From Sea to City: Navigating (Extra)ordinary Landscapes of Nature, Labor, and Culture
Type: Virtual Poster
Day: 2/27/2022
Start Time: 2:00 PM
End Time: 3:20 PM
Theme: The Changing North American Continent
Sponsor Group(s):
Cultural Geography Specialty Group
, Landscape Specialty Group
, Study of the American South Specialty Group
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Organizer(s):
Joshua Merced
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Chairs(s):
Joshua Merced, University of North Carolina at Greensboro
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Description:
The focus of the session is “From Sea to City: Navigating (Extra)ordinary Landscapes of Nature, Labor, and Culture.” While we welcome any work across the depth and breadth of cultural geography and landscape studies, those whose work intersects with the meeting's themes of Climate Justice, Geographies of Access: Inclusions and Pathways, Ethnonationalism and Exclusion around the World, the Changing North American Continent, and Expanding the Community of Geography are particularly welcome. This session is sponsored by the Cultural Geography Specialty Group, Landscape Specialty Group, and the Study of the American South Specialty Group.
Additional topics at the cultural geographies-landscape studies nexus may include:
• Contested spaces and places
• Cultural ecology
• Cultural landscapes and ecosystem services
• Adapting and modifying landscapes and lived experiences due to COVID-19
• Habitat and ecosystem services
• Landscapes of labor, work and the workforce
• Impacts of human modifications to environmental systems
• Socioecological systems
• Material culture and place
• The role of landscape in decolonizing and land control
• Heritage and cultural histories of particular landscapes
• Landscape identities and representations
• Creative methodologies involving cultural landscapes
• Landscapes of the arts, including visual arts, theatre, film, television, music, and dance
• Spectral geographies and haunting
The poster session will take place virtually via Zoom. Each poster presenter will have their own breakout room in which they can engage with a free-flowing audience to participate in the traditional browsing and questions/answers. This session will not be recorded at the discretion of the session organizers.
Presentation(s), if applicable
Katrinka Somdahl, Rowan University; Two memorials: Embodied landscapes of beauty and death |
Bradley Bereitschaft, University of Nebraska - Omaha; The changing ethno-racial profile of “very walkable” urban neighborhoods in the U.S. (2010-2020): Are minorities being excluded? |
Rosalie Carbajal, ; Urbanization and Climate Change: Los Angeles, California |
William Helmer, No Affiliation ; Military expeditions and botanical collections in the West--John C. Frémont and the Sacramento River Massacre of 1846 |
Nicole Dellana, CU Denver; Diagnostic of Adaptive Management in the National Park Service |
Douglas Gallaway, Farmingdale State College; Preserving and documenting regionally significant cultural sites using Ultra-High-Resolution UAV Imagery, a Low-Cost UAV and Structure from Motion |
Diandra Oliver, ; If this protest doesn’t kill you, I will: Youth vs. colonial capitalism in so-called British Columbia 2020-2021 |
Michael Madin, Kansas State University; Landscape diversity and sustainable agriculture production |
Don Bragg, USDA Forest Service, Southern Research Station; A mapped history of the Southern Research Station |
Ava Gleicher, ; Bridging Food Access and Food Justice Initiatives: A Pilot Study with a Home Gardening Program and Food Pantry |
Ahmad BinTouq, ; Memorialization and Bereavement in Dubai during the COVID-19 pandemic |
Remi Alapo, ; Diversity and Multi-Culturalism in the 21st Century |
Chanho Kim, ; Exploratory study on toponymic stigma through discussing the negative brand value of place names: A case of Wuhan in China |
Sohyun Park, ; Increasing the positive effect of kindergarten students’ exposure to nature: A case study in Yazd, Iran |
Rebecca Vail, ; Reconstructing 4,000 years of fire at Markwood Meadow, Sierra National Forest, California |
Anna Frisbie, University of Richmond; The Potential Effects of Transboundary Road-Building in the Southwestern Amazon shared by Peru and Brazil |
Nicole Provost, ; Understanding How Beach Proximity Affects Property Sales in New Jersey: A Hedonic Analysis Approach |
Katrina McCarthy, Rowan University; Wandering Warehouses in New Jersey |
Max Epstein, ; Urban renewal and the use of eminent domain in Tallahassee, FL |
Jessica Lukawiecki, ; Operationalizing the Biocultural Perspective in Conservation Practice: A Systematic Review of the Literature |
Herlinda Hernandez, ; The Geolocation of Social Media Posts about the proposed UC-105/Interoceanica Centro Road in the Amazon borderlands of Peru |
John Hasse, Rowan University; A Web Mapping Blueprint to Empower Inner City Community Health & Green Space |
Non-Presenting Participants Agenda
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From Sea to City: Navigating (Extra)ordinary Landscapes of Nature, Labor, and Culture
Description
Virtual Poster
Contact the Primary Organizer
Joshua Merced - joshua.merced@nau.edu