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1

Milligan, Christine, Sarah Atkinson, Mark Skinner, and Janine Wiles. "Geographies of care: A commentary." New Zealand Geographer 63, no. 2 (August 2007): 135–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1745-7939.2007.00101.x.

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2

Lawson, Victoria. "Geographies of Care and Responsibility." Annals of the Association of American Geographers 97, no. 1 (March 2007): 1–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-8306.2007.00520.x.

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3

Conradson, David. "Geographies of care: spaces, practices, experiences." Social & Cultural Geography 4, no. 4 (December 2003): 451–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/1464936032000137894.

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4

Hanrahan, Kelsey B., and Christine E. Smith. "Interstices of Care: Re‐Imagining the geographies of care." Area 52, no. 2 (October 25, 2018): 230–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/area.12502.

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5

Del Casino, Vincent J. "Social geographies II." Progress in Human Geography 40, no. 6 (July 10, 2016): 846–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0309132515618807.

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This report examines how social geographers are engaging with the questions that robots and robotic technologies provoke. First, it discusses Marxist analyses of machines and troubles the role that robots play in social production and reproduction. Second, robots as actors in assemblages of sociospatial relations are interrogated for their role in state violence. Third, the dynamic change brought about by smart cities and their algorithmic subjects is discussed. The concluding section is speculative, discussing robots and the ethics of care. This report asks social geographers to reimagine their social geographies in relation to the role of robots in everyday life.
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Mohan, John F. "Explaining geographies of health care: A critique." Health & Place 4, no. 2 (June 1998): 113–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s1353-8292(98)00004-5.

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7

England, Kim. "Home, Work and the Shifting Geographies of Care." Ethics, Place & Environment 13, no. 2 (June 2010): 131–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13668791003778826.

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8

Foley, Ronan. "Geographies of informal care in Ireland, 2002–2006." Irish Geography 41, no. 3 (November 2008): 261–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00750770802506949.

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9

King, Brian, and Andrea Rishworth. "Infectious addictions: Geographies of colliding epidemics." Progress in Human Geography 46, no. 1 (November 30, 2021): 139–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/03091325211052040.

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Medical geography and health geography have made significant contributions to studies of human health by addressing the spatial patterns of disease exposure, location of health care services, and place-specific processes producing health and wellbeing. Human geography and human-environment geography have also contributed with emerging attention to the body, uncertainty, and health and environment interactions. What remains understudied are the co-occurrence of multiple disease patterns, including the relationships between infectious disease and addiction. We review geographic research on infectious disease and addiction to advance a theoretical framework that emphasizes the centrality of complexity, uncertainty, difference, and care in shaping human health.
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Iacovone, Chiara, Alberto Valz Gris, Astrid Safina, Andrea Pollio, and Francesca Governa. "Breaking the distance: Dialogues of care in a time of limited geographies." Dialogues in Human Geography 10, no. 2 (July 2020): 124–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2043820620934940.

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In this commentary, we reflect on the limitations, somber difficulties, and possibilities of new geographies of care that have emerged as a result of our limited personal geographies during the time of COVID-19.
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11

Andrews, Gavin J., and Josh Evans. "Understanding the reproduction of health care: towards geographies in health care work." Progress in Human Geography 32, no. 6 (February 18, 2008): 759–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0309132508089826.

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12

Olson, Elizabeth. "Geography and ethics III: Whither the next moral turn?" Progress in Human Geography 42, no. 6 (October 2, 2017): 937–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0309132517732174.

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The 20 years since geography’s ‘moral turn’ have generated a robust field of scholarship around diverse ethical engagements. However, as geographers continue to build articulate claims to care and justice in and beyond the academy, the role of ‘the moral’ has often been resigned to the margins of our theories and empirical work. In my third and final progress report on geography and ethics, I suggest that new approaches toward moral geographies and economies are already signaling directions for geography’s next moral turn. Some of these approaches use more traditional theoretical and empirical options to explain and raise challenges for confronting harmful moral projects endorsed by states. But other more critical and controversial shifts are also evident in the speculative ethics of post-humanism which destabilize and reassemble what we think we know about moral status and moral agency.
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13

Taylor, C. Scott, and Jennifer Carter. "Care in the contested geographies of Dolphin-Assisted Therapy." Social & Cultural Geography 21, no. 1 (March 26, 2018): 64–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14649365.2018.1455217.

