Undergraduate Student Activities and Resources at the 2017 Annual Meeting in Boston

The 2017 Annual Meeting is the first since the establishment of the new Undergraduate Student Affinity Group and over 400 undergraduates have already registered to attend! At the Annual Meeting, students are encouraged to network with their peers and colleagues, expand their involvement in and understanding of the discipline of geography, and learn skills to build their careers. To celebrate and engage this important part of the AAG community, there will be events, activities, and resources geared for undergraduate students in attendance in Boston.

• Newcomers’ Guide to the Meeting: Is it your first time attending an Annual Meeting? Check out this guide for tips and tricks to navigating the largest geography conference in the world.

• Suggested Itinerary for Students: Overwhelmed by the thousands of presentations and unsure where to start planning your day? Get started with the suggested itinerary for students, available under “Essentials” in the AAG Mobile app.

• AAG Snapshot Talk on Student Membership: As part of the new AAG Snapshots series at the Annual Meeting, AAG staff will be giving brief informational talks in the AAG Communications Center, including the topic “Make the Most of your Student Membership,” presented on Wed., April 5th at 10 a.m. and Friday, April 7, at 3:20 p.m.

• Scavenger Hunt for Undergrads: Looking for a fun way to explore the Annual Meeting? Tackle our Photo Scavenger Hunt designed for undergraduate attendees to help discover different aspects of the meeting. View and download the “Undergrad Photo Scavenger Hunt” PDF under “Essentials” in the AAG Mobile app. The first two undergraduate students to show their completed photos and checklist to AAG Staff at the AAG Booth will get $20 credit to spend at the AAG Booth (located near registration, 2nd floor of the Hynes Convention Center).

• Undergrad Meetup Area at the International Reception: Music, refreshments, and catching up with colleagues new and old are all features of the International Reception. Find the Undergrad Student Meetup area to connect with fellow undergraduates, entire a raffle for an AAG Swag Pack, learn more about the new Undergraduate Student Affinity Group, and add to our graffiti wall by drawing the logo, mascot, or name of your university! The International Reception takes place Friday, April 7, 7:00 – 9:00 p.m. in Ballroom B, on the third level of the Hynes Convention Center. Don’t miss it!

• Undergraduate Student Affinity Group Business Meeting – Want to help steer the direction of the new Undergraduate Student Affinity Group? Want to build leadership experience and add service activities to your resume? Attend the 1st USAG business meeting and consider running for a position on the board! The USAG Business Meeting is on Thursday, April 6th, from 8:10 to 9:10pm in the Vineyard Room on the 4th Floor of the Marriott.

• AAG Jobs & Careers Center and the AAG Careers in Geography Fair: Looking for career mentoring, career resources, workshops to improve your skills, or even a chance to speak with potential employers? Be sure to check out the numerous sessions and workshops at the Jobs & Careers Center as well as the employers you can speak to on site at the AAG Careers in Geography Fair. Both will be located on the Second Level of the Hynes Convention Center, in and around Rooms 203, 204, and 205.

• World Geography Bowl – Attend and cheer on fellow students competing in this annual event! The bowl takes place on Saturday, April 8, from 7:00 p.m. – 11:00 p.m. in Rooms 101-105 on the Plaza Level of the Hynes Convention Center.

• Geographers March for Science — Sign the Banner: The AAG has partnered with the March for Science. In addition to supporting the march in many ways, the AAG also will have a large banner that will be carried at the March for Science event in Washington, D.C. on Earth Day, April 22. The banner will be in Boston during the Annual Meeting at the AAG Communications Center (near registration) for any attendees who would like to sign their name on the banner to indicate their support. Undergraduates represent the future of geography; we welcome your important signatures to the banner!

In addition to the official meeting hashtag, #AAG2017, consider also using #AAGUndergrads to interact with other undergraduates in attendance and to build your peer and professional network via social media.

Undergraduate students can join the AAG for just $38 per year and receive a range of member benefits including online access to scholarly journals and publications, exclusive access to the Jobs in Geography listings, and reduced rates for Annual Meeting and other event registration. Joining the Undergraduate Student Affinity Group only costs an additional $1 per year. Check out the USAG website and USAG Twitter account for more information.  For questions, contact cluebbering [at] aag [dot] org.

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AAG Organizational Signon Letter re NOAA budget cuts

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The AAG Wilbanks Award for Transformational Research in Geography

The Tom Wilbanks family has created a new award to memorialize Tom, the AAG Wilbanks Award for Transformational Research in Geography, to honor researchers from the public, private, or academic sectors who have made extraordinary contributions to Geography and GIScience.

Wilbanks was a groundbreaking scientist at Oak Ridge National Laboratory, where he conducted research and published extensively on sustainable development, energy and environmental technology and policy, responses to global climate change, and the role of geographic scale in addressing these issues. He also helped lead the first comprehensive U.S. national energy plan and led over 70 projects in more than 40 developing countries. Wilbanks played key roles in numerous climate change studies at the National Academies of Science, including America’s Climate Choices, and co-authored and edited several books, among them The Geographical Dimensions of Terrorism.

Among his many honors, Wilbanks was named Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) and in 2007 was named a co-laureate for the Nobel Prize for Peace in recognition of his work on the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). Before joining Oak Ridge National Laboratory in 1977, he was a professor at Syracuse University and chaired the Geography Department at Oklahoma University.

To donate to or to learn more about the AAG Wilbanks Award for Transformational Research in Geography, visit here.

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Snapshot of Some Past VGSP Visits

The Visiting Geographical Scientist Program seeks to stimulate interest in geography and Gamma Theta Upsilon (GTU) by sponsoring visits by prominent geographers to colleges and universities across the country — especially in small departments that do not have the resources to bring in well-known speakers. Below are examples of the experiences and presentation materials of past visits listed in alpha order by speaker.

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New Books: March 2017

Every month the AAG compiles a list of newly-published books in geography and related areas. Some are selected for review in the AAG Review of Books.

Publishers are welcome to send new volumes to the Editor-in-Chief (Kent Mathewson, Editor-in-Chief, AAG Review of BooksDepartment of Geography and Anthropology, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, LA 70803).

Anyone interested in reviewing these or other titles should also contact the Editor-in-Chief.

PLEASE NOTE: Due to current public health policies which have prompted the closing of most offices, we are unable to access incoming books at this time. We are working on a solution during this transition and will continue our new books processing as soon as we can. In the meantime, please feel free to peruse previous books from our archived lists.

February 2020

The Saguaro Cactus : A Natural History by David Yetman, Alberto Burquez, Kevin Hultine, and Michael Sanderson (University of Arizona Press 2020)

Wild Blue Media: Thinking through Seawater by Melody Jue (Duke University Press 2020)

Intimate Geopolitics: Love, Territory, and the Future on India’s Northern Threshold by Sara Smith (Rutgers University Press 2020)

Panic City: Crime and the Fear Industries in Johannesburg by Martin J. Murray (Stanford University Press 2020)

Assembling Moral Mobilities : Cycling, Cities and the Common Good by Nicholas A Scott (University of Nebraska Press 2020)

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AAG 2017 Featured Theme – Mainstreaming Human Rights in Geography and the AAG

AAAS textual graphic containing many human rights terms

AAG Annual Meeting, Boston, April 5-9, 2017

 

Nearly all geographers are concerned about human rights, and in their personal and professional lives seek meaningful ways to act on these concerns and values. The AAG and the discipline of geography intersects with human rights in numerous ways. This special theme within the 2017 AAG Annual Meeting will explore intersections of Human Rights and Geography, and will build on the AAG’s decade-long initiatives on Mainstreaming Human Rights in Geography and the AAG.

This theme will feature 50 sessions with more than 250 presentations at the intersection of human rights and geography. Speakers from leading human rights organizations, academia, government, and international organizations will address human rights challenges around the world.

Keynote Address

An Interview with Noam Chomsky by Doug Richardson will keynote this theme at the 2017 Boston Annual Meeting.

Featured Speakers

A sampling of featured speakers includes:

  • Noam Chomsky, Institute Professor and Professor of Linguistics Emeritus, MIT
  • Mike Posner, former Assistant Secretary of State for Human Rights
  • James Hansen, Columbia University
  • Rush Holt, CEO, American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
  • Terry Rockefeller, Board of Directors, Amnesty International USA
  • Colette Pichon Battle, Executive Director, US Human Rights Network
  • Stéphane Bonamy, Deputy Head, International Committee of the Red Cross
  • Lee Schwartz, Director, Office of the Geographer and Global Issues, US State Department
  • Susannah Sirkin, Director of International Policy and Partnerships, Physicians for Human Rights
  • Jessica Wyndham, Interim Director, Scientific Responsibility, Human Rights and Law Program, AAAS
  • Priscilla Rodriguez, Associate Director for Advocacy, Disability Rights International
  • Douglas Richardson, Executive Director, American Association of Geographers
  • Beth Simmons, U-Penn Law and NAS Committee on Human Rights
  • Harvard Humanitarian Initiative (four presenters from Harvard)
  • Audrey Kobayashi, Queen’s University
  • Hilary Zainab, Research Director, Standby Task Force
  • Kathryn Hanson, Smithsonian Museum Conservation Institute
  • Sheryl Luzzadder-Beach, University  of Texas at Austin
  • Balakrishnan Rajagopal, Head, International Development Group, MIT
  • Colin Kelley, Columbia Center for Climate and Security
  • Stephen Marks, Department of Global Health and Policy, Harvard University
  • Tawanda Mutasah, Senior Director for Law and Policy, Amnesty International

Organizing Committee

Douglas Richardson, Chair (AAG), Sheryl Beach (University of Texas), Jessica Wyndham (American Association for the Advancement of Science), Audrey Kobayashi (Queen’s University)

For more information, please visit www.aag.org/annualmeeting, or contact members of the theme’s organizing committee at GeoHumanRights [at] aag [dot] org.


Session Schedule

Wednesday, April 5

8:00 am – 9:40 am

1105.   Health and human rights
Room: Room 105, Hynes, Plaza Level  (Paper Session)
ORGANIZER(S): Mainstreaming Human Rights
CHAIR(S): SARASWATI KERKETTA, Nistarini College
8:00  Rhoda Mundi, Ph.D.*, University of Abuja, Nigeria, Women’s Empowerment and Demographic and Health Outcomes: Evidence From 2013 Nigeria Demographic and Health Survey.
8:20  SUMAN SINGH, PhD*, Banaras Hindu University, Varanasi, India, The Maternity Benefit (Amendment) Bill, 2016: Is it Half full or Half Empty.
8:40  Calvin P Tribby*, Columbia University Medical Center, Infusing Vision Zero Policies with the Human Rights Perspective to Address the Traffic-related Mortality and Morbidity Epidemic.
9:00  Meghan Smith*, Salem State University, Access to Language Services in Substance Abuse Treatment Facilities in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.
9:20  SARASWATI KERKETTA*, Nistarini College, Right of Women to Maternal Health Care.

