Reflections on "doing" cultural geography – "being" a cultural geographer in the Netherlands Social Geography, 6, 29-37, 2011 Author(s): B. van Hoven In this article, I explore Dutch social geography in the context of "the cultural turn". In so doing, I extensively draw on writing from the Anglo-American context which somewhat complicates the matter. Barnett (1998) implied that the "cultural turn" is not a "coherent and singular process" (379) which will emerge from my reflections as well. But even though the disciplines have undergone different ways of becoming, Dutch geographies are, formally, valued and assessed by procedures that have developed alongside, if not as a part of, the cultural turn(s) in the United Kingdom. In the Netherlands, different Departments have been a part of (or apart from) the cultural turn in different ways. In this article, I draw on some of the similarities and differences but will focus to a large extent on my own institutional context at the University of Groningen.
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  • 11
    Publication Date: 2012
    Description: 〈b〉The Night Light Development Index (NLDI): a spatially explicit measure of human development from satellite data〈/b〉〈br〉 C. D. Elvidge, K. E. Baugh, S. J. Anderson, P. C. Sutton, and T. Ghosh〈br〉 Soc. Geogr., 7, 23-35, doi:10.5194/sg-7-23-2012, 2012〈br〉 We have developed a satellite data derived ''Night Light Development Index'' (NLDI) as a simple, objective, spatially explicit and globally available empirical measurement of human development derived solely from nighttime satellite imagery and population density. There is increasing recognition that the distribution of wealth and income amongst the population in a nation or region correlates strongly with both the overall happiness of that population and the environmental quality of that nation or region. Measuring the distribution of wealth and income at national and regional scales is an interesting and challenging problem. Gini coefficients derived from Lorenz curves are a well-established method of measuring income distribution. Nonetheless, there are many shortcomings of the Gini coefficient as a measure of income or wealth distribution. Gini coefficients are typically calculated using national level data on the distribution of income through the population. Such data are not available for many countries and the results are generally limited to single values representing entire countries. In this paper we develop an index for the co-distribution of nocturnal light and people that is derived without the use of monetary measures of wealth and is capable of providing a spatial depiction of differences in development within countries.
    Print ISSN: 1729-4274
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    Topics: Geography
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  • 12
    Publication Date: 2012
    Description: 〈b〉Just passing through: the risky mobilities of hazardous materials transport〈/b〉〈br〉 J. Cidell〈br〉 Soc. Geogr., 7, 13-22, doi:10.5194/sg-7-13-2012, 2012〈br〉 The scientific construction of risk is usually based on the probability of an event occurring in a specific location from a specific hazard. Hazardous waste transport is an example of a risk source that is fixed in neither time nor space, with materials traveling through the landscape. Residents living along fixed transportation routes likely to experience an increase in the amount and potency of hazardous materials traveling through their communities draw on distant places and spaces in order to define the risk they face as they try to make absent places and materials present. However, because those places and spaces 〈i〉are〈/i〉 distant and absent, regulatory officials can resist their inclusion by arguing that only what is on site matters. This site of struggle over sources and construction of risks can best be understood through Law and Mol's spatiality of fire space. Using two North American case studies, this paper draws on the concepts of fire space and mobilities to explain the nature of the risk that mobile materials pose, including the disconnect between citizens' objections to increased hazardous materials transport and the environmental review and regulatory processes meant to prevent catastrophes from occurring.
