{"title":"地理:在公共政策方面,我们对学科和专业的倡导是否足够?","authors":"Elaine Stratford","doi":"10.1111/1745-5871.12599","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>We are close on two quarters through 2023! The time has gone remarkably quickly and felt slightly disjointed. Perhaps that is because of the pattern of austral academic rhythms—leave-taking over summer, grant writing, preparing for semester one, and Easter and school holiday breaks in April. Or perhaps it is simply because academic life is busy. Either way, work related to the journal continues apace and that includes both our publication and our collaborative webinar with the Institute of Australian Geographers (IAG) and Wiley. So, before I introduce the May issue, I want to spend a little time reflecting on one of two webinars we hosted in the first part of the year. Entitled <i>Flourish or Flounder: the possibilities for geography education and the future of the discipline</i>, the webinar was led by Susan Caldis, co-hosted by the Australian Geography Teachers’ Association (AGTA), and will be accessible here.</p><p>In one discussion in the webinar, I put a question to participants about the extent to which academic and professional geographers should be advocating for the discipline in political and policy circles. The question was not intended to suggest that the IAG and AGTA were not already doing so. Both organisations’ councils have been attentive in their engagement with debates about the Australian curriculum and changes to geography, for example.</p><p>Nonetheless, it is always useful to pause and ask: Are we doing enough? Could we do more? What more is needed? How would that work be done and by whom? For me, answers to the first two questions are fairly straightforward: no and yes. Thereafter, it becomes more complex and the views offered here are mine alone—an editorial privilege and responsibility not taken lightly. I have stopped short of addressing the last question on the grounds that it is beyond the journal’s remit and best left to the IAG Council and membership.</p><p>I have, however, been forward enough to consider what more may be needed. So, for example, could we engage public policy experts to provide professional development to IAG members via webinar platforms? Should public policy experts be explicitly identified on the journal’s editorial board? Might it be useful to add policy insights to more of our articles where content invites that approach? Do we need more focused calls for papers on public policy scholarship in geography? Perhaps as part of their mandates, might our Institute’s study groups be asked to address public policy issues explicitly and consistently and share those with the journal? At annual IAG conferences, what would it take to have a funded lecture focused on international comparative work on geography and public policy, which might then be published in the journal following peer review?</p><p>Doubtless, there <i>is</i> already useful and interesting scholarship on this crucial subject area, possibly starting with David Harvey’s (<span>1974</span>) initiating paper asking, “what kind of geography for what kind of public policy”? At least one edited collection led by Adam Whitworth (<span>2019</span>) has pointed to various responses to that question as it pertains to social policy and scale, power relations, spatial analysis, and mapping. Likewise, in a special section editorial on the subject, Shaun Lin et al. (<span>2022</span>, p. 77) have also pointed to the “substantial established literature on the geography–public policy relationship and its actual and potential trajectories.” They have suggested that debates about geography and public policy need to be recontextualised and reshaped for contemporary conditions. And they have written that there is ongoing pressure on geographers to “steer the discipline through [a] … politics of relevance and engage public policy in terms which are critical, moral and efficacious” (p 77). In the same special, John Harrison (<span>2022</span>) has suggested that foundational undergraduate texts in geography lamentably lack any reference to policy. This lack exists despite the fact that many geography graduates become leading public, private, and non-government sector personnel and profoundly shape policy outcomes at many scales over the span of their careers.</p><p>That point is highlighted by work by Janet Banfield and her colleagues (<span>2022</span>), in which a key argument is that our teaching is essential preparation for graduates. Echoing others, they claim that pedagogy “surely <i>is</i> the discipline’s greatest claim to impact” (p. 163), but I think that assumption should be unsettled. Given the range and severity of challenges that we face collectively, and given geographers’ capacities to think in integrative and innovative ways, I would think that our greatest claims to impact must be what we do in relation to research-informed learning and teaching <i>and</i> in terms of research and its intrinsic worth. Translational work is crucial to such efforts and policy translations are key.</p><p>There remains, then, much potential in terms of our engagement with geography and public policy, and I would welcome readers’ views. But on to the substance of May’s offerings in the journal.