Noam Chomsky To Receive AAG Atlas Award in Boston

Chomsky

The American Association of Geographers has selected Noam Chomsky as the recipient of its 2017 AAG Atlas Award, the association’s highest honor.

The AAG Atlas Award is designed to recognize and celebrate outstanding, internationally-recognized leaders who advance world understanding in exceptional ways. The image of Atlas bearing the weight of the world on his shoulders is a powerful metaphor for this award program, as our nominees are those who have taken the weight of the world on their shoulders and moved it forward, whether in science, politics, scholarship, or the arts. Primatologist Jane Goodall, international human rights and political leader Mary Robinson, and civil rights icon Julian Bond have been the recipients of the first three AAG Atlas Awards.

One of the world’s leading public intellectuals, Noam Chomsky has written and lectured widely on linguistics, philosophy, science, history, contemporary issues, international affairs, and US foreign policy. His work on the nature of human language and communication has profoundly transformed the field of linguistics, and greatly influenced science and philosophy more broadly. “In terms of the power, range, novelty and influence of his thought, Noam Chomsky is arguably the most important intellectual alive today, “ wrote Paul Robinson in the New York Times Book Review.

Chomsky’s wide-ranging intellect and impassioned work have long inspired geographers. And his highly-regarded contributions on contemporary topics concerning globalization and the intersections between geography, economics and politics are of great interest to AAG members. Noam Chomsky is Institute Professor and Professor of Linguistics emeritus at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

A Continuing Conversation with Noam Chomsky

Noam Chomsky will engage in a conversational interview with AAG Executive Director Doug Richardson, as he has several times previously, at this year’s AAG Annual Meeting in Boston. The audience will have an opportunity to ask questions following the interview.

This special interview with Chomsky will also serve as the keynote session to kick off Mainstreaming Human Rights in Geography and the AAG, one of three main Themes of the 2017 AAG Annual Meeting. Learn more.

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New Books: September 2016

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.

September 2016

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Newsletter – September 2016

PRESIDENT’S COLUMN

The World of the City

By Glen M. MacDonald

Glen M. MacDonaldThose of us alive today are witnessing one of the most profound events in all of human history — and it is an event, which is fundamentally geographic in nature. The transformation we are experiencing is the concentration of the majority of the world’s population into urban areas.

Although much has been made of the United Nations report that declared as of 2008 half the world’s population live in urban areas, this trend has been a long-term feature of the 20th and 21st centuries. In 1900 only about 10 percent to 15 percent of the world’s population lived in urban areas.

The trend towards greater urbanization accelerated from the 1950s and shows no indication of stopping. The United Nations estimates that by 2050 some 70 percent of the world population will live in urban areas. In terms of absolute numbers that means in just 34 years there will be some 6.4 billion city dwellers.

Continue Reading.

Recent columns from the President


FEATURE

AAG Offers Suite of New Resources for Students and Job Seekers‎

Students looking for information about undergraduate and graduate degree programs, as well as currently available graduate assistantships, internships, and postdoc positions in geography now have a suite of resources available from the AAG.

AAG Guide to Geography Programs in the Americas – Our popular guide to undergraduate and graduate programs in all areas of geography has been enhanced with a new interactive map. Easy-to-use search tools allow students explore and discover geography programs by degree type, region, and program specialization.

AAG Student and Postdoc Opportunities Website – This site features a variety of graduate assistantships, internships, and postdoctoral researcher positions in the discipline. Academic departments may post their student and postdoc opportunities on the site at no charge.

AAG Jobs in Geography Center – Job seekers can begin their search on this site, which offers the latest geography-related job openings in the academic, public, private, and nonprofit sectors, along with a wide array of practical resources that can assist students with career planning and the job hunt.

For more information, contact Mark Revell at mrevell [at] aag [dot] org.



ANNUAL MEETING

AAG To Feature Three Themes at Annual Meeting in Boston

Each year, the AAG identifies a few themes for its Annual Meeting to help focus discussion and provide a fresh and engaging structure to the conference program. Current themes include:

Please see the links above for more information about how to get involved with these themes.

Attendees are also invited to develop sessions relevant to the meeting’s location or influenced by political and intellectual trends within the discipline. As always, any topic relevant to geography is welcome at the AAG annual meeting. For more information, contact Oscar Larson, AAG conference director, at meeting [at] aag [dot] org.

In addition to the these three major themes, the AAG Annual Meeting will also feature 6,000 presentations, posters, and workshops by leading scholars, researchers, and educators.

Learn More.

Call for Participation: Geography Career Events

The AAG seeks panelists, mentors, and workshop leaders for career and professional development events for its annual meeting, April 5–9, 2017, in Boston. A diverse group of individuals representing a broad range of employment sectors, organizations, academic and professional backgrounds, and racial/ethnic/gender perspectives are encouraged to apply. Email careers [at] aag [dot] org, specifying topic(s) and activity(s) of interest, and attach a current C.V. or resume. For best consideration, please submit your information by November 17, 2016.

Learn more.