    Print ISSN: 1729-4274
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  • 13
    Publication Date: 2012
    Description: 〈b〉Investigating community behaviour after the 2004 Chuetsu earthquake: a case study of Kawaguchi, Japan〈/b〉〈br〉 M. Gismondi〈br〉 Soc. Geogr., 7, 1-12, doi:10.5194/sg-7-1-2012, 2012〈br〉 Every year, earthquakes cause economic and human losses around the globe. In Japan, a great deal of attention has focused on improving the safety of structures and individuals in the last decade. The introduction here of several new related policies, together with continuous discussion of such policies, has raised the level of environmental security nationwide. Despite this significant effort, individual preparedness and awareness are still lacking, especially in rural areas, where technological advancements and policy applications often arrive late. In this paper, Kawaguchi in Niigata Prefecture, Japan was chosen as study area because of both the major damage experienced during the 2004 Chuetsu earthquake and the particularly dynamic socio-cultural activities of the community. Using interviews and questionnaires to collect information, this study aims to investigate the causes of local variations in community behaviour after the earthquake. Geographic location as well as everyday social relationships, social interactions and organisation are considered the main causes of the differences in community organisation during the recovery process. This study highlights the necessity for more localised emergency education in order to promote longer-lasting awareness and preparation in rural areas.
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    Topics: Geography
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  • 14
    Publication Date: 2011
    Description: 〈b〉Participative environmental management and social capital in Poland〈/b〉〈br〉 A. Hunka and W. T. de Groot〈br〉 Soc. Geogr., 6, 39-45, doi:10.5194/sg-6-39-2011, 2011〈br〉 Eastern European countries, such as Poland, often illustrate social capital studies. Upon entering the European Union, social capital in Poland was seen as a problem in implementing new regulations, particularly in the field of environmental policy. Equally important, environmental issues often present a high degree of complexity – and European legislation requires multi-stakeholder involvement in decision-making processes. Thus, the dilemma: on the one hand, there is a demand to engage and consult many actors; on the other hand, the actors function in administrative culture with a ubiquitous top-down approach taken by institutional decision makers. 〈br〉〈br〉 This paper attempts to address the problem from the perspective of social capital theory. An overview of administrative culture and examples of decision-making processes shows the way decisions are currently made. We also propose a way to achieve more participative environmental management.
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    Topics: Geography
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  • 15
    Publication Date: 2010
    Description: 〈b〉Intercultural interaction and "situational places": a perspective for urban cultural geography within and beyond the performative turn〈/b〉〈br〉 P. Dirksmeier and I. Helbrecht〈br〉 Soc. Geogr., 5, 39-48, doi:10.5194/sg-5-39-2010, 2010〈br〉 With the performative turn in social sciences and the humanities the concept of performance has arrived in human geography. Performance denotes an understanding of social actions and practices as constitutive for non-representational realities. This paper looks at the relationship between places and performance especially in urban geography and develops the new term "situational place" to grasp the increasing phenomenon of (intercultural) encounters in the cities of modern world society. "Situational places" are situated performances of these (intercultural) interactions between strangers in cities of the contemporary world society. With the aid of performance theory the influence of the omnipresent interactions between strangers in cities on urban space is conceptualized. Therewith, we hope to present some fruitful theoretical and empirical possibilities for a cultural urban geography within and beyond the performative turn.
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  • 16
    Publication Date: 2011
    Description: 〈b〉Erzählter Raum und Erzählraum: (Kultur)Raumkonstruktion zwischen Diskurs und Performanz〈/b〉〈br〉 A. Harendt and D. Sprunk〈br〉 Soc. Geogr., 6, 15-27, doi:10.5194/sg-6-15-2011, 2011〈br〉 Ziel des Aufsatzes ist es, die mediale Erzeugung geographischer Wirklichkeiten durch so genannte Weltenkenner im Sinne einer Geographie der Medien zu untersuchen. Es gilt die Frage zu beantworten, mit welchen Zuschreibungen ausgewählte Weltenkenner territoriale Raumausschnitte belegen und welche raumbezogenen Gegenwartsdiagnosen von ihnen gegeben werden. Weiterhin sind die Gründe für ihre Autorität und Popularität zu klären. Über zwei theoretische Zugänge – Diskurs einerseits und Performanz andererseits – wird sich der raumbezogenen Deutungs- und Sinnstiftungsarbeit deutschsprachiger Weltenkenner angenähert. Die theoretische Verbindung der verbalen Diskurs- und Argumentebene mit der bild- und körperbezogenen Performanzebene kombiniert sprachliche und nicht-sprachliche Weisen der Welterzeugung. Beide, so unsere These, sind konstitutiv für eine Analyse der Weltenkenner und ihrer Wirklichkeitskonstruktionen. Für das Zusammendenken der beiden Ebenen schlagen wir die Konzepte des Erzählten Raumes und Erzählraums vor. 〈br〉〈br〉 〈b〉Abstract.〈/b〉 The aim of the article is to analyze the construction of geographical realities in the media by so called world "insiders". Which attributes do the world insiders ascribe to spatial territories and which dia- and prognoses of the contemporary world do they offer? In addition, the question has to be raised as to why their interpretations are so appealing and popular. Two theoretical approaches – discourse and performance/performativity – form the framework of the analysis. The theoretical link between the discursive and argumentative level on the one hand and the performative level on the other hand combines verbal and non-verbal geography-making. Our claim is that both levels are essential for an analysis of the world insiders and their ways of world construction. To integrate these two levels we suggest the concepts of Narrative space and Narrated space.
