987 resultados para Critical Geography
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In this paper, we examine Florida’s sixth-eighth grade geography standards to determine the potential for teaching critical geography, a field that interrogates space, place, power, and identity. While 57% of the standards demonstrated evidence of critical thinking, only six standards foster higher levels of critique consistent with critical geography.
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A dissertação baseia-se na Teoria do Desenvolvimento Geográfico Desigual, fruto das elucubrações e da inserção do viés marxista no âmbito da Geografia Crítica ou Radical, que desvelará a produção das diferenciações espaciais concernente ao espaço urbano. Apoiado nessa base teórica objetiva-se desvelar a produção do espaço desigual no bairro de Campo Grande, Rio de Janeiro, com foco nas Zonas Residenciais 3 e 4, pela leitura das políticas urbanas estatais, que fragmentam e restringem o acesso aos diferentes espaços do bairro, estabelecidas e influenciadas pelo neoliberalismo no momento atual da integração e acumulação do sistema político-econômico mundial estabelecido como Globalização. Ainda, verifica-se a influência dos agentes privados na formulação de tais políticas e na apropriação e produção do espaço.
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This is a study of identity and geopolitics in Hergé's Adventures of Tintin, a series of adventure comics created from 1929 to 1976. The Tintin comics became increasingly popular throughout the mid-twentieth century, and their creator, Hergé, is still a subject of intrigue in the press and popular publications. Recent work in popular geopolitics has pioneered the use of comics as a new type of source material in critical geography. Hergé's approach to the comics format combines an iconic protagonist with detailed and textured environments that draw upon some of the geopolitical discourses of the twentieth century. Three forms of geopolitical meaning are identified within the Tintin comics: discourses of colonialism, European pre-eminence and anti-Americanism. These overlapping trends amount to different facets of one single discourse, which places European ideologies at the centre of its world-view. This is highlighted by focusing on three geographical spaces of the Tintin series, and by contextualising the life and selected works of Hergé. © 2009 Taylor & Francis.
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The co-edited collection investigates the processes of learning how to live with individual and groups differences in the 21century and examines the ambivalences of contemporary cosmopolitanism. The contributions focus on visual, normative and cultural embodiments of differences, examining conflicts at local sites that are connected by the processes of Europeanization and globalization.
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Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES)
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Pós-graduação em Geografia - IGCE
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El punto de inicio del razonamiento desarrollado para la construcción de lo que se denomina metageografía, parte con el reconocimiento de un estado de crisis en la Geografía, y en segundo lugar, de su rol como posibilidad, a pesar de ser una ciencia fragmentada, de comprender el mundo moderno, pues su conocimiento puede constituirse en un movimiento hacia la totalidad. En un sentido más amplio, se reflexiona sobre el lugar de la Geografía en la explicación de la realidad en constante cambio. ¿Es posible pensar que, a pesar de sus avances, la Geografía se encuentra en un estado de crisis? Nos enfrentamos con la obligación de revelar sus indicios y, por consiguiente, la necesidad de construir un camino hacia adelante en la necesidad de comprender la realidad desde o por la Geografía. La metageografía es una propuesta teórico-metodológica para la superación de la situación de crisis en que la disciplina se encuentra, a partir de la práctica socioespacial como modo explicativo.