1106.   Crime, brutality, and violence
Room: Room 107, Hynes, Plaza Level  (Paper Session)
ORGANIZER(S): Mainstreaming Human Rights
CHAIR(S): Patricia De La Mata
8:00  Dylan Beatty*, University of Hawaii – Manoa, ‘Pusher na Ako’: First-hand Account of Manila following Duterte’s Election.
8:20  Morten Koch Andersen*, Danish Institute Against Torture, Filtering Information: Human Rights Documentation and that Which is Known.
8:40  Shaul Cohen*, University of Oregon, Transcending Space, Embracing Time: Geographic Imagination From Within a Prison.
9:00  Scott Warren*, Arizona State University, Human Rights, Field Work, and ASU’s Desert Aid Class on the Arizona-Mexico Border.
9:20  Patricia De La Mata*, California State University San Marcos, Worldwide Trafficking.

10:00 am – 11:40 am

1205.   Global Carceral Geographies I: Carceral Experiences (Sponsored by Political Geography Specialty Group, Ethics, Justice, and Human Rights Specialty Group, Sexuality and Space Specialty Group)
Room: Room 105, Hynes, Plaza Level  (Paper Session)
ORGANIZER(S): Austin Kocher, The Ohio State University, Department of Geography; Dominique Moran, University of Birmingham; Nick Gill, Exeter Unviesity
CHAIR(S): Dominique Moran, University of Birmingham 10:00  Anna Schliehe, Dr*, University of Cambridge, Dialogues across carceral space: comparative research and the case of penal exceptionalism.
10:20  Anaïs Tschanz*, University of Montreal, Carceral (im)mobilities and inmate experience of distance in the Canadian province of Quebec.
10:40  Nicolas Sallée*, Université de Montréal, Imprisoned rehabilitation? The carceral nature of a Quebec secure juvenile facility.
11:00  Jennifer Turner*, University of Liverpool; Dominique Moran*, University of Birmingham; Yvonne Jewkes, University of Brighton, Serving time with a sea view: escaping prison via therapeutic blue space.
Discussant(s): Dominique Moran, University of Birmingham

12:40 pm – 2:20 pm

1405.   Global Carceral Geographies II: Carceral Societies (Sponsored by Political Geography Specialty Group, Ethics, Justice, and Human Rights Specialty Group, Sexuality and Space Specialty Group)
Room: Room 105, Hynes, Plaza Level  (Paper Session)
ORGANIZER(S): Austin Kocher, The Ohio State University, Department of Geography; Dominique Moran, University of Birmingham; Nick Gill, Exeter Unviesity
CHAIR(S): Austin Kocher, The Ohio State University, Department of Geography
12:40  Luca Follis*, Lancaster University, Financializing Carceral Spaces: Probation, Parole and Speculative Capital.
1:00  OLIVIER MILHAUD*, University Paris-Sorbonne, UMR ENeC CNRS, A theoretical framework for confinement (prisons, distance, discontinuities, France).
1:20  Steve Herbert*, University of Washington, Banished Forever? Redeeming the Ostracized Life Prisoner.
1:40  Julie De Dardel*, University of Geneva, Ethics in and after the field in prison research.
Discussant(s): Austin Kocher, The Ohio State University, Department of Geography

2:40 pm – 4:20 pm

1505.   Global Carceral Geographies III: Confining the Other (Sponsored by Political Geography Specialty Group, Ethics, Justice, and Human Rights Specialty Group, Sexuality and Space Specialty Group)
Room: Room 105, Hynes, Plaza Level  (Paper Session)
ORGANIZER(S): Austin Kocher, The Ohio State University, Department of Geography; Dominique Moran, University of Birmingham; Nick Gill, Exeter Unviesity
CHAIR(S): Nick Gill, Exeter Unviesity
2:40  Lauren Martin*, Durham University, The Carceral Mobilities of Cash: Outsourcing, Digital Surveillance, and Refused Asylum-seeker Assistance in the United Kingdom.
3:00  Leigh Barrick*, University of British Columbia, Separating families to maintain family unity, and other paradoxes of U.S. deterrence policy.
3:20  Austin Kocher*, The Ohio State University, Department of Geography, The Legal Construction of Space: On the Juridical Relationship Between Immigrant Detention, Immigration Courts, and Border Enforcement in the United States.
3:40  Adam Joseph Barker*, University of Leicester, Carcerality and Indigeneity: the roots of ‘Indian territory’ in Turtle Island (North America).
Discussant(s): Nick Gill, Exeter Unviesity

4:40 pm – 6:20 pm

1605.   Global Carceral Geographies IV: Carceral Intersections (Sponsored by Political Geography Specialty Group, Ethics, Justice, and Human Rights Specialty Group, Sexuality and Space Specialty Group)
Room: Room 105, Hynes, Plaza Level  (Paper Session)
ORGANIZER(S): Austin Kocher, The Ohio State University, Department of Geography; Dominique Moran, University of Birmingham; Nick Gill, Exeter Unviesity
CHAIR(S): Steve Herbert, University of Washington
4:40  Emma Marshall*, University of Exeter, Investigating the possibilities of online activism as a challenge to carceral space.
5:00  Jesse Proudfoot*, Durham University, Scaling Addiction.
5:20  Odilka Sabrina Santiago*, Binghamton University; Odilka Sabrina Santiago, PhD Student, SUNY Binghamton University; odilka Sabrina santiago, PhD, SUNY Binghamton University, Predictive Policing and the Transformation of Carceral Space: Promotes, rather than, Prevents Violence.
5:40  Christophe Mincke*, National Institute for Forensic Science and Criminology, From confinement to monitoring. The carceral as management of the transitory.
Discussant(s): Steve Herbert, University of Washington

1606.   (De)Stigmatising Sexscapes: Politics, Policy and Performance I: Porn, Pleasure & Performance (Sponsored by Sexuality and Space Specialty Group)
Room: Room 107, Hynes, Plaza Level  (Paper Session)
ORGANIZER(S): Paul J. Maginn, University of Western Australia; Emily Cooper, University of Central Lancashire; Erin Sanders-McDonagh, Middlesex University
CHAIR(S): Paul J. Maginn, University of Western Australia
4:40  Gemma Commane, Dr*, Birmingham City University, Kinktrepreneurship and social media: debates, rights and female subjectivity..
5:05  Joanne Bowring*, Liverpool John Moores University, Stigma in the UK Adult Film Industry.
5:30  Jennifer Heineman, PhD*, University of Nebraska at Omaha, Performing the Whore, Performing the Academic.
5:55  Emily Meyer, Esq.*, University of Cincinnati, The Cam Model: Kinship, Community, and Intimacy.


Thursday, April 6

8:00 am – 9:40 am

2103.   Human Rights: Humanitarian Disaster Response and Protecting Cultural Heritage
Room: Room 103, Hynes, Plaza Level  (Panel Session)
ORGANIZER(S): John Wertman, American Association of Geographers
CHAIR(S): Lars Bromley, United Nations Institute for Training and Research
Panelists: Stephane Bonamy, ICRC; Hilary N. Ervin, Payson Center for International Development; Lars Bromley, United Nations Institute for Training and Research

2104.   Right to water and safe environments
Room: Room 104, Hynes, Plaza Level  (Paper Session)
ORGANIZER(S): Mainstreaming Human Rights
CHAIR(S): Jessica J. Goddard, University of California – Berkeley
8:00  Duncan McLaren*, Lancaster Environment Centre, Radicalizing Rights: Recognition and Climate Justice in an Engineered Anthropocene.
8:20  Heba Allah Khalil, Associate Professor*, Cairo University; Carl Philipp Schuck, Deutsche Gesellschaft fuer Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ), Environmental Justice and Geographies of Urban Exclusion: The Case of Cairo.
8:40  Catherine Corson*, Mount Holyoke College, Human Rights Based Conservation: Assembling Universal Rights at the World Conservation Congress.
9:00  Jessica J. Goddard*, University of California – Berkeley; Carolina Balazs, PhD, University of California – Davis, Water Affordability in California’s Human Right to Water.

2106.   (De)Stigmatising Sexscapes: Politics, Policy and Performance II: 2. Rights, Wrongs and Regulations (Sponsored by Sexuality and Space Specialty Group)
Room: Room 107, Hynes, Plaza Level  (Paper Session)
ORGANIZER(S): Paul J. Maginn, University of Western Australia; Emily Cooper, University of Central Lancashire; Erin Sanders-McDonagh, Middlesex University
CHAIR(S): Emily Cooper, University of Central Lancashire
8:00  Laura Graham*, Durham University, The Home Affairs Select Committee Inquiry on Prostitution: Is the time ripe for a Human Rights based approach to sex work?
8:25  Emilia Ljungberg*, Karlstad University, The smiling face of the emotional state.
8:50  Elena Shih*, Brown University; Christine Shio Lim, Brown University; Jordan Rubin-McGregor, Brown University; Imani Herring, Brown University, Building a Movement Against Sex Work in Rhode Island: Anti-Trafficking and Academic Industrial Complexes.
9:15  Billie M Lister, Doctor*, Leeds Beckett University, Time for change? : Indoor sex workers experiences of working under quasi-criminalisation in England and Wales and their ideas for legislative change.

2107.   The 2016 Elections: Analyzing the Data
Room: Room 108, Hynes, Plaza Level  (Paper Session)
ORGANIZER(S): Program Committee; John Wertman, American Association of Geographers
CHAIR(S): James Newman, Northern Illinois University
8:00  James W Newman, Ph.D. Candidate*, Northern Illinois University, Using Rank-Mobility Index to Reveal Significant Patterns in Voter Behavior in the 2016 US Presidential Election.
8:20  Robert Chlala*, University of Southern California, Going Green in 2016? Cannabis Legalization and Remaking California’s Neoliberal Geography.
8:40  Peter E Lenz*, Dstillery, Observing and Modeling Candidate Supporters Using Mobile Phone Signals During the 2016 Iowa Caucus.
9:00  Chenxiao Guo*, University of Georgia; Xiaobai Yao, University of Georgia, Associate Socioeconomic Indicators with Public Sentiments on the US Election 2016: A Case Study of Georgia Based on Geotagged Tweets.
Discussant(s): Helenmary M. Hotz, University of Massachusetts Boston

10:00 am – 11:40 am

2203.   Documenting Evidence for Human Rights Tribunals and Litigation Using Geographic Research and Tools
Room: Room 103, Hynes, Plaza Level  (Panel Session)
ORGANIZER(S): John Wertman, American Association of Geographers; Mainstreaming Human Rights
CHAIR(S): Theresa Harris, AAAS
Panelists: Theresa Harris, AAAS; Susannah Sirkin, Physicians for Human Rights; Wesley J. Reisser, George Washington University; Ryan Burns, University of Calgary

2204.   Mainstreaming Human Rights in Geomorphology and Water Resources (Sponsored by Mainstreaming Human Rights in Geography and the AAG Featured Theme, Geomorphology Specialty Group)
Room: Room 104, Hynes, Plaza Level  (Panel Session)
ORGANIZER(S): Sheryl Luzzadder-Beach, University of Texas-Austin
CHAIR(S): Sheryl Luzzadder-Beach, University of Texas-Austin
Introducer: Sheryl Luzzadder-Beach
Panelists: Mark Giordano, Georgetown University; Michael A. Urban, University of Missouri; Sheryl Luzzadder-Beach, University of Texas-Austin; Richard A. Marston, Kansas State University; Anne Chin, University of Colorado Denver