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14

Exworthy, Mark. "Geographies of Care: Space, Place and the Voluntary Sector." Health and Social Care in the Community 10, no. 5 (September 2002): 410–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-2524.2002.03831.x.

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15

Cloke, Paul, Jon May, and Andrew Williams. "The geographies of food banks in the meantime." Progress in Human Geography 41, no. 6 (July 12, 2016): 703–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0309132516655881.

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Geographies of food banks have focused predominantly on issues of neoliberal political-economy and food insecurity. In this paper, we trace alternative understandings of food banking – as spaces of care, and as liminal spaces of encounter capable of incubating political and ethical values, practices and subjectivities that challenge neoliberal austerity. Our aim is to develop a conceptual approach to voluntary welfare capable both of holding in tension the ambivalent and contradictory dynamics of care and welfare in the meantime(s), and of underlining some of the more hopeful and progressive possibilities that can arise in and through such spaces of care.
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Catungal, John Paul, Benjamin Klassen, Robert Ablenas, Sandy Lambert, Sarah Chown, and Nathan Lachowsky. "Organising care and community in the era of the ‘gay disease’: Gay community responses to HIV/AIDS and the production of differentiated care geographies in Vancouver." Urban Studies 58, no. 7 (January 28, 2021): 1346–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0042098020984908.

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Scholarship on the place of the HIV/AIDS crisis in urban geographies of sexual minority activism has powerfully insisted on the importance of community organising as a response to state and societal failures and to their homophobic, AIDS phobic and morally conservative underpinnings. This paper extends this scholarship by examining the urban social geographies of exclusion produced by such community organising efforts. It draws on the perspectives of long-term survivors of HIV/AIDS (LTS) in Vancouver to highlight the differentiated care geographies of HIV/AIDS that resulted from the racialised, classed and gendered politics and urban imaginations enacted by gay and allied HIV/AIDS organising. Though LTS networks, spaces and politics of care and community were more extended than Vancouver’s gay community during the 1980s and 1990s, the centring of the West End gay village in many community-led responses to HIV/AIDS resulted in LTS geographies outside the West End being excluded from important systems of care and community. LTS narratives of the city at the time of the ‘gay disease’ thus tell an urban politics of sexual and health activisms as shaped not only by processes of heteronormativity and homophobia but also of racially, colonially and class-inflected homonormative urban imaginaries.
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17

Hall, Sarah Marie. "Everyday austerity: Towards relational geographies of family, friendship and intimacy." Progress in Human Geography 43, no. 5 (September 16, 2018): 769–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0309132518796280.

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This paper advances ideas about relational geographies to explore ‘everyday austerity’. Whilst geographers have analysed the causes and aftermath of the recent financial crisis, the focus largely remains on problems within economic systems and urban governance, rather than austerity as lived experience. I outline how focusing on everyday relationships and relational spaces – family, friendship and intimate relations – provides exciting opportunities for thinking geographically about everyday life in austerity. Using examples of care and support and mundane mobilities, I demonstrate how a relational approach extends current understandings of how austerity cuts through, across and between spaces.
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18

Muller, Megan K. "Colonial Geographies: Indigenous Access to Primary Care in British Columbia." Medical Anthropology 41, no. 3 (January 18, 2022): 359–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/01459740.2021.2021901.

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19

Eriksen, Christine. "Research Ethics, Trauma and Self-care: reflections on disaster geographies." Australian Geographer 48, no. 2 (September 16, 2016): 273–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00049182.2016.1230001.

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20

Curtis, Sarah, and Mylène Riva. "Health geographies II: complexity and health care systems and policy." Progress in Human Geography 34, no. 4 (June 4, 2009): 513–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0309132509336029.

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21

Greenhough, Beth. "Citizenship, care and companionship: Approaching geographies of health and bioscience." Progress in Human Geography 35, no. 2 (August 23, 2010): 153–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0309132510376258.

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22

Connell, John, and Margaret Walton-Roberts. "What about the workers? The missing geographies of health care." Progress in Human Geography 40, no. 2 (February 18, 2015): 158–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0309132515570513.

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23

Gatrell, A. C. "Guest editorial: Geographies of primary health-care: perspective and introduction." Health & Social Care in the Community 9, no. 5 (September 2001): 263–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-2524.2001.00304.x.

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24

Bailey, Cathy, and Rachel Pain. "Geographies of infant feeding and access to primary health-care." Health & Social Care in the Community 9, no. 5 (September 2001): 309–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-2524.2001.00308.x.