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  • 17
    Publication Date: 2012
    Description: 〈b〉Community development and social actor theories: a case study in Montréal (Canada)〈/b〉〈br〉 G. Sénécal〈br〉 Soc. Geogr., 7, 37-46, doi:10.5194/sg-7-37-2012, 2012〈br〉 Research focusing on community development processes is increasingly making use of the notion of actor. Actors are engaged in a system of actions. A range of sociological theories has given rise to the various stances adopted by social actors, including the theatrical actor, the strategic actor, the actor-network, or the reflexive actor. We review these theories in an attempt to define an analytical framework by employing what we call a bricolage methodology. The aim is to gain insight on the interactions that bind together the various stakeholders by function (acting and the actors' roles) in the fields of action (the scenes of interaction and real interventions) and on effects (the results of these actions). We then propose to apply our analytical framework to a case study on the process of developing an action plan in the Villeray district of Montréal (Québec, Canada).
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  • 18
    Publication Date: 2012
    Description: 〈b〉Book Review Essay ''Social mixing as state-led gentrification?''〈/b〉〈br〉 M. Rosol〈br〉 Soc. Geogr., 7, 47-49, doi:10.5194/sg-7-47-2012, 2012〈br〉
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  • 19
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Copernicus
    Publication Date: 2011
    Description: 〈b〉Families and food: beyond the "cultural turn"?〈/b〉〈br〉 P. Jackson〈br〉 Soc. Geogr., 6, 63-71, doi:10.5194/sg-6-63-2011, 2011〈br〉 This paper provides some personal reflections on the ''cultural turn'' in human geography including a tentative chronology of events. It outlines some of the characteristics of the ''cultural turn'' and some of the criticisms that have been levelled against it. In the body of the paper, I attempt to assess the value of the ''cultural turn'', conceptually and methodologically, as applied to two recent research projects on the geography of food and families. The paper concludes that the ''cultural turn'' greatly enriched the study of human geography through its analysis of discourse, representation and practice. But other approaches are required to explain broader changes in political-economy and the materiality of nature. While the ''cultural turn'' contributed to our understanding of materiality and our place in a more-than-human world, geographers are now also embracing other approaches such as those informed by actor-network theory and geographies of emotion, embodiment and affect. The paper concludes with an agenda for future research on the political and moral economies of food, focusing on contemporary consumer anxieties at a range of geographical scales.
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  • 20
    Publication Date: 2011
    Description: 〈b〉Reflections on "doing" cultural geography – "being" a cultural geographer in the Netherlands〈/b〉〈br〉 B. van Hoven〈br〉 Soc. Geogr., 6, 29-37, doi:10.5194/sg-6-29-2011, 2011〈br〉 In this article, I explore Dutch social geography in the context of "the cultural turn". In so doing, I extensively draw on writing from the Anglo-American context which somewhat complicates the matter. Barnett (1998) implied that the "cultural turn" is not a "coherent and singular process" (379) which will emerge from my reflections as well. But even though the disciplines have undergone different ways of becoming, Dutch geographies are, formally, valued and assessed by procedures that have developed alongside, if not as a part of, the cultural turn(s) in the United Kingdom. In the Netherlands, different Departments have been a part of (or apart from) the cultural turn in different ways. In this article, I draw on some of the similarities and differences but will focus to a large extent on my own institutional context at the University of Groningen.
