Please join us this Friday (April 10) for a panel on:

*More-than-human geographies of COVID-19: Species, inequalities,
vulnerabilities*

This panel will generate a conversation across more-than-human geographies
and geographies of conservation and the wildlife trade to shed light on the
roots of the coronavirus, the politics of responding to it, and how it
might reshape human-nonhuman relations.



*Day/Time:* April 10, 2020, 9:00 - 10:15 AM (MDT)

*The talk is FREE & open to the public *(you do not need to be a member of
the AAG to join)


*Join us at this* *link*: AAG Panel More-than-human geographies of COVID-19
<https://aag.secure-abstracts.com/AAG%20Annual%20Meeting%202020/sessions-gallery/26836>



*Panelists: *


   - Rebecca Wong, Department of Social and Behavioural Sciences, City
   University of Hong Kong
   - Neel Ahuja, Feminist Studies Department & Critical Race and Ethnic
   Studies Program, UC Santa Cruz
   - Bruce Braun, Department of Geography, Environment and Society,
   University of Minnesota
   - Rosemary Collard, Department of Geography, Simon Fraser University
   - Libby Lunstrum, School of Public Service, Boise State University
   - Stephanie Rutherford, School of the Environment, Trent University


*Questions for panelists include:*

   1. Roots of COVID-19: Given the information we have, how should we
   understand the roots of COVID-19? [What frameworks help us understand this
   crisis and how? What questions should we be asking?]
   2. Response: How might COVID-19 and our response to it reshape
   human-nonhuman interactions?
   3. Representation & Justice: How is understanding of COVID-19 and
   responses to it caught up in questions of representation? What would a more
   just discourse look like?
   4. Further Connections: How could your work more broadly help us
   understand different facets of the novel coronavirus. Possible topics
   include:
   - Porous and calcified borders and boundaries
      - Intimacy and distance between humans and nonhumans
      - Debates on environmental destruction, biodiversity, the wildlife
      trade, etc.
      - Inequality, capitalism, and/or colonialism
   5.  Broader, overarching question: What should a more-than-human
   research agenda of the covid-19 look like?

--
Libby Lunstrum

Associate Professor
School of Public Service
Boise State University
Boise, ID, USA

-- 
Libby Lunstrum
Associate Professor
School of Public Service
Boise State University
Boise, ID, USA

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"gep-ed" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To view this discussion on the web visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/gep-ed/CAJUXKjphROVtB6zmpoHr1Hdk4DmtheYMadAWP3ajojZjapEM7w%40mail.gmail.com.

Reply via email to