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25

Rosenberg, Mark W. "New spaces of the geographies of health and health care." GeoJournal 76, no. 2 (May 13, 2009): 109. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10708-009-9288-3.

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26

Herron, Rachel V., and Mark W. Skinner. "Farmwomen's emotional geographies of care: a view from rural Ontario." Gender, Place & Culture 19, no. 2 (April 2012): 232–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/0966369x.2011.572432.

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27

Coddington, Kate. "For political geographies of fertilities." Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space 39, no. 8 (October 4, 2021): 1675–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/23996544211050078.

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Debates ranging from parental leave within universities to abortion rights, ‘anchor babies,’ racialized maternal mortality, and the continued disproportionate role of indigenous children within foster care systems demonstrate the wide range of politics informed by fertility. In this paper, I aim to prompt further academic research and personal reflection about the politics that underpin questions about fertility and the life course. There is an analytic potential and political urgency to understand these debates under the conceptual umbrella of ‘political geographies of fertility,’ as matters of fertility cross disciplinary and subdisciplinary boundaries and are – literally – matters of life and death. In this paper, I argue for framing fertility as a continued state of being, an anticipatory weight, that influences lives, behaviors, and politics at a variety of scales, from the border and the nation-state to academic workplaces and the body. By considering the range of spaces and scales where the politics of fertility take shape, I hope to encourage future researchers to devote attention to what gets made political through fertility – including but not limited to the biological events of reproduction.
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28

Coddington, Kate. "For political geographies of fertilities." Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space 39, no. 8 (October 4, 2021): 1675–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/23996544211050078.

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Debates ranging from parental leave within universities to abortion rights, ‘anchor babies,’ racialized maternal mortality, and the continued disproportionate role of indigenous children within foster care systems demonstrate the wide range of politics informed by fertility. In this paper, I aim to prompt further academic research and personal reflection about the politics that underpin questions about fertility and the life course. There is an analytic potential and political urgency to understand these debates under the conceptual umbrella of ‘political geographies of fertility,’ as matters of fertility cross disciplinary and subdisciplinary boundaries and are – literally – matters of life and death. In this paper, I argue for framing fertility as a continued state of being, an anticipatory weight, that influences lives, behaviors, and politics at a variety of scales, from the border and the nation-state to academic workplaces and the body. By considering the range of spaces and scales where the politics of fertility take shape, I hope to encourage future researchers to devote attention to what gets made political through fertility – including but not limited to the biological events of reproduction.
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29

Haylett, Chris. "Class, Care, and Welfare Reform: Reading Meanings, Talking Feelings." Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space 35, no. 5 (May 2003): 799–814. http://dx.doi.org/10.1068/a35120.

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This paper presents a way of looking at welfare as a realm of affective well-being, which challenges dominant liberal and rationalist views of welfare as unemployment compensation or support on the route back to ‘work’. With reference to welfare-to-work reform in Britain and, the United States, I examine liberal feminist and neoliberal policy discourses on women, work, and welfare. The rationale underlying these discourses is argued to effect an erasure of meaning and feeling from conceptions of care, with serious consequences for the caring choices of poor working-class mothers. The potential of a nonreductive feminist ethics of care, to oppose the work-centric notion of welfare promoted in prevailing approaches to reform, is considered. Ethical thinking is shown to promote an expanded concept of welfare based on caring interrelations and interdependencies, and a way of seeing the emotional geographies of welfare reform. I conclude by arguing the need for labour politics to engage with the emotional geographies of welfare reform.
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30

Hirsch, Lioba A. "In the wake: Interpreting care and global health through Black geographies." Area 52, no. 2 (July 29, 2019): 314–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/area.12573.

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31

Berman‐Arévalo, Eloísa, and Diana Ojeda. "Ordinary Geographies: Care, Violence, and Agrarian Extractivism in “Post‐Conflict” Colombia." Antipode 52, no. 6 (September 3, 2020): 1583–602. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/anti.12667.

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32

DeVerteuil, Geoffrey. "Book Review: Geographies of care: space, place and the voluntary sector." Progress in Human Geography 27, no. 3 (June 2003): 392–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/030913250302700318.

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33

Lejano, Raul P., and Richard Funderburg. "Geographies of Risk, the Regulatory State, and the Ethic of Care." Annals of the American Association of Geographers 106, no. 5 (May 24, 2016): 1097–113. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/24694452.2016.1179565.