AAG To Offer On-site Childcare During 2017 Annual Meeting

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 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 April 5-9, 2017.

Learn more.

Daydreams and Nightmares in the Northern Forest: A Quarter Century of Change‎

Source: LL Bean company, reproduced by permission.
Source: LL Bean company, reproduced by permission.

The Northern Forest is a term used by forest activists, policy wonks and some geographers to describe the forested regions of upstate New York, Vermont, New Hampshire and Maine. This is a region of scattered population, glaciated hills and valleys, many lakes and rivers, and several substantial mountain ranges (Irland, 1999; 2011). In its fall displays of color, the red and yellow maples and birches are studded by dark green pines and spruce.

It is virtually the last redoubt of native brook trout populations; in a few coastal Maine streams tiny surviving runs of Atlantic salmon cling to life. This region was accustomed to long-standing private ownership by paper companies, well-established timber families, and Kingdom Owners– descendants of New York wealth from the 1890’s, with their lakes and “Adirondack Camps.”

The region has an aura of remoteness and wilderness character, regularly burnished by writers and artists since Thoreau’s visits in the 1840’s and the glowing paintings of Hudson River School artists. Into countless households each year, the mail order catalogs of the L.L. Bean Company arrive, with covers displaying appealing images of wild solitude. They become the suburbanites’ mental picture of the Northwoods.

Visitors were often stunned, then, to drive into the woods and see logging trucks, recent clearcuts, and for sale signs for wildland lots. Many wanted something done about it.

Continue Reading.


ASSOCIATION NEWS

Help Make an AP GIS&T Course a Reality

The AAG has proposed a new Advanced Placement course in Geographic Information Science and Technology (AP GIS&T) designed to introduce high school students to the fundamentals of geographic information science and applications of geospatial technologies for spatial analysis and problem solving.

For AP GIS&T to become a reality, the AAG needs 250 U.S. high schools to attest to their interest and capacity to offer the course. Similarly, 100 colleges and universities need to declare their willingness to offer credit to students who demonstrate a proficiency on the AP GIS&T exam.

Learn More.

AAG Launches New Undergraduate Student Affinity Group

AAG Undergraduate Student Affinity Group flierThe American Association of Geographers will launch a new affinity group specifically for undergraduate students. The Undergraduate Student Affinity Group (USAG) will be an international community of students studying geography, offering opportunities to network and socialize, get advice on graduate study and careers, and take part in academic events.

Undergraduate students can join the AAG for just $38 and receive full membership benefits including access to scholarly journals and publications, exclusive access to the Jobs in Geography listings, participation in the knowledge environments, and reduced rates for Annual Meeting and other event registration. They can join USAG for an additional $1.

Learn More.

New Council Award Recognizing Outstanding Graduate Student Papers at Regional Meeting

Becoming more involved in the AAG facilitates strengthening professional networks, volunteering, taking part in scholarly activities, advancing academic studies, etc. Graduate students can register to attend their fall regional division meeting and submit their paper at that time to be eligible to win the Council Award for Outstanding Graduate Student Paper at a Regional Meeting.

Each awardee will receive $1,000 in funding for use towards the awardee’s registration and travel costs to the AAG Annual Meeting.

Learn More.

AAG Welcomes Julio Arguello, Jr as Social Media and Website Content ManagerJulio Arguello, Jr.

The AAG is pleased to welcome Julio Arguello, Jr. as the Social Media and Website Content Manager. He has more than 15 years of digital communications, IT, membership and publications management experience in the nonprofit sector.

Julio will collaborate with AAG’s communications group to oversee AAG’s engagement across its social media communities, including Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn and YouTube. He will monitor media channels, post information, interact with users, and curate and write web content. He will also contribute to organizing project-related campaigns.

Learn More.

Nominate Deserving Colleagues for Three AAG Awards

Deadlines for nominations for three AAG awards are fast approaching this month. Don’t miss out on sending in a recommendation for a worthy colleague. The deadline is September 15.

Learn More.


RESOURCES & OPPORTUNITIES

Visiting Geographical Scientist Program Accepting Applications‎

The Visiting Geographical Scientist program (VGSP) is accepting applications for the 2016-17 academic year. VGSP sponsors visits by prominent geographers to small departments or institutions that do not have the resources to bring in well-known speakers.

The purpose of this program is to stimulate interest in geography and is targeted for students, faculty members and administrative officers. Participating institutions select and make arrangements with the visiting geographer.

Learn More. 

GISCI Announces 2016 Fall Exam Test Period

The 2016 next testing window for the GISCI Geospatial Core Technical Knowledge Exam® as a part of the GISP Certification has been scheduled for December 3-10, 2016, and will be administered by PSI Online through their worldwide testing facilities in a computer based testing (CBT) format.

The Exam application form and testing center locations are now available on the GISCI web site, and an Exam Application portal has been developed and is available for direct Exam application.

Learn More.

National Humanities Center 2017-2018 Call for Fellowship Applications‎

The National Humanities Center will offer up to 40 residential fellowships for advanced study in the humanities for the period September 2017 through May 2018. Applicants must have a doctorate or equivalent scholarly credentials. Mid-career scholars as well as senior scholars are encouraged to apply.

