AntipodeFoundation.org

A Radical Geography Community

New Antipode Book Series title – ‘The Down-deep Delight of Democracy’

Last month saw the release of a new title in the Antipode Book Series – Mark Purcell’s The Down-deep Delight of Democracy. In the book – chapter one of which … Continue reading

22 April 2013 · Leave a Comment

Activism, environment, food, universities, and…post-Wall German filmmaking: Antipode volume 45, issue 3 out now

Antipode volume 45, number 3 out now…

15 April 2013 · 1 Comment

Antipode at the 2013 AAG

Don’t forget that Christian Parenti will be giving this year’s Antipode Lecture at the AAG annual meeting in Los Angeles on Wednesday 10 April, 16:40 – 18:20 (Emerald Bay, Westin, … Continue reading

9 April 2013 · 1 Comment

Radical public geographies: Antipode author on BBC Radio 4

Antipode author Kendra Strauss will be speaking on BBC Radio 4′s ‘Thinking Allowed’ programme tomorrow, Wednesday 27th March, at 16:00 GMT. Cambridge geographer Kendra has been invited to take part … Continue reading

26 March 2013 · Leave a Comment

“More war than night”: Violence, resistance, and territory in Pará, Brazil

by David Meek, University of Georgia Adora sits on a rock-hard couch, leaning back to blow smoke upwards where it is refracted by the daylight, streaming through cracks in her … Continue reading

15 November 2012 · Leave a Comment

Critical Cartography as Transformational Learning

by David Meek, University of Georgia A fundamental principle of critical geography is that maps are embodiments of power, differentially legitimizing particular communities, histories, and practices and obscuring others (Harley … Continue reading

11 October 2012 · Leave a Comment

Crofters, crafters, diggers and dreamers: Romantics or radicals?

by Naomi Millner, University of Bristol There’s a new political movement on the scene and it’s not afraid to get out its knitting-needles. Craftivism is “the practice of engaged creativity, … Continue reading

31 July 2012 · Leave a Comment

Rio+20, climate change, and critical scholarship: Beyond the critique of ‘green neoliberalism’?

by Sara Nelson, University of Minnesota According to critical accounts of the recent Rio+20 summit, the results of the convention were predictable: failure to reach binding agreements; a lack of … Continue reading

17 July 2012 · Leave a Comment

Rio+20 and the People’s Summit: Dialogic or Disconnected Spaces?

by David Meek, University of Georgia Critical educational scholars have extensively explored the diversity of ways in which people learn within social movements (Welton 1993; Spencer 1995; Walter 2007; Holland … Continue reading

12 July 2012 · 1 Comment

Thoughts on transition: Public education, social justice, and geography

by Rachel Brahinsky, UC Berkeley This was originally presented at the commencement ceremony for the Department of Geography, University of California, Berkeley in May 2012. Many thanks to Rachel for … Continue reading

5 July 2012 · 2 Comments

Occupy Homes MN: The anti-foreclosure movement builds solidarity among debtors

by Sara Nelson, University of Minnesota At 4 am on Monday 25 May, officers of the Hennepin County Sheriff’s Department raided the home of the Cruz family in south Minneapolis, … Continue reading

28 June 2012 · 1 Comment

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  • Some May Day reading - a review of Carl Griffin’s ‘The Rural War: Captain Swing and the Politics of Protest’ - wp.me/p16RPC-Gn 3 weeks ago

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