2206.   (De)Stigmatising Sexscapes: Politics, Policy and Performance III: 3. Governance, Policing and Design (Sponsored by Sexuality and Space Specialty Group)
Room: Room 107, Hynes, Plaza Level  (Paper Session)
ORGANIZER(S): Paul J. Maginn, University of Western Australia; Emily Cooper, University of Central Lancashire; Erin Sanders-McDonagh, Middlesex University
CHAIR(S): Gemma Commane, Birmingham City University
10:00  Nicole Kalms*, Monash University, Sex Shop / Pole Dance / Street Work: Heteronormative Architectures of the Neoliberal City.
10:25  Erin Sanders-McDonagh*, University of Kent, Pushing sex work to the margins: The sanitization of Red Light Districts in Amsterdam and London.
10:50  Paul J. Maginn*, University of Western Australia; Emily Cooper, University of Central Lancashire, On-street, Off-street, And Online: The Dynamic Liminalities Of Sex Work I.
11:15  Alison Better*, Kingsborough Community College, CUNY, Constructing Space and Community for Sexual and Gender Exploration at Sex Toy Boutiques

2207.   The 2016 Elections: Destabilization, Social Forces, and the Media
Room: Room 108, Hynes, Plaza Level  (Paper Session)
ORGANIZER(S): John Wertman, American Association of Geographers
CHAIR(S): Richard M. Medina, University of Utah
10:00  Richard M. Medina*, University of Utah; Emily A Nicolosi, University of Utah, Hate in the US: A Geographical Analysis of Movements and Activities.
10:20  James Andrew Sevitt*, The Graduate Center – CUNY; James Sevitt, PhD Student, The Graduate Center, CUNY, Rethinking Political Subjectivities Amidst the Ongoing Crises of Liberal Democracy.
10:40  Luca Muscarà*, Universita del Molise, Similarities and differences between Trump and Berlusconi: which lessons for their opponents?.
Discussant(s): Laxmi Ramasubramanian, Hunter College; Stephanie Pincetl, UCLA

11:50 am – 1:10 pm

2303.   Special session featuring Rush Holt, CEO of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS): “Advancing Science in the Public Arena”
Room: Room 103, Hynes, Plaza Level  (Panel Session)
ORGANIZER(S): Douglas Richardson, American Association of Geographers
CHAIR(S): Douglas Richardson, American Association of Geographers
Panelists: Rush Holt, AAAS
Discussants: David Berrigan, Antoinette WinklerPrins

1:20 pm – 3:00 pm

2403.   Integrating Geography & Geospatial Methods Into Humanitarian Response & Human Rights Documentation: Lessons from Five Years of the Signal Program on Human Security & Technology at the Harvard Humanitarian Initiative
Room: Room 103, Hynes, Plaza Level  (Panel Session)
ORGANIZER(S): Mainstreaming Human Rights
CHAIR(S): Nathaniel Raymond, Harvard Humanitarian Initiative
Panelists: Nathaniel Raymond, Harvard Humanitarian Initiative; Isaac Baker, Harvard Humanitarian Initiative; Faine Greenwood, Harvard Humanitarian Initiative

2406.   (De)Stigmatising Sexscapes: Politics, Policy and Performance IV: 4. Production, Consumption and Reflection (Sponsored by Sexuality and Space Specialty Group)
Room: Room 107, Hynes, Plaza Level  (Paper Session)
ORGANIZER(S): Paul J. Maginn, University of Western Australia; Emily Cooper, University of Central Lancashire; Erin Sanders-McDonagh, Middlesex University
CHAIR(S): Emily Cooper, University of Central Lancashire
1:20  Yo-Hsin Yang*, Negotiating/resisting stigma of sexscapes: gay men’s sex moral performances on tour.
1:40  Victor Trofimov*, European University Viadrina, From commercial sex to homonormativity: changing landscape of male street sex work in Berlin.
2:00  Katharine Parker*, Northumbria University, Public Sex Environments in Contemporary Sexscapes: A Case Study from North East England.
2:20  Nick McGlynn*, University of Brighton, Too Fat, Too Thin, Just Right?: Stigmatised Bodies in Bear Spaces.
2:40  Philip Birch*, Western Sydney University, Prostitution and Procuring Sexual Services: Why men buy sex .

2407.   Precarious Times, Precarious Politics: Whiteness, Masculinity, and Working-Class Lives
Room: Room 108, Hynes, Plaza Level  (Paper Session)
ORGANIZER(S): Jamie L. Winders, Syracuse University; Barbara Ellen Smith, Virginia Tech
CHAIR(S): Jamie L. Winders, Syracuse University
1:20  Katie Mazer*, University of Toronto, Vulnerable talent, just-in-time work: The tar sands talent pipeline.
1:40  Jamie L. Winders*, Syracuse University; Barbara Ellen Smith*, Virginia Tech, Whiteness, Masculinity, and Working-Class Lives.
2:00  Sara Dorow*, University of Alberta, The Precarity of Mobile White Masculinities in the Oil Patch.
2:20  Lise Nelson*, Penn State University, Narratives of whiteness and racially transgressive embodiments of place in the rural U.S. South.
Introducer: Barbara Ellen Smith

3:20 pm – 5:00 pm

2503.   Article 15: Understanding the Human Right to the Benefits of Science to Help Progress and Its Applications
Room: Room 103, Hynes, Plaza Level  (Panel Session)
ORGANIZER(S): Jessica Wyndham, AAAS Scientific Responsibility, Human Rights and Law Program; Mainstreaming Human Rights
CHAIR(S): Jessica Wyndham, AAAS Scientific Responsibility, Human Rights and Law Program
Panelists: Jessica Wyndham, AAAS Scientific Responsibility, Human Rights and Law Program; Patricia Carbajales-Dale, Clemson University

2506.   (De)Stigmatising Sexscapes: Politics, Policy and Performance V: 5. Mobilities, Immobilities and Boundaries (Sponsored by Sexuality and Space Specialty Group)
Room: Room 107, Hynes, Plaza Level  (Paper Session)
ORGANIZER(S): Paul J. Maginn, University of Western Australia; Emily Cooper, University of Central Lancashire; Erin Sanders-McDonagh, Middlesex University
CHAIR(S): Erin Sanders-McDonagh, Middlesex University
3:20  Rachel Wotton*, Sex workers who provide services to clients with disability..
3:45  Alison J. Lynch, J.D., M.A.*, Associate Instructor, Mental Disability Law and Policy Associates, Sexuality, Disability and the Law: Beyond the Last Frontier?.
4:10  Bella Robinson*, CoyoteRI; Elena Shih, Brown University, Policing Modern Day Slavery: Sex Work and the Carceral State in Rhode Island.
4:35  Laura Connelly, Dr*, University of Salford, Caring for and controlling the subaltern body: Politics, policy and practice within a rescue industry.

2507.   The 2016 US Elections: Reflections and Predictions from a Geographical Point of View (Sponsored by Political Geography Specialty Group)
Room: Room 108, Hynes, Plaza Level  (Panel Session)
ORGANIZER(S): John Heppen, University of Wisconsin, River Falls
CHAIR(S): John Heppen, University of Wisconsin, River Falls
Panelists: Barney Warf, University of Kansas; John Clark Archer, University of Nebraska; Fred M. Shelley, University of Oklahoma; Erin H. Fouberg, Northern State University; John Wertman, American Association of Geographers

5:20 pm – 7:00 pm

2636.   Noam Chomsky Interview – A Continuing Conversation with Geographers
Room: Ballroom B, Hynes, Third Level  (Panel Session)
ORGANIZER(S): Douglas Richardson, American Association of Geographers
CHAIR(S): Douglas Richardson, American Association of Geographers
Participants: Noam Chomsky, MIT; Douglas Richardson, American Association of Geographers

Watch the video


Friday, April 7

8:00 am – 9:40 am

3105.   Indigenous and marginalized groups
Room: Room 105, Hynes, Plaza Level  (Paper Session) ORGANIZER(S): Mainstreaming Human Rights
CHAIR(S): Hillary Beattie, University of Winnipeg
8:00  Hong Jiang, Dr.*, University Of Hawaii, China’s Persecution of Falun Gong: What Do We Know, and Why Don’t We Hear about It?.
8:20  Sahab Deen, Ph.D*, Jawaharlal Nehru University, The Scheduled Castes, who are Denotified: An Analysis of Socio-Economic Condition of Ex-Criminal in Delhi Metropolitan Area.
8:40  Andrew Curley, Ph.D.*, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, “Tó éíí béé íína”: the struggle for water in the Navajo Nation.
9:00  Hillary Beattie*, University of Manitoba; Vina Brown, North West Indian College; Ian Mauro, University of Winnipeg; Frank Brown, Heiltsuk Nation, “Pulling Together to Gather Strength”: Telling Stories of Cultural Resurgence and Resilience in Heiltsuk Territory.

3106.   Geographies of the conservative Other
Room: Room 107, Hynes, Plaza Level  (Panel Session)
ORGANIZER(S): Adam Jadhav, University of California – Berkeley
CHAIR(S): Adam Jadhav, University of California – Berkeley
Introducer: Adam Jadhav
Discussant(s): Chad Newbrough Steacy, University of Georgia
Panelists: Jeffrey Vance Martin, University of California – Berkeley; Gina K. Thornburg, Kansas State University; Annalena Di Giovanni, University of Cambridge

10:00 am – 11:40 am

3205.   Policymaking under a human rights framework
Room: Room 105, Hynes, Plaza Level  (Paper Session)
ORGANIZER(S): Mainstreaming Human Rights
CHAIR(S): Pete Fussey
10:00  Toan Ngoc Dang*, Western Sydney University, The Human Rights based approach to Poverty Reduction in Vietnam.
10:20  Jason M. Angel*, University of Waterloo, Managing Accessibility; a Case Study at the University of Waterloo.
10:40  Natallia Sianko, PhD, Clemson University; Patricia Carbajales-Dale*, Clemson University, Assessing State Action on the Right to Benefit from Scientific Progress: A geographic approach.
11:00  Pete Fussey*, University of Essex, Urban Policing, ‘Big Data’ and Human Rights.

3208.   Brexit, Trump, and the rise of regional discontent: what just happened? (Sponsored by Economic Geography Specialty Group)
Room: Room 109, Hynes, Plaza Level  (Panel Session)
ORGANIZER(S): Betsy Donald, Queen’s University
CHAIR(S): Betsy Donald, Queen’s University
Panelists: Michael Kitson; Mia Gray, University of Cambridge; Betsy Donald, Queen’s University; Linda Lobao, Ohio State University; Gregory Hooks, McMaster University; Amy Glasmeier, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

3219.   Honorary Geographer James Hansen
Room: Room 210, Hynes, Second Level  (Panel Session)
Organizer: American Association of Geographers
Moderator: Glen MacDonald, University of California – Los Angeles
Speaker: James Hansen, Columbia University

3248.   Social Media and Activism: Media and Communication Geography Session IV (Sponsored by Mainstreaming Human Rights in Geography and the AAG Featured Theme, Communication Geography Specialty Group)
Room: Beacon D, Sheraton, Third Floor  (Paper Session)
ORGANIZER(S): Emily Fekete, Oklahoma State University
CHAIR(S): Lorna Emma O’Hara, Department of Geography, Maynooth University Ireland.
10:00  Madeleine Wong*, St. Lawrence University; Rutendo Chabikwa, St. Lawrence Univesity, #FeesMustFall: Engaging youth subjectivities and social movements in South Africa.
10:20  Sara McDowell*, University of Ulster, Networked separatism in a changing Europe: Agency, activism and the social network.
10:40  Frederick Nadeau*, Institut national de la recherche scientifique, Political Engagement and Radicalization: Does Space Still Matters? Activism in a Canadian Extreme Right Mouvement.
11:00  Lorna Emma O’Hara, PhD Candidate*, Department of Geography, Maynooth University Ireland., Feminist art and activism: a study of pro-choice resistance in Ireland.

