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Books > Earth & environment > Geography > Human geography
NOTE: You are purchasing a standalone product; MasteringGeography
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purchase both the physical text and MasteringGeography search for
ISBN-10: 0321984234/ISBN-13: 9780321984234 . That package includes
ISBN-10: 0321984242/ISBN-13: 9780321984241 and ISBN-10:
0321984706/ISBN-13: 9780321984708 . For courses in Human Geography.
A distinctly modern look at human geography Described as "fresh,
innovative, and intelligent," Human Geography: Places and Regions
in Global Context is acclaimed for its global approach, conceptual
rigor, engaging real-world applications, and outstanding visual
program. Knox and Marston foster awareness of current issues and
developing trends from a geographic perspective, and provide a
solid foundation in the fundamentals of human geography. The
authors integrate compelling local, regional, and global viewpoints
to give meaning to people and places. By providing access to the
latest ideas, concepts, and theories, the text deepens students'
understanding of the interdependence of places and regions in a
globalizing world. The Seventh Edition extends Knox/Marston's
modern approach, integrating new technology as well as new visual
and thematic features relevant to human geography today. Also
available with MasteringGeography (TM) MasteringGeography is an
online homework, tutorial, and assessment program designed to work
with Human Geography to engage students and improve results.
Interactive, self-paced activities provide individualized coaching
to keep students on track. With a wide range of activities
available, students can actively learn, understand, and retain even
the most difficult concepts.
Compelling and engaging, this Handbook on Shrinking Cities
addresses the fundamentals of shrinkage, exploring its causal
factors, the ways in which planning strategies and policies are
steered, and innovative solutions for revitalising shrinking
cities. It analyses the multidimensional phenomena involved in
processes of shrinkage, where cities experience a dramatic decline
in their economic and social bases. Offering a timely response to
the endurance of decline in cities across the globe, contributions
from top scholars showcase a wide range of perspectives on the
ongoing challenges of shrinkage. Chapters cover topics of
'governance', 'greening' and 'right-sizing', and 'regrowth', laying
the relevant groundwork for the Handbook's proposals for dealing
with shrinkage in the age of COVID-19 and beyond. Leading experts
in the fields of urban and regional development contribute novel
ideas pertinent to the future of shrinking cities, considering
factors such as economic prosperity, liveability, social stability,
and innovation, ultimately representing a paradigmatic shift from
growth-centred planning to the notion of 'shrinking sustainably'.
In suggesting strategies to reverse decline and generate newer,
more robust development, this prescient Handbook will prove
beneficial to scholars of human geography and urban planning. The
wide range of case studies will also make this a vital read for
planning practitioners.
This innovative Handbook provides an expansive interrogation of the
spaces and places of law, exploring how we engage relationally in a
material world, within which we are inter-dependent and reliant,
and governed by laws in a dynamic process. It advances novel
insights into the numerous intersections of space, place and law in
our lives. International contributors offer a range of
activity-orientated analyses, focusing on methodology, embodied
experience, legal pluralism, conflict and resistance, and non-human
and place agency. The Handbook examines a number of cross-cutting
themes including social inequality, environmental justice,
sustainability, urban development, Indigenous legal systems, the
effects of colonialism and property law. Representing a diversity
of locales from all around the world, the chapters encompass both
urban and rural, terrestrial and marine areas, agential and storied
spaces, and fictional as well as ''real'' places. Taking a
multidisciplinary approach that incorporates law, human and legal
geography, planning, sociology, political ecology, anthropology,
and beyond, this comprehensive Handbook will be critical reading
for scholars and students of these and cognate areas. Its
discussion of empirical examples will also be beneficial for
practitioners and policymakers interested in these fields.
Drawing critically on the UN concept of 'human security', this book
offers a transformative understanding of security in responding to
the Mediterranean refugee crisis. From a range of arts, humanities
and social science disciplines, and through case studies
incorporating key governmental, NGO and refugee perspectives, the
book critiques the major geopolitical, economic and social issues
of the crisis. It documents the prioritization of population
management techniques that are underpinned by conventional
territorial logics of security, before reflecting on the
alternative priorities of human security that can facilitate an
active human rights framework and a more holistic and humanitarian
interventionism. In advancing a human security approach to the
crisis, the book insists upon our interconnected global sense of
precarity, interrogates the human consequences of the endless
cycles of conflict and displacement, and challenges the
impoverished thinking of statist security agendas that divide the
world into zones of sanctuary and abandonment. Of broad appeal and
relevance across the social sciences, from geography and migration
studies to international relations and critical security studies,
this book will also be a timely read for people working for NGOs
and policy makers looking for a more holistic response to the
ongoing refugee crisis. Contributors include: T. Bicchieri, A.