Applicants submit an application form, a curriculum vitae, a 1000-word project proposal, and three letters of recommendation. Applications and letters of recommendation must be submitted online by October 18, 2016.

Learn More.


PUBLICATIONS

Pre-order ‘The International Encyclopedia of Geography’

The International Encyclopedia of GeographyThe 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.

AAG Releases New Edition of Guide to Geography Programs

The AAG Guide to Geography Programs in the Americas, or The Guide, includes detailed information on undergraduate and graduate geography programs in the United States, Canada, and Latin America, including degree requirements, curricula, faculty qualifications, program specialties, financial assistance, and degrees completed.

The 2015-2016 edition of The Guide is now available as a free PDF document. The AAG has also published an interactive, companion map where users can search for programs by location, degree type, field of interest, and regional focus.

Learn More.

‘AAG Review of Books’ Launches Database to Commemorate New Milestone‎

Since launching in 2013, The AAG Review of Books has published more than 250 book reviews, marking a new milestone for the journal. To celebrate this landmark, and to enable easier exploration of the vast collection of reviews, the AAG has launched a new searchable database.

Readers can now search the full list of all books reviewed in the journal by title, author, reviewer, theme and other categories. They can then follow a direct link to the review. More reviews will be added to the database as each new issue of the journal is published.

Learn More.

Environmental Sciences Section Editor Sought for ‘Annals of the AAG’‎

The AAG seeks applications and nominations for the Environmental Sciences section editor for the Annals of the American Association of Geographers. The new section editor will be appointed for a four-year editorial term that will commence on January 1, 2017.

The appointment will be made by fall 2016. A letter of application that addresses both qualifications and a vision for the Environmental Sciences section should be accompanied by a complete curriculum vitae. Nominations and applications should be submitted by Friday, October 7, 2016.

Learn More.


OF NOTE

Geoffrey Martin Receives Humboldt Book Award for Enduring Scholarship in Geography‎

The AAG Review of Books (AAGRB) has selected Professor Geoffrey Martin’s monumental book, American Geography and Geographers, as the inaugural recipient of the Humboldt Book Award for Enduring Scholarship in Geography.

The award was selected from all of the books reviewed during the first four years of The AAG Review of Books. The selection committee chaired by the Editor-in-Chief of the AAGRB unanimously agreed on selection ofAmerican Geography and Geographers as the inaugural awardee for the Humboldt Book Award for Enduring Scholarship in Geography.

Learn More.


IN THE NEWS

Popular stories from the AAG SmartBrief

 


EVENTS CALENDAR

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

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Daydreams and Nightmares in the Northern Forest: A Quarter Century of Change

The Northern Forest is a term used by forest activists, policy wonks and some geographers to describe the forested regions of upstate New York, Vermont, New Hampshire and Maine. This is a region of scattered population, glaciated hills and valleys, many lakes and rivers, and several substantial mountain ranges (Irland, 1999; 2011). In its fall displays of color, the red and yellow maples and birches are studded by dark green pines and spruce. It is virtually the last redoubt of native brook trout populations; in a few coastal Maine streams tiny surviving runs of Atlantic salmon cling to life. This region was accustomed to long-standing private ownership by paper companies, well-established timber families, and Kingdom Owners– descendants of New York wealth from the 1890’s, with their lakes and “Adirondack Camps.” The region has an aura of remoteness and wilderness character, regularly burnished by writers and artists since Thoreau’s visits in the 1840’s and the glowing paintings of Hudson River School artists. Into countless households each year, the mail order catalogs of the LL Bean Company arrive, with covers displaying appealing images of wild solitude. They become the suburbanites’ mental picture of the Northwoods. Visitors were often stunned, then, to drive into the woods and see logging trucks, recent clearcuts, and for sale signs for wildland lots. Many wanted something done about it.

Source: Northern Forest Lands Council, 1994. This region counted 26 million acres of forest in the late 80s. The acreage of forest had barely changed by 2015. In 2015, the NFL region contained 56% of all the forest land in the four states (USDA Forest Service data). Its boundaries were constructed carefully: to avoid federal lands (as in VT and NH), and to avoid as much as possible any small landholders and farmers, while including most of the largest timberland holdings of the region. Much of the private ownership here has changed hands – some more than once, since 1990.

Source: LL Bean company, reproduced by permission.
Source: LL Bean company, reproduced by permission.

A regionwide outbreak of spruce budworm attacked spruce and fir stands from the early 70’s to the mid 80’s, leading to widely publicized spray programs and accelerated cutting in Maine where the effects were most serious. Recreationists could readily access the most remote corners of the Northwoods on gravel roads, following the end of log driving on the rivers.