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  • 21
    Publication Date: 2011
    Description: 〈b〉Vollzug und Sprache Physischer Geographie und die Frage geographischen Takts〈/b〉〈br〉 B. Zahnen〈br〉 Soc. Geogr., 6, 47-61, doi:10.5194/sg-6-47-2011, 2011〈br〉 Der Aufsatz versteht sich als ein Beitrag zu der sozial- oder kulturwissenschaftlichen Diskussion der Humangeographie um die Möglichkeit der Einbeziehung einer Dimension der Natur bzw. der Materialität, zugleich aber auch als ein theoretischer Entwurf einer Physischen Geographie im starken Sinne, die nicht mehr in dichotomer Entgegensetzung zur Humangeographie zu verstehen ist und die Möglichkeit bietet, genuin geographische Prozesse und Seinsweisen als solche zu verstehen. 〈br〉〈br〉 Ausgehend davon, dass es Physische Geographen bzw. Geowissenschaftler gibt, die ihr Tun als Gespräch mit der Erde bezeichnen, deckt der Aufsatz zum einen auf, inwiefern dieses Tun aufgrund einer grundlegenden Ebene, die sich aus dem Prozess der eigenen Erfahrung übergänglicher Naturgebilde der Erde ergibt, als etwas qualifiziert werden kann, das eine gewisse Form doppelter Hermeneutik involviert. Zum anderen wird gezeigt, dass aufgrund dieser grundlegenden Ebene die Möglichkeit des revidierten Verständnisses von Physischer Geographie – also der Physischen Geographie im starken Sinne – in dem derzeitigen physisch-geographischen Tun eines naturwissenschaftlichen Selbstverständnisses bereits angelegt ist. Ferner wird deutlich, dass sich in diesem Zuge neue Zugangsmöglichkeiten zur Geschichte des Fachs ergeben. In diesem Sinne wird die alte Idee eines geographischen Takts neu beleuchtet und entfaltet. 〈br〉〈br〉 〈b〉Abstract.〈/b〉 The paper can be understood as a contribution to the discussion about how to involve "nature" or "materiality" in the undertakings of social or cultural scientists or human geographers, but at the same time as a theoretical conception of "physical geography in a strong sense" which can no longer be understood as being in dichotomic opposition to human geography and makes it possible to understand genuinely geographical processes and qualities [Seinsweisen] as such. 〈br〉〈br〉 Taking as a starting point the fact that there are physical geographers and earth scientists who characterise their doing as a "conversation with the earth", the paper reveals in which way it is appropriate to qualify this doing as involving a kind of "double hermeneutics": namely due to a foundational layer which arises from the process of experiencing transitional formations of the natural appearances of the earth. The paper also shows that due to this foundational layer, the chance of a revised understanding of physical geography – i.e. of "physical geography in the strong sense" – is already inherent in current physical geography as a natural science. Moreover, the paper shows that its insights open up new ways to understand pivotal traits of the history of geography. In this sense, the old idea of a "geographical tact" is illuminated and unfolded in a new way.
