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ROUTLEDGE HANDBOOK OF
GENDER AND FEMINIST GEOGRAPHIES
This handbook provides a comprehensive analysis of contemporary gender and feminist geog-
raphies in an international and multi-disciplinary context. It features 48 new contributions from
both experienced and emerging scholars, artists and activists who critically review and appraise
current spatial politics. Each chapter advances the future development of feminist geography
and gender studies, as well as empirical evidence of changing relationships between gender,
power, place and space. Following an introduction by the Editors, the handbook presents ori-
ginal work organized into four parts which engage with relevant issues including violence,
resistance, agency and desire:
The Routledge Handbook of Gender and Feminist Geographies will be an essential reference work
for scholars interested in feminist geography, gender studies and geographical thought.
Peter Hopkins is a professor of Social Geography in the School of Geography, Politics and
Sociology at Newcastle University, UK.
Elizabeth Olson is a professor of Geography and Global Studies at the University of North
Carolina –Chapel Hill, USA.
Joseli Maria Silva is a professor of Geography at the State University of Ponta Grossa, Brazil.
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ROUTLEDGE HANDBOOK
OF GENDER AND FEMINIST
GEOGRAPHIES
We dedicate this book to Professor Claire Dwyer (1964–2019). She was a leader in gender and feminist
geography, always deeply supportive and endlessly generous with her time and intellect.