This region was the culture hearth of the nation’s lumber, log driving, and paper industries; lobbyists and executives for these industries once carried big sticks in state capitals. By the late 1980’s, though, large private holdings were beginning to turn over to new owners, often non-industrial ones. Fears began to spread that the traditional model of timberland ownership would burst wide open leading to widespread shoddy subdividing and development, loss of public access, diminished timber supply, and then loss of jobs as mills could not meet their wood needs. In 1990, and again in 1994, major studies were done on these issues, funded by federal dollars.

By the early 1990s, it was thought that by judicious public policy, something resembling the traditionally stable Northern Forest landscape could be retained, fostering stable employment in rural areas and milltowns, widespread public access to private lands, and desirable wildlife habitat. In 1989, a regionwide study was launched, the Northern Forest Lands Study, to assess these issues with a guiding committee of state officials and stakeholders (USDA Forest Service and Governors’ Task Force, 1990). A followup in 2004 was a more ambitious effort to conduct detailed research and develop policy options (Northern Forest Lands Council, 1994; Northeastern State Foresters Association, 2005).

These projects conducted local public meetings to obtain input and encountered loud protests from local groups, especially in the Adirondacks, who – correctly — saw the reports as efforts to build support for more land protection. They saw this as threats to their economy and autonomy (Porter, Erickson, and Whalley, 2009). One result of this was that both reports, while depicting longterm issues and needs, had to tread gingerly by burning incense to the idols of local stakeholder input before any recommendations were made. In its 2004 Report, the Northern Forest Lands Council offered a saccharine vision of the future forest and the industries and communities depending on it. They recognized that this could not be achieved without improved public policies, for which they offered numerous suggestions. But they assumed a level of stability in markets and industry structure that was not to be.

Rarely has there been a more dynamic period in the region’s forest history than the 1990-2015 period —

Numerous small wood processing companies (Irland 2004) have been driven out of business by furniture imports from China.

From 2000 to 2015, newsprint usage nationally fell by 70%; printing and writing paper consumption by one third.   The post 2005 housing crash cut national lumber production by half, and it has since barely recovered. Today, there is no paper being manufactured along Maine’s Penobscot River, and lumber manufacturing remains as a pale shadow of what once was. Primary paper mills have virtually vanished from New York, Vermont, and New Hampshire. In parts of the region, more wood is being burned to generate electricity than to make pulp or paper. Had anyone in 1990 predicted all these events they would have been dismissed as delusional. Domestic market crashes and surges in imports upset the hopes for a stable forest economy with prospering little milltowns stretching from Tug Hill to Eastern Maine

Paper mill in Bucksport, Maine, running full steam in better days. It is now being dismantled. Its ownership history: St Regis to Champion to International Paper to Verso to scrap dealer in about 2 decades is not atypical of the northeastern industry. In early summer in the late 1930s, the Penobscot River in the foreground would be covered with pulpwood logs. Photo by author.

The 1990 study was prompted by concerns that industry would sell its land to others, who would have less reason to keep it in forest and retain public access customs. This concern proved all too well founded: for a host of reasons, forest industries sold off their holdings almost completely, and many of the mills as well (your present writer was among those who failed to predict this). At one time, with a stroll down “Paper Industry Row”, on E. 42d Street in New York, you could talk to the owners of much of the forest of the region, or at least their Wall Street bankers. No longer. Many of the longtime family holdings, such as the Adirondack “Kingdoms” held by heirs of the Robber Barons since the 1890s, went on the block as well. New owners represented a wide variety of interests, including newly rich billionaires, and investment funds managed for pension funds and institutions (Irland, Hagan, and Lutz, 2011). More than a little of this land found its way into conservation uses via NGO’s, public agencies, and conservation easements.

From some perspectives, progress has been made: counting fee ownership and conservation easements, 19% of Maine is now in conservation ownership.   Important gaps in the Adirondack Park have been filled in.   In many areas, however, the resource “took a haircut” in this process as smaller tracts and outholdings were sold off. Often the buyers were exploitive “liquidators” who stripped the timber and sold the land as “leisure lots” in sizes that would elude local land use controls (if there were any at all). Today, many who loved to hate the paper companies wistfully admit that wish we could go back to those times. Fortunately, the housing crash has cut deeply into demand for such lots, but signs of gentrification on large “view lots” are emerging once again, especially near ski areas. The old rustic “ski chalet”, often self-built, is being replaced by virtual mansions, with 2 car garages and mowed lawns. Development on view lots is eroding the sense of remoteness that once characterized much of this region, with implications for public access and wildlife habitat that are only beginning to be recognized.

Political cultures regarding public land ownership and regulation vary from state to state across this region, despite its apparent ecological and economic similarities. Substate institutions have arisen in New York (Adirondack Park Authority), New Hampshire (unincorporated portions of Coos county), and Maine (Land Use Planning Commission for 10 million acres lacking any local government). A major influence has been concentrations of wealth and population in the Boston-New York coastal strip. The Northern Forest is the recreational and second home backdrop for these regions, and most of the conservation accomplishment has been lobbied from those urban areas.   So the region has a distinct north-south political divide. Broadly speaking, advocates of the National Forests on Vermont and New Hampshire have allowed the 2 states to pass much of the cost and bureaucracy of administering dispersed forest recreation to federal taxpayers. In New York and Maine, by contrast, there is very little federal conservation land, while New York’s constitutional Forever Wild in the Adirondacks represents a huge state-managed stretch of wild land.