1:20 pm – 3:00 pm

3403.   Human Rights & Climate Change: A High-Level Discussion
Room: Room 103, Hynes, Plaza Level  (Panel Session)
ORGANIZER(S): Mainstreaming Human Rights; John Wertman, American Association of Geographers
CHAIR(S): John Wertman, American Association of Geographers
Panelists: Colette Pichon Battle, US Human Rights Network; Colin Kelley, International Research Institute for Climate and Society; Balakrishnan Rajagopal

3406.   Trump on Immigration Enforcement: the First 100 Days (Sponsored by Political Geography Specialty Group, Ethics, Justice, and Human Rights Specialty Group, Sexuality and Space Specialty Group)
Room: Room 107, Hynes, Plaza Level  (Panel Session)
ORGANIZER(S): Austin Kocher, The Ohio State University, Department of Geography
CHAIR(S): Austin Kocher, The Ohio State University, Department of Geography
Discussant(s): Deirdre Conlon, University of Leeds / SPU
Panelists: Patricia Ehrkamp, University of Kentucky; Jeremy Slack, University of Texas – El Paso; Austin Kocher, The Ohio State University, Department of Geography; Geoffrey Boyce, University of Arizona; Nancy Hiemstra, Stony Brook University

3468.   Geographies of Disability 1: Mapping & Accessibility (Sponsored by Rural Geography Specialty Group, Health and Medical Geography Specialty Group, Disability Specialty Group)
Room: St. Botolph, Marriott, Second Floor  (Paper Session)
ORGANIZER(S): Sandy Wong, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; Andrew Myers, University of Montana; Susanne Zimmermann-Janschitz, University of Graz
CHAIR(S): Susanne Zimmermann-Janschitz, University of Graz
1:20  Andrew Myers*, University of Montana; Lillie Greiman, University of Montana, Current Disability Patterns in Rural America.
1:40  Nathaniel Bell*, University of South Carolina, Geographical research on spinal cord injury disparities: some thoughts on the census and street-network mapping.
2:00  Martha E. Geores, Associate Professor*, University of Maryland College Park Department of Geographical Sciences, “Way-finding”: How do I get there from here?
2:20  Sandy Wong*, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Visual impairment & urban mobilities: An evaluation of time geographic techniques to understanding movement.
2:40  Aimi Hamraie*, Vanderbilt University, Mapping Access: from code compliance to intersectional disability justice.

3:20 pm – 5:00 pm

3505.   Refugees, asylum seekers, and IDPs
Room: Room 105, Hynes, Plaza Level  (Paper Session)
ORGANIZER(S): Mainstreaming Human Rights
CHAIR(S): Annette Spellerberg
3:20  Viktoriya Pantyley*, Maria Curie-Sklodowska University; Irina Melnik, Luhansk National Taras Shevchenko University (city Starobilsk), Human Capital of Child Population in the Face of Hidden War: Comparative Analysis of Eastern and Western Regions of Ukraine.
3:40  Jamon Van Den Hoek*, Oregon State University; Paulo Murillo-Sandoval, Oregon State University; Alan Devenish, Oregon State University; Megan Chellew, Oregon State University; Ryan Crumley, Oregon State University; Stephanie Ichien, Oregon State University; Tyler Harris, Oregon State University; Robert Kennedy, Oregon State University; David Wrathall, Oregon State University, The Refugee Archipelago: A satellite image time series assessment of the enviro-climatic marginality of 922 global refugee camps.
4:00  Lajos Boros*, University of Szeged, Refugees, diversity and the politics of fear in Hungary.
4:20  Jussi S. Jauhiainen*, University of Turku, Best Practices and Governance of Asylum Seeking. The Case of Finland..
4:40  Annette Spellerberg*, University of Kaiserslautern, Refugees in Germany: Spatial Patterns and Local Challenges.

3568.   Geographies of Disability 2: Social Perspectives (Sponsored by Mainstreaming Human Rights in Geography and the AAG Featured Theme, Health and Medical Geography Specialty Group, Disability Specialty Group)
Room: St. Botolph, Marriott, Second Floor  (Paper Session)
ORGANIZER(S): Sandy Wong, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; Andrew Myers, University of Montana; Susanne Zimmermann-Janschitz, University of Graz
CHAIR(S): Susanne Zimmermann-Janschitz, University of Graz
3:20  Stine Hansen*, McMaster University, Exploring the Social Geographies of Immigrants with Disabilities: an Intersectional Approach.
3:40  Sylette Henry-Buckmire*, Stony Brook University, Physical disability, personal mobility freedom and resistance.
4:00  Emma Nyman*, Umeå University, Constrained geographical reach for the mobility disabled.
4:20  Benjamin Patrick Butler*, University of Toronto, Encountering disability through airport security practices: security screening as disablement.
Discussant(s): Debanuj DasGupta, University of Connecticut

5:20 pm – 7:00 pm

3605.   Emerging geographies of Post-Apartheid South Africa (Sponsored by Mainstreaming Human Rights in Geography and the AAG Featured Theme, Africa Specialty Group)
Room: Room 105, Hynes, Plaza Level  (Paper Session)
ORGANIZER(S): Joseph Terzungwe Zume, Shippensburg University
CHAIR(S): Ryan Centner, London School of Economics
5:20  Brij Maharaj, UKZN*, School of Agriculture, Earth and Environmental Sciences, Development, Vulnerability and Displacement: The Case of the Proposed Dug-out Port in Durban, South Africa.
5:40  Michael White*, Brown University; Richard Ballard, Gauteng City-Region Observatory, South Africa; Christian Hamann, Gauteng City-Region Observatory, South Africa; Anna Nicole Kreisberg, Brown University, Changing Racial Segregation in the New South Africa.
6:00  Sagie Narsiah, Dr*, University of KwaZulu-Natal, Neoliberalism and Citizenship in Durban, South Africa.
6:20  Edward Ramsamy*, RUTGERS UNIVERSITY, Nelson Mandela: the Making of a Global Icon.
6:40  Ryan Centner*, London School of Economics, Inhabiting showcase urbanism in South Africa & Brazil: Developmental aspirations among increasing heterogeneity

3606.   Human rights education and research practice
Room: Room 107, Hynes, Plaza Level  (Paper Session)
ORGANIZER(S): Mainstreaming Human Rights
CHAIR(S): Pablo S. Bose, University of Vermont
5:20  Pablo Fuentenebro*, Global citizenship, human rights and education.
5:40  Leo L. Hwang, Ph.D.*, Greenfield Community College, Finding a Beacon: a community economies approach to fostering diversity and inclusion at a community college.
6:00  Maureen Ann Kelley*, San Jose State University, Using the Universal Declaration of Human Rights as a foundation for teaching an upper-division general education geography course.
6:20  Pablo S. Bose, Dr*, University of Vermont, Refugee Research in the Shadow of Fear

3668.   Geographies of Disability 3: Inclusive Practices (Sponsored by Mainstreaming Human Rights in Geography and the AAG Featured Theme, Health and Medical Geography Specialty Group, Disability Specialty Group)
Room: St. Botolph, Marriott, Second Floor  (Paper Session)
ORGANIZER(S): Sandy Wong, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; Andrew Myers, University of Montana; Susanne Zimmermann-Janschitz, University of Graz
CHAIR(S): Susanne Zimmermann-Janschitz, University of Graz
5:20  Emma Calgaro*, University of Sydney; Emma Calgaro, Dr, University of Sydney; Dale Dominey-Howes, Ass/Prof., University of Sydney; Leilani Craig, Craigs Consultants International (CCI); Nick Craig, Craigs Consultants International (CCI), Disability and disasters: Steps towards transformation through empowerment.
5:40  Robert Wilton*, McMaster University; Joshua Evans, University of Athabasca, “I don’t know what I would have done without this job”: Exploring workplace geographies of mental health recovery.
6:00  Anja Jørgensen*, Aalborg University, Denmark; Mia Arp Fallov, Aalborg University, The Village as a Social Laboratory.
6:20  Magdalena Ornstein-Sloan, PhD, MPH, MA*, Sarah Lawrence College, A place for respite: Family caregiving and the built environment.


Saturday, April 8

8:00 am – 9:40 am

4105.   Planning the (White) City: Neoliberal Urbanism and the Rise of the Homogenous City, Session I (Sponsored by Mainstreaming Human Rights in Geography and the AAG Featured Theme, Urban Geography Specialty Group, Historical Geography Specialty Group)
Room: Room 105, Hynes, Plaza Level  (Paper Session)
ORGANIZER(S): Aretina Rochelle Hamilton, University of Kentucky
CHAIR(S): Aretina Rochelle Hamilton, University of Kentucky
8:00  Akira Drake Rodriguez*, PennDesign, Demobilization by Demolition: State Suppression of Marginalized Political Spaces in Atlanta.
8:20  Aretina Rochelle Hamilton*, University of Kentucky, “Do Not Panic:” White Resistance to Black Spatialization in Atlanta, Georgia.
8:40  Kevin Keenan*, College of Charleston, What is Terror Violence? Understanding Terrorism Through the Charleston AME Church Massacre.
9:00  Russell L. Stockard*, California Lutheran University, Talking the (White) City in the Neoliberal World Order: Gentrification Discourse in New Orleans.
9:20  Erin Lilli*, City University of New York, Perceptions of Neighborhood Change.

4106.   Territorial Articulations and Shifting Legal Geographies: Indigenous and Native Rights in the Americas 1 (Sponsored by Mainstreaming Human Rights in Geography and the AAG Featured Theme, Cultural and Political Ecology Specialty Group, Indigenous Peoples Specialty Group)
Room: Room 107, Hynes, Plaza Level  (Paper Session)
ORGANIZER(S): Sarah Kelly-Richards, School of Geography and Development, University of Arizona; Joel E. Correia, University of Colorado, Boulder
CHAIR(S): Sarah Kelly-Richards, School of Geography and Development, University of Arizona
8:00  Lucero Radonic, PhD*, Michigan State University, Property and Life: The right to water in Indigenous struggles.
8:20  Isaac Rivera*, The University of Colorado, Vectors of Dispossession: Towards a Quantitative Political Ecology for Indigenous Self Determination in Eastern Nicaragua.
8:40  Deondre Smiles*, The Ohio State University, “…to the grave…”—Biopolitics, Governmentality and Indigenous Counter-Conduct.
9:00  Elizabeth Steyn, BA LL.B. LL.M. LL.D. Candidate, Faculty of Law*, Universite De Montreal, The Winnemem Wintu, Spiritual Warfare, and Legal Formalism, or: The Bureaucrat’s Guide to Sacred Indigenous Sites.
9:20  Kari Forbes-Boyte*, Dakota State University; Kari L Forbes-Boyte, Ph.D., Dakota State University, The Gap in Between: Boundaries and Borders in a Multi-cultural Context.

