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EGRG Supports SIEG2016

The EGRG is pleased to announce that it will be supporting two PhD students to attend the Summer Institute in Economic Geography at Kentucky University this summer. Kelly Kay from the London School of Economics and Amy Horton from Queen Mary University of London have both been awarded £175 towards their travel costs. Reports on their time at the Summer Institute will be made available at the end of the summer.



Lizzie Richardson (Cambridge) blogs about GCEG2015

Lizzie Richardson was awarded an EGRG Travel Grant to attend GCEG2015.  Read about her experiences below…

On home territory? Getting (dis)orientated at the Global Conference on Economic Geography, Oxford, August 2015

In trying to capture a sense of my experience of the above conference now some months past, I can’t help but come to rest on ‘disorientation’ as a suitable descriptor. Despite the conference taking place in the UK, and in the facilities of a university not unlike the one where I am currently based, for me there was something a bit queer about the event.

I use the term ‘queer’ deliberately.

This is because my sense of disorientation picks up Sara Ahmed’s Queer Phenomenology in which she considers how questioning orientation, and getting lost, can help us find direction. And as someone more schooled in ‘cultural’ matters, this conference was something of an outing into what was for me the under-charted territories of economic geography.

This process of disorientation to reorientate myself at the conference involved queer encounters with the subject matter of economic geography. Some of this was through engaging with completely new areas for me, for example aspects of ‘financial economies’. Equally it involved becoming attuned to different vocabularies to describe topics with which I am familiar, such as ‘work economies’.

But as well as querying my own position, this sense of disorientation was in operation in the subject of the conference itself. Perhaps unsurprisingly, far from being homogeneous research matter, economic geography proved to have incongruities and heterogeneities. There were lots of different speaking positions, some of which seemed to be more receptive to entering into dialogue than others.

This heterogeneity was the subject of Jamie Peck’s keynote address at the opening reception, held in Oxford’s Museum of Natural History. Known to have a fondness for allegory, he borrowed the classification of the scholarly ‘lumpers’ and ‘splitters’ who differently construct natural history, and applied these academic types to the production of knowledge in economic geography. As someone with a cultural ‘predilection’, I enjoyed Peck’s lecture for its thoughtful construction, but was also drawn to his assessment that economic geography is yet to properly respond to the ‘post-structural’ challenge, posed some twenty years ago by feminist economic geographers.

Another notable point when incoherence and uncertainty around speaking positions emerged was in the final plenary, the topic of which was ‘global encounter, pluralism and transformation in economic geography’. The session was constituted by a discussion between Britta Klagge, Jane Pollard and Henry Wai-chung Yeung, chaired by Gavin Bridge. As well as providing some interesting bits of academic life history for each of the panellists, the session contained some thought provoking discussion about the challenges of ‘doing’ economic geography, and of ‘being’ an economic geographer.

And in this reflexive light, thinking through Sara Ahmed reminds me of the importance of being receptive to queer orientations. To allow for plural approaches in economic geography means being willing to see things differently. Or for Ahmed, to extend the parameters of the visible and the sayable involves disclosing work, when the things in front of us that allow us to find our way, can also conceal other directions. Such a question of what falls within the parameters of economic geography, and what economic geography might obscure, was evident in the ‘digital economies’ stream.

Perhaps an unfair (and not to mention biased) comparison, but I felt the topic matter open to discussion was much broader in the panel (in which I participated) on the ‘sharing economy’ than much of the content of the digital economies plenary session. Nonetheless, in both sessions, what was interesting was the struggle to find a vocabulary for ‘digital economies’ that might do justice to overlaps with and departures from existing theoretical and empirical work in economic geography.

Overall, and including the usual conference cocktail of overstimulation and sleep deprivation, I thoroughly enjoyed my outing at the conference. I am grateful to the Economic Geography Research Group of the RGS-IBG for their travel award.



ENTER YOUR THESIS FOR THE EGRG PHD PRIZE 2016

The EGRG committee is pleased to announce the details of the 2016 EGRG postgraduate thesis competition. Each year, we award a £100 prize to the best PhD dissertation in the field of economic geography (broadly defined).

The prize is kindly sponsored by Sage.  Previous winners are listed on the EGRG website: http://www.egrg.rgs.org/prizes/

In order to be considered for the award, please email an electronic version of the thesis to j.johns@liverpool.ac.uk by Friday 29th January 2016. This must an absolutely final version of a thesis that has passed the degree for which it has been submitted at a UK institution during 2015.

If you have any doubts about eligibility, please email Jenny Johns, EGRG Prize Coordinator.  The theses will be reviewed by the EGRG committee and we will announce the winners in April/May 2016.



Aidan Wong wins 2015 EGRG PhD Prize

IMG_4256[1]Many congratulations to Dr Aidan Wong who has been awarded the Economic Geography Research Group 2015 PhD Prize for a thesis entitled:

The Politics of Urban Waste Collection and Recycling Global Production Networks in Singapore and Malaysia

Aidan completed his PhD in the School of Geography at Queen Mary, University of London.  He is now a Postdoctoral Research Fellow in the Department of Geography at the National University of Singapore.  Aidan’s thesis also won the 2015 PhD Prize in Economic Geography awarded by the Association of American Geographers.  We understand that this is the first time that someone has won the double in this way!

The EGRG prize judges commented on the highest standards of scholarship and academic attainment evidenced across this year’s entries, and look forward to judging the next round (calls for entries to be announced later this year).



