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Outputs (882)

Navigating climate’s human geographies: Exploring the whereabouts of climate politics (2019)
Journal Article
Bulkeley, H. (2019). Navigating climate’s human geographies: Exploring the whereabouts of climate politics. Dialogues in Human Geography, 9(1), 3-17. https://doi.org/10.1177/2043820619829920

Just as global institutions and environmental assessment processes embark on the latest effort to integrate more social science into global environmental change research, it appears that the social sciences of climate change are unable or unwilling t... Read More about Navigating climate’s human geographies: Exploring the whereabouts of climate politics.

Reflections on Navigating Climate’s Human Geographies (2019)
Journal Article
Bulkeley, H. (2019). Reflections on Navigating Climate’s Human Geographies. Dialogues in Human Geography, 9(1), 38-42. https://doi.org/10.1177/2043820619829934

In this reflection, I take up a variety of open questions and remaining concerns raised by the set of commentaries concerning the implications of the paper for: how we regard climate change as an issue; how knowledge systems might be changed to enabl... Read More about Reflections on Navigating Climate’s Human Geographies.

Whatever Happened to Green Collar Jobs? Populism and Clean Energy Transition (2019)
Journal Article
Knuth, S. (2019). Whatever Happened to Green Collar Jobs? Populism and Clean Energy Transition. Annals of the American Association of Geographers, 109(2), 634-643. https://doi.org/10.1080/24694452.2018.1523001

In today’s populist moment, climate change response has become anything but “postpolitical.” The project to decarbonize energy supplies is generating ongoing political clashes today, including between competing forms of capital/ism. In the United Sta... Read More about Whatever Happened to Green Collar Jobs? Populism and Clean Energy Transition.

Slow emergencies: temporality and the racialized biopolitics of emergency governance (2019)
Journal Article
Anderson, B., Grove, K., Kearnes, M., & Rickards, L. (2019). Slow emergencies: temporality and the racialized biopolitics of emergency governance. Progress in Human Geography, 44(4), 621-639. https://doi.org/10.1177/0309132519849263

How lives are governed through emergency is a critical issue for our time. In this paper, we build on scholarship on this issue by developing the concept of ‘slow emergencies’. We do so to attune to situations of harm that call into question what for... Read More about Slow emergencies: temporality and the racialized biopolitics of emergency governance.

Introduction (2018)
Book Chapter
Luque-Ayala, A., Marvin, S., & Bulkeley, H. (2018). Introduction. In A. Luque-Ayala, S. Marvin, & H. Bulkeley (Eds.), Rethinking Urban Transitions: Politics in the Low Carbon City (1-12). Routledge

Rethinking urban transitions: an analytical framework (2018)
Book Chapter
Luque-Ayala, A., Bulkeley, H., & Marvin, S. (2018). Rethinking urban transitions: an analytical framework. In A. Luque-Ayala, S. Marvin, & H. Bulkeley (Eds.), Rethinking Urban Transitions: Politics in the Low Carbon City (13-36). Routledge

Culturalisation and devices: what is culture in cultural economy? (2018)
Journal Article
Richardson, L. (2019). Culturalisation and devices: what is culture in cultural economy?. Journal of Cultural Economy, 12(3), 228-241. https://doi.org/10.1080/17530350.2018.1542608

Theorisation of culture is often absent from research on production in the creative and cultural sector. Further, cultural production has been largely untouched by the insights of the cultural economy approach. Culturalisation is a means of addressin... Read More about Culturalisation and devices: what is culture in cultural economy?.

On right-wing movements, spheres, and resonances: an interview with Ben Anderson and Rainer Mühlhoff (2018)
Journal Article
Kemmer, L., Peters, C. H., Weber, V., Anderson, B., & Mühlhoff, R. (2019). On right-wing movements, spheres, and resonances: an interview with Ben Anderson and Rainer Mühlhoff. Distinktion: Scandinavian Journal of Social Theory, 20(1), 25-41. https://doi.org/10.1080/1600910x.2018.1544577

This interview began in Hamburg and Berlin and continued virtually, as an active email exchange, between November 2017 and April 2018. Our conversation was sparked by the recent and ongoing turn to the right in global politics. It departs from explor... Read More about On right-wing movements, spheres, and resonances: an interview with Ben Anderson and Rainer Mühlhoff.

Sharing Economy (2018)
Book Chapter
Richardson, L. (2018). Sharing Economy. In J. Ash, R. Kitchin, & A. Leszczynski (Eds.), Digital geographies (200-209). SAGE Publications

Agency, power, and state-firm relations in global financial networks (2018)
Journal Article
Lai, K. P. (2018). Agency, power, and state-firm relations in global financial networks. Dialogues in Human Geography, 8(3), 285-288. https://doi.org/10.1177/2043820618797463

In response to Töpfer’s incisive critique of how current work on global production networks and global financial networks (GFNs) have been too firm-centric and reliant on neoliberal market framings, this commentary highlights three key points for dev... Read More about Agency, power, and state-firm relations in global financial networks.

The illegal, the illicit and new geographies of uneven development (2018)
Journal Article
Hudson, R. (2020). The illegal, the illicit and new geographies of uneven development. Territory, Politics, Governance, 8(2), 161-176. https://doi.org/10.1080/21622671.2018.1535998

There have been significant changes in the geographies of uneven development and a considerable literature documenting these, at varying spatial scales. There is, however, a significant absence in the urban and regional development literature as to t... Read More about The illegal, the illicit and new geographies of uneven development.

Solar energy for all? Understanding the successes and shortfalls through a critical comparative assessment of Bangladesh, Brazil, India, Mozambique, Sri Lanka and South Africa (2018)
Journal Article
Kumar, A., Ferdous, R., Luque-Ayala, A., McEwan, C., Power, M., Turner, B., & Bulkeley, H. (2019). Solar energy for all? Understanding the successes and shortfalls through a critical comparative assessment of Bangladesh, Brazil, India, Mozambique, Sri Lanka and South Africa. Energy Research and Social Science, 48, 166-176. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.erss.2018.10.005

Lanterns, homes systems, hot water systems and micro-grids based on small-scale solar have become prominent ways to address the energy access challenge. As momentum grows for this form of energy transition this paper draws together research on small-... Read More about Solar energy for all? Understanding the successes and shortfalls through a critical comparative assessment of Bangladesh, Brazil, India, Mozambique, Sri Lanka and South Africa.