117,595 research outputs found

    Respectful Relationalities: Researching with Those Who Contest or Have Concerns about Changes in Sexual and Gender Legislation and Cultures

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    It has long been established that research spaces are relational. This chapter explores the ways in which research was undertaken to investigate the everyday spatial experiences of those who oppose or are concerned about new gender and sexual landscapes, including those who see marriage as between a man/woman, who are pro-life, gender critical, and/or who contest trans inclusions. It argues that research that seeks to understand polarization and division and to work across difference may be transformative, but must also carefully negotiated. These negotiations and flexibilities are necessary to create respectful relationalities between the researcher and the researched that are open to hearing and understanding complexities, contradictions, and stories. Thus, we argue that respectful relationalities can be formed through forms of feminist engagements with narratives as well as queer methodological approaches that see binaries and ‘sides’ as incongruous, fluid and continually redefined.European Commission Horizon 2020Check citation details during checkdate report - RO

    Oberhausser, Ann M.; Fluri, Jennifer L.; Whitson, Risa i Mollet, Sharlene (2018). Feminist Spaces : Gender and Geography in a Global Context. Oxon: Routledge

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    Obra ressenyada: Ann M. OBERHAUSSER; Jennifer L. FLURI; Risa WHITSON i Sharlene MOLLET, Feminist Spaces: Gender and Geography in a Global Context. Oxon: Routledge, 2018

    Mitchell Katharyne, Jones Reece et Fluri Jennifer L., Handbook on Critical Geographies of Migration

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    Katharyne Mitchell (Université de Californie), Reece Jones (Université d’Hawaï) et Jennifer L. Fluri (Université du Colorado à Boulder) établissent dans cet ouvrage un état des lieux actualisé de la recherche sur les migrations dans le champ de la géographie. Il est composé de trente-deux articles écrits par des chercheurs principalement anglophones, répartis en six chapitres selon leurs objets d’étude : « New issues in Critical Migration Research », « Corporeal and Gendered Geographies of Mi..

    Response by Clive Barnett. Book review forum discussion: The Priority of Injustice: Locating Democracy in Critical Theory, by Michael Samers, Joshua Barkan, Kirsi Pauliina Kallio, Jennifer L. Fluri and Clive Barnett

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    This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Routledge via the DOI in this recordThis is the response by Clive Barnett within the book review forum discussion "The Priority of Injustice: Locating Democracy in Critical Theory", by Michael Samers, Joshua Barkan, Kirsi Pauliina Kallio, Jennifer L. Fluri and Clive Barnett which constitutes the whole article cited in this record. The response is on pp. 50-53 of the articl

    Managing displacement: Negotiating transnationalism, encampment and return

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    The management of migration and displacement, including humanitarian response, is shaped by geopolitics and relies on the construction of two key spatialities of exclusion, containment, and securitization: externalizing asylum and refuge so that those on the move are kept in "regions of origin" away from the "Global North;" and encampment within those regions. Both are tied to a state-centric orientation that refugees return to their countries of origin, as preferred 'durable solution.' Yet refugees negotiate their own safety both within and beyond the humanitarian governance system, through extensive and often transnational networks. We explore the idea of transnational displacement as an alternate theoretical framing that is empirically rooted in more circulatory geographies. Observable pathways to safety are grounded in a case study of Burundian refugees and returnees. Ultimately, 'grand theories of humanitarian government' cannot fully capture the ruptures and sutures of displacement, return, and return again that may occur in the lives of families caught between violence, starvation, and family separation

    Response by Clive Barnett. Book review forum discussion: The Priority of Injustice: Locating Democracy in Critical Theory, by Michael Samers, Joshua Barkan, Kirsi Pauliina Kallio, Jennifer L. Fluri and Clive Barnett

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    This is the response by Clive Barnett within the book review forum discussion "The Priority of Injustice: Locating Democracy in Critical Theory", by Michael Samers, Joshua Barkan, Kirsi Pauliina Kallio, Jennifer L. Fluri and Clive Barnett which constitutes the whole article cited in this record. The response is on pp. 50-53 of the articl