New Chair of EGRG

faulconbridgealex hughesAfter 3 years of hard work as Chair of EGRG, Alex Hughes stood down at the August 2015 AGM in Oxford, at the Fourth Global Conference in Economic Geography.  She is succeeded by James Faulconbridge.  Many thanks to Alex, and good luck to James!



EGRG Undergrad Prize Winner 2014

Many congratulations to Yasmin Merican at the University of Edinburgh who has been awarded the Economic Geography Research Group 2014 Prize for the best undergraduate dissertation for a study entitled:

‘All food is ethical: exploring the negotiation of everyday ethics and ethical food’

There were eight entries this year and all reflected the highest standards of scholarship and academic attainment.

New for 2014, the EGRG Undergraduate Dissertation Prize is sponsored by Sage. Yasmin receives a copy of Global Shift, The Sage Handbook of Economic Geography, and a further £150 worth of Sage books.

 

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EGRG Annual Symposium 2014 – See Photos

Generating Research Impact: Ethics, Politics and Practices

Date: Tuesday 26th August 2014

Venue: Royal Geographical Society (RGS), 1 Kensington Gore, London, SW7 2AR

Jointly organised by RGS-IBG Research Groups: EGRG, DARG, SCGRG and PolGRG

FINAL PROGRAMME (download as PDF)

This hugely successful workshop took place on the day before the 2014 annual international conference of the RGS (with IBG). It brought together academics, including postgraduates, from across human geography to facilitate a critical focus and debate on the nature and implications of research impact, from research group perspectives across the discipline, including thinking more broadly and critically about what research impact means to us, and how it affects our work. The event included group and roundtable debate, facilitated by five keynote talks.

VIEW PHOTOS FROM THE SYMPOSIUM HERE here

 

 



Sage Sponsors EGRG Undergraduate Dissertation Prize

 

EGRG is pleased to announce that new for 2014, the EGRG Undergraduate Dissertation Prize is proudly sponsored by Sage. Winners receive copies of Global Shift, The Sage Handbook of Economic Geography, and a further £150 worth of Sage books.  For more information on the EGRG prizes and how to enter click here.

The winner of the 2014 UG prize will be announced – along with the PhD Prize winner – at the EGRG AGM,1.10pm to 2.25pm on Wednesday 27th August 2014. The Venue is the Lowther Room at the Royal Geographical Society.  See you there.

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Register Now for EGRG Annual Symposium: 26 August 2014, London

Generating Research Impact: Ethics, Politics and Practices

Date: Tuesday 26th August 2014

Venue: Education Centre, Royal Geographical Society (RGS), 1 Kensington Gore, London, SW7 2AR

Jointly organised by RGS-IBG Research Groups: EGRG, DARG, SCGRG and PolGRG

This workshop will take place on the day before the 2014 annual international conference of the RGS (with IBG). It brings together academics, including postgraduates, from across human geography to facilitate a critical focus and debate on the nature and implications of research impact, from research group perspectives across the discipline, including thinking more broadly and critically about what research impact means to us, and how it affects our work. The event includes group and roundtable debate, facilitated by five keynote talks.

Programme:

10:00-10:30 Registration & coffee

10:30-10:45 Welcome from Alex Hughes & introductions

10:45-12:00 Session 1: Tracking & Embedding Impact (Chair: Steve Musson)

  • Dr Martin Walsh (Global Research Adviser, Oxfam GB, & Member of REF Main Panel C): Researching impacts: emerging lessons from the development sector
  • Group discussion: How do we embed & track impact? How might we work with organisations to do this, and what are the challenges?

12:00-13:00 Lunch

13:00-14:30 Session 2: Politics, Consequences & Communication of Impact (Chair: Rebecca Sandover)

  • Professor Kevin Morgan (Cardiff School of Planning & Geography): The politics of sustainable school food reform (project recognised in ESRC Impact Annual Awards 2013)
  • Hazel Edwards (Senior Engagement Manager – Arts & Humanities, Durham University): Research impact through partnership: the case of a Tyne & Wear Archives & Museum project
  • Group discussion: How do we conduct research that shapes public policy/engagement? How do we address the political challenges associated with the generation & consequences of research impact? How do we communicate research impact?

14:30-15:00 Tea/coffee

15:00-16:30 Session 3: Conceptualising Impact & its Pathways (Chair: Karen Lai)

  • Eloise Mellor (ESRC): Overview of ESRC’s current visions of impact
  • Professor Nina Laurie (Newcastle University): Conceptualising impact in the global South: the case of a trafficking project
  • Group discussion: How do we conceptualise and create pathways to impact? What kinds of skills are required to foster impact?

16:30 Workshop closes

18:15 RGS-IBG 2014 Annual conference opens

 

The event is free to students (current, registered graduate or doctoral studies), and £16 for all others.

To register for the event, you can book in one of two ways: (i) through the RGS website and online booking system (to add the workshop to your RGS annual conference booking) at www.rgs.org/AC2014Workshops or, if you are not attending the annual conference, (ii) by e-mailing Alex.Hughes@ncl.ac.uk and sending a cheque (if you are paying) for £16 made payable to ‘EGRG’ to Alex Hughes, School of Geography, Politics & Sociology, 5th Floor Claremont Tower, Newcastle University, Newcastle upon Tyne, NE1 7RU by 6th August.

 



EGRG sponsors 8 sessions at RGS-IBG 2014