University of Wollongong
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Assembling geographical knowledge of changing worlds

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journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-14, 19:49 authored by Pauline McGuirkPauline McGuirk
This piece is sympathetic to the critical questions and epistemological arguments Larner (2011) presents for the current conjuncture of global transformations. I mobilize Larner's arguments for process-oriented assemblage thinking and apply them to the particular conjuncture through which one of these transformations - climate change - is being problematized in the Australian empirical context, and its connection to existing and emergent institutional and political formations and knowledge practices. I also point to emergent process-oriented, situated scholarly accounts of climate change in Australia and their potential to expand the contestable spaces whereby alternative politicizations and alternative political and institutional forms might be imagined and enacted. In closing, I reflect on the connection between situated accounts, such as these, and the potential performative effects of situated theorizing.

History

Citation

McGuirk, P. (2011). Assembling geographical knowledge of changing worlds. Dialogues in Human Geography, 1 (3), 336-341.

Journal title

Dialogues in Human Geography

Volume

1

Issue

3

Pagination

336-341

Language

English

RIS ID

107530

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