    Parametrized cosmological mass maps dataset

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    Parametrized cosmological mass maps dataset This dataset consists of the non-tomographic training and testing set without noise and intrinsic alignments. It was introduced in the following paper Fluri, Janis, et al. "Cosmological constraints with deep learning from KiDS-450 weak lensing maps." Physical Review D 100.6 (2019): 063514. Furthermore, this dataset is released with the following paper: Perraudin, Nathanaël, et al. "Emulation of cosmological mass maps with conditional generative adversarial networks." arXiv preprint arXiv:2004.08139 (2020). Code related to this dataset can be found in https://renkulab.io/projects/nathanael.perraudin/darkmattergan Description The simulation grid consists of 5757 different cosmologies assuming a flat LambdaCDM universe. Each of these 57 configurations was run with different values of Omega_m and sigma_8, resulting in the following parameter grid.| Omega_m, sigma_8 0.101, 1.304 0.102, 1.125 0.103, 0.947 0.120, 1.178 0.123, 1.006 0.127, 0.836 0.137, 1.230 0.142, 1.063 0.148, 0.900 0.154, 1.281 0.156, 0.741 0.161, 1.119 0.169, 0.961 0.171, 1.331 0.178, 0.807 0.179, 1.173 0.188, 1.019 0.189, 0.659 0.196, 1.225 0.199, 0.870 0.207, 1.075 0.212, 0.727 0.219, 0.930 0.225, 1.129 0.227, 0.591 0.233, 0.791 0.238, 0.988 0.250, 0.658 0.254, 0.852 0.257, 1.043 0.269, 0.534 0.271, 0.723 0.273, 0.910 0.291, 0.601 0.291, 0.783 0.292, 0.966 0.311, 0.842 0.312, 0.664 0.314, 0.487 0.330, 0.898 0.332, 0.724 0.335, 0.552 0.352, 0.782 0.356, 0.614 0.370, 0.838 0.376, 0.673 0.382, 0.510 0.395, 0.730 0.402, 0.570 0.413, 0.784 0.421, 0.628 0.431, 0.475 0.440, 0.683 0.450, 0.533 0.458, 0.737 0.469, 0.589 0.487, 0.643 Each zip file in the dataset corresponds to 1 of these combinations and contains 12 files containing 1000 images. The source galaxy redshift distribution corresponding to these maps is the full, non-tomographic redshift distribution n(z) from Fluri et. al. The projected matter distribution was pixelised into images of size 128px x 128px, which correspond to 5deg x 5deg of the sky. Eventually, the resulting dataset consists of 57 sets of 12'000 sky convergence maps for a total of 684000684'000 samples. Citations If you use this dataset, please cite: @article{perraudin2020emulation, title={Emulation of cosmological mass maps with conditional generative adversarial networks}, author={Perraudin, Nathana{\"e}l and Marcon, Sandro and Lucchi, Aurelien and Kacprzak, Tomasz}, journal={arXiv preprint arXiv:2004.08139}, year={2020} } and @article{fluri2019cosmological, title={Cosmological constraints with deep learning from KiDS-450 weak lensing maps}, author={Fluri, Janis and Kacprzak, Tomasz and Lucchi, Aurelien and Refregier, Alexandre and Amara, Adam and Hofmann, Thomas and Schneider, Aurel}, journal={Physical Review D}, volume={100}, number={6}, pages={063514}, year={2019}, publisher={APS}

    The laws of impermanence: displacement, sovereignty, subjectivity

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    How shall we make sense of migrant mobility in a context of increasingly dislocated governance of territorial borders? What kinds of intersecting spaces and places does such a politics produce? And what forms of structured agency emerge from these intersections? This chapter argues for an embodied analytics, which deals, consecutively, with three productive tensions that underpin the effects of human displacement in contemporary migration regimes: between displacement and enforcement; sovereignty and governmentality; and the negation and negotiation of rights. Building on an analysis of return migration to Italy within the rapidly European asylum regime since 2011, I argue that while human displacement can be associated to a field of power that is not necessarily fixed in place, today’s liquid migration management also produces, sometimes unpredictable, outcomes and renegotiations of identities, hierarchies, and rights

    Going Beyond Counting First Authors in Author Co-citation Analysis

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    The present study examines one of the fundamental aspects of author co-citation analysis (ACA) - the way co-citation counts are defined. Co-citation counting provides the data on which all subsequent statistical analyses and mappings are based, and we compare ACA results based on two different types of co-citation counting - the traditional type that only counts the first one among a cited work's authors on the one hand and a non-traditional type that takes into account the first 5 authors of a cited work on the other hand. Results indicate that the picture produced through this non-traditional author co-citation counting contains more coherent author groups and is therefore considerably clearer. However, this picture represents fewer specialties in the research field being studied than that produced through the traditional first-author co-citation counting when the same number of top-ranked authors is selected and analyzed. Reasons for these effects are discussed

    Square Dancing with the Stars to Enhance Dynamic Hirschman Linkages?

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    In this Presidential Address, the author takes the reader on a reconnaissance of his life and time as a regional scientist. He points out scenery he found scintillating along the way, hoping that some may pick up the banner and chew on a few of the ideas for a while. He suggests a revisit to Albert O. Hirschman’s notion of key sectors and more empirical analysis related to Marcus Berliant’s and Masahisa Fujita’s notion of knowledge creation and transfer.Presidential Address, San Antonio, Texas, March 29, 2014 (53rd Meetings of the Southern Regional Science Association
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