Both Maine and New York are not favorable to federal ownership, except where federal dollars will pick up costly coastal property (e.g. Acadia NP; Rachel Carson NWR; Fire Island National Seashore on Long Island … but these are not in the Northern Forest) One lesson has been that creating federal land units has been far easier than administering them. Drawing lines on maps cannot make the divisions among various publics go away. Since 1990, changes in fee ownership in the Northern Forest have not been substantial, amounting to only about 800,000 acres leaving private ownership over the quarter century. Most of the conservation achievement has been via conservation easements, which represent the removal of development rights from land remaining in private hands.

Source: various, compiled by author. These are proportions of total land area owned by states and by the states plus federal agencies. Accurate data on county and municipal lands are elusive. These figures refer to fee simple ownership only. Conservation easements, especially in Maine, augment these figures substantially.

The entire region has been used to urban elites picking and choosing locations for National Parks and other major conservation units, perhaps to a degree unmatched elsewhere in the country. This yielded major conservation successes: the Adirondack Park, Acadia NP, the White Mountain National Forest, and Baxter State Park. Yet it exacerbates the north-south political divides noted above.

In Maine, since about 2010 an organized program of blowback against the programs favored by Northern Forest Lands advocates has been under way. A Republican governor and legislative allies have been blocking Maine’s premier land conservation program, attempting to roll back other conservation policies, and trying to pull the teeth from Maine’s Land Use Regulation Commission (newly renamed the Land Use Planning Commission and asked to work with more county input). This revolt may be narrowly based on a few discontented small businesses in rural areas, but it has had an impact. Leaders of the blowback have not, it seems, paid any political price for their actions. Conservation and environmental groups seem slow to realize the implications.

In 2016, the entomologists are telling us that the spruce budworm is coming back – and its ultimate spread and impacts are unpredictable (Maine Forest Service, 2016). This brings a further dark cloud to the horizon for private forest owners.

The Northern Forest’s history of land use change, the underlying forces, and the effectiveness – or lack thereof—of state and federal forest policies offer many important topics for study by geographers (Wallach, 1980). The literature of the field seems sparse in attention to this unusual region; perhaps the Boston meeting will stimulate more interest.


Lloyd C. Irland is a forestry consultant in Maine, a former forestry school instructor, and public official in Maine state government. He contributed land use analysis to the 1990 Northern Forest Lands study and is author of many papers on forest resources as well as 2 books on the northeast’s forests. lcirland [at] gmail [dot] com.

Author’s Note: The title of this article does homage to Daydreams and Nightmares, a 1971 book by my colleague W. R. Burch Jr, who was one of the earliest to apply sociological insights to forest resource and natural resource problems.

DOI: 10.14433/2016.0015


References

Burch, W. R. Jr. 1971. Daydreams and Nightmares: a sociological essay on the American Environment. New York: Harper and Row.

Foster, David R. et al. 2010Wildlands & Woodlands: A Vision for the New England Landscape. Petersham: Harvard Forest. May. https://www.wildlandsandwoodlands.org/

Irland, Lloyd C. The Northeast’s Changing Forest. Harvard Forest, Petersham, MA (dist. By Harvard Univ. Press). 1999.

Irland, L. C., J. Hagan, and J. Lutz. 2011. Large timberland transactions in the Northern Forest 1980 – 2006. Yale Global Institute for Sustainable Forestry. Private Forests Working Paper No. 11. https://gisf.yale.edu/publications-presentations/gisf-research-reports

Irland. Lloyd C. 2004. Maine’s forest industry: from one era to anotherIn: R. E. Barringer (ed.) Changing Maine. Gardiner, Maine: Tilbury House, pp. 362-387.

Irland, Lloyd C. 2011.   “New England Forests: Two Centuries of a Changing Landscape

In, B. Harrison and R. Judd, eds. New England: A Landscape History. Cambridge: MIT Press. Pp. 53-70.

Maine Forest Service 2016. Spruce Budworm Internet Hub

Northern Forest Lands Council. 1994. Finding common ground: Conserving the Northern Forest. Recommendations of the Northern Forest Lands Council. Concord, NH.

Northeastern State Foresters Association.2005. Northern Forest Lands Council 10th Anniversary Forum. Concord. Northeastern State Foresters Association. www.nefainfo.org/uploads/2/7/4/5/27453461/nflcfr_final…

Porter, W. F., J. D. Erickson, and R. S. Whalley. 2009. The Great Experiment in Conservation: Voices from the Adirondack ParkSyracuse: Syracuse University Press.

USDA Forest Service and Governors’ Task Force. 1990. Northern Forest Lands Study. USDA Forest Service, Rutland, VT.