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CONTENTS
PART 1
Establishing feminist geographies 15
I N DI G EN E IT Y
2 Indigenous Australian sexualities explored through the lens of sex work 17
Corrinne Sullivan
S EX UALI TIE S
3 From order to chaos: geographies of sexualities 27
Carl Bonner-Thompson, Graeme William Mearns, Alessandro Boussalem
and Ged Ridley
BLAC K F EMIN IS M
4 Hip-hop urbanism, placemaking and community-building among
Black LGBT youth in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil 37
Devin Oliver and Caroline Faria
M EN AND M A S C UL IN IT IE S
5 Shifting multiple masculinities: alternative views from Japan and
Papua New Guinea 48
Keichi Kumagai
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Contents
DI S ABI LIT Y
6 Disabled women academics reshaping the landscape of the academy 61
Nancy Hansen
ACADEMIC G E OG R A P HY
7 Gender and the discipline of geography: case studies of relational
networks of support in Western academia 70
Martina Angela Caretta and Avril Maddrell
EM OTI O N A N D A F F E C T
8 Skin, sweat and materiality: feminist geographies of emotion and affect 80
Gail Adams-Hutcheson and Paula Smith
PERF O R M AT IV IT Y
9 On the subject of performativity: Judith Butler’s influence
in geography 92
Eden Kinkaid and Lise Nelson
S PAC E/ T IME A N D S CA L E
10 Politics and space/time 102
Doreen Massey
EC O N O M Y
11 Feminist engagement with the economy: spaces of resistance
and transformation 118
Jessa M. Loomis and Ann M. Oberhauser
G LO BAL IZ AT ION
12 Disentangling globalization: towards a feminist geography of
hair and beauty 129
Caroline Faria and Bisola Falola
PART 2
Placing feminist geographies 141
BO DI ES
13 Embodiment: lesbians, space, sperm and reproductive technologies 143
Robyn Longhurst and Lisa Melville
I N TI M AT E
14 The intimate geopolitics of race and gender in the United States 153
Chris Neubert, Sara Smith and Pavithra Vasudevan
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Contents
HOME
15 Home-keeping in long-term displacement 164
Cathrine Brun and Anita H. Fábos
EN VI RO N ME N T
16 Environmental politics in the everyday: jam, red meat and showers 174
Gordon Waitt and Rebecca Campbell
U RBAN
17 Gender and urban neoliberalization 184
Carina Listerborn
PLAN NI NG
18 Gender and sexuality in participatory planning in Israel: a journey
between discourses 194
Tovi Fenster and Chen Misgav
RU RAL
19 Rurality, geography and feminism: troubling relationships 202
Barbara Pini, Robyn Mayes and Laura Rodriguez Castro
NATI O N
20 Nationhood: feminist approaches, emancipatory processes and
intersecting identities 212
Maria Rodó-Zárate
TRANS N AT ION A L IS M
21 Unsettling gender and sexuality across nations: transnationalism within
and between nations 223
May Farrales and Geraldine Pratt
C I TI ZENS H IP
22 Mobilities and citizenship 234
Tamir Arviv and Symon James-Wilson
M I G RATI ON
23 Geographies of gendered migration: place as difference and connection 244
Eleonore Kofman and Parvati Raghuram
LANDS CAP E
24 Representing women and gender in memory landscapes 254
Danielle Drozdzewski and Janice Monk
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Contents
PO LI TI CA L E C OL OG Y
25 Feminist political ecologies: race, bodies and the human 271
Sharlene Mollett, Laura Vaz-Jones and Lydia Delicado-Moratalla
PART 3
Engaging feminist geographies 285
TRAU M A
26 Trauma, gender and space: insights from Bangladesh, Malaysia and the UK
287
Rachel Pain, Nahid Rezwana and Zuriatunfadzliah Sahdan
VI O LEN C E
27 Geographies of violence: feminist geopolitical approaches 297
Katherine Brickell and Dana Cuomo
S U RVI VOR S
28 Scaling a survivor-centric approach for survivors of sexual violence: the
case of an action-based research project in India 308
Andréanne Martel and Margaret Walton-Roberts
M OTH ER HOOD
29 Motherhood in feminist geography: current trends and themes 318
Kate Boyer
LABO U R
30 Embodied labour in the bioeconomy 326
Maria Fannin
H EALTH A N D W E L L -B E IN G
31 Care, health and migration 336
Kim England, Isabel Dyck, Iliana Ortega-Alcázar and Menah Raven-Ellison
CARE AN D CA R E G IV IN G
32 Contexts of ‘caring masculinities’: the gendered and intergenerational
geographies of men’s care responsibilities in later life 347
Anna Tarrant
C H I LDR E N A N D YOUT H
33 Giving birth to geographies of young people: the importance of
feminist geography beyond feminist geography 357
Ann E. Bartos
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Contents
DEVELO P ME N T
34 Gendered geographies of development 368
Paula Meth
FOOD
35 Feminist visceral politics: from taste to territory 379
Allison Hayes-Conroy, Jessica Hayes-Conroy,Yoshiko Yamasaki and
Ximena Quintero Saavedra
NEO LI BER A L IS M
36 Feminist perspectives on neoliberal globalization, (post)feminisms
and (homo)normativities 389
Shirlena Huang and Qian Hui Tan
PART 4
Doing feminist geographies 399
DEC O LO N IZ IN G M E T H OD S
37 Embodied translations: decolonizing methodologies of knowing and being
401
Beaudelaine Pierre, Naimah Petigny and Richa Nagar
AC TI V I S M
39 Spaces and scales of feminist activism 423
Claire Hancock, Roxane Bettinger and Sofia Manseri
ART/S C I EN C E C OL L A B OR AT ION S
40 An artful feminist geopolitics of climate change 433
Sallie A. Marston, Harriet Hawkins and Elizabeth Straughan
C RI TI CAL P H Y S ICA L G E OG R A P HY
41 Feminist geography in the Anthropocene: sciences, bodies, futures 445
Kai Bosworth
GIS
42 QGIS in feminist geographic research: its merits and limits 455
Nazgol Bagheri
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Contents
DI G I TAL