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34

Henry, Caitlin. "Palliative space-time: Expanding and contracting geographies of US health care." Social Science & Medicine 268 (January 2021): 113377. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2020.113377.

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35

WILSON, KATHLEEN, and MARK W. ROSENBERG. "The geographies of crisis: exploring accessibility to health care in Canada." Canadian Geographer/Le Géographe canadien 46, no. 3 (September 2002): 223–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1541-0064.2002.tb00742.x.

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36

Pallister-Wilkins, Polly. "Hotspots and the geographies of humanitarianism." Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 38, no. 6 (January 25, 2018): 991–1008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0263775818754884.

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This article focuses on the humanitarian geographies of the hotspots. It argues that hotspots are humanitarian in both idea and practice by raising two fundamental questions that form the basis for the article: what is humanitarianism, and who is it for? The article understands humanitarianism as a logic of government that is more expansive than the mainstream ideal that emerged in the 20th-century. Instead humanitarianism is understood as concerning logics developed to both effectively manage disaster and to secure (in both senses of the word) imminently mobile populations for the maintenance of liberal order alongside and through the securing of life. The article takes an expansive view of humanitarian government to consider genealogies of caring and population security logics in the establishment of modern, western and liberal states. The article unsettles some of the traditional geographical understandings of humanitarianism as care for distant strangers and considers the ways compassion is rationalised by the hotspot approach. This critical reading of humanitarianism and the hotspots offers empirical weight to what has been called ‘humanitarianism as liberal diagnostic’, through which humanitarianism is deployed to secure both life and a liberal political order across multiple scales.
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37

Muldoon, K., L. Galway, A. Drumm, T. Leach, M. Heimerl, and K. Sampsel. "P114: Geographies of sexual assault: using geographic information system analysis to identify neighbourhoods affected by violence." CJEM 21, S1 (May 2019): S105. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/cem.2019.305.

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Introduction: Emergency Departments are a common point of access for survivors of sexual and gender-based violence (SGBV), but very little is known about where survivors live and the characteristics of the neighbourhoods. The objective of this study was to use hospital-based data to characterize sexual and domestic assault cases and identify geographic distribution across the Ottawa-Gatineau area. Methods: Data for this study were extracted from the Sexual Assault and Partner Abuse Care Program (SAPACP) case registry (Jan 1-Dec 31, 2015) at The Ottawa Hospital. Spatial analyses were conducted using 6-digit postal codes converted to Canadian Census Tracts to identify potential geographic areas where SGBV cases are clustered. Hot-spots were defined as Census Tracts with seven or more assaults within a single calendar year.Data for this study were extracted from the Sexual Assault and Partner Abuse Care Program (SAPACP) case registry (Jan 1-Dec 31, 2015) at The Ottawa Hospital. Spatial analyses were conducted using 6-digit postal codes converted to Canadian Census Tracts to identify potential geographic areas where SGBV cases are clustered. Hot-spots were defined as Census Tracts with seven or more assaults within a single calendar year. Results: In 2015, there were 406 patients seen at the SAPACP, 348 had valid postal codes from Ottawa-Gatineau and were included in the analyses. Over 90% of patients were female and 152 (43.68%) were below 24 years of age. Eight hot-spots were identified including 3 in the downtown entertainment district, 3 lower income areas, 1 high income neighbourhood, and 1 suburb more than 20km from downtown. Conclusion: This study is of the first to use hospital-based data to examine the geographic distribution of SGBV cases, with key findings including the identification of high-income neighbourhoods and suburbs as SGBV hot-spots. Alongside efforts like the #MeToo movement, this evidence challenges stereotypes of assault survivors and highlights the breadth and widespread nature of SGBV.
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38

Vincent, Esther Xueming. "Ecofeminist Poetry as Living on Earth with Attention and Care." Trumpeter 38, no. 1 (January 11, 2023): 23–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1095384ar.

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The article explores ecofeminism as intersectional, founded upon a politics of relations. Through an ecofeminist re-reading of Eavan Boland’s “Anna Liffey” and Grace Nichols’ “Hurricane Hits England”, the article discusses how these women poets remake geographies to locate themselves in time and place as kin to other person-beings.
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39

Kofman, Eleonore, and Kim England. "Who Will Mind the Baby? Geographies of Child Care and Working Mothers." Geographical Journal 164, no. 1 (March 1998): 102. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3060559.