Wallach, Bret. 1980. “Logging in Maine’s Empty Quarter” Annals of the Association Geographers , vol. 70 (4):542-552. DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-8306.1980.tb01331.x


Focus on Boston is an on-going series curated by the Local Arrangements Committee to provide insight on and understanding of the geographies of Boston and New England. The 2017 AAG Annual Meeting will be held April 5-9, 2017, in Boston. 

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AAG Launches New Undergraduate Student Affinity Group

The American Association of Geographers will launch a new affinity group specifically for undergraduate students. The Undergraduate Student Affinity Group (USAG) will be an international community of students studying geography, offering opportunities to network and socialize, get advice on graduate study and careers, and take part in academic events.

USAG will work closely with the Graduate Student Affinity Group (GSAG) to plan and develop joint events and workshops that are run by students for students. These may include mentoring and advice on applying to grad school.

USAG membership is open to undergraduate students at a college or university anywhere in the world who are studying geography or a closely related subject (e.g., environmental studies, urban and regional planning, GIScience, geoscience, global studies, or social science education), and are members of the AAG—joining AAG and USAG can happen simultaneously.

Undergraduate students can join the AAG for just $38 and receive full membership benefits including access to scholarly journals and publications, exclusive access to the Jobs in Geography listings, participation in the knowledge communities, and reduced rates for Annual Meeting and other event registration. They can join USAG for an additional $1.

We are also looking for a few students to form the inaugural board of USAG and shape the future of this group. Nominations are welcome throughout the fall and winter, and officers will be selected during the first Business Meeting of USAG held during the AAG Annual Meeting in Boston, April 5-9, 2017. Please let us know if you know particularly enthusiastic students in their sophomore or junior years who might be keen to serve as an officer of this group for two years.

For further information please visit www.aag.org/usag or contact Jenny Lunn (jlunn [at] aag [dot] org).

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AAG Welcomes Julio Arguello Jr. as Social Media and Website Content Manager

The AAG is pleased to announce that Julio Arguello, Jr. has joined the association as the Social Media and Website Content Manager at its headquarters in Washington, D.C. Julio has more than 15 years of digital communications, IT, membership and publications management experience in the nonprofit sector. He holds a bachelor’s degree in English from Towson State University.

Julio previously worked for the Association of Maternal & Child Health Programs (AMCHP) where he was the Digital Communications Manager in charge of online communications and social media strategies, including AMCHP’s website. Prior to that position, Julio served as the organization’s Publications & Member Services Manager.

Julio will collaborate with AAG’s communications group to oversee AAG’s engagement across its social media communities, including Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn and YouTube. He will monitor media channels, post information, interact with users, and curate and write web content. He will also contribute to organizing project-related campaigns.

In his free time, Julio enjoys playing tennis, taking long walks and exploring Washington, D.C., watching films, and the theater and opera.

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The World of the City

Those of us alive today are witnessing one of the most profound events in all of human history — and it is an event, which is fundamentally geographic in nature. The transformation we are experiencing is the concentration of the majority of the world’s population into urban areas. Although much has been made of the United Nations report that declared as of 2008 half the world’s population live in urban areas, this trend has been a long-term feature of the 20th and 21st centuries. In 1900 only about 10 percent to 15 percent of the world’s population lived in urban areas. The trend towards greater urbanization accelerated from the 1950s and shows no indication of stopping. The United Nations estimates that by 2050 some 70 percent of the world population will live in urban areas. In terms of absolute numbers that means in just 34 years there will be some 6.4 billion city dwellers.

Source: United Nations, World Urbanization Prospects, The 2007 Revision Highlights

It is not just the proportion of the world’s population living in cities that is increasing. We are also witnessing an agglomerative effect wherein the relative population size of certain cities and their metropolitan areas is increasing at a remarkable pace. This is creating a global constellation of megacities which have populations greater than 10 million. As of 2015 there were at least 35 such megacities. For comparison, in 1985 there were less than 10.

The increase in urban populations is not entirely driven by the birthrates of populations already situated within existing cities. It is also driven by the outmigration of rural populations to urban centers. Thus, according to U.N. estimates, global rural population will decline in actual numbers by about 18 percent, or some 600 million people by 2050. This trend of rural exodus has a long history in Europe and the United States. It is strikingly apparent in U.S. county-level population trends. Despite overall growth in U.S. population, many rural counties, particularly those distant from larger urban centers, are experiencing declines in absolute population numbers.

The trend of rural exodus is not confined to the developed world. Between 2007 and 2050 rural populations in the world’s less developed regions are expected to decline by 17 percent or some 440 million people. Unlike the 20th century, it is outmigration from the countryside in least developed regions that will drive the global rural exodus numbers going forward.