43 Doing gender in the digital: feminist geographic methods changing
research? 467
Jessica McLean, Sophia Maalsen and Nicole McNamara
M EDI A
44 Drone Queen of the Homeland: the gendered geopolitics of television
drama in the age of media convergence 476
Julie Cupples and Kevin Glynn
ARC H I V E S
45 Historical research: gender, politics and ethics 490
Laura Crawford and Sarah Mills
PEDAG O G Y
46 Teaching feminist geography: practices and perspectives 501
Joos Droogleever Fortuijn
W RI TI N G
47 Autogeography: placing research in the first-person singular 511
Sophie Tamas
S TO RY T E L L IN G
48 Narrating new spaces: theories and practices of storytelling in
feminist geographies 519
Sarah de Leeuw and Vanessa Sloan Morgan
Index 531
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ILLUSTRATIONS
Figures
4.1 Front entrance of Casa Nem, stating, ‘Respect the girls, queens,
transgender women, travestis and whores!’. 43
5.1 Four young men on the morning after the skin-cutting ritual.
Kraimbit village, Papua New Guinea, August 2018. 51
12.1 Showcasing hair at the Beautyworld Middle East trade fair, 2015. 136
24.1 Grażyna and Litawor (1823), Planty, Kraków. 258
24.2 Lilla Weneda (1839), Planty, Kraków. 260
24.3 Monumental Women Belong Here (2018). Permission granted by
Stanton and Anthony Statue Fund. 263
24.4 Woman of Words. Katherine Mansfield statue, Wellington, Aotearoa
New Zealand. 267
27.1 San Francisco’s Column of Strength memorial. 303
31.1 Admission to the NMC Register from the UK and non-UK
countries, 1999–2018. 341
35.1 Body map. 384
38.1 Homeland Security © 2010 Ruby Chacón. 411
38.2 Caution © Mestizo Arts & Activism Collective. 415
39.1 Flyer for May 2017 conference at Université Paris-Est as initially
designed (the final version had only the image of the children). 426
39.2 Messages stencilled over anti-abortion slogans on Paris pavements: ‘Procreation without
fear or father’, ‘Access to abortion’ and ‘Reproductive technologies for all’. 428
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List of illustrations
40.1 No. 4, CF 2008 Disko Bay Expedition: 1 October, Tracey Rowledge (2008). 437
40.2 High Arctic, Matthew Clark and United Visual Artists, view of installation at the
National Maritime Museum, London 2011. 438
Map
30.1 Surrogacy laws by country. 330
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CONTRIBUTORS
Peter Hopkins is a professor of Social Geography in the School of Geography, Politics and
Sociology, Newcastle University, England, UK. His research interests focus upon: masculinities,
ethnicities and place; young people, place and identity; intersectionality, equality and diversity;
and racism, Islamophobia and Muslim identities. He previously served as the managing editor
of Gender, Place and Culture.
Elizabeth Olson is a professor of Geography and Global Studies at the University of North
Carolina –Chapel Hill. Her research engages with themes of gender in relation to structural
inequality, ethics, religion and young people, with a more recent focus on the ethics of care in
the context of contemporary caregiving economies. She has served on the editorial board of
Gender, Place and Culture, and is a member of the Scientific Committee for the International
Young Carers Conference and the AAG Climate Action Task Force.
Joseli Maria Silva is a professor of Geography in the postgraduate programme at the State
University of Ponta Grossa, Brazil. She is coordinator of the Group of Territorial Studies
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List of contributors
at the same university and chief editor of the Revista Latino-americana de Geografia e Gênero
(Latin American Journal of Geography and Gender). She is one of the founders of the Ibero-Latin
American Network for the Study of Geography, Gender and Sexualities. Joseli is a member
of the Steering Committee of the International Geographical Union Gender and Geography
Commission. Her research is focused on the relationship between space, gender and sexualities,
with special attention on trans-sexualities.
Tamir Arviv is a postdoctoral fellow in the Faculty of Architecture and Town Planning at the
Technion, Israel Institute of Technology. His current research explores the relationship between
the planning and design of high-r ise complexes in Israeli cities and the everyday socio-spatial
practices and interactions among Arab and Jewish residents.
Ann E. Bartos is a senior lecturer in the School of Environment at the University of Auckland,
Aotearoa New Zealand. She has an interest in questions around political agency, politics of
embodiment, political ecology and geographies of care. Her research has focused on sexual and
gender-based violence, agriculture and food politics and children’s environmental agency.
Roxane Bettinger first trained as a social worker and now teaches research methodologies.
Her political engagements are radical materialist feminist struggles and advocacy for LGBT
rights, both understood in intersectional perspectives. She writes for collective organizations
and in November 2018 authored an autobiographical fiction about sex work and feminism.
Kai Bosworth is an assistant professor at the School of World Studies, Virginia Commonwealth
University, USA. He completed a PhD in the Department of Geography, Environment and
Society at the University of Minnesota, where he studies the politics of environmentalism,
especially concerning natural resource extraction and transportation as an aspect of settler colo-
nialism. His publications have appeared in Environment and Planning D: Society & Space; Antipode
and The Annals of the American Association of Geographers.