</p><p>We begin with the second of our associate editor commentaries, in which Alex Lo writes about carbon offsetting and renewable energy in a way that strongly models the very points I make above. Here is an accessibly written and useful engagement with issues crucial for public policy and to which geographers have much to contribute in terms of international, national, and local scales of challenge and solution; ecosystem processes; finance and energy geographies; and the political geographies of renewable energy futures.</p><p>Thereafter, we present a special section on legal geographies that we hope will be featured in our May webinar as well. Led by Josephine Gillespie and Tayanah O’Donnell (<span>2023</span>), the special comprises five papers by leading scholars in legal geography. I will not steal their thunder by summarising the papers here, because that is done comprehensively in their own editorial. What I will point out, however, is that every paper in the collection makes specific and important inroads into pressing public policy challenges related to agricultural research (Bartel & Graham, <span>2023</span>), bushfire management strategies (Lange & Gillespie, <span>2023</span>), biodiversity loss (Carr, <span>2023</span>), shale gas developments (Sherval, <span>2023</span>), and environmental contamination (Legg & Prior, <span>2023</span>).</p><p>Three other original papers follow the special. In “Associations between coastal proximity and children’s mental health in Australia,” Laura Oostenbach et al. (<span>2022</span>) have provided evidence that coastal proximity may ameliorate depression and anxiety among children in Australia and suggested new paths for more research. In “Increasing livelihood vulnerabilities to coastal erosion and wastewater intrusion: The political ecology of Thai aquaculture in peri-urban Bangkok,” Danny Marks et al. (<span>2023</span>) consider how small-scale aquaculture farmers are dealing with fractures in vertical and horizontal governance and unequal class relations. Finally, in “Waiting during disasters: Negotiating the spatio-temporalities of resilience and recovery,” Gemma Sou and Kirsten Howarth (<span>2023</span>) examine the spatio-temporal dimensions of disasters, shedding light on what it means to wait to recover—as individuals and communities with embodied geographies and in relation to the state’s capacities to control how fast or how slow recovery times might be shaped.</p><p>Again, all three papers point to the crucial role that geographers have in producing research that has profound public policy implications. They are completed by a timely and apposite work by David Mercer (<span>2023</span>) who, in an extended and compelling commentary on David Wilmoth’s book, <i>The promise of the city</i>, also points to the ways in which geographers and geography have shaped public policy across universities, governments, and international organisations. Bears thinking about … a lot more.</p>","PeriodicalId":47233,"journal":{"name":"Geographical Research","volume":"61 2","pages":"156-157"},"PeriodicalIF":2.9000,"publicationDate":"2023-04-26","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/1745-5871.12599","citationCount":"1","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Geography: Do we advocate enough for the discipline and profession in terms of public policy?\",\"authors\":\"Elaine Stratford\",\"doi\":\"10.1111/1745-5871.12599\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p>We are close on two quarters through 2023! The time has gone remarkably quickly and felt slightly disjointed. Perhaps that is because of the pattern of austral academic rhythms—leave-taking over summer, grant writing, preparing for semester one, and Easter and school holiday breaks in April. Or perhaps it is simply because academic life is busy. Either way, work related to the journal continues apace and that includes both our publication and our collaborative webinar with the Institute of Australian Geographers (IAG) and Wiley. So, before I introduce the May issue, I want to spend a little time reflecting on one of two webinars we hosted in the first part of the year. Entitled <i>Flourish or Flounder: the possibilities for geography education and the future of the discipline</i>, the webinar was led by Susan Caldis, co-hosted by the Australian Geography Teachers’ Association (AGTA), and will be accessible here.</p><p>In one discussion in the webinar, I put a question to participants about the extent to which academic and professional geographers should be advocating for the discipline in political and policy circles. The question was not intended to suggest that the IAG and AGTA were not already doing so. Both organisations’ councils have been attentive in their engagement with debates about the Australian curriculum and changes to geography, for example.</p><p>Nonetheless, it is always useful to pause and ask: Are we doing enough? Could we do more? What more is needed? How would that work be done and by whom? For me, answers to the first two questions are fairly straightforward: no and yes. Thereafter, it becomes more complex and the views offered here are mine alone—an editorial privilege and responsibility not taken lightly. I have stopped short of addressing the last question on the grounds that it is beyond the journal’s remit and best left to the IAG Council and membership.