Bilgic, J. Bloomer, M. Brehony, R. Browne, M. Brunicardi, V.
Cirefice, C. Dorrity, L. Elliott, D. Estrada-Tanck, D. Gasper, T.J.
Hughes, J. Hyndman, G. Kearns, V. Ledwith, J. Morrissey, A. Mountz,
K. Reilly, C. Wilcock
This innovative book explores the foundations of the smart city
and, through a critique of its challenges and concerns, showcases
how to redefine the concept for increased sustainability,
liveability and resilience in urban areas. It undertakes a review
of the smart city concept, providing a new perspective on how
technology-based urban solutions must be centred around human
dimensions to render more liveable urban fabrics. Chapters
highlight how existing digital infrastructures can be coupled with
emerging ones, so that they can provide increased efficiency and
performance, with an ultimate objective of rendering safer, more
sustainable, resilient and inclusive cities, aligning with the
needs of the SDGs. The book also covers emerging technologies and
concepts, such as 6G and the '15-minute city', underlining how
these can develop within smart city frameworks. This is an
invigorating look into the concept of the smart city and how it can
be improved and rethought, making it useful for urban studies and
human geography academics and researchers. It also offers helpful
insights for policy makers and planners on how to increase the
quality of life in modern cities.
This timely Research Handbook examines the evolution of smart
growth over the past three decades, mapping the trajectory from its
original principles to its position as an important paradigm in
urban planning today. Critically analysing the original concept of
smart growth and how it has been embedded in state and local plans,
contributions from top scholars in the field illustrate what smart
growth has accomplished since its conception, as well as to what
extent it has achieved its goals. Providing an overview of the
history of smart growth, the book further examines its changing
governance over time, and the new horizons for smart growth,
exploring ways to confront contemporary challenges in urban
planning. Illuminating key issues in the field, from urban sprawl
to gentrification, that the original principles failed to address,
this insightful Handbook advocates for the expansion of smart
growth principles to meet the emerging challenges of the modern
world, concluding with an agenda for a "smart growth 2.0".
Informative and comprehensive, this Handbook will prove to be
essential reading for researchers, academics and students of urban
planning. Its proposals for the future evolution of smart growth
will also serve as an accessible and up-to-date reference point for
urban planning professionals, activists and policymakers.
Offering insights on violence in conservation in Africa, this
timely book demonstrates how and why the state pursues conservation
objectives to the detriment of its citizens. It focuses on how the
dehumanization of black people and indigenous groups, the insertion
of global green agendas onto the continent, a lack of resource
sovereignty, and neoliberal conservation account for why violence
is a permanent feature of conservation in Africa. Chapters uncover
various forms of violence experienced on the continent, revealing
the local and global conditions that enable them, and propose
pathways towards non-violent conservation. The book concludes that
the ideology of conservation is also an ideology about people.
Crucially, it highlights the implications of increasing investment
in violent instruments and the institutionalization of militarized
approaches for conservation, the state, and ordinary people.
Scholars and students of political ecology and environmental policy
and planning will greatly benefit from this book's drawing together
of perspectives encompassing green violence and the militarization
of conservation. It will also be an invigorating read for African
studies researchers looking at coloniality and the re-evaluation of
the African state, particularly through the lens of nature
conservation.