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List of contributors
Alessandro Boussalem is a PhD student affiliated with the School of Geography, Politics and
Sociology at Newcastle University, UK. Alessandro’s research explores LGBTQ subjectivities
among LGBTQ Muslims who currently live in Brussels.
Kate Boyer is a senior lecturer in the School of Geography and Planning at Cardiff University,
UK. She has been researching and publishing on motherhood and breastfeeding over the last
ten years, and in 2018 published Spaces and Politics of Motherhood.
Cathrine Brun is a human geographer and director of the Centre for Development and
Emergency Practice (CENDEP), the School of Architecture at Oxford Brookes University, UK.
Her research interests concern forced migration and conflict, housing and home; and the theory,
ethics and practice of humanitarianism.
Caitlin Cahill is an associate professor of Urban Geography and Politics at Pratt Institute,
Brooklyn, New York. Caitlin engages in critical participatory action research with communi-
ties, focused on the everyday intimate experiences of neoliberal racial capitalism, specifically
as it concerns gentrification, immigration, education and zero tolerance/policing policies.
Martina Angela Caretta is a feminist geographer researching the human dimensions of water.
She is a coordinating lead author of the forthcoming 6th UN Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change Assessment report. She also explores how the neoliberal turn of academia
affects early-career female geographers.
David Alberto Quijada Cerecer is an associate professor of Ethnic Studies at Saint Mary’s
College of California. His research interests include inter-cultural/ethnic youth alliances, cul-
tural citizenship, feminist ethnographic methods and youth participatory action research.
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List of contributors
Dana Cuomo is an assistant professor at Lafayette College. Her current project investigates the
role of technology in facilitating abuse, and assesses the needs of domestic violence survivors
whose safety and security are compromised as a result. Dana’s research has been published in
Gender, Place & Culture and in Progress in Human Geography.
Julie Cupples is a professor of Human Geography and Cultural Studies at the University
of Edinburgh. Her research interests include cultural politics, especially in Central America,
Indigenous and Afro- descendant media and geopolitical television. She is the author
or editor of six books, the most recent being the Routledge Handbook of Latin American
Development.
Sarah de Leeuw is an award-winning researcher and author (poetry and literary non-fiction),
focusing on unsettling power and the role of humanities in making biomedical and health
sciences socially accountable. A Canada Research Chair in Humanities and Health Inequities,
she is an associate professor with the University of Northern British Columbia’s Northern
Medical Program, the University of British Columbia’s Faculty of Medicine.
Isabel Dyck is a professor emeritus, School of Geography, Queen Mary University of London.
Her work focuses on a range of settlement issues for international migrants, both in Canada and
the UK, including the reconstitution of home and family, health and care practices and house-
hold economic strategies.
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List of contributors
Bisola Falola is a feminist geographer and graduate of the Department of Geography and
the Environment at the University of Texas at Austin. She is a programme officer at the Open
Society Foundation, working on youth, urban precarity and marginalization, and specializing in
narrative and cultural change strategies.
Maria Fannin is a reader in Human Geography at the University of Bristol, UK. Her research
focuses on cultural aspects of human tissue use in medicine and the life sciences. She is the co-
editor, with Marcia R. England and Helen Hazen, of Reproductive Geographies: Bodies, Places and
Politics (Routledge, 2018).
May Farrales is a postdoctoral fellow with the Health Arts Research Centre and ECHO
(Environment, Community, Health Observatory) project at the University of Northern
British Columbia on the traditional territory of the Lheidli T’enneh people. Her research
interests are nested in understanding how different forms of colonialism work over time
and space.
Tovi Fenster is a professor and head of the Department of Geography and Human Environment
at Tel Aviv University. She is the founder and head of PECLAB; former head of the Institute of
Diplomacy and Regional Cooperation and the NCJW Women and Gender Studies programme;
and former chair of IGU Gender and Geography Commission. In 1999, she initiated and was the
first chair of Bimkom-Planners for Planning Rights in Israel (NGO) and now serves as its president.
Joos Droogleever Fortuijn retired as an associate professor in human geography and served as
chair of the Department of Geography, Planning and International Development Studies of the
University of Amsterdam. She is the first vice-president of the International Geographical Union.