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Este trabajo tiene por objetivo indagar el lugar que ocupa -y la forma en que está constituida- la dimensión espacial en distintos enfoques que nutrieron o se desarrollaron como teorías de la geografía económica. Se inicia la discusión partiendo de la economía convencional (neoclásica o keynesiana) y se sigue con los enfoques institucionalistas del desarrollo regional. Con respecto a estos últimos, se estudia los conceptos básicos tomados del giro relacional de la geografía humana, sobre todo al momento de definir sus objetos de análisis y su espacialidad inherente. Se intenta así caracterizar el tratamiento del espacio descubriendo sus límites y dificultades, poniéndose de manifiesto el piso común que estos enfoques comparten con las perspectivas convencionales de la geografía económica. Finalmente, se recuperan los aportes de geógrafos críticos dedicados al estudio de la estructuración espacio-temporal de la "moderna sociedad burguesa", entablando un diálogo fructífero con el giro relacional que sirvió de fundamento al pensamiento institucionalista
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Este trabajo tiene por objetivo indagar el lugar que ocupa -y la forma en que está constituida- la dimensión espacial en distintos enfoques que nutrieron o se desarrollaron como teorías de la geografía económica. Se inicia la discusión partiendo de la economía convencional (neoclásica o keynesiana) y se sigue con los enfoques institucionalistas del desarrollo regional. Con respecto a estos últimos, se estudia los conceptos básicos tomados del giro relacional de la geografía humana, sobre todo al momento de definir sus objetos de análisis y su espacialidad inherente. Se intenta así caracterizar el tratamiento del espacio descubriendo sus límites y dificultades, poniéndose de manifiesto el piso común que estos enfoques comparten con las perspectivas convencionales de la geografía económica. Finalmente, se recuperan los aportes de geógrafos críticos dedicados al estudio de la estructuración espacio-temporal de la "moderna sociedad burguesa", entablando un diálogo fructífero con el giro relacional que sirvió de fundamento al pensamiento institucionalista
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Este trabajo tiene por objetivo indagar el lugar que ocupa -y la forma en que está constituida- la dimensión espacial en distintos enfoques que nutrieron o se desarrollaron como teorías de la geografía económica. Se inicia la discusión partiendo de la economía convencional (neoclásica o keynesiana) y se sigue con los enfoques institucionalistas del desarrollo regional. Con respecto a estos últimos, se estudia los conceptos básicos tomados del giro relacional de la geografía humana, sobre todo al momento de definir sus objetos de análisis y su espacialidad inherente. Se intenta así caracterizar el tratamiento del espacio descubriendo sus límites y dificultades, poniéndose de manifiesto el piso común que estos enfoques comparten con las perspectivas convencionales de la geografía económica. Finalmente, se recuperan los aportes de geógrafos críticos dedicados al estudio de la estructuración espacio-temporal de la "moderna sociedad burguesa", entablando un diálogo fructífero con el giro relacional que sirvió de fundamento al pensamiento institucionalista
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Mallorca, the largest of the Balearic Islands, is a well-known summer holidays destination; an ideal place to relax and enjoy the sun and the sea. That tourist gaze reflected on postcards results from advertising campaigns, where cinema played an important role with documentaries and fiction films. The origins of that iconography started in the decades of the 1920’s and 1930’s, reflecting the so-called myth of the “island of calm”. On the other hand, the films of the 1950’s and 1960’s created new stereotypes related to the mass tourism boom. Busy beaches and the white bodies of tourists replaced white sandy beaches, mountains and landscapes shown up in the movies of the early decades of the 20th century. Besides, hotels and nightclubs also replaced monuments, rural landscapes and folk exhibitions. These tourist images mirror the social and spatial transformations of Mallorca, under standardization processes like other seaside mass tourist destinations. The identity was rebuilt on the foundations of "modernity". Although "balearization" has not ceased, nowadays filmmaking about Mallorca is advertising again a stereotype close to that one of the 1920s and 1930s, glorifying the myth of the "island of calm". This singular identity makes the island more profitable for capital that searches socio-spatial differentiation in post-fordist times.