10:00 am – 11:40 am

4203.   Human Rights and Disabilities: High-Level Perspectives From the Academy and Beyond
Room: Room 103, Hynes, Plaza Level  (Panel Session)
ORGANIZER(S): John Wertman, American Association of Geographers; Mainstreaming Human Rights
CHAIR(S): Audrey L. Kobayashi, Queen’s University
Panelists: Nancy Ellen Hansen, University of Manitoba; Robert Dinerstein, American University, Washington College of Law; Priscilla Rodriguez, Disability Rights International

4205.   Planning the (White) City: Neoliberal Urbanism and the Rise of the Homogenous City, Session II (Sponsored by Urban Geography Specialty Group)
Room: Room 105, Hynes, Plaza Level  (Paper Session)
ORGANIZER(S): Aretina Rochelle Hamilton, University of Kentucky
CHAIR(S): Kaelyn D. Rodriguez, UCLA
10:00  Katera Y Moore, PhD, MES*, University of Pennsylvania, Non-Participatory Planning: Placing Marginal People in Harm’s Way.
10:20  Kaelyn D. Rodriguez, M.A.*, UCLA, Emoji Mapping in Los Angeles: Locating Memories and the Black Spatial Imaginary in Watts.
10:40  Jason Burke Murphy, PhD*, Elms College, Basic Income, Distorted Communication, and the City.
Discussant(s): Aretina Rochelle Hamilton, University of Kentucky

4206.   Territorial Articulations and Shifting Legal Geographies: Indigenous and Native Rights in the Americas 2 (Sponsored by Cultural and Political Ecology Specialty Group, Indigenous Peoples Specialty Group)
Room: Room 107, Hynes, Plaza Level  (Paper Session)
ORGANIZER(S): Sarah Kelly-Richards, School of Geography and Development, University of Arizona; Joel E. Correia, University of Colorado, Boulder
CHAIR(S): Sarah Kelly-Richards, School of Geography and Development, University of Arizona
10:00  Carwil R Bjork-James*, Vanderbilt University, Extractivism Strikes Back: The Administrative Neutralization of Indigenous Territorial Autonomy in Plurinational Bolivia.
10:20  Joel E. Correia*, University of Colorado, Boulder, Living in the gap: Dispossession, indigeneity, and the politics of the possible in Paraguay.
10:40  Sarah Kelly-Richards*, School of Geography and Development, University of Arizona, Fragmented Consultations, Territorial Recuperation: Small Hydropower, Indigenous Rights, and Environmental Institutions in Puelwillimapu Territory (Southern Chile).
11:00  Marcela Velasco*, Colorado State University, Local variation in indigenous self-government in Colombia.
Discussant(s): Tom Perreault, Syracuse University

1:20 pm – 3:00 pm

4403.   International Human Rights Priorities: Featured Perspectives
Room: Room 103, Hynes, Plaza Level  (Panel Session)
ORGANIZER(S): John Wertman, American Association of Geographers; Mainstreaming Human Rights
CHAIR(S): John Wertman, American Association of Geographers
Panelists: Michael Posner, NYU Stern Center for Business and Human Rights; Terry Rockefeller, Amnesty International USA; Beth Simmons, University of Pennsylvania; Jessica Wyndham, AAAS Scientific Responsibility, Human Rights and Law Program; Tawanda Mutasah, Amnesty International

4405.   Confronting the (White) City and White Spatial Imaginaries: A Conversation (Sponsored by Urban Geography Specialty Group)
Room: Room 105, Hynes, Plaza Level  (Panel Session)
ORGANIZER(S): Aretina Rochelle Hamilton, University of Kentucky; Annette Koh, University of Hawaii at Manoa, Urban & Regional Planning
CHAIR(S): Aretina Rochelle Hamilton, University of Kentucky
Panelists: Chad Newbrough Steacy, University of Georgia; Amy Shimshon-Santo, CREO; Aretina Rochelle Hamilton, University of Kentucky; Jason Burke Murphy, Elms College; Annette Koh, University of Hawaii at Manoa, Urban & Regional Planning

4406.   Indigenous Peoples and Climate Change (Sponsored by Human Dimensions of Global Change Specialty Group, Climate Specialty Group, Indigenous Peoples Specialty Group)
Room: Room 107, Hynes, Plaza Level  (Paper Session)
ORGANIZER(S): RDK Herman, National Museum of the American Indian
CHAIR(S): RDK Herman, National Museum of the American Indian
1:20  Pallavi V Das*, Lakehead University, Climate Change Knowledge from Below and Above: Comparison of apple farmers’ and scientists’ views of climate change in the Himalayas.
1:40  Keith Bosak*, The University of Montana; Sarah Halvorson, the University of Montana, Impacts of Climate Change and socio-economic change on indigenous people in the Indian Himalaya.
2:00  Dylan Harris*, Clark University, Mountain-Bodies, Experiential Wisdom: The Kallawaya Cosmovisíon and Climate Change Adaptation.
2:20  Daniel G. Cole, Smithsonian Institution; William Fitzhugh, National Museum of Natural History, Exhibiting the Interconnections between Inuit, Narwhals, and Climate Change.
2:40  Logan Christian*, Utah State University; Forrest Scott Schoessow, Utah State University, Cultural dimensions of climate change impacts in the subtropical Andes Mountains.

4421.   Electoral Geography: Research in Recent Elections (Sponsored by Political Geography Specialty Group, Socialist and Critical Geography Specialty Group)
Room: Room 301, Hynes, Third Level  (Paper Session)
ORGANIZER(S): John Heppen, University of Wisconsin, River Falls
CHAIR(S): John Heppen, University of Wisconsin, River Falls
1:20  Isabel Airas*, University of Durham, Affective Politics and the ‘Corbyn Phenomenon’.
1:40  John Heppen*, University of Wisconsin, River Falls, Changing places of Socialist Voting in US Presidential Elections 1908 to 2016.
2:00  Fiona M. Davidson*, University Of Arkansas, “Nasty” women vote: gender polarization and the 2016 Presidential Election.
2:20  Hannah Zucherman, California State University, Long Beach, Gender, Space and Age in the 2014 Scottish Independence Vote.
2:40  Ryan Douglas Weichelt*, University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire, Latino Vote in the 2016 United States Presidential Election.

3:20 pm – 5:00 pm

4506.   Indigenous Peoples and Climate Change II (Sponsored by Human Dimensions of Global Change Specialty Group, Climate Specialty Group, Indigenous Peoples Specialty Group)
Room: Room 107, Hynes, Plaza Level  (Paper Session)
ORGANIZER(S): RDK Herman, National Museum of the American Indian
CHAIR(S): RDK Herman, National Museum of the American Indian
3:20  Stanislav Ksenofontov*, Department of Geography, University of Zurich, Switzerland; Norman Backhaus, Prof.Dr., Department of Geography, University of Zurich, Switzerland; Gabriela Schaepman-Strub, Dr., Department of Evolutionary Biology and Earth Sciences, University of Zurich, Switzerland, “To fish or not to fish?”: vulnerability of fishing communities of Arctic Siberia to climate change and political transformations.
3:40  Lauren Stuart Withey*, University of California – Berkeley, Commons Conflicts: What experiences in Colombia’s Pacific can teach us about fights for communally-titled lands.
4:00  David Brown*, Coventry University, The Representations of Climate Justice in REDD+ policy on a Multiscalar Level.
4:20  Rishi R. Bastakoti*, University of Calgary; Conny Davidsen, University of Calgary, A Political Ecology of Forest Carbon, Livelihoods and Tenure in Nepal’s REDD+ Climate Change Strategy.
4:40  Carl Norman Meinhardt Bergmann*, Macalester College, Carbon commodity chains: Assessing the political ecology of carbon forestry and the carbon economy.

4507.   Sex and Gender in Election 2016
Room: Room 108, Hynes, Plaza Level  (Panel Session)
ORGANIZER(S): Robert M. Vanderbeck, University of Leeds; Rashad Shabazz, Arizona State University
CHAIR(S): Lawrence Knopp, University of Washington Tacoma
Panelists: Altha J. Cravey, University Of North Carolina; Joni Seager, Bentley College; Matthew G. Hannah, Universität Bayreuth; Laurie Essig, Middlebury College

4521.   Electoral Geography: Research in Recent Elections II (Sponsored by Political Geography Specialty Group)
Room: Room 301, Hynes, Third Level  (Paper Session)
ORGANIZER(S): John Heppen, University of Wisconsin, River Falls
CHAIR(S): John Heppen, University of Wisconsin, River Falls
3:20  Jason Jurjevich*, Portland State University, Who Votes for Mayor? Exploring Voter Turnout in U.S. Mayoral Elections.
3:40  Erin H. Fouberg*, Northern State University, Millennial Self-Efficacy and Presidential Candidate Support.
4:00  Robert Howard Watrel*, South Dakota State University; Fred M. Shelley, University of Oklahoma; John Clark Archer, University of Nebraska, The 2016 Presidential Election in Historical Perspective.
4:20  Levi J. Wolf*, Arizona State University, Spatial Misspecification in Electoral Modeling & Counterfactual Inference.
4:40  Jonathan Leib*, Old Dominion University, Confederate Symbols and ‘Southern’ Identities in Hampton Roads, Virginia after the 2015 Charleston Massacre.

5:20 pm – 7:00 pm

4606.   HGSG Plenary: Audrey Kobayashi – Distinguished Historical Geography Lecture (Sponsored by Historical Geography Specialty Group)
Room: Room 107, Hynes, Plaza Level  (Paper Session)
ORGANIZER(S): Kirsten Greer, Nipissing University
CHAIR(S): Kirsten Greer, Nipissing University
5:20  Audrey L. Kobayashi*, Queen’s University, Historical Geography in the Service of Social Justice.

4632.   Panel with Past AAG Presidents on Election
Room: Room 312, Hynes, Third Level  (Panel Session)
ORGANIZER(S): Douglas Richardson, American Association of Geographers
CHAIR(S): Douglas Richardson, American Association of Geographers
Panelists: Glen MacDonald, UCLA; Sarah Witham Bednarz, Texas A&M University; Alexander B. Murphy, University of Oregon; Douglas Richardson, American Association of Geographers; Derek H. Alderman, University of Tennessee; Victoria A. Lawson, University of Washington; Julie Winkler, Michigan State University


Sunday, April 9

8:00 am – 9:40 am

5106.   Geographies of Aging, Health and Health Care 1 (Sponsored by Mainstreaming Human Rights in Geography and the AAG Featured Theme, Health and Medical Geography Specialty Group)
Room: Room 107, Hynes, Plaza Level  (Paper Session)
ORGANIZER(S): Mark W. Rosenberg, Queen’s University; Jessica Finlay, University of Minnesota; Kyle Plumb, Queens University
CHAIR(S): Jessica Finlay, University of Minnesota
8:00  Alexandra Boyle*, Queen Mary University of London, Exploring the emotio-spatial dimensions of communication technology use among older adults in contemporary London.
8:20  Valorie Crooks*, Simon Fraser University; Melissa Giesbrecht, Simon Fraser University; Heather Castleden, Queen’s University; Nadine Schuurman, Simon Fraser University; Mark Skinner, Trent University; Allison Williams, McMaster University, Palliating inside the lines: The effects of borders and boundaries on palliative care in rural Canada.
8:40  Peiling Zhou*, Michigan State University; Anne K. Hughes, Michigan State University; Sue C., Grady, Michigan State University, Physical activity and chronic disease conditions among older adults in China’s small city: a longitudinal analysis.
9:00  Kyle Plumb*, Queens University, Placing Person-Centred Care.
9:20  Kelly Ann Renwick*, McGill University; Nancy Ross, Professor, McGill University; Claudia Sanmartin, PhD, Statistics Canada, Social Support as a Determinant of Premature Mortality and Hospital Utilization in Canada.