She has published on urban and rural geography, gender, ageing and feminist geography teaching.
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group. Her recent work has focused on issues of the right to the city for gender minorities in
Paris and other European cities.
Nancy Hansen is associate professor and director of the Interdisciplinary Master’s Program in
Disability Studies at the University of Manitoba. She has a PhD (Human Geography) from the
University of Glasgow. She is a co-editor of two academic volumes, has written numerous book
chapters and contributed to various academic journals.
Harriet Hawkins researches the geographies of artworks and art worlds. She is currently
working on a project on the underground, including caves and grottos. She is the author of
several monographs (‘For Creative Geographies’ and ‘Creativity: Live,Work, Create’), and works
collaboratively with artists and curators around the world. Harriet is currently a professor of
GeoHumanities at Royal Holloway, University of London.
Eden Kinkaid is a doctoral candidate in the departments of Geography and Women’s, Gender,
and Sexuality Studies at Pennsylvania State University. Her research concerns the intersections
of queer theory, phenomenology and geography, with a particular interest in philosophies of
space and the subject.
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List of contributors
Jessa M. Loomis received her doctorate from the University of Kentucky in 2018 and is a lecturer
of Economic Geography at Newcastle University. Loomis uses qualitative methods and feminist
theory to examine social and economic change. Her research interests include financialization,
economic subjectivity, inequality and the social and scalar relations of debt.
Sophia Maalsen is a lecturer in urbanism at the School of Architecture, Design and Planning,
University of Sydney. Prior to this post, Sophia was a postdoctoral researcher on the European
Union-funded Programmable City Project, where she investigated the digital transformation
of cities and urban governance. Her particular expertise is in understanding the intersection of
gender, the material, digital and the human and how this affects lived experience.
Avril Maddrell is a professor of Social and Cultural Geography at the University of Reading.
She is a feminist geographer, with research interests in spaces, landscapes and practices of death,
mourning and remembrance; sacred mobilities; and gendered historiography. She is an Editor
of Social and Cultural Geography, former Editor of Gender, Place and Culture, and author/co-
author/co-editor of several books, including Complex Locations.Women’s Geographical Work in the
UK 1850–1970 (Maddrell 2009) and Contemporary Encounters in Gender and Religion (Gemzoe,
Keinanen and Maddrell (Eds).
Sofia Manseri is a long-time resident of the Paris suburbs. Besides her regular office job, she
works on the policy and promotion of equality, as an elected city councillor, in Gennevilliers.
She collaborates with the research collective Les Urbaines (https://urbaines.hypotheses.org) and
writes about equality in critical perspectives on her blog, http://loubiaconnection.blogspot.com.
Sallie A. Marston is a human geographer whose work is located at the intersection of socio-
spatial theory and politics. She investigates through everyday life and the seemingly mundane
practices that constitute it. In addition to being a professor in the School of Geography and
Development, she is the director of the University of Arizona’s Community and School Garden
Program.
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Doreen Massey was born on 3 January 1944 and passed away on 11 March 2016. She was a
Professor of Geography at the Open University for most of her career and published widely in
human geography, including in debates about gender, capitalism and place.
Nicole McNamara is a geographer and planner, working to integrate the two disciplines in
her professional planning practice. She recently completed her PhD entitled ‘Understanding
Cycling: Practices and Experiences in Sydney’ at Macquarie University. Nicole’s interdiscip-
linary research focuses on emotional and affectual geographies, mobilities, social practice theory
and feminist geographies.
Graeme William Mearns is a queer geographer who has spent several years working outside
his home discipline as part of an interdisciplinary research, with colleagues in computing. His
core interests are sexual citizenship, gender and emerging technologies.
Lisa Melville is a PhD student at the University of Waikato and is researching lesbians’
experiences of conception, pregnancy and mothering. Lisa wrote ‘“Who’s the Dad?” And Other
Things Not to Say to Lesbian Mums’, published in The Spinoff and The New Zealand Herald
e-Edition (2018), and ‘Lesbians Making Babies: Why Research on Sperm, Space and Decisions
Matters’ in Te Kua Kete Aronui (2016).