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Partimos do pressuposto que a universidade pública é um bem do povo e deve servir aos interesses da sociedade, sobretudo aos interesses daqueles cuja vida é ameaçada mediante as condições desiguais sob as quais a sociedade capitalista se funda. Entendemos que a extensão universitária é uma atividade da universidade e deve, como ensino e pesquisa, ser reconhecida como produtora de conhecimentos e não por trabalhos assistenciais, como se caracteriza, na realidade concreta, a extensão universitária analisada nesta dissertação. Com base nisso, o trabalho que se segue discorre sobre a relação de dependência das associações populares, ligadas ao movimento da economia popular solidária à extensão da Universidade Federal do Rio Grande – FURG, especificamente aquela realizada pelo Núcleo de Desenvolvimento Social e Econômico – NUDESE-FURG, da região de Rio GrandeRS. O objetivo do trabalho foi conhecer a relação entre o núcleo e as associações, problematizando-a com base em alguns princípios da Educação Ambiental Crítica (diálogo, totalidade, relação teoria/prática e participação social). O referencial que sustenta o trabalho articula autores da sociologia do trabalho, economia da educação, ecologia política, geografia crítica, todos, de alguma forma, ligados ao materialismo histórico como perspectiva de análise. O trabalho se caracteriza como um estudo de caso, onde os principais recursos perpassaram pela análise de documentos e, fundamentalmente, as entrevistas gravadas e transcritas na íntegra, pelas quais nosso estudo se baseia. A análise do material foi feita a partir dos pressupostos da análise crítica do discurso, a qual busca entrelaçar os pronunciamentos dos sujeitos com a totalidade social na qual o discurso está inscrito, possibilitando o alcance do significado concreto. O estudo demonstra que a extensão universitária desenvolvida pelo NUDESE-FURG tem características assistencialistas, cuja consequência prática é a realização de atividades para os trabalhadores associados (principalmente elaboração e gestão de projetos), impedindo que as associações desenvolvam suas ações sem depender do núcleo. Além disso, ao assumir recursos financeiros oriundos de projetos (via editais), as associações apenas transferem para o Estado a condição de dependência do intermediário, o que não extingue o problema, mas reafirma-o. Por isso, entendemos que a Educação Ambiental Crítica oferece, por meio dos princípios que utilizamos, um instrumento crítico importante ao estudo de processos e políticas que buscam a emancipação dos sujeitos. Isso porque, também, ao reconhecer a crise socioambiental que vivemos, fruto do modo de produção capitalista, dos conflitos existentes na sociedade (portanto dos diferentes interesses, concepções e valores em disputa), pela apropriação da riqueza produzida, podem-se possibilitar conhecimentos úteis dos trabalhadores das associações. Para que isso aconteça, defendemos o encontro da extensão universitária do NUDESE-FURG com a Educação Ambiental Crítica, caso a emancipação, de fato, esteja no horizonte das práticas deste núcleo, já que pelo estudo, nesta pesquisa, predomina dependência de tais grupos do NUDESE-FURG.
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This chapter attends to the legal and political geographies of one of Earth's most important, valuable, and pressured spaces: the geostationary orbit. Since the first, NASA, satellite entered it in 1964, this small, defined band of Outer Space, 35,786km from the Earth's surface, and only 30km wide, has become a highly charged legal and geopolitical environment, yet it remains a space which is curiously unheard of outside of specialist circles. For the thousands of satellites which now underpin the Earth's communication, media, and data industries and flows, the geostationary orbit is the prime position in Space. The geostationary orbit only has the physical capacity to hold approximately 1500 satellites; in 1997 there were approximately 1000. It is no overstatement to assert that media, communication, and data industries would not be what they are today if it was not for the geostationary orbit. This chapter provides a critical legal geography of the geostationary orbit, charting the topography of the debates and struggles to define and manage this highly-important space. Drawing on key legal documents such as the Outer Space Treaty and the Moon Treaty, the chapter addresses fundamental questions about the legal geography of the orbit, questions which are of growing importance as the orbit’s available satellite spaces diminish and the orbit comes under increasing pressure. Who owns the geostationary orbit? Who, and whose rules, govern what may or may not (literally) take place within it? Who decides which satellites can occupy the orbit? Is the geostationary orbit the sovereign property of the equatorial states it supertends, as these states argued in the 1970s? Or is it a part of the res communis, or common property of humanity, which currently legally characterises Outer Space? As challenges to the existing legal spatiality of the orbit from launch states, companies, and potential launch states, it is