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40

Margulies, Jared. "A Political Ecology of Desire." Environmental Humanities 14, no. 2 (July 1, 2022): 241–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/22011919-9712357.

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Abstract How does attention to exertion and absence of care illuminate possibilities for avoiding extinction amid global biodiversity declines? This article brings together feminist technoscience and more-than-human theory on care with Lacanian psychoanalytic theories of anxiety and desire. It does so to diagnose the threat of extinction anxieties and consider their material and political consequences for impedances to caring for nonhuman life and their flourishing. The article is developed through the empirical case of Arrojadoa marylanae, an endangered species of cactus in Bahia, Brazil, as a political ecology of desire. In bringing psychoanalytic thought into conversation with care, it considers how desire sits at the heart of more-than-human care and yet may be thwarted by anxiety. Contending with his own extinction anxieties as they became focused through an endangered cactus on a mountain destined for mining, the author excavates routes toward flourishing geographies: geographies of care-full interspecies alliances composed against Anthropocenic thinking. In concluding, the author urges for greater attention to the work of desire in studies of environmental change and the wider environmental humanities.
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41

Giesbrecht, Melissa, Jonathan Cinnamon, Charles Fritz, and Rory Johnston. "Themes in geographies of health and health care research: Reflections from the 2012 Canadian Association of Geographers annual meeting." Canadian Geographer / Le Géographe canadien 58, no. 2 (September 30, 2013): 160–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1541-0064.2013.12042.x.

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42

Sahar, Liora, Rentonia Williams, Arthi Rao, Kassandra I. Alcaraz, and Kenneth M. Portier. "Using GIS Technology to Define and Assess a Rurality Scheme Suitable for Decision Support in Health and Patient Services." International Journal of Applied Geospatial Research 9, no. 3 (July 2018): 1–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/ijagr.2018070101.

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Labeling geographic areas into rural or urban classes has implications to public policy, distribution of funds and services, as well as analysis and research. Rural-Urban classifications are often limited to dichotomous, county-based comparisons on geographies that can be too large and diverse to effectively assess and resource health care needs and services. Using an existing census tract based classification system, a modified rurality classification layer is proposed and used as a foundation layer in support of research, mission and income programs at a National Non-profit Organization. This system is analyzed by integrating with health services and program data to better understand accessibility and availability of health services, to assess available program offerings, and to evaluate the geographic distribution of health care providers and facilities. The analysis illustrates how identifying intra-rural differences can play a pivotal role in understanding patient needs, assigning adequate resources and can further support public health programs and policy implementation.
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43

Margulies, Jared D. "On coming into animal presence with photovoice." Environment and Planning E: Nature and Space 2, no. 4 (May 30, 2019): 850–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2514848619853060.

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Methodological advancement within more-than-human geography lags behind its theorization. As an intervention into the promise of visual methods for enlivening more-than-human geographies, I describe working with a photographic practice for exploring geographies of encounter between humans, the animals they care for, and wild animals. This is presented through discussing a collaborative project employing photovoice to explore wildlife conservation politics in a landscape where both humans and animals have the capacity to kill, and be killed, by one another. Through engaging with photographs and text produced over the course of six months by six individuals living in close proximity to Bandipur National Park in Karnataka, India, I explore entangled relations between humans and animals and the production of more-than-human hierarchies. I consider the potential of a visual method for practicing more-than-human geographies as an exploration of affective encounters. This paper contributes to on-going discussions and debates on decolonizing more-than-human geographies. More specifically, I suggest photovoice as one means by which more-than-human geographies can remain critically engaged with and speak out against enactments of injustice and violent legacies of colonialism that reach across species divides.
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44

McEwan, Cheryl, and Michael K. Goodman. "Place Geography and the Ethics of Care: Introductory Remarks on the Geographies of Ethics, Responsibility and Care." Ethics, Place & Environment 13, no. 2 (June 2010): 103–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13668791003778602.

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45

Leonard, Kelsey. "Medicine lines and COVID-19: Indigenous geographies of imagined bordering." Dialogues in Human Geography 10, no. 2 (June 23, 2020): 164–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2043820620934941.