Paula Meth is a reader in Urban Studies and Planning at the University of Sheffield and an
associate fellow of the School of Architecture and Planning at Wits University in South Africa.
She focuses on social and everyday lives within cities of the Global South, exploring how
changes to their material and infrastructural elements (housing, for example) shape, and in turn
are shaped by, social and political processes. She co-authored Geographies of Developing Areas
(2014, Routledge).
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Sarah Mills is a reader in human geography at Loughborough University. Her research interests
include the geographies of youth citizenship, informal education and volunteering in both
historical and contemporary contexts. She is the co-editor of Informal Education, Childhood
and Youth: Geographies, Histories, Practices (2014, Palgrave Macmillan) and Politics, Citizenship and
Rights (2016, Springer).
Chen Misgav is currently a postdoctoral fellow in the Open University, Israel, and a research
fellow in Minerva Humanities Center in Tel-Aviv University. He was awarded his PhD by
the Department of Geography and Human Environment/Planning with Communities for the
Environment at Tel-Aviv University, Israel. Chen has published on the intersections of space,
politics, social and protest movements, gender, sexuality and planning.
Sharlene Mollett is an associate professor in the Department of Geography and Centre for
Critical Development Studies at the University of Toronto. Her work is positioned at the inter-
section of postcolonial political ecologies and critical feminist racial studies and is published in
such venues as Cultural Geographies and Antipode.
Janice Monk is a research professor at the University of Arizona, in the School of Geography
and Development and Research Social Scientist Emerita of the Southwest Institute for Research
on Women, and also a Fellow of the American Association of Geographers. She is Adjunct
Professor at Macquarie University, working with colleagues in Indigenous Studies. Janice is
active in the Commission on Gender and Geography of the IGU and the Gender Group in
Geography at the Autonomous University of Barcelona.
Richa Nagar is a professor of the College in the College of Liberal Arts at University of Minnesota
and holds an honorary professorship at Rhodes University in Grahamstown, South Africa.Working
in the areas of critical development studies, feminist epistemologies and questions of solidarity work
across borders, she writes in multiple genres and co-creates theatre in English and Hindi.
Lise Nelson is an associate professor in the Departments of Geography and Women’s, Gender,
and Sexuality Studies at Pennsylvania State University. She researches labour, identity, place, and
citizenship in the context of neoliberal globalization. Nelson is co-editor of the Companion to
Feminist Geography and has articles in Gender, Place, and Culture and the Annals of the American
Association of Geographers.
Paula Ngaire Smith has a Master’s degree in geography from the University of Waikato,
Aotearoa New Zealand, exploring the changes when homes are made, unmade and remade
following relationship challenges. Feminist, queer and poststructuralist geographical theories
analyse the connection between the relationships, emotions and materialities of home spaces.
Ann M. Oberhauser is a professor of Sociology and Director of Women’s and Gender Studies
at Iowa State University. She conducts research in the areas of feminist geography, gender and
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development, qualitative methods and feminist pedagogy. She is co-editor of Global Perspectives
on Gender and Space (2014) and co-author of Feminist Spaces (2017).
Devin Oliver is both a geographer and urban planner, receiving his BA in geography from
the Ohio State University, and his MS in Community and Regional Planning and MA in
Latin American Studies from the University of Texas at Austin. Devin is equally committed to
human geography and Black studies, which influence his work in environmental and energy
policy. He currently works for low-income solar and energy-efficiency programmes across the
California.
Rachel Pain is a professor of human geography at Newcastle University in the UK. Informed
by feminist and participatory theory, practice and activism, her research focuses on international
and intimate violence, fear and trauma. She is author of Fear: Critical Geopolitics and Everyday Life
and the Sage Handbook of Social Geographies.
Naimah Petigny received her BA in Women’s Studies and Sociology from Vassar College and
is currently a doctoral candidate in Gender, Women and Sexuality Studies at the University of
Minnesota. Working at the intersections of Black feminist theory and performance studies, her
dissertation centres on the peripheralized queer Black femme and the unruly dimensions of Black
subjectivity.
Barbara Pini is a professor in the School of Humanities, Languages and Social Science at
Griffith University, Brisbane, Australia.
Ximena Quintero Saavedra is a planning and social development professional and a legal
representative for and director of Corporación Casa Mía in Medellin, Colombia. She is a per-
petual learner and lover of life.