</p><p>I have, however, been forward enough to consider what more may be needed. So, for example, could we engage public policy experts to provide professional development to IAG members via webinar platforms? Should public policy experts be explicitly identified on the journal’s editorial board? Might it be useful to add policy insights to more of our articles where content invites that approach? Do we need more focused calls for papers on public policy scholarship in geography? Perhaps as part of their mandates, might our Institute’s study groups be asked to address public policy issues explicitly and consistently and share those with the journal? At annual IAG conferences, what would it take to have a funded lecture focused on international comparative work on geography and public policy, which might then be published in the journal following peer review?</p><p>Doubtless, there <i>is</i> already useful and interesting scholarship on this crucial subject area, possibly starting with David Harvey’s (<span>1974</span>) initiating paper asking, “what kind of geography for what kind of public policy”? At least one edited collection led by Adam Whitworth (<span>2019</span>) has pointed to various responses to that question as it pertains to social policy and scale, power relations, spatial analysis, and mapping. Likewise, in a special section editorial on the subject, Shaun Lin et al. (<span>2022</span>, p. 77) have also pointed to the “substantial established literature on the geography–public policy relationship and its actual and potential trajectories.” They have suggested that debates about geography and public policy need to be recontextualised and reshaped for contemporary conditions. And they have written that there is ongoing pressure on geographers to “steer the discipline through [a] … politics of relevance and engage public policy in terms which are critical, moral and efficacious” (p 77). In the same special, John Harrison (<span>2022</span>) has suggested that foundational undergraduate texts in geography lamentably lack any reference to policy. This lack exists despite the fact that many geography graduates become leading public, private, and non-government sector personnel and profoundly shape policy outcomes at many scales over the span of their careers.</p><p>That point is highlighted by work by Janet Banfield and her colleagues (<span>2022</span>), in which a key argument is that our teaching is essential preparation for graduates. Echoing others, they claim that pedagogy “surely <i>is</i> the discipline’s greatest claim to impact” (p. 163), but I think that assumption should be unsettled. Given the range and severity of challenges that we face collectively, and given geographers’ capacities to think in integrative and innovative ways, I would think that our greatest claims to impact must be what we do in relation to research-informed learning and teaching <i>and</i> in terms of research and its intrinsic worth. Translational work is crucial to such efforts and policy translations are key.</p><p>There remains, then, much potential in terms of our engagement with geography and public policy, and I would welcome readers’ views. But on to the substance of May’s offerings in the journal.</p><p>We begin with the second of our associate editor commentaries, in which Alex Lo writes about carbon offsetting and renewable energy in a way that strongly models the very points I make above. Here is an accessibly written and useful engagement with issues crucial for public policy and to which geographers have much to contribute in terms of international, national, and local scales of challenge and solution; ecosystem processes; finance and energy geographies; and the political geographies of renewable energy futures.</p><p>Thereafter, we present a special section on legal geographies that we hope will be featured in our May webinar as well. Led by Josephine Gillespie and Tayanah O’Donnell (<span>2023</span>), the special comprises five papers by leading scholars in legal geography. I will not steal their thunder by summarising the papers here, because that is done comprehensively in their own editorial. What I will point out, however, is that every paper in the collection makes specific and important inroads into pressing public policy challenges related to agricultural research (Bartel & Graham, <span>2023</span>), bushfire management strategies (Lange & Gillespie, <span>2023</span>), biodiversity loss (Carr, <span>2023</span>), shale gas developments (Sherval, <span>2023</span>), and environmental contamination (Legg & Prior, <span>2023</span>).