Although the urbanization we are witnessing is a global phenomenon it can hardly be called flat and featureless in terms of finer scale geographic detail. At present the percentage of the population living in urban areas varies greatly by country and world region. According to data from the World Bank, 82 percent of the population in North America live in urban areas. In contrast, the urban percentage in Sub Saharan Africa is 38 percent. In East Asia the percentage of urban dwellers is 57 percent, but this represents a remarkable rise from a base of 22 percent in 1960. Over that same period China has seen its percentage of urban population more than triple, from 16 percent to 56 percent. The distribution and growth of megacities also shows geographic patterning. Tokyo, with approximately 40 million people, is the world’s largest megacity. However, Shanghai and Jakarta are not far behind and growth in the latter may well make Indonesia the home of the world’s largest megacity in the near future. It is notable that eight of the 10 largest megacities are in Asia. In fact, contrasting with the relatively high proportions of urban dwellers in Europe and the United States, only a handful of megacities are found in these regions. These include Moscow, Paris, London, New York and Los Angeles. As a final point, this agglomerative process is likely to intensify in Asia and Africa as overall populations grow and rural exodus accelerates.

The trajectory towards increasing urbanization presents two sets of research challenges to geographers. The first revolves around the fundamental question of how do we classify a specific place, a population or a process as being ‘urban’? Carl Haub, senior demographer at the Population Reference Bureau, has raised this question. He points out that the U.N. focuses upon population sizes typical of larger cities. However, many people living in smaller communities may well follow a relatively urban lifestyle and consider themselves more urbanite than rural. The U.N. itself recognizes this difficulty and has no universal definition, “Because of national differences in the characteristics that distinguish urban from rural areas, the distinction between the urban and the rural population is not yet amenable to a single definition that would be applicable to all countries or, for the most part, even to the countries within a region” (U.N. Department of Economic and Social Affairs). Some of the apparent shift from rural to urban in the U.N. data reflects the growth of smaller communities to a population size that crosses the urban classification threshold in that country. In fact though, not much may have changed for the inhabitants. An alternative would be to classify livelihood as agrarian versus non-agrarian, but this too is nebulous. As geographer Michael Pacione instructs in his text, “Urban Geography: A Global Perspective,” urban can mean many things — population size and density, economic base, administrative structure, etc.

The spatial designation of one locale as urban and one place as rural is also problematic. An interesting remote sensing study published in 2009 by Annemarie Schneider of the Department of Geography at the University of Wisconsin and her co-authors grappled with this. They pointed out that multiple criteria exist to make such a distinction when classifying imagery as urban or rural. Schneider et al favored an approach of developing regional specific criteria for classifying a given locale as urban. From their analysis they concluded that only about 0.5 percent of the earth’s land area could be classified as urban. When one reflects on the large proportion of humans now occupying urban areas this is a remarkable spatial concentration of people. However, things may not be so simple. Geographer Karen Seto, now at the Yale School of Forestry and the Environment, and her colleagues in their paper, “Urban land teleconnections and sustainability,” have also grappled with how one defines urban. They point out that place-based classifications, such as those typical of remote-sensing land-use products, make an artificial dichotomy between the urban and the rural when in fact there is a continuum of land uses and very indistinct spatial boundaries. Using a processes-based perspective that appreciates this continuum and the flows that connect across it is more realistic, and would appreciably expand the land area we might consider urban.

One can imagine that as the nature of economies, telecommunications and the geographies of employment change and become less spatially limited, so too will the geographies of the urban and the urban-rural continuum. In addition, rural economies, demographies and geographies are changing. In the Unites States family farms are replaced by large corporate farms. Mechanization further decreases agricultural workforce needs. At the same time networked urbanites find affordable accommodations or space for start-ups in these increasingly available rural locales. Though agglomeration of these networked or commuting exurbanite populations increase, types of labor shift to non-agrarian and rural regions become increasingly urbanized in function if not in physical form. The hinterlands surrounding the San Francisco Bay Area are an example. At the same time, the inner city cores which experienced depressed real estate markets due to the flight of upper and middle classes and manufacturing are being redeveloped and gentrified in many cities. This in turn is pulling people back to denser urban cores.

Cairo, Egypt, is one of the world’s megacities with a population estimated to be around 20 million people. (Photo courtesy Glen M. MacDonald)

Geographers have a major role in studying and determining how the term urban is defined. In this case the focus will need to be both on the spatial and the process-oriented perspectives. Considering the paragraph above we might ask what is the comparative experience in the new Asian megacities in terms of spatial form and processes that link urban populations? Will the patterns of urban evolution experienced in more developed countries also occur in less developed countries? Geographers have been at the lead of considering such questions. Karen Seto’s work is one recent example. We might also consider work in the tradition of the late Neil Smith as represented in his 2002 paper, “New Globalism, New Urbanism: Gentrification as Global Urban Strategy.” In it he not only spoke about the global spread of the gentrification, but also provided a much wider take on globalization, urbanism and the rise of the Asian, South American and African megacities.

The second set of questions in geography’s wheel house concern the socioeconomic, cultural and environmental implications of increasing urbanization and the growth of global megacities. Here geographers have been at the forefront. Work spans from the quantitative study of regional economic geography and the agglomerative process of urban growth to the qualitative analysis of how ethnicity, gender of sexual orientation shape individual experiences and perceptions of urban space and place. Geographers such as Michael Dear, Allen Scott, Edward Soja, Michael Storper and Jennifer Wolch of the Los Angeles School of Urbanism have had global impact through their work on the functioning and increasing economic, social and cultural dominance of the world’s global cities. The rise of Critical GIS, which directly links geography’s growing technical capacity for spatial analysis with social theory and qualitative methods is a newer and particularly exciting development. Geographer Mae-Po Kwan and her students have been recognized leaders in these efforts. Here is an approach that can provide new insights not just on the geographies within cities, but also help come to terms with the spatial and functional complexity of the urban-rural continuum.