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    Topics: Geography
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  • 22
    Publication Date: 2011
    Description: 〈b〉Der Konstruktivismus lernt laufen: Doing more-than-representational geography〈/b〉〈br〉 A. Strüver〈br〉 Soc. Geogr., 6, 1-13, doi:10.5194/sg-6-1-2011, 2011〈br〉 Dieser Beitrag beschäftigt sich mit verkörperten Subjekten als laufenden Themen einer Sozial- und Kulturgeographie 〈i〉nach〈/i〉 dem Cultural Turn, die die Errungenschaft der so genannten Neuen Kulturgeographie radikalisiert, um dadurch den Repräsentationsbegriff um performative Praktiken sowie deren materialisierte Verkörperungen zu erweitern. Anhand der Versportung von städtischen Alltagsräumen geht es dabei insbesondere um das ko-konstitutive Wechselverhältnis von verkörperten Subjekten und sozialräumlichen Verhältnissen mithilfe von Subjektkonzeptionen im Anschluss an Foucault und Butler. In Kombination mit dem interaktionistischen Subjekt- und Praxisverständnis der Mikrosoziologie wird schließlich die gesellschaftliche Raumproduktion vom Subjekt her gedacht – einem Subjekt, das sowohl konstituiert durch als auch Konstituens von Gesellschafts- und Raumstrukturen ist. 〈br〉〈br〉 〈b〉Abstract.〈/b〉 This contribution concentrates on embodied subjects as "on-〈i〉going〈/i〉" topics of a social and cultural geography after and beyond the cultural turn – a geography that radicalises the achievements of the so called "new cultural geography" by way of extending the concept of representations in order to focus on performative practices, materialities and embodiments. 〈br〉〈br〉 Taking the "sportification" of urban everyday spaces as example, it elaborates on the co-constitutive interrelations between embodied subjects and sociospatial conditions with reference to Foucault's and Butler's conceptions of the subject. Eventually, these conceptions are combined with a rather micro-sociological and interactive notion of subjects and practices ("doings"), aiming at an understanding of the social production of space that gives special attention to the subject – a subject that is both constituted by and constitutive of social and spatial structures.
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  • 23
    Publication Date: 2010
    Description: 〈b〉Déjà-vu: tourist practices of repeat visitors in the city of Paris〈/b〉〈br〉 T. Freytag〈br〉 Soc. Geogr., 5, 49-58, doi:10.5194/sg-5-49-2010, 2010〈br〉 In the context of sustained growth in European city tourism, competing travel destinations develop marketing strategies that include measures to attract an increasing number of repeat visitors. This paper explores the case of Paris in order to provide a better understanding of the specific motivations, interests and activities of leisure tourists who had previously stayed in the capital of France. Drawing on Pierre Bourdieu's concept of "distinction" it is argued that repeat visitors tend to differentiate themselves from other tourists. On the basis of substantive field work in Paris, a set of repeat visitor practices is presented that include strategies to avoid spatial concentrations of major tourist spots in order to participate in Parisian everyday life. Moreover, it is suggested to conceptualize the encounters between repeat visitors and tourism destinations as a lifelong relationship, which can be renewed and reproduced through further visits and virtual encounters. The distinct characteristics of repeat visitor practices have substantial implications for the organization of tourism in the city and the relationships between first-time tourists, repeat visitors and the local population.
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  • 24
    Publication Date: 2012-12-05
    Description: Book Review Essay ''Social mixing as state-led gentrification?'' Social Geography, 7, 47-49, 2012 Author(s): M. Rosol
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  • 25
    Publication Date: 2012-07-23
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  • 26
    Publication Date: 2011-06-01
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  • 27
    Publication Date: 2011-03-22
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  • 28
    Publication Date: 2011-03-31
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  • 29
    Publication Date: 2010-02-24
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  • 30
    Publication Date: 2012-12-04
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  • 31
    Publication Date: 2010-11-26
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  • 32
    Publication Date: 2012-05-25
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  • 33
    Publication Date: 2010-07-26
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  • 34
    Publication Date: 2011-01-24
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  • 35
    Publication Date: 2012-08-31
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  • 36
    Publication Date: 2010-02-02
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  • 37
    Publication Date: 2010-12-01
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  • 38
    Publication Date: 2012-03-02
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  • 39
    Publication Date: 2011-01-26
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  • 40
    Publication Date: 2010-06-17
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  • 41
    Publication Date: 2011-10-06
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