Parvati Raghuram is a professor in Geography and Migration at the Open University. Her most
recent ESRC-funded projects are ‘Gender, Skilled Migration and the IT Sector: A Comparative
Study of India and the UK’ and ‘Facilitating Equitable Access and Quality Education for
Development: South African International Distance Education’. She co-edits the Palgrave Pivot
series Mobility and Politics.
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Alonso R. Reyna Rivarola is an assistant director for the Office of Diversity & Multicultural
Affairs at Salt Lake Community College. Growing up undocumented in Utah, his academic,
research and professional interests are found in the raced-gendered intersections of education,
labor, and immigration within the US context.
Ged Ridley is affiliated with the School of Geography, Politics and Sociology at Newcastle
University. Ged’s ESRC-funded PhD focuses on trans experiences of public bathrooms in the
north of England, a collaborative project with the Yorkshire Trans support and advocacy network.
Maria Rodó-Zárate is a Juan de la Cierva postdoctoral researcher at the Gender and ICT
research group, Universitat Oberta de Catalunya. She holds a PhD in geography (Autonomous
University of Barcelona), and her topics of interest are feminist geographies, geographies of
sexualities and youth and intersectionality.
Laura Rodriguez Castro is a PhD candidate for the Doctor of Philosophy at Griffith
University, Australia. Her research interests are in the areas rural studies and decolonialism. Her
participatory research involves visual ethnography with campesina women in Colombia in the
context of globalization.
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Corrinne Sullivan is an Aboriginal scholar from the Wiradjuri nation, a senior lecturer at
Western Sydney University and a PhD student in geography at Macquarie University. Her
research interests focus broadly on experiences and effects of body and identity in relation to
Indigenous peoples, and on how these people are affected by their experiences of space and place.
Qian Hui Tan is a PhD student in the Department of Geography, National University of
Singapore. She is a social-cultural geographer with a keen interest in feminist and queer theories.
Anna Tarrant is an associate professor in Sociology at the University of Lincoln. She has
taken published research about a range of themes from an interdisciplinary, feminist perspective,
including men and masculinities; caregiving; and family life. She is also interested in qualitative
longitudinal methodologies, including the potential of qualitative secondary analysis.
Pavithra Vasudevan is assistant professor of Women’s and Gender Studies and African &
African Diaspora Studies at the University of Texas at Austin. She is a scholar-activist whose
research focuses on the stuff of environmental justice: race, water and power. Her current pro-
ject explores radicalized toxicity as a mode of twentieth-century racial capitalism, incorporating
Black feminism, materialist science studies, feminist geopolitics and cultural studies.
Laura Vaz-Jones is a PhD student in human geography at the University of Toronto. A fem-
inist and urban geographer, her research argues for an intersectional perspective in ‘right to the
city struggles in Salvador da Bahia, Brazil’. She has published in Signs: Journal of Women in Culture
and Society.
Gordon Waitt is a professor in the School of Geography and Sustainable Communities at the
University of Wollongong, Australia. His current research is underpinned by a corporeal fem-
inist geographical approach to address questions of fuel poverty, everyday mobilities and house-
hold sustainability.
Yoshiko Yamasaki has worked on women’s health and early childhood education, and was
previously the chef and owner of a restaurant. She is passionate about Farm to Early Childhood
Education, knows the importance of setting early foundations of wellness and has worked with
families experiencing the complex effects that poverty has on well-being.
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
This Handbook has been a long time in the making, and we would like to acknowledge all of
those who were involved in enabling it to reach publication. We thank all of the contributors
for taking the time to write for this Handbook, often bringing in new and emerging scholars
and writing about contested and challenging issues.We thank our co-editors for their solidarity,
political insight and commitments to gender equality and feminist geographies during challen-
ging times; our different locations across the globe and the struggles found within each of these
contexts shaped our conversations and sparked new ideas and new ways of thinking.
We thank Matthew Shahin Richardson, Mark Ortiz and Sertanya Reddy, who helpfully
assisted with the compiling of the Handbook chapters. Massive thanks also to Alison Williamson,
for her outstanding proofreading skills.
xxvii
xxvi
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142
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