</p><p>Three other original papers follow the special. In “Associations between coastal proximity and children’s mental health in Australia,” Laura Oostenbach et al. (<span>2022</span>) have provided evidence that coastal proximity may ameliorate depression and anxiety among children in Australia and suggested new paths for more research. In “Increasing livelihood vulnerabilities to coastal erosion and wastewater intrusion: The political ecology of Thai aquaculture in peri-urban Bangkok,” Danny Marks et al. (<span>2023</span>) consider how small-scale aquaculture farmers are dealing with fractures in vertical and horizontal governance and unequal class relations. Finally, in “Waiting during disasters: Negotiating the spatio-temporalities of resilience and recovery,” Gemma Sou and Kirsten Howarth (<span>2023</span>) examine the spatio-temporal dimensions of disasters, shedding light on what it means to wait to recover—as individuals and communities with embodied geographies and in relation to the state’s capacities to control how fast or how slow recovery times might be shaped.</p><p>Again, all three papers point to the crucial role that geographers have in producing research that has profound public policy implications. They are completed by a timely and apposite work by David Mercer (<span>2023</span>) who, in an extended and compelling commentary on David Wilmoth’s book, <i>The promise of the city</i>, also points to the ways in which geographers and geography have shaped public policy across universities, governments, and international organisations. Bears thinking about … a lot more.</p>\",\"PeriodicalId\":47233,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"Geographical Research\",\"volume\":\"61 2\",\"pages\":\"156-157\"},\"PeriodicalIF\":2.9000,\"publicationDate\":\"2023-04-26\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/1745-5871.12599\",\"citationCount\":\"1\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"Geographical Research\",\"FirstCategoryId\":\"90\",\"ListUrlMain\":\"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1745-5871.12599\",\"RegionNum\":2,\"RegionCategory\":\"社会学\",\"ArticlePicture\":[],\"TitleCN\":null,\"AbstractTextCN\":null,\"PMCID\":null,\"EPubDate\":\"\",\"PubModel\":\"\",\"JCR\":\"Q1\",\"JCRName\":\"GEOGRAPHY\",\"Score\":null,\"Total\":0}","platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Geographical Research","FirstCategoryId":"90","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1745-5871.12599","RegionNum":2,"RegionCategory":"社会学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"GEOGRAPHY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 1
摘要
但让我们来看看梅在杂志上发表的文章的实质内容。我们从副主编的第二篇评论开始,Alex Lo在其中写了关于碳抵消和可再生能源的文章,以一种强烈的方式模仿了我上面提到的观点。这是一本通俗易懂且有用的书,涉及公共政策的关键问题,地理学家在国际、国家和地方层面的挑战和解决方案方面可以做出很大贡献;生态系统流程;金融和能源地理;以及可再生能源未来的政治地理。此后,我们将介绍一个关于法律地理的特别部分,我们希望该部分也将在我们5月的网络研讨会上出现。该专题由Josephine Gillespie和Tayanah O 'Donnell(2023)牵头,由法律地理学领域的主要学者撰写的五篇论文组成。我不会抢了他们的风头,在这里总结这些论文,因为这在他们自己的社论中已经做得很全面了。然而,我要指出的是,文集中的每一篇论文都对与农业研究相关的紧迫的公共政策挑战做出了具体而重要的贡献(Bartel &格雷厄姆,2023),森林火灾管理策略(兰格&Gillespie, 2023)、生物多样性丧失(Carr, 2023)、页岩气开发(Sherval, 2023)和环境污染(Legg &之前,2023年)。另外三篇原创论文紧随其后。在“澳大利亚沿海邻近与儿童心理健康之间的关系”中,Laura Oostenbach等人(2022)提供了证据,表明沿海邻近可能会改善澳大利亚儿童的抑郁和焦虑,并提出了更多研究的新途径。Danny Marks等人(2023年)在“日益增加的生计脆弱性对海岸侵蚀和废水入侵的影响:曼谷城郊泰国水产养殖的政治生态”中,考虑了小规模水产养殖户如何应对垂直和水平治理的断裂以及不平等的阶级关系。最后,在“灾难期间的等待:谈判弹性和恢复的时空性”中,Gemma Sou和Kirsten Howarth(2023)研究了灾害的时空维度,揭示了等待恢复的意义——作为具有具体地理位置的个人和社区,以及与国家控制恢复时间的快或慢可能形成的能力有关。同样,这三篇论文都指出了地理学家在产生具有深远公共政策影响的研究中所起的关键作用。大卫·默瑟(David Mercer, 2023年)在对大卫·威尔莫斯(David Wilmoth)的著作《城市的承诺》(The promise of The city)进行了详尽而引人注目的评论后,及时而恰当地完成了这些研究。默瑟还指出,地理学家和地理学是如何塑造大学、政府和国际组织的公共政策的。熊想的更多。
Geography: Do we advocate enough for the discipline and profession in terms of public policy?
We are close on two quarters through 2023! The time has gone remarkably quickly and felt slightly disjointed. Perhaps that is because of the pattern of austral academic rhythms—leave-taking over summer, grant writing, preparing for semester one, and Easter and school holiday breaks in April. Or perhaps it is simply because academic life is busy. Either way, work related to the journal continues apace and that includes both our publication and our collaborative webinar with the Institute of Australian Geographers (IAG) and Wiley. So, before I introduce the May issue, I want to spend a little time reflecting on one of two webinars we hosted in the first part of the year. Entitled Flourish or Flounder: the possibilities for geography education and the future of the discipline, the webinar was led by Susan Caldis, co-hosted by the Australian Geography Teachers’ Association (AGTA), and will be accessible here.
In one discussion in the webinar, I put a question to participants about the extent to which academic and professional geographers should be advocating for the discipline in political and policy circles. The question was not intended to suggest that the IAG and AGTA were not already doing so. Both organisations’ councils have been attentive in their engagement with debates about the Australian curriculum and changes to geography, for example.
Nonetheless, it is always useful to pause and ask: Are we doing enough? Could we do more? What more is needed? How would that work be done and by whom? For me, answers to the first two questions are fairly straightforward: no and yes. Thereafter, it becomes more complex and the views offered here are mine alone—an editorial privilege and responsibility not taken lightly. I have stopped short of addressing the last question on the grounds that it is beyond the journal’s remit and best left to the IAG Council and membership.
