The subdiscipline of economic geography has a long and varied history, and recent work has pushed the field to diversify even further. This collection takes this agenda forward by showcasing inspiring, critical and plural perspectives for contemporary economic geographies.
Highlighting the contributions of global scholars, the thirty chapters showcase fresh ways of approaching economic geography in research, teaching and praxis. With sections on thought leaders, contemporary critical debates and future research agendas, this collection calls for greater openness and inclusivity.
Tabela de Conteúdo
Introducing Contemporary Economic Geographies: An Inspiring, Critical and Plural Collection – Jennifer Johns and Sarah Marie Hall
PART 1: Inspirational Thought Leaders
1. Doreen Massey: For Political Praxis, Relationality and Contingency – Faith Mac Neil Taylor
2. Beverley Mullings: Social Transformations, Social Reproduction and Social Justice – Caitlin Henry
3. Susan Christopherson: On (Still) Being Outside the Project – Jennifer Clark
4. J.K. Gibson-Graham: Feminist Geographies and Diverse Economies – Zara Babakordi
5. Jessie Poon: International Trade and Geographies of Finance – Karen P.Y. Lai
6. Linda Mc Dowell: Complex Geographies that Matter – Karenjit Clare
7. Yuko Aoyama: Curiosity as Method – Heidi Østbo-Haugen
8. Susanne Soederberg: A Critical and Multidisciplinary Global Political Economy – Lama Tawakkol
9. Simona Iammarino: Interdisciplinary Approaches to the Economy – Rhiannon Pugh
10. Susan Strange: Trading Zones – Sarah Hall
PART 2: Critical Debates in Contemporary Economic Geographies
11. Informal Economies: Towards Plurality and Social Justice – Kavita Ramakrishnan and Emma Mawdsley
12. Global Economy: Geographies of Production During Crises – Vida Vanchan
13. Entrepreneurship and Innovation: Who Is Forgotten? – Wenying Fu
14. Consumption: Advancing Postcolonial Perspectives from the Global South – Luiza Sarayed-Din and Alex Hughes
15. Governance: Climate Change and Land Use in the Anthropocene – Janelle Knox-Hayes
16. Creativity: An Evolving Critical Debate – Suntje Schmidt
17. Industrial Landscapes: From the Geographies of Production to Everyday Life – Chantel Carr and Natasha Larkin
18. Labour: Reckoning with Inequality through ‘Divisions of Labour – Nancy Worth
19. Economic Development: Political Ecologies of Race – Sharlene Mollett
20. Poverty and Inequality: Austerity, Welfare Reforms and Insecurity – Amy Greer Murphy
PART 3: Charting Future Research Agendas for Economic Geographies
21. Housing Struggles: Dwelling in Crisis Economies – Mara Ferreri
22. Urban Economies: Learning from Post-Socialist Contexts – Elena Trubina
23. Migration and Cross-Border Trading – Charlotte Wrigley-Asante and Mariama Zaami
24. Care and Social Reproduction – Kendra Strauss
25. The Future of Creative Industries and Labour – Taylor Brydges
26. Future Finance – Sabine Dörry
27. Disasters and Recovery: Postcolonializing Economic Geography – Gemma Sou
28. Retail Market Futures: Retail Geographies from and for the Margins – Myfanwy Taylor and Sara González
29. Resources and Extraction – Julie Ann de los Reyes
30. Workplaces of the Future – Lizzie Richardson
Postscript: Continuing the Work – Jennifer Johns and Sarah Marie Hall
Sobre o autor
Sarah Marie Hall is Senior Lecturer in Human Geography at the University of Manchester, UK. Working across feminist, social and economic geography, her research explores how lived experience and social difference shape socio-economic inequalities.