Social Theory in Nursing Scholarship, From Humanism to Post-Humanism: Revisiting S. Nairn on the Structure-Agency Debate. [PDF]
West CA, Petrovskaya O.
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Challenging neoliberal time: Creating space for radical praxis in geography
Short Abstract The non‐linearity of time is a useful way to understand how we work in academia. In this paper I explore how can we change how we use our time. I propose three responses, which each play with time as non‐linear, multiple rhythms, and as having a lack of balance or stability.
Jenny Pickerill
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Advancing feminist understandings of woman abuse: the value of old wine in new bottles. [PDF]
DeKeesredy WS.
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Resurrected analysis: Navigating time between two environmental projects in Finland
Short Abstract This paper considers the ways in which research projects linger beyond their ‘official’ endings, and how to deal with this. Building on conversations on slow research, performed endings, and the complexities of data storage and analysis over time, I relate some experiences with my research on the Finnish Saimaa Ringed Seal, which ...
Katja Garson
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Evolution of diversity and inclusion excellence within an academic pathology professional organization: historical perspective, progress, and a model for others. [PDF]
Howell LP, Lipscomb MF, Limson M.
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Non‐linear pathways of/for social and spatial justice research
Short Abstract This commentary challenges the linear connection between research, engagement and activism in geographical scholarship, emphasising how these elements often intersect, overlap and conflict in complex, non‐linear ways. It reflects on the author's personal experiences as a human geographer and activist in the UK and Spain, exploring the ...
Mara Ferreri
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Bodily abounds. Hilary Mantel's <i>The Mirror and the Light</i> as Cixousian 'feminine text'. [PDF]
Andabak A.
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Volumetric mediations: Atmospheres of crisis and unbelonging in humanitarian drone documentaries
Short Abstract This paper contributes to scholarship on drones’ more‐than‐military realms as they pertain to the atmospheres they create in visual culture. Focusing on two humanitarian drone documentaries, Ai Weiwei's Human Flow (2017) and Morgan Knibbe's Those Who Feel the Fire Burning (2014), I examine how their drone cinematography visualises the ...
Beryl Pong
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Short Abstract This paper explores the ethical and creative value of composite fiction as a method for engaging with vulnerable participants in health geography research. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork in Port Talbot, South Wales, it examines how composite fiction can allow for co‐creation, to challenge authorial authority, support the ethical ...
Rosie Knowles
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