5107.   Spaces of Informality and the Governing of Slums (Sponsored by Mainstreaming Human Rights in Geography and the AAG Featured Theme, Urban Geography Specialty Group, Association of American Geographers)
Room: Room 108, Hynes, Plaza Level  (Paper Session)
ORGANIZER(S): Mona Atia, George Washington University; Zora Kovacic, Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona
CHAIR(S): Mona Atia, George Washington University
8:00  Zora Kovacic*, Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona, The exacerbation of social exclusion through slum upgrading.
8:20  Mona Atia, PhD*, George Washington University; Said Samlali, L’INAU, The Moroccan City without Slums Program: Successes and Limits of the Intervention.
8:40  Ezana Haddis Weldeghebrael*, University of Manchester, Aspiring “Developmental” State’s Spatial Strategy Towards Slum for Accumulation and Hegemonic Purpose: The Case of Addis Ababa.
9:00  Tahire Erman*, Bilkent University, Spatial Clustering of Migrants/Refugees and Slum/Squatter Renewal Projects in the Turkish Context: Multiple Vulnerabilities in Neoliberal Urban Restructuring.
9:20  Amy Richmond, PhD*, USMA West Point, How does Informality influence Household Vulnerability: A Case study of Kampala, Uganda.

10:00 am – 11:40 am

5206.   Geographies of Aging, Health and Health Care 2 (Sponsored by Mainstreaming Human Rights in Geography and the AAG Featured Theme, Health and Medical Geography Specialty Group)
Room: Room 107, Hynes, Plaza Level  (Paper Session)
ORGANIZER(S): Mark W. Rosenberg, Queen’s University; Jessica Finlay, University of Minnesota; Kyle Plumb, Queens University
CHAIR(S): Kyle Plumb, Queens University
10:00  Leon Hoffman*, Simon Fraser University; Valorie A Crooks, Simon Fraser University; Jeremy Snyder, Simon Fraser University, Purchasing Pills in Paradise: Lifestyle and retirement migrants’ perceptions of the pharmaceutical sector on Cozumel Island, Mexico.
10:20  Mengqi Yang*, Queen’s University; Mark W Rosenberg, Queen’s University, The social security system for older people in China.
10:40  Mark W. Rosenberg, Ph.D.*, Queen’s University; Lindsay Herman, M.A. Candidate, University of Saskatchewan; Kathi Wilson, Ph.D., University of Toronto; Ryan Walker, Ph.D., University of Saskatchewan, The Unheard Voices of Age-friendly Communities.
11:00  Jessica Finlay*, University of Minnesota, Socio-Physical Contexts of Aging in Place.
11:20  Nari Kim*; Nari Kim, University of Tennessee, Knpxville, Residential Space Perception of Elderly Welfare Housing Dwellers Based on Ageism.

5207.   Gender, sexual identity, and human rights
Room: Room 108, Hynes, Plaza Level  (Paper Session)
ORGANIZER(S): Mainstreaming Human Rights
CHAIR(S): Hilary N. Ervin, Payson Center for International Development
10:00  PHUNU DAS SARMA*, EDUCATION DEPARTMENT. COTTON COLLEGE. GUWAHATI. INDIA.ASSAM, Violation of Human Rights among the Women with special reference to NE region..
10:20  Heather M. Turcotte, PhD*, UMASS Dartmouth and The Feminist Wire, Legal Geographies and the Politics of Justice: Petroleum, Sexual Violence, and Transnationalisms.
10:40  William J. Payne*, York University, The Abdicating State: Violence, impunity and LGBT rights in Guerrero, Mexico.
11:00  Jakia Rajoana*, University of Hull, UK, Gender and Sustainable Rural Tourism: A study into the experiences and the roles of local women in the Sundarbans area of Bangladesh.
11:20  Hilary N. Ervin*, Payson Center for International Development, Spaces of Vulnerability: Mapping Resilience and Gendered Violence in the Context of Human Rights.

2:00 pm – 3:40 pm

5406.   Geographies of Aging, Health and Health Care 3 (Sponsored by Mainstreaming Human Rights in Geography and the AAG Featured Theme, Health and Medical Geography Specialty Group)
Room: Room 107, Hynes, Plaza Level  (Paper Session)
ORGANIZER(S): Mark W. Rosenberg, Queen’s University; Kyle Plumb, Queens University; Jessica Finlay, University of Minnesota
CHAIR(S): Kyle Plumb, Queens University
2:00  Hamish Robertson*, University of NSW; Nick Nicholas, The Demographer’s Workshop; Joanne Travaglia, PhD, University of Technology Sydney; Andrew Georgiou, PhD, Macquarie University; Andrew Hayen, PhD, University of Technology Sydney, Aging and Cognition in Australia: A Spatial Dashboard Approach.
2:20  Prince Michael Amegbor, M.Phil*, Department of Geography & PLanning, Queen’s University, Kingston, ON; Mark W Rosenberg, Ph.D, Department of Geography & Planning, Queen’s University, ACCESS AND USE OF DENTAL SERVICES IN ALBERTA, MANITOBA, AND NEWFOUNDLAND: A COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS.
2:40  JieLan Xu*, University of Toronto, Neighborhood context of aging-in-place: mapping the spatial patterns of aging in Canada.
3:00  Qiuyi Zhang, MS*, Department of Geography, University at Buffalo, Buffalo, NY; Jessica L. Gilbert, Department of Geography, University at Buffalo, Buffalo, NY; Zhu Jin, MS, PhD Candidate, Department of Geography, University at Buffalo, Buffalo, NY; Mary E. Northridge, MPH, PhD, Department of Epidemiology & Health Promotion, New York University College of Dentistry, New York; Carol Kunzel, PhD, Section of Population Oral Health, Columbia University College of Dental Medicine, New York, NY; Hua Wang, PhD, Department of Communication, University at Buffalo, Buffalo, NY; Sara S. Metcalf, PhD, Department of Geography, University at Buffalo, Buffalo, NY, Modeling the Dynamics of Oral Health Disparities in Aging Adult Populations.
3:20  Pierre-Marie CHAPON*, Efferve’sens, University of Lyon; Kévin PHALIPPON*; Guillaume PETIT, The importance of assessing the environment to determine the most suitable location for seniors’ residences so as to adjust the supply to the needs..

5407.   Land Rights and Colonialism (Sponsored by Ethics, Justice, and Human Rights Specialty Group, Indigenous Peoples Specialty Group)
Room: Room 108, Hynes, Plaza Level  (Paper Session)
ORGANIZER(S): RDK Herman, National Museum of the American Indian
CHAIR(S): Nicholas L. Padilla, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
2:00  Maira Irigaray*, University of Florida, Between Connections and Disconnections: Indigenous rights & Resistance in the Amazon Rainforest: The Munduruku People and the Endogenous Ipereg Ayu Movement Case.
2:20  Michael J. Dangerfield, FRGS*, University of Oxford, ILO Convention 169 and the private sector: Understanding the evolving ‘second-life’ of the world’s only binding convention on indigenous rights.
2:40  Susana Estela Valle Garcia*, UNAM; Enrique Pérez Campuzano, Instituto de Geografía Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Environmental policies, conservation strategies and indigenous territories in Lacandon Jungle, México.
3:00  Nicholas L. Padilla*, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Decolonizing nature and liberating Madre Tierra – persistent Southern natures.

4:00 pm – 5:40 pm

5506.   Racial Scars that Still Reflected on the Space (Sponsored by Graduate Student Affinity Group, Ethnic Geography Specialty Group)
Room: Room 107, Hynes, Plaza Level  (Paper Session)
ORGANIZER(S): Ana I. Sanchez-Rivera, University of Maryland-College Park
CHAIR(S): Ana I. Sanchez-Rivera, University of Maryland-College Park
4:00  Bradley Hinger*, University of Tennessee, Regional Narratives and Racism Redacted.
4:20  Estraven Lupino-Smith*, Concordia University, Marginalized Aesthetics: Queered Interrogations of Gentrification in Saint-Henri.
4:40  Kelly Sharron*, University of Arizona, The Implications and Enforcement of Race, Space, and Place in Ferguson, Missouri.
5:00  Orly Clerge, Ph.D.*, Assistant Professor of Sociology & Africana Studies, Memories in Black: Slavery in New York’s Forgotten Racial Geography.
5:20  Ana I. Sanchez-Rivera*, University of Maryland-College Park, Gerrymandering in Puerto Rico?: History about Loiza’s split and its outcomes.

5507.   Urban inequalities
Room: Room 108, Hynes, Plaza Level  (Paper Session)
ORGANIZER(S): Mainstreaming Human Rights
CHAIR(S): Oren Yiftachel, Ben-Gurion University
4:00  Aina Landsverk Hagen, Dr.*, Work Research Institute; Bengt Andersen, Dr.*, The Work Research Institute, Oslo and Akershus University College; Ingar Brattbakk*, Work Research Institute, Oslo and Akershus university College, Paying the price: Social bonding and geographies of spatial inequalities in Tøyen, Oslo.
4:20  Beth Nelson*, University of South Carolina, Landscape and Discourse Analysis of Historical Violence in Identity Formation: the case of France and Algerian immigrants.
4:40  Jeffrey R. Masuda*, Queen’s University; Audrey Kobayashi, Queen’s University, Inhabiting the right to the city: Lessons from the battle for the Single Room Occupancy Hotel in Vancouver, Canada.
5:00  Andy Anderson, Ph.D.*, Amherst College, Bias in New Deal Housing Maps.
5:20  Oren Yiftachel*, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Human Rights and ‘Gray Spacing’: the Impact of New Urban Regimes.

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AAG Emerging Workforce Scholars Program

This year, the AAG has launched a unique new initiative called the Emerging Workforce Scholars Program. The program allows aspirational high school and undergraduate students from underserved Boston-area communities to attend the Annual Meeting and interact with geography and geoscience professionals to learn about the work they perform and the preparation needed for careers in their field. The program builds on the AAG’s long-term commitment to enhancing diversity in geography and the geosciences and addressing equity and social justice issues.