particularly critical that the current spatiality of the orbit is understood and considered. One of the busiest areas of Outer Space’s spatiality is international territorial law. Mentions of Space law tend to evoke incredulity and ‘little green men’ jokes, but as Space becomes busier and busier, international Space law is growing in complexity and importance. The chapter draws on two key fields of research: cultural geography, and critical legal geography. The chapter is framed by the cultural geographical concept of ‘spatiality’, a term which signals the multiple and dynamic nature of geographical space. As spatial theorists such as Henri Lefebvre assert, a space is never simply physical; rather, any space is always a jostling composite of material, imagined, and practiced geographies (Lefebvre 1991). The ways in which a culture perceives, represents, and legislates that space are as constitutive of its identity--its spatiality--as the physical topography of the ground itself. The second field in which this chapter is situated—critical legal geography—derives from cultural geography’s focus on the cultural construction of spatiality. In his Law, Space and the Geographies of Power (1994), Nicholas Blomley asserts that analyses of territorial law largely neglect the spatial dimension of their investigations; rather than seeing the law as a force that produces specific kinds of spaces, they tend to position space as a neutral, universally-legible entity which is neatly governed by the equally neutral 'external variable' of territorial law (28). 'In the hegemonic conception of the law,' Pue similarly argues, 'the entire world is transmuted into one vast isotropic surface' (1990: 568) on which law simply acts. But as the emerging field of critical legal geography demonstrates, law is not a neutral organiser of space, but is instead a powerful cultural technology of spatial production. Or as Delaney states, legal debates are “episodes in the social production of space” (2001, p. 494). International territorial law, in other words, makes space, and does not simply govern it. Drawing on these tenets of the field of critical legal geography, as well as on Lefebvrian concept of multipartite spatiality, this chapter does two things. First, it extends the field of critical legal geography into Space, a domain with which the field has yet to substantially engage. Second, it demonstrates that the legal spatiality of the geostationary orbit is both complex and contested, and argues that it is crucial that we understand this dynamic legal space on which the Earth’s communications systems rely.
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This chapter provides a critical legal geography of outer Space, charting the topography of the debates and struggles around its definition, management, and possession. As the emerging field of critical legal geography demonstrates, law is not a neutral organiser of space, but is instead a powerful cultural technology of spatial production. Drawing on legal documents such as the Outer Space Treaty and the Moon Treaty, as well as on the analogous and precedent-setting legal geographies of Antarctica and the deep seabed, the chapter addresses key questions about the legal geography of outer Space, questions which are of growing importance as Space’s available satellite spaces in the geostationary orbit diminish, Space weapons and mining become increasingly viable, Space colonisation and tourism emerge, and questions about Space’s legal status grow in intensity. Who owns outer Space? Who, and whose rules, govern what may or may not (literally) take place there? Is the geostationary orbit the sovereign property of the equatorial states it supertends, as these states argued in the 1970s? Or is it a part of the res communis, or common property of humanity, which currently legally characterises outer Space? Does Space belong to no one, or to everyone? As challenges to the existing legal spatiality of outer Space emerge from spacefaring states, companies, and non-spacefaring states, it is particularly critical that the current spatiality of Space is understood and considered.
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Enchantment is a term frequently used by human geographers to express delight, wonder or that which cannot be simply explained. However, it is a concept that has yet to be subject to sustained critique, specifically how it can be used to progress geographic thought and praxis. This paper makes sense of, and space for, the unintelligibility of enchantment in order to encourage a less repressed, more cheerful way of engaging with the geographies of the world. We track back through our disciplinary heritage to explore how geographers have employed enchantment as a force through which the world inspires affective attachment. We review the terrain of the debate surrounding recent geographical engagements with enchantment, focusing on the nature of being critical and the character of critique in human geography, offering a new ‘enchanted’ stance to our geographical endeavours. We argue that the moment of enchantment has not passed with the current challenging climate; if anything, it is more pressing.