Where are you at? Re-engaging bioregional ideas and what they offer geography
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/31565Dato
2023-08-02Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Sammendrag
Bioregionalism was popularised in the 1970s back to the
land movement. It is distinguished from other forms of environmentalism through the spatial imaginary of a bioregion as
the scale for environmental action and regenerative living.
Bioregional thought has been widely critiqued by geographers for its potentially deterministic understanding of the
relationship between place and culture. This paper argues
that bioregionalism is less of a homogenous movement
and more of a discursive forum that houses a spectrum of
perspectives. We identify three key tendencies within bioregional thought, an ontological tendency, a critical tendency
and a processual tendency. Each tendency is rooted in
different spatial imaginaries, and generates different axiologies and strategies of change. We argue that contemporary
processual tendencies in bioregional thought are productive
for geographers considering questions of (1) materiality,
agency and place, (2) politics, ethics and place, and (3) acting
in place for urgent and ethical change.
Forlag
WileySitering
Hubbard, Wearne, Jonas K, Norton, Wilke. Where are you at? Re-engaging bioregional ideas and what they offer geography. Geography Compass. 2023Metadata
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