Geographers have, to their credit, been aware that we are not just studying regression models and pixels, but the lives and futures of real people. There is the deep vein of social awareness and advocacy that permeates much of the work of urban geographers. David Harvey, who arguably stands as the preeminent urban social theorist of our time, has led the way to a melding of scholarship and social responsibility. For over 40 years, starting with the seminal work “Social Justice in the City” and continuing with a multitude of deeply reasoned works including the 2012 book, “Rebel Cities: From the Right to the City to the Urban Revolution”, Harvey and his students have set the standard for the discipline.

The relationship between urbanization and the environment in the 21st century is also critical and an area where geographers have much to contribute in terms of research and education. This matters both in terms of urban impacts on the physical and biological environment and in terms of the environmental quality for urbanites. As one of many examples of the former, a paper published this week in Nature authored by Sean Maxwell, a Ph.D. student in the School of Geography, Planning and Environmental Management at the University of Queensland in Australia, concluded that urban development was the third greatest extinction threat to species classified as threatened or near-threatened by the International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources (IUCN) Red List. In fact, the threat to biodiversity by urbanization was found to be almost twice as great as that offered by climate change. From the study of urban heat islands, spatial patterns of air, water and soil pollutants, and health threats to the geographies of parks and outdoor recreational spaces for cities and their neighborhoods, geographers have a strong role to play in the study of urban environmental quality and urban environmental justice. In her 2000 Annals article, “Rethinking Environmental Racism: White Privilege and Urban Development in Southern California,” Laura Pulido, formerly of the University of Southern California and now a Professor of Geography at the University of Oregon, brings together the strands of environment, social justice and racism in a critical assessment of how cities can fail to serve their citizens and the geographies of such injustices. This follows the tradition in urban human geography where scholarship is combined with advocacy.

In closing I reflect upon a figure entitled “The nature of human geography” in Michael Pacione’s text, “Urban Geography: A Global Perspective” in which he has placed Urban Geography at the center of all the other sub-disciplines from Physical Geography to Social Geography to Cultural Geography, etc. This might appear to be hubris, but in the 21st century and for our discipline it is not unreasonable. With most of the world’s population arguably urbanized and this trend to continue, and with cities and megacities having such impacts on global economies, culture, politics, health, the environment, etc., urban geography is indeed of critical importance. We have had a strong tradition in this area and going forward I would hope to see that urban geography can indeed form a center of gravity which brings human and physical geographers to work as teams tackling the research, education and policy challenges that the urbanized 21st century brings. This is also an important nexus where those geography departments which are twinned with planning can build bridges and collaborations that will benefit both parties. There is a long history of urban geographers receiving training in planning or being appointed to planning departments as faculty. Let’s capitalize more on these linkages. It seems to me the AAG Annual Meeting can serve as an ideal venue to bring together human geographers, physical geographers and planners in focused sessions to share work and plot collaborations on urban issues. I wonder how our journals might also serve as catalysts? The 21st century is the world of the city, and geography can capitalize upon great traditions and great potential to help understand and improve this evolving new world. Your ideas on how the AAG can help are welcome!

Join the conversation and share your thoughts on Twitter #PresidentAAG.

— Glen M. MacDonald

 

DOI: 10.14433/2016.0014

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Geoffrey Martin Receives the Humboldt Book Award for Enduring Scholarship in Geography

The AAG Review of Books (AAGRB) is proud to announce the selection of Prof. Geoffrey Martin’s monumental book, American Geography and Geographers, as the inaugural recipient of the Humboldt Book Award for Enduring Scholarship in Geography.

The award was selected from all of the books reviewed during the first four years of the AAG Review of Books. The selection committee chaired by the Editor-in-Chief of the AAGRB unanimously agreed on selection of American Geography and Geographers as the inaugural awardee for the Humboldt Book Award for Enduring Scholarship in Geography.

The Humboldt Book Award for Enduring Scholarship was established to recognize the single book reviewed in the AAG Review of Books judged to be a work that not only represents geographic scholarship at its best, but a book that also promises enduring scholarly value and importance. The author receives an honorarium of $1,000 as well.

Published by Oxford University Press in 2015, American Geography and Geographers has been characterized by Ron Abler as “unparalleled in the scope and depth of its research” and by Harm De Blij as “a monumental and magisterial work, exhaustively researched and documented.” William Koelsch added, “This landmark study will be a resource for teachers and students of the discipline for years to come, and an important first reference for scholars seeking to expand the breadth and depth of the field.”

The selection of the AAGRB Humboldt Book Award for Enduring Scholarship in Geography will be made every four years, from the books reviewed in the AAGRB during the prior four years.

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