While ‘the social’ is problematized in diverse ways in current geographical debates this report reflects on the ongoing relevance of social geographies, especially those that attend to the complexity and interconnectivity of life. This review outlines three ways in which society-nature relations are being interrogated via: poststructural, posthuman and Indigenous foci. It concludes that important questions of social difference and unequal power relations remain relevant for more-than-human geographies.
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2.
Bear, C. and Eden, S.2008: Making space for fish: the regional, network and fluid spaces of fisheries certification. Social and Cultural Geography9, 487-504.
3.
Besio, K., Johnston, L. and Longhurst, R.2008: Sexy beasts and devoted mums: narrating nature through dolphin tourism. Environment and Planning A40, 1219-34.
4.
Bingham, N.2006: Bees, butterflies, and bacteria: biotechnology and the politics of nonhuman friendship. Environment and Planning A38, 483-98.
Buller, H.2008: Safe from the wolf: biosecurity, bio-diversity, and competing philosophies of nature. Environment and Planning A40, 1583-97.
7.
Caprotti, F. and Kaika, M.2008: Producing the ideal fascist landscape: nature, materiality and the cinematic representation of land reclamation in the Pontine Marshes . Social and Cultural Geography9, 613-34.
8.
Castree, N.2004: Nature is dead! Long live nature!Environment and Planning A36, 191-94.
9.
Castree, N. and Nash, C.2004: Posthumanism in question. Environment and Planning A36, 1341-43.
10.
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11.
Cloke, P. and Jones, O.2004: Turning in the grave-yard: trees and the hybrid geographies of dwelling, monitoring and resistance in a Bristol cemetery. Cultural Geographies11, 313-41.
12.
Cloke, P. and Pawson, E.2008: Memorial trees and treescape memories. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space26, 107-22.
13.
Coyle, F.2006: Posthuman geographies? Biotechnology, nature and the demise of the autonomous human subject. Social and Cultural Geography7, 505-23
14.
Davies, G.F.2006: Patterning the geographies of organ transplantation: corporeality, generosity and justice. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers NS31, 257-71.
15.
Davison, A.2008: The trouble with nature: ambivalence in the lives of urban Australian environmentalists. Geoforum39, 1284-95.
16.
Del Casino, V.J. Jr and Marston, S.2006: Social geography in the United States: everywhere and nowhere. Social and Cultural Geography7, 995-1009.
17.
Derrida, J.1997: Politics of friendship. London: Verso.
18.
Fox, R.2006: Animal behaviours, post-human lives: everyday negotiations of the animal-human divide in pet-keeping. Social and Cultural Geography7, 525-37.
19.
Franklin, A.2006: Burning cities: a posthumanist account of Australians and eucalypts. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space24, 555-76.
20.
Fukuyama, F.2002: Our posthuman future: consequences of the biotechnology revolution. New York: Picador.
21.
Ginn, F.2008: Extension, subversion, containment: eco-nationalism and (post)colonial nature in Aotearoa New Zealand. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers NS33, 335-53.
22.
Head, L. and Muir, P.2006: Surburban life and the boundaries of nature: resilience and rupture in Australian backyard gardens. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers NS31, 505-24.
23.
Hinchliffe, S., Kearnes, M.B., Degen, M. and Whatmore, S.2005: Urban wild things: a cosmopolitical experiment. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space23, 643-58.
24.
Hitchings, R.2003: People, plants and performance: on actor network theory and the material pleasures of the private garden. Social and Cultural Geography4, 99-114.
25.
Jeffrey, C. and McFarlane, C., editors 2008: Theme issue: cosmopolitanism . Environment and Planning D: Society and Space26, 420-536.
26.
Jessop, B., Brenner, N. and Jones, M.2008: Theorizing sociospatial relations. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space26, 389-401.
27.
Johnson, J.T. and Murton, B.2007: Re/placing native science: Indigenous voices in contemporary constructions of nature. Geographical Research45, 121-29.
28.
Johnson, J., Cant, G., Howitt, R. and Peters, E.2007: Guest editorial. Creating anti-colonial geographies: embracing indigenous people’s knowledges and rights. Geographical Research45, 117-20.
Little, J. and Panelli, R.2007: ‘Outback’ romance? A reading of nature and heterosexuality in rural Australia. Sociologia Ruralis47, 173-88.
31.
Longhurst, R.2006: Plots, plants and paradoxes: contemporary domestic gardens in Aotearoa/New Zealand. Social and Cultural Geography7, 581-93.
32.
Lorimer, J.2008: Living roofs and brownfield wildlife: towards a fluid biogeography of UK nature conservation. Environment and Planning A40, 2042-60.
33.
Mansfield, B.2008: Health as a nature - society question. Environment and Planning A40, 1015-19.
34.
Massey, D.2004: Geographies of responsibility. Geografiska Annaler Series B: Human Geography86(B), 5-18.
35.
Mazzullo, N. and Ingold, T.2008: Being along: place, time and movement among Sámi people. In Baerenholdt, J.O. and Granaas, B., editors, Mobility and place: enacting European peripheries, Aldershot: Ashgate, 27-38.
36.
McCreanor, T., Penney, L., Jensen, V., Witten, K., Kearns, R. and Barnes, H.M.2006: ‘This is like my comfort zone’: Senses of place and belonging within Oruāmo/Beachhaven, New Zealand. New Zealand Geographer62, 196-207.
37.
Nancy, J.-L.2000: Being singular plural (translated by R.D. Richardson and A.E. O’Byrne). Palo Alto, CA: Stanford University Press.
38.
Panelli, R. and Tipa, G.2007: Placing well-being: a Maori case of linking cultural and environmental specificity. EcoHealth4, 445-60.
39.
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40.
Parr, H.2007: Mental health, nature work, and social inclusion. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space25, 537-61.
41.
Philo, C.2005: Geographies that wound. Population, Space and Place11, 441-54.
42.
Philo, C. and Wilbert, C., editors 2000: Animal spaces, beastly places: new geographies of human- animal relations. London: Routledge.
43.
Philo, C. and Wolch, J., editors 1998: Through the geographical looking glass: space, place and society - animal relations. Society and Animals6, 103-18.
44.
Power, E.R.2005: Human-nature relations in suburban gardens. Australian Geographer36, 39-53.
45.
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46.
Rose, D.B.2004: Reports from a wild country: ethics for decolonization . Sydney: University of New South Wales.
47.
Shaw, W.S., Herman, R.D.K. and Dobbs, G.R.2006: Encountering indigeneity: re-imagining and decolonizing geography. Geografiska Annaler88B, 267-76.
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Sheller, M. and Urry, J.2006: The new mobilities paradigm. Environment and Planning A, 38, 207-26.
49.
Smith, J., Clark, N. and Yusoff, K.2007: Interdependence. Geography Compass 2, DOI: 10.1111/ j.1749-8198.2007.00015.x.
50.
Valentine, G.2008: Living with difference: reflections on geographies of encounter. Progress in Human Geography32, 323-37.
51.
Virilio, P.2003: Art and fear (translated by J. Rose). London: Continuum.
52.
Waitt, G.2008: ‘Killing waves’: surfing space and gender . Social and Cultural Geography9, 75-94.
53.
Watson, A. and Huntington, O.H.2008: They’re here - I can feel them: the epistemic spaces of Indigenous and Western knowledges. Social and Cultural Geography9, 257-81.
54.
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