This authoritative Handbook presents a comprehensive analysis of
the spatial transformation of the state; a pivotal process of
globalization. It explores the state as an ongoing project that is
always changing, illuminating the new spaces of geopolitics that
arise from these political, social, cultural, and environmental
negotiations. Drawing together a diverse set of expert
contributors, this book showcases compelling scholarship on the
changing geographies of the state. Chapters examine the state from
a range of theoretical angles and analyse a variety of relevant
themes, including feminist geographies, the relationship between
state and environment, urbanization, security geographies,
nation-building, and geographical political economies. The book
considers the state as spatial in both form and outlook,
illustrating how it occupies existing and constantly-changing
political geographic conditions, and how it is maintained by the
practices of categorizing and managing territory. Taking a
multidisciplinary approach, this Handbook will be a valuable
resource for academics and students across a range of subjects,
including human geography, international relations, political
science, spatial planning, and urban studies. The key case studies
explored will also provide valuable examples for scholars and
policy-makers seeking a better understanding of the broad scope of
geopolitics in a globalizing world.
Elgar Research Agendas outline the future of research in a given
area. Leading scholars are given the space to explore their subject
in provocative ways, and map out the potential directions of
travel. They are relevant but also visionary. The power of borders
emerges not only from their institutional and legal nature but also
from their symbolic and identity-forming significance. This
innovative Research Agenda uncovers links between different levels
of border-making processes, or bordering, from the political to the
cognitive, and connects everyday processes and experiences of
border-making to the wider social world. Grounded in their original
research, contributors offer a variety of discussions on future
directions for border studies, including two areas which may prove
particularly fruitful; firstly, the question of the broader
political salience of borders and secondly, the ways in which the
border studies paradigm increasingly connects ontological and
ethical questions to processes of border-making. Taken together,
these address the question of how everyday bordering practices and
discourses can be productively linked to different aspects of
social relations. This timely book will be an invigorating read for
those studying borders across a wide range of disciplines including
human geography, political science, sociology, anthropology,
history, international law as well as the humanities, notably art,
media studies and philosophy.
Elgar Advanced Introductions are stimulating and thoughtful
introductions to major fields in the social sciences, business and
law, expertly written by the world's leading scholars. Designed to
be accessible yet rigorous, they offer concise and lucid surveys of
the substantive and policy issues associated with discrete subject
areas. With disasters increasing in both frequency and intensity,
this timely Advanced Introduction provides a fresh perspective on
how the concepts established in the Sendai Framework can be put
into practice to reduce disaster risk, improve preparedness in
cost-effective ways, and develop whole-of-society approaches to
increasing resilience. Key Features: Provides evidence-informed
coverage of the core areas of disaster risk reduction Identifies
the implementation issues and challenges to anticipation,
preparedness, evaluation and governance and the strategies that can
be used to facilitate it Discusses individual and collective ways
to manage recovery and to learn from disaster experiences and
programmes such as Build Back Better to prepare people to deal with
disasters more effectively in the future Incorporating research on
preparedness modelling, evaluation strategies, adaptive governance,
and transformative learning, this Advanced Introduction will be
invaluable to students and scholars of environmental management,
governance and regulation interested in disaster risk reduction. It
will also be a vital resource to policymakers looking to strengthen
their disaster preparedness and recovery measures.
This comprehensive Handbook offers a broad assessment of tourism
impacts research. With critical perspectives on social and
environmental impacts of the sector it addresses the often-clashing
value systems in tourism that underpin both scholarly and policy
agendas. Chapters offer reflections on critical issues, including
climate change, environmental degradation and COVID-19, analysing
their effects on tourism impacts. Top scholars in the field flesh
out unique perspectives on tourism, highlighting its impact on
communities, workers and Indigenous peoples, as well as the ongoing
global and local sustainability issues associated with the
prevailing growth-oriented rationale of the industry. Providing a
state-of-the-art, integrative approach to the field, the Handbook
lays out a social impact assessment approach and draws attention to
the relationships between tourism, human rights, development and
the environment. Offering innovative insights on the future of the
industry, the Handbook of Tourism Impacts is crucial reading for
students and scholars of tourism, human geography and planning, as
well as other social scientists working on tourism impacts. It also
provides useful insights for practitioners and policymakers looking
to address and limit the negative impacts of tourism.