In support of this program, Ms. Trinh Nguyen 

(pictured, right), the Director of Mayor Walsh’s Office of Workforce Development, will participate in a panel on Friday, April 7 from 1:20 – 3:00 pm entitled “Building Tomorrow’s Workforce: Leading Employers Discuss Career Pathways to Jobs in Infrastructure, Hospitality, Tech, and Sustainability,” and from 3:20 – 4:00 pm

The Honorable Ronald L. Walker, II, Massachusetts Secretary of Labor and Workforce Development (pictured, right) will be keynote speaker at the recognition ceremony for the AAG Emerging Workforce Scholars program participants. This session is entitled: “Keynote by Hon. Sec. Ronald L. Walker, Massachusetts Secretary of Labor: Massachusetts’s Workforce Investment Programs and AAG Emerging Workforce Scholars Recognition Ceremony.” Both sessions will take place in Room 203 of the Hynes Convention Center.

For more information about the Emerging Workforce Scholars Program, visit: https://www.aag.org/diversity_scholarship

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AAG to Recognize 50-Year Members: Class of 1967

The AAG congratulates and gives thanks to the Class of 1967 for their continuous membership, enduring support, and contributions to the Association. The Class of 1967 receives a memento in recognition of their loyalty to the Association. As a tangible token of appreciation, 50-year members also receive lifetime remission of annual dues and annual meeting registration fees from the AAG.

This year’s honorees are:

  • Charles Aiken
  • James Baldwin
  • Klaus Bayr
  • Joseph Bencloski
  • Ronald Briggs
  • Anne Buttimer
  • Stephen Chang
  • Michael Conzen
  • William Craig
  • Michael Cummins
  • Donald Dahmann
  • Harvey Flad
  • Colbert Held
  • Briavel Holcomb
  • Jerry Kaster
  • William Keinath, Jr
  • Victor Kelbaugh
  • Laurence Ma
  • Wayne McKim
  • John Moravek
  • Edward Muller
  • James Mulvihill
  • William Muraco
  • Paul Phillips
  • Arlene Rengert
  • George Rengert
  • Gwyn Rowley
  • Gary Shannon
  • Richard Smith
  • Noel Stirrat

The Class of 1967 will be recognized at the AAG Annual Meeting in Boston during the AAG Awards Luncheon on Sunday, April 9, 2017. Friends, family, and colleagues are invited to celebrate with the honorees. Admission, which includes a plated lunch, is only $55. Tables for parties of ten are also available. Buy tickets.

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AAG Announces Recipients of 2017 Awards

The American Association of Geographers (AAG) congratulates the individuals and groups named to receive an AAG Award. The awardees represent outstanding contributions to and accomplishments in the geographic field. The awardees will be recognized at the AAG Annual Meeting in Boston during the AAG Awards Luncheon on Sunday, April 9, 2017.

Friends, family, and colleagues are invited to celebrate with the honorees. Admission, which includes a plated lunch, is only $55. Tables for parties of ten are also available. Buy tickets.

* * *

Community College Travel Grants

  • April Shirey, Grand Rapids Community College, Grand Rapids, MI

AAG Darrel Hess Community College Geography Scholarships

  • Amy Kennedy, transferring from Sinclair Community College in Dayton, Ohio to the Ohio State University

Marble-Boyle Undergraduate Achievement Award in Geographic Science

  • Coty Welch, University of North Alabama

AAG Dissertation Research Grants

  • Mia Bennett, University of California Los Angeles
  • Eric Nost, University of Wisconsin-Madison
  • Yoo-Min Park, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
  • Brian Williams, University of Georgia
  • Sheridan Wright Kennedy, Rice University
  • Qunshan Zhao, Arizona State University

AAG Research Grants

  • Sarah Blue, Texas State University
  • Shouraseni Roy, University of Miami
  • Qiusheng Wu, State University of New York at Binghamton

J. Warren Nystrom Award

 Mel Marcus Fund for Physical Geography

  • Dr. Sally Horn, University of Tennessee

*** AAG Book Awards *** 

Humboldt Book Award for Enduring Scholarship in Geography

  • Geoffrey Martin, American Geography and Geographers, Oxford University Press, 2015 

The John Brinckerhoff Jackson Prize 

  • Lisa Benton-Short, The National Mall: No Ordinary Public Space, University of Toronto Press, 2016

The AAG Globe Book Award for Public Understanding of Geography\

  • Niem Nguyen, A Curriculum of Fear, University of Minnesota Press, 2016

The AAG Meridian Book Award for Outstanding Scholarly Work in Geography

  • Eric Sheppard, Limits to Globalization: The Disruptive Geographies of Capitalist Development, Oxford University Press, 2016

* * *

Program Excellence Award

  • The Department of Geography and the Environment, University of North Texas
  • Honorable Mention: The Geography Department, George Washington University

 Susan Hardwick Excellence in Mentoring Award

  • Beverly Mullings, Queen’s University

Glenda Laws Award

  • Sarah Hunt, University of British Columbia

The AAG Harold M. Rose Award for Anti-Racism Research and Practice

  • Melissa Wright, Pennsylvania State University

AAG Enhancing Diversity

  • Leela Viswanathan, Queen’s University

AAG Harm de Blij Award for Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching

  • Ronald Kalafsky,  University of Tennessee

 E. Willard and Ruby S. Miller Award

  • Hui Lin, Chinese University of Hong Kong

 The AAG Stanley Brunn Award for Creativity in Geography

  • David Harvey, City University of New York 

 AAG Honorary Geographer

  • James Hansen, Columbia University 

Atlas Award

  • Noam Chomsky, Massachusetts Institute of Technology 

 AAG Presidential Achievement Award

  • Roger Downs, Pennsylvania State University

*** AAG Honors ***

Distinguished Teaching Honors

  •  Michael Pretes, University of North Alabama

Ron F. Abler Distinguished Service Honors

  •  Julie Winkler, Michigan State University
  • Kent Mathewson

Distinguished Scholarship Honors

  • Patrick Bartlein, University of Oregon
  • Michael Storper, University of California, Los Angeles

Lifetime Achievement Honors

  • Ruth Fincher, University of Melbourne
  • David Robinson, Rutgers University
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Newsletter – March 2017

PRESIDENT’S COLUMN

Telling Our Stories, Speaking Out and Being Heard as Geographers

By Glen M. MacDonald

Glen M. MacDonald

Perhaps now more than ever geographers need to tell their stories, speak out and make their voices heard. In a world that seems increasingly divisive politically and socially, and where the fact-based discourse and decision-making we value is under threat, there is much that we find of concern and much with which we feel we should publically engage. In this column I share my thoughts on three aspects of communicating as geographers with the public, policymakers and each other.

Continue Reading.

Recent columns from the President


FEATURES

NAACP Endorses AAG Letter Opposing Restrictions on Geospatial and Racial Disparities Data

The NAACP and 26 other prominent national organizations signed on to a letter written by the AAG expressing concerns about proposed bills (Senate Bill 103 and House Bill 482) that could impose restrictions on the use of and access to geospatial data related to racial disparities. Read more about AAG policy action.

Continue reading.

 


AAG Partners with the March for Science

The American Association of Geographers (AAG) is pleased to announce that we are formally partnering with and affirming our support for the March for Science, a multi-location event that will be held in Washington, D.C., across the U.S., and internationally on Earth Day, April 22, 2017. As a nonprofit scientific, research, and educational society with a current membership of over 12,000 individuals from across the nation and around the world, the AAG is proud to stand with many other organizations that share a belief that the benefits of science are a human right. Our members work in the public, private, and academic sectors to advance the theory, methods, and practice of geography, and share a nonpartisan belief that science should be well funded and that political leaders should enact evidence-based policies for the common good.

Continue reading.



ANNUAL MEETING

Featured Theme: Mainstreaming Human Rights in Geography and the AAG

Mainstreaming-Human-Rights-courtesy-AAAS-272x300Nearly all geographers are concerned about human rights, and in their personal and professional lives seek meaningful ways to act on these concerns and values. The AAG and the discipline of geography intersects with human rights in numerous ways. This special theme within the 2017 AAG Annual Meeting will explore intersections of Human Rights and Geography, and will build on the AAG’s decade-long initiatives on Mainstreaming Human Rights in Geography and the AAG. An Interview with Noam Chomsky by Doug Richardson will keynote this theme at the 2017 Boston Annual Meeting.

This theme will feature 50 sessions with more than 250 presentations at the intersection of human rights and geography. Speakers from leading human rights organizations, academia, government, and international organizations will address human rights challenges around the world.

Learn more.

Featured Theme: Uncertainty and Context in Geography and GIScienceKernelActivitySpace

Uncertainty and context pose fundamental challenges in geographic research and GIScience. Geospatial data are imbued with error (e.g., measurement and sampling error), and understanding of the effects of contextual influences on human behavior and experience are often obfuscated by various types of uncertainty (e.g., contextual uncertainties, algorithmic uncertainties, and uncertainty arising from different spatial scales and zonal schemes). Identifying the “true causally relevant” spatial and temporal contexts that influence people’s behavior and experience is thus also challenging, since people move around in their daily lives and over their life courses and experience the influences of many different contexts. To generate reliable geographic knowledge, these uncertainties and contextual issues will be addressed within the special theme, Uncertainty and Context in Geography and GIScience: Advances in Theory, Methods, and Practice, during the 2017 AAG Annual Meeting in Boston.

Learn more.

Featured Theme: Geographies of Bread and Water in the 21st Century

Burgeoning global population along with increasing appetite for high-protein or resource demanding food choices may double demands on world agriculture by 2050. At the same time groundwater depletion and climate change are negatively impacting the availability of sufficient water to meet agricultural and domestic freshwater demands in many regions. Compounding these challenges are socioeconomic forces, including armed conflicts and state collapse that negatively affect agricultural productivity, food transference and water resources. The challenges to food and water security over the 21st century represent an increasing and potentially existential threat to global society. These issues are fundamentally geographical in nature and form a central research and educational focus of geography and the AAG special theme.

Learn more.

Attend Special Sessions on the 2016 U.S. Elections: Implications for Geography and Beyond

US-Election-graphicThe 2016 elections in the United States may impact geography and our nation in the years ahead in many ways. During the AAG Annual Meeting in Boston, we will hold a series of late-breaking sessions on the US election. The keynote session organized by AAG President Glen MacDonald and AAG past presidents is titled, “The 2016 U.S. Elections: Implications for Geography and Beyond,” addressing what the results may mean for geography, the nation, and our planet.

Learn more.

Jobs & Careers Center

The Jobs & Careers Center provides a central location for jobseekers, students, and professionals to interact with one another and to learn more about careers and professional development for geographers. No additional cost or registration is required for conference participants to visit the Jobs & Careers Center. The Jobs & Careers Center will be located in Rooms 203, 204 & 205 of the Hynes Convention Center, Second Level.

Learn more

Sign Up for One of the Many AAG 2017 Field Trips, Workshops and Excursions

Explore the rich physical and cultural geography of Boston, Mass., and the New England region through informative field trips led by geographers or other experts. Field trips and excursions are also an excellent way to meet and exchange ideas with colleagues and friends. Also, expand your knowledge base and sign up for a workshop within your area of expertise.

Learn more.