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In response to COVID-19, this commentary explores the disproportionate impacts that the pandemic is having on Indigenous nations of Turtle Island (North America) and the rendering of Indigenous borders as sites of compassionate community care. I argue that settler colonialism during COVID-19 is enacted through travel and second-home escapism of urban elites.
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46

Pascucci, Elisa. "Who welcomes? The geographies of refugee aid as care work – commentary to Gill." Fennia - International Journal of Geography 196, no. 2 (November 28, 2018): 236–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.11143/fennia.76588.

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Drawing on my recent research with aid workers in Jordan and Lebanon, as well as on examples from Greece and Italy, in this commentary I propose the concept of care work as one of the possible ways to achieve a grounded critical understanding of welcome, one that goes beyond solidarity versus institutionalization, bureaucracy versus generosity and state versus civil society dichotomies. Framing the issue in such a way means asking three fundamental questions: not only, as Gill poignantly does, what is welcome, but also where is welcome actually located and, most importantly, who welcomes. These questions illuminate the many overlooked forms of affective and physical labour without which state-centred, institutional, and internationally organized aid and “welcome” would not be possible. The task, I contend, is to unearth the labour of care that the governance of migration and refuge requires, labour that is mostly feminized, racialized, and precarious. By illuminating the forms of care and interdependencies upon which the reproduction of our societies depends – in all its aspects, including border regimes – this perspective opens up an emancipatory pathway to the politicization of welcoming and aid to migrants and refugees, alternative to humanitarian discourses.
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47

Staeheli, Lynn A., and Michael Brown. "Where Has Welfare Gone? Introductory Remarks on the Geographies of Care and Welfare." Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space 35, no. 5 (May 2003): 771–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.1068/a35132.

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48

Adams, William M. "Geographies of conservation II: Technology, surveillance and conservation by algorithm." Progress in Human Geography 43, no. 2 (November 5, 2017): 337–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0309132517740220.

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The wide range of wildlife tracking and surveillance technologies (radio and satellite tracking, cameras, and audio) that are being deployed in conservation have important implications for a geographical understanding of care for non-human nature. This report explores four dimensions of their influence. First, their detailed view of spatial dimensions of non-human lives affects conservation’s demarcation and control of space. Second, the application of surveillance technologies to people is central to the rise of coercive conservation strategies. Third, such technologies enable the creation and commoditization of spectacular nature. Fourth, spatial digital data enables the automation of conservation decisions, a trend described here as ‘conservation by algorithm’.
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49

Massaro, Vanessa A. "Relocating the “inmate”: Tracing the geographies of social reproduction in correctional supervision." Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space 38, no. 7-8 (May 2, 2019): 1216–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2399654419845911.

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Neoliberal governance spurs the contradictory drives of securitization and austerity in the US carceral system. Correctional and parole offices cut costs by relocating care, relying upon the work of Black women, their families, and communities to provide myriad services to their incarcerated and paroled loved ones. Yet while their labor is vital to the reproduction and growth of this system, these same neoliberal processes work systematically to erase it. In doing so, they allow new kinds of unwarranted state surveillance through the private space of the home. In this article, I critically analyze the austerity measures implemented by Pennsylvania’s Department of Corrections, an institution that has undergone extensive reforms since 2012. To do so, I bridge feminist political and economic geographies, examining state processes via an analysis of unpaid reproductive labor, everyday practices, and emotion. Through a three-year ethnographic study with the loved ones of incarcerated people, I show how the state externalizes the cost of supervision onto prisoners’ support networks, relying in varied ways on families for the care and surveillance of prisoners. I show that this covert strategy enables the state to claim reductions in prison populations while, in fact, maintaining containment of formerly incarcerated people. These findings urge increased attention to the state’s dependence on incarcerated people’s support networks, demonstrating the vital insights a feminist geographic perspective offers in this age of austerity.
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50

Elliott, Mark C. "The Limits of Tartary: Manchuria in Imperial and National Geographies." Journal of Asian Studies 59, no. 3 (August 2000): 603–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2658945.

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This essay examines the transformation from undifferentiated frontier to geographic region of that part of northeast Asia controversially referred to as Manchuria. This transition—from space to place, as it were—long has tended to be seen primarily in terms of the extension of colonial interests into China in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. However, as I shall argue, the invention of this place began much earlier, in the seventeenth century, and owed substantially to the efforts of China's Manchu rulers, who claimed it as their homeland, the terre natale of the Qing dynasty (1644–1912). Even as the area was joined to the larger empire, Qing emperors took care to invest what I define as “Greater Mukden” with a unique identity.
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