Exploring the importance of megacities and megacity-regions as one
of the defining features of the 21st century, this Handbook
provides a clear and comprehensive overview of current thinking and
debates from leading scholars in the field. Highlighting major
current challenges and dimensions of megaurbanization, chapters
form a thematic focus on governance, planning, history, and
environmental and social issues, supported by case studies from
every continent. Analysing vital questions for contemporary urban
research, this Handbook looks at: what place megacities and
megacity-regions occupy in a world of cities; how they interrogate
current thinking about urban society, theory, and policy; and what
role these largest of urban areas will play in shaping humanity's
future. Key contributions reveal that research needs to further
focus a critical and analytical lens on the particularities and
distinctive issues associated with megaurbanization. A timely and
essential read for urban studies, urban geography, and public
policy students, the interdisciplinary nature of this Handbook
provides a thorough view into the features and importance of
megacities and megacity-regions. Public policy-makers and planners
will also benefit from the wide-ranging case studies included.
Interest in tourism with a social imperative is gaining momentum
not only amongst policy makers, but also researchers and the
academy. This thought-provoking and timely Handbook considers the
impact and challenges that social tourism has on people's lives.
Integrating case studies from around the world, chapters showcase
the latest research on social tourism and its potential role in
tackling the challenges posed by modern, mass tourism development
that can lead to sustainable alternatives and social equity in
participation. Contributors explore tourism activities that are
directed towards positive social and personal outcomes for people
who would not be able to access leisure or holiday travel without
such interventions and illustrate the social imperative of tourism
as a force for good. The Handbook of Social Tourism enables
academics and students from various disciplines, as well as
practitioners in the tourism sector, to obtain a more holistic
understanding of this phenomenon and offers an enlightening and
stimulating read. Contributors include: C. Billen, N. Carr, J.D.
Cisneros-Martinez, V. Cops, A. Diekmann, V. Eichhorn, A.E.
Estrada-Gonzalez, C. Eusebio, A. Fernandez-Morales, J. Finniear, E.
Herengodts, E. Hermans, P. Hunter Jones, L. Jolin, K.I. Kakoudakis,
M. Kay Smith, R. Komppula, T. Kosar, J. Lima, S. McCabe, L.
Minnaert, N. Morgan, B. Prideaux, S. Pyke, J. Pyke, G. Qiao, Y.
Ram, A.C. Reyes Uribe, H. Schanzel, E. Schenkel, G. Shaw, L. Sie,
E. Vento, M. Vilele de Almeida, M. Vincent, J. Wooton
Elgar Research Agendas outline the future of research in a given
area. Leading scholars are given the space to explore their subject
in provocative ways, and map out the potential directions of
travel. They are relevant but also visionary. This timely Research
Agenda explores and proposes critical lines of research to support
understanding of the conditions under which urban tourism
contributes to the development of urban systems, and what can be
done to create and conserve these conditions. Chapters highlight
conceptual discussions, concrete case studies and policy reviews to
address the issues surrounding the economic, environmental and
social impacts of tourism on cities. Analysing the trends that have
characterized urban tourism in the past, the Research Agenda looks
ahead to those that may influence it in the future, including the
impact of Covid-19. Chapters further offer a thorough
conceptualization and innovative definitions of the phenomenon of
urban tourism. The critical issue of the sustainability of tourism
development in cities is also discussed in depth. The Research
Agenda provides a comprehensive and up-to-date overview of the
urban tourism debate, making it a critical read for urban studies
and tourism scholars. The detailed case studies from across four
continents will also be beneficial to policymakers and urban
planners dealing with tourism development.
This authoritative Handbook presents a comprehensive analysis of
the spatial transformation of the state; a pivotal process of
globalization. It explores the state as an ongoing project that is
always changing, illuminating the new spaces of geopolitics that
arise from these political, social, cultural, and environmental
negotiations. Drawing together a diverse set of expert
contributors, this book showcases compelling scholarship on the
changing geographies of the state. Chapters examine the state from
a range of theoretical angles and analyse a variety of relevant
themes, including feminist geographies, the relationship between
state and environment, urbanization, security geographies,
nation-building, and geographical political economies. The book
considers the state as spatial in both form and outlook,
illustrating how it occupies existing and constantly-changing
political geographic conditions, and how it is maintained by the
practices of categorizing and managing territory. Taking a
multidisciplinary approach, this Handbook will be a valuable
resource for academics and students across a range of subjects,
including human geography, international relations, political
science, spatial planning, and urban studies. The key case studies
explored will also provide valuable examples for scholars and
policy-makers seeking a better understanding of the broad scope of
geopolitics in a globalizing world.