Transformative Research in Geography Education

A Special Track of Sessions for the 2017 AAG Annual Meeting

The National Center for Research in Geography Education (NCRGE) is a NSF-funded research coordination network headquartered at the AAG and Texas State University. For the 2017 AAG Annual Meeting in Boston, NCRGE is sponsoring organized sessions on the topic of Transformative Research in Geography Education. This is the first of a planned annual series of activities at the AAG Annual Meeting to raise the visibility of research in geography education, grow the NCRGE research coordination network, and provide productive spaces for discussion about geography education research and what makes research in the field potentially transformative. Full session descriptions are available in the AAG Annual Meeting Program.

Learn more.

AAG Snapshots: Learn About the Many Programs, Projects, and Resources the AAG Has to Offer

snapshot aagThere is much more the AAG than its annual meeting! Check out our new AAG Snapshots series at the 2017 Annual Meeting in Boston to learn about the many resources and opportunities available to you through the AAG. Throughout the week, AAG staff will be giving brief (5-10 minute) talks on different aspects of the projects, programs, and resources of the association, with website demonstrations showing how to access more information online. Topics range from making the most of your student membership to AAG’s efforts regarding public policy. We encourage everyone to attend these casual presentations and interact with AAG staff, asking your questions and learning more about the association and membership.

Learn more.

On-Site Childcare Available in BostonACCENT_logo

Register for Camp AAG by March 31

For the third consecutive year, the AAG is pleased to announce that it is continuing full-time, professionally managed and staffed on-site childcare services for the 2017 Annual Meeting at the Boston Sheraton Hotel. Childcare services will be provided by Accent on Children’s Arrangements, Inc., which will design and run a children’s program called Camp AAG from April 5-9.

Learn more.

Carry the AAG 2017 Annual Meeting Program in Your Pocket

smartphone tablet app aagGet the most from your AAG 2017 Boston experience with the mobile app. Enjoy an interactive experience on your Apple, Android, BlackBerry and other mobile devices during the annual meeting. If you’re a laptop user or have a Windows phone, there’s also a Web version for your devices.

Learn More.

Celebrate the International Encyclopedia of Geography in Boston

he International EncyclopediaJoin us in celebrating the official launch of the International Encyclopedia of Geography: People, the Earth, Environment, and Technologies during an AAG International Reception in Boston! This reception is an opportunity to see old friends and meet colleagues at the outset of the AAG Annual Meeting. There will be food, drinks, music, and interaction with IEG authors and editors. All attendees are invited to attend.

Learn More.

Boston: Geography in a Sanctuary City

Thousands of geographers will convene in Boston from April 5-9 to discuss geographic research, education, and innovation, and form new collaborations with like- and differently-minded scholars, researchers, and practitioners. They will strive to interpret, understand, and respond to the current political climates using their expertise in and perspectives of geography and its many diverse sub-disciplines.

Learn more.

Ideas for the Culture Enthusiast in Boston

dance dancer med_3465645991_0bc18d4afe_o-290x290Boston’s cultural scene is vibrant in all seasons. From museums and performing arts to interactive festivals and outdoor concerts, Boston is abuzz with activities for cultural enthusiasts. If you love the classics, ensembles such as Handel & Haydn Society and the Boston Symphony Orchestra are reason enough to visit Boston. If you prefer a lighter, contemporary flair then the Boston Pops are your orchestra of choice.  Boston’s heralded conservatories, including Boston Conservatory, New England Conservatory, and Berklee College of Music, also performance concerts every week throughout the year.

Learn more.

Family-Friendly Boston

Family fun in Boston is around every corner.  From the waterfront to the Fens, and across the river too, Boston is full of family-oriented attractions.  We make history fun with tours of the Freedom Trail and interactive exhibits at the Boston Tea Party Ships & Museum and the USS Constitution Museum.  Don’t worry about those little feet getting fatigued because everything in Boston is nearby.  If you do need a rest hop aboard a Trolley Tour or Boston Duck Tour.

Learn more.

 


ASSOCIATION NEWS

Call for Nominations – AAG Honors

Please consider nominating outstanding colleagues for the AAG Honors, the highest awards offered by the AAG! AAG Honors are offered annually to recognize outstanding accomplishments by members in research and scholarship, teaching, education, service to the discipline, public service outside academe, and for lifetime achievement. Individual AAG members, specialty groups, affinity groups, departments, and other interested parties are encouraged to nominate outstanding colleagues by June 30. Currently, honors are awarded in several categories, including: Distinguished Teaching Honors; Gilbert F. White Distinguished Public Service Honors; Ronald F. Abler Distinguished Service Honors; Gilbert Grosvenor Honors for Geographic Education; Distinguished Scholarship Honors; and Lifetime Achievement Honors. AAG Honors are selected annually by the AAG Honors Committee from a collection of nomination submissions.

Learn more.

The AAG Fellows Program

The AAG is honored to announce it has launched AAG Fellows, a new program to recognize geographers who have made significant contributions to advancing geography. In addition to honoring geographers, AAG Fellows will serve the AAG as an august body to address key AAG initiatives including creating and contributing to AAG initiatives; advising on AAG strategic directions and grand challenges; and mentoring early and mid-career faculty. The deadline for nominations is June 30.

Learn more.

AAG Announces 2017 Election Results

The AAG Tellers Committee has reported the results of the 2017 AAG Election. Those elected to office are as follows:

  • President:  Derek H. Alderman, University of Tennessee.
  • Vice President: Sheryl Luzzadder-Beach, University of Texas-Austin.
  • National Councilors: Lorraine Dowler, Pennsylvania State University; Jamie Winders, Syracuse University.
  • Nominating Committee: Perry Carter, Texas Tech University; Jennifer Clark, Georgia Institute of Technology; Shannon O’Lear, University of Kansas.
  • Honors Committee A: Wendy Jepson, Texas A&M University. Honors Committee B: Lisa DeChano-Cook, Western Michigan University; Rebecca Lave, Indiana University.
  • Constitutional changes to add a student member to Council: Approved

Learn more.

Join the #AAGChat on the Release of the International Encyclopedia of Geography, Mar. 16, 2017

Mark your calendars and be sure to join us for an #AAGChat on the release of the International Encyclopedia of Geography (IEG). The chat will feature Richard A. Marston, IEG General Editor – Physical Geography and former AAG President, as well as J. Marshall Shepherd, IEG Section Editor – Climate, as well as Jennifer Cassidento, AAG Publications Director. The chat will occur on Thursday, March 16, 2017, from 12-1 p.m. EST. To participate in the chat, please use the hashtag, #AAGChat. Make sure to follow us on Twitter by searching for our handle, @TheAAG!

Also, be sure to visit our updated social media page to view our previous #AAGChat on careers in geography and learn more about our social media channels and events.

Learn more.

 


RESOURCES & OPPORTUNITIES

Request for Proposals: Transformative Research in Geography Education

The National Center for Research in Geography Education (NCRGE) invites proposals to develop new collaborative and interdisciplinary research networks addressing major questions and challenges in geography education. Through this program, NCRGE aspires to strengthen geography education research processes and promote the growth of sustainable, and potentially transformative, lines of research.

Learn more.

Call for Nominations: GeoCUR Undergraduate Research Mentor Award

cur-logo-300x175The Geosciences Division of the Council on Undergraduate Research (GeoCUR) is now accepting nominations for its annual award that highlights the importance of mentoring undergraduate research activities. The award annually recognizes an individual who serves as a role model for productive and transformative student-faculty mentoring relationships and for maintaining a sustained and innovative approach to the enterprise of undergraduate research.

Learn more.

 


IN MEMORIAM

Dr. Thomas J. Wilbanks

The AAG Wilbanks Award for Transformational Research in Geography has been established in memory of the late Dr. Thomas Wilbanks, a former AAG President and long-standing AAG member. The Wilbanks family has created this new award to honor researchers who have made significant contributions to Geography and GIScience. The family asks that donations be made to the AAG Wilbanks Award for Transformational Research in Geography at this link or by contacting Candida Mannozzi at cmannozzi [at] aag [dot] org or 202-234-1450.

Learn more.

 Samuel Stephen Aryeetey Attoh

Samuel Stephen Nii Kojo Armah Aryeetey-AttohSamuel Stephen Nii Kojo Armah Aryeetey-Attoh was born June 26, 1956, in Accra, Ghana. He was the last born and only son to the late Samuel A Attoh and Cecilia Taiwo Attoh. Samuel received his BA with Honors from the University of Ghana, his Masters from Carleton University in Ottawa, Canada, and his Ph.D. from Boston University, Massachusetts. Dr. Attoh began his academic career at the University of Toledo, where he was a Geography Professor from 1987 to 2005. During this time, he also served as Chairman of Geography and Planning department from 1996 to 2003. He served as a Fellow of the American Council on Education and Administrative Placement Intern Mentor at Carnegie Mellon University, Pennsylvania, from 2003-2004.

Learn more.
 


PUBLICATIONS

Pre-order ‘The International Encyclopedia of Geography’

he International EncyclopediaThe AAG and an international team of distinguished editors and authors are in the final stages of preparing a new major reference work for Geography: The International Encyclopedia of Geography: People, the Earth, Environment, and Technology.

This 15-volume work, published by Wiley both in hard copy and online, will be an invaluable resource for libraries, geographers, GIScientists, students and academic departments around the globe. Updated annually, this Encyclopedia will be the authoritative reference work in the field of geography for decades to come.

Learn more.

May 2017 Issue of ‘The Professional Geographer’ Now Available

The Professional Geographer Cover FlatThe AAG is pleased to announce that Volume 69, Issue 2 (May 2017) of The Professional Geographer is now available. The focus of The Professional Geographer is on short articles in academic or applied geography, emphasizing empirical studies and methodologies. These features may range in content and approach from rigorously analytic to broadly philosophical or prescriptive. The journal provides a forum for new ideas and alternative viewpoints. Each issue, the Editor chooses one article to make freely available. In this issue you can read The Price of Journals in Geography by Oliver T. Coomes, Tim R. Moore, and Sébastien Breau for free for the next three months.

Learn more.

April 2017 Issue of the ‘African Geographical Review’ Now Available

The AAG is pleased to announce that Volume 36, Issue 1 (April 2017) of the African Geographical Review is now available. The African Geographical Review is the journal of the Africa Specialty Group of the American Association of Geographers. It provides a medium for the publication of geographical material relating to Africa, seeks to enhance the standing of African regional geography, and to promote a better representation of African scholarship. Articles cover all sub-fields of geography, and can be theoretical, empirical or applied in nature.

Learn more.

New Books in Geography — February 2017

Every month the AAG compiles a list of newly-published books in geography and related fields. Some are selected for review in the AAG Review of Books. Anyone interested in reviewing these or other titles should contact the Editor-in-Chief, Kent Mathewson. Check out the books received from publishers in the last month.

Learn more.

Annals Special Issue on Mountains

Every year since 2009 our flagship journal, the Annals of the American Association of Geographers, has published a special issue that highlights geographic research around a significant global theme. The ninth special issue of the Annals, published in March 2017, brings together 27 articles on the topic of Mountains, edited by Mark A. Fonstad. Over a two-year period, papers were sought from a wide spectrum of researchers from different parts of the world who address physical, political, theoretical, social, empirical, environmental, methodological, and economic issues focused on the geography of mountains and their inhabitants.

Learn more.


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IN THE NEWS

Popular stories from the AAG SmartBrief

 

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Submit News to the AAG Newsletter. To share your news, submit announcements to newsletter [at] aag [dot] org.

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