I have, however, been forward enough to consider what more may be needed. So, for example, could we engage public policy experts to provide professional development to IAG members via webinar platforms? Should public policy experts be explicitly identified on the journal’s editorial board? Might it be useful to add policy insights to more of our articles where content invites that approach? Do we need more focused calls for papers on public policy scholarship in geography? Perhaps as part of their mandates, might our Institute’s study groups be asked to address public policy issues explicitly and consistently and share those with the journal? At annual IAG conferences, what would it take to have a funded lecture focused on international comparative work on geography and public policy, which might then be published in the journal following peer review?
Doubtless, there is already useful and interesting scholarship on this crucial subject area, possibly starting with David Harvey’s (1974) initiating paper asking, “what kind of geography for what kind of public policy”? At least one edited collection led by Adam Whitworth (2019) has pointed to various responses to that question as it pertains to social policy and scale, power relations, spatial analysis, and mapping. Likewise, in a special section editorial on the subject, Shaun Lin et al. (2022, p. 77) have also pointed to the “substantial established literature on the geography–public policy relationship and its actual and potential trajectories.” They have suggested that debates about geography and public policy need to be recontextualised and reshaped for contemporary conditions. And they have written that there is ongoing pressure on geographers to “steer the discipline through [a] … politics of relevance and engage public policy in terms which are critical, moral and efficacious” (p 77). In the same special, John Harrison (2022) has suggested that foundational undergraduate texts in geography lamentably lack any reference to policy. This lack exists despite the fact that many geography graduates become leading public, private, and non-government sector personnel and profoundly shape policy outcomes at many scales over the span of their careers.
That point is highlighted by work by Janet Banfield and her colleagues (2022), in which a key argument is that our teaching is essential preparation for graduates. Echoing others, they claim that pedagogy “surely is the discipline’s greatest claim to impact” (p. 163), but I think that assumption should be unsettled. Given the range and severity of challenges that we face collectively, and given geographers’ capacities to think in integrative and innovative ways, I would think that our greatest claims to impact must be what we do in relation to research-informed learning and teaching and in terms of research and its intrinsic worth. Translational work is crucial to such efforts and policy translations are key.
There remains, then, much potential in terms of our engagement with geography and public policy, and I would welcome readers’ views. But on to the substance of May’s offerings in the journal.
We begin with the second of our associate editor commentaries, in which Alex Lo writes about carbon offsetting and renewable energy in a way that strongly models the very points I make above. Here is an accessibly written and useful engagement with issues crucial for public policy and to which geographers have much to contribute in terms of international, national, and local scales of challenge and solution; ecosystem processes; finance and energy geographies; and the political geographies of renewable energy futures.
Thereafter, we present a special section on legal geographies that we hope will be featured in our May webinar as well. Led by Josephine Gillespie and Tayanah O’Donnell (2023), the special comprises five papers by leading scholars in legal geography. I will not steal their thunder by summarising the papers here, because that is done comprehensively in their own editorial. What I will point out, however, is that every paper in the collection makes specific and important inroads into pressing public policy challenges related to agricultural research (Bartel & Graham, 2023), bushfire management strategies (Lange & Gillespie, 2023), biodiversity loss (Carr, 2023), shale gas developments (Sherval, 2023), and environmental contamination (Legg & Prior, 2023).
Three other original papers follow the special. In “Associations between coastal proximity and children’s mental health in Australia,” Laura Oostenbach et al. (2022) have provided evidence that coastal proximity may ameliorate depression and anxiety among children in Australia and suggested new paths for more research. In “Increasing livelihood vulnerabilities to coastal erosion and wastewater intrusion: The political ecology of Thai aquaculture in peri-urban Bangkok,” Danny Marks et al. (2023) consider how small-scale aquaculture farmers are dealing with fractures in vertical and horizontal governance and unequal class relations. Finally, in “Waiting during disasters: Negotiating the spatio-temporalities of resilience and recovery,” Gemma Sou and Kirsten Howarth (2023) examine the spatio-temporal dimensions of disasters, shedding light on what it means to wait to recover—as individuals and communities with embodied geographies and in relation to the state’s capacities to control how fast or how slow recovery times might be shaped.
Again, all three papers point to the crucial role that geographers have in producing research that has profound public policy implications. They are completed by a timely and apposite work by David Mercer (2023) who, in an extended and compelling commentary on David Wilmoth’s book, The promise of the city, also points to the ways in which geographers and geography have shaped public policy across universities, governments, and international organisations. Bears thinking about … a lot more.