'This book is a remarkable and often inspirational tour de force.
Martin Jones confidently moves between theories of political
economy and stories of regional and urban policy, using each to
inform the other. He brings the uneven geographies of England to
life, showing how they are reproduced in practice, while also
offering the prospect of alternative futures.' - Allan Cochrane,
The Open University, UK Offering a geographical political economy
analysis, this book explores the mechanisms, institutions, and
spaces of subnational economic development. Martin Jones
innovatively examines how policy-makers frame problems and offer
intervention solutions in different cities and regions. Drawing on
different approaches to state intervention, neoliberalism, crisis
and contradiction theories, and notions of depoliticisation, this
book explains policy failure and how it is impacted by flux
surrounding economic development. With constant changes to
legislation, institutional initiatives, and ministerial
responsibility, local and regional economic development is shown to
be at a critical crossroads. Theoretically innovative and
empirically focused, this timely book is a must-read for
researchers and policy-makers of urban geography, regional
development, political economy and public policy.
With 78 specially commissioned entries written by a diverse range
of contributors, this essential reference book covers the breadth
and depth of human geography to provide a lively and accessible
state of the art of the discipline for students, instructors and
researchers. Carefully curated by two internationally recognised
scholars in the field, entries are written by both distinguished
and up and coming researchers and encompass the key ideas,
concepts, and theories in human geography. The Encyclopedia
examines both long standing subdisciplinary fields in human
geography like economic geography and urban geography, but also
more recent ones such as emotional geographies and indigenous
geographies, making a point about the move to plural geographies.
The selection of entries reflects both the influence of established
developments, such as the 'cultural turn', and new advances
including the growing interest in Big Data, the more committed
focus on decolonization of the discipline, and interest in research
on the Anthropocene. This will be fundamental reading for human
geography students, particularly undergraduates looking for a
succinct and accessible resource for current thinking in the field.
Key Features: 78 concise entries from diverse international
contributors Encapsulates the state of the art of research in the
field Highlights new trends Explores the ways in which human
geography is starting to decolonize
This ground-breaking Handbook presents a state-of-the-art
exploration of entropy, complexity, and spatial dynamics from
fundamental theoretical, empirical and methodological perspectives.
It considers how foundational theories can contribute to new
advances, including novel modeling and empirical insights at
different sectoral, spatial, and temporal scales. With the help of
leading experts worldwide, the Handbook examines how and to what
extent entropic and non-entropic forces and processes in complex
spatial socio-economic systems shape and are shaped by their
structure and dynamics. Moreover, considering current concerns that
big data and related data-driven methods may signal an end to
theory, this Handbook is intended to investigate the potential and
possibilities for complexity science to engage, revitalize, and
advance theory in spatial economics. Overall, this Handbook reaches
beyond qualitative generalizations, contributing to the
identification of fundamental structural and dynamic properties of
the complex space-economy. Drawing upon diverse foundations and
perspectives, the Handbook on Entropy, Complexity and Spatial
Dynamics: A Rebirth of Theory? will be an essential resource for
researchers and students of many fields and disciplines, including
economics, urban planning and geography, regional science,
information science, physics, and biology.
This Handbook is a state-of-the-art analysis of proximity
relations, offering insights into its history alongside up-to-date
scientific advances and emerging questions. Its broad scope - from
industrial and innovation approaches through to society issues of
living and working at a distance, territorial development and
environmental topics - will ensure an in-depth focus point for
researchers in economics as well as geography, organizational
studies, planning and sociology. Split into four distinctly
thematic parts, the Handbook explores the precise definition of
proximity relationships and their diversity, including the role
they play in social and economic interactions as well as examining
the origins and evolution of such relationships. It further
presents a detailed overview of the main methods of analysis,
highlighting the link between proximity relationships and exchange
of information while explaining how exchanges at a distance rely on
links of organized proximity, something that plays an increasing
role in our societies. This engaging Handbook will provide an
excellent update for scientists and researchers on the recent
developments in the analysis of proximity relations as well as
students looking for precise and detailed information on the main
characteristics of proximity relations, regional and spatial
analysis, and the major analytical tools.
