Although feminism and the field of geographic information systems and science (GIS) have only recently begun speaking to each other, the feminist mapping subject is emerging across a variety of sites – academic, professional, and lay. However, it is most articulated in the work of critical GIS scholars. Both male and female, they are committed to nonpositivist practices of knowledge produc-tion and are sensitive to gender and other power hierarchies that produce social, economic, and cultural difference. These scholars have been creating ‘feminist cartographies’, practicing ‘feminist visualization’, and developing new mapping alternatives to mainstream cartographic and GIS representations. We begin by briefly re-reading the history of women...
Through novel empirical research, this thesis explores the experience of women working in the profes...
Thematic maps facilitate spatial understanding of patterns and exceptions. Cognitive ability, spatia...
What’s the relationship between GIS and the political subject? In an effort to address this question...
Richly evocative figures exist for feminist visualizations of the world as witty agent... We just li...
In the twenty-first century we speak of a geospatial revolution, but over one hundred years ago anot...
A Companion to Feminist Geography captures the breadth and diversity of this vibrant and substantive...
Editors: Pamela Moss and Karen Falconer al-Hindi, UNO faculty member. In this innovative reader, Pam...
Feminist geographers investigate the messy, power-laden, and embodied relationships humans and non-h...
The recent growth in critical geography suggests this may be a ‘critical’ time for raising issues ab...
About the book: In recent years, the study of human geography has been reshaped by the work of femi...
Editor: Pamela Moss Chapter, Toward a More Fully Reflexive Feminist Geography, authored by Karen Fal...
Abstract New interactive web services are dramat-ically altering the way in which ordinary citizens ...
The next challenge for the subdiscipline (of political geography) is to incorporate new politicizati...
In this paper, we argue that a feminist geographical analysis that examines women as active agents i...
There exists an increasing need and trend to visualize a collective sense of place based on personal...
Through novel empirical research, this thesis explores the experience of women working in the profes...
Thematic maps facilitate spatial understanding of patterns and exceptions. Cognitive ability, spatia...
What’s the relationship between GIS and the political subject? In an effort to address this question...
Richly evocative figures exist for feminist visualizations of the world as witty agent... We just li...
In the twenty-first century we speak of a geospatial revolution, but over one hundred years ago anot...
A Companion to Feminist Geography captures the breadth and diversity of this vibrant and substantive...
Editors: Pamela Moss and Karen Falconer al-Hindi, UNO faculty member. In this innovative reader, Pam...
Feminist geographers investigate the messy, power-laden, and embodied relationships humans and non-h...
The recent growth in critical geography suggests this may be a ‘critical’ time for raising issues ab...
About the book: In recent years, the study of human geography has been reshaped by the work of femi...
Editor: Pamela Moss Chapter, Toward a More Fully Reflexive Feminist Geography, authored by Karen Fal...
Abstract New interactive web services are dramat-ically altering the way in which ordinary citizens ...
The next challenge for the subdiscipline (of political geography) is to incorporate new politicizati...
In this paper, we argue that a feminist geographical analysis that examines women as active agents i...
There exists an increasing need and trend to visualize a collective sense of place based on personal...
Through novel empirical research, this thesis explores the experience of women working in the profes...
Thematic maps facilitate spatial understanding of patterns and exceptions. Cognitive ability, spatia...
What’s the relationship between GIS and the political subject? In an effort to address this question...