Elgar Advanced Introductions are stimulating and thoughtful
introductions to major fields in the social sciences, business and
law, expertly written by the world's leading scholars. Designed to
be accessible yet rigorous, they offer concise and lucid surveys of
the substantive and policy issues associated with discrete subject
areas. The Advanced Introduction to Marxism and Human Geography
explores the fundamental aspects of Marx's conceptualization of
capital and of capitalist development, including value theory, the
class relation, accumulation and the development of the capitalist
division of labor. Kevin Cox goes beyond simplistic analysis to
further engage with key concepts, and how their relationships with
one another can illuminate the human geography of the world. Key
features include: Comparative insights into human geography and
Marx's theory A detailed discussion of capitalism and Marxism,
covering topics such as capitalist geography, the capitalist city
and urbanization A focus on core concepts of the field as well as
looking more broadly at Marxist approaches to topics such as
geopolitics and difference and uneven development. This engaging
work will be valuable reading for students and scholars of human
geography and Marxist geography.
Providing a critical overview of transnationalism as a concept,
this Handbook looks at its growing influence in an era of
high-speed, globalised interconnectivity. It offers crucial
insights on how approaches to transnationalism have altered how we
think about social life from the family to the nation-state, whilst
also challenging the predominance of methodologically nationalist
analyses. Encompassing research from around the world, leading
international researchers examine transnational migration, culture,
state practices, organisations and institutions. Chapters draw
attention to conceptual concerns around the topic, including the
spatiality and temporality of transnationalism, connections to the
life course, and the articulation of affect and emotion across
borders. The Handbook further explains the transnational dimensions
of different forms of migration, including labour migrations and
student mobilities, and emphasises why and how transnational
networks and circulations matter. An engaging foundation for
students and scholars seeking to enhance their understanding of
transnationalism, this Handbook offers agenda-setting arguments
that will be beneficial to researchers of migration and mobilities,
human geography, sociology, anthropology, international relations
and cultural studies. It will also be an interesting read for
practitioners working in migration, migrant rights and
transnational organising and activism.
Elgar Research Agendas outline the future of research in a given
area. Leading scholars are given the space to explore their subject
in provocative ways, and map out the potential directions of
travel. They are relevant but also visionary. Exploring the social,
economic and environmental impacts of events on people, places and
communities, this timely Research Agenda highlights the links
between theory and practice in event impacts research. Top scholars
critically assess events, looking at who benefits from hosting
them, and focusing on issues surrounding sustainability, the need
to define legacies, and the need to extend regeneration efforts to
secure economic and socially sustainable futures. The Research
Agenda first outlines key theories and concepts in the field,
addressing the three impacts recognized in triple bottom line
considerations of sustainability. Chapters then move to analyse a
range of types and scales of event, including: conventions and
business events, sports tourism, cultural and religious events,
intangible cultural heritage, and events in rural locations. This
forward-looking Research Agenda further analyses event hosting in
emerging economy nations, disability access and inclusion, climate
change and the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic. Covering a broad
range of types, scales and settings of events, this will be a
crucial read for event studies and event management scholars. The
critical insights to practical impacts of events will also be
beneficial for policy-makers and event practitioners.
Elgar Research Agendas outline the future of research in a given
area. Leading scholars are given the space to explore their subject
in provocative ways, and map out the potential directions of
travel. They are relevant but also visionary. This insightful
Research Agenda examines the multidimensional relationship between
heritage planning and pressing current societal challenges around
climate, identity and development. Mapping future avenues for the
field, it suggests new approaches to executing, studying and
reflecting on heritage planning. Expert international contributors
raise key questions that challenge practice and research to push
for structural and institutional change, highlighting how heritage
planning, conservation, and adaptive reuse have transformative
potential - and the responsibilities that come with such potential.
Chapters explore central topics including industrial heritage and
conservation planning, digital reconstruction methods and remote
sensing technologies, rural tourism, participation and heritage-led
regeneration, as well as issues around contestation and
politicization, and the conceptualisations of heritage planning.
Spanning the domains of theoretical and empirical insights, from
academic outlooks to professional challenges, this Research Agenda
will be a vital resource for academics and students of urban and
human geography, heritage studies, planning, urban design and
architecture. Its examination of particular heritage projects will
also be useful for policy makers and professionals working in the
heritage planning field.
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