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Call for papers:  RGS-IBG Annual International Conference 2007 28th –  
31st August 2007, at the Royal Geographical Society with IBG, London.

Immature Geographies / Immature Geographers

Co-sponsored by the Geographies of Children, Youth and Families  
Working Group and the Postgraduate Forum.

Convenor: Lesley Gallacher

Immaturity tends to be viewed as a negative attribute: an unfortunate  
state of dependency, silliness, and inadequacy that should be  
overcome, grown out of and eliminated.  Furthermore, to be immature  
is to be unfinished; it is to be in the process of maturing.  The end  
point of this process, maturity (independence, stability and  
competence), is to be preferred over immaturity.  Because of these  
negative associations geographers have not exactly been drawn towards  
immaturity as a concept.  This is particularly the case for those  
working with children and young people, for whom 'immaturity' seems  
all too easily to reinforce the subordination of childhood to adulthood.

It could be said that children and young people are defined by their  
immaturity.  Whether this immaturity is conceived of as biological or  
social, or both, young people are considered to be growing, learning  
and maturing.  Similarly, postgraduates might be said to be immature  
researchers; they are still learning and in need of supervision.  But  
immaturity cannot be said to belong only to the young and  
inexperienced.  Older people can be immature in various ways, and the  
experienced are not infallible.

Conceptualising immaturity entirely negatively seems somewhat  
unhelpful.    Apart from anything else, this implies that stability,  
fixity and independence are to be aspired to, while open-endedess,  
change and (inter)dependence are to be avoided.  This session aims to  
explore immaturity without denigrading it, without understanding it  
solely as a misfortune to be transcended.  In this way, the session,  
seeks to join those who have begun to explore the critical potential  
of immaturity: conceptual, methodological, political and ethical (for  
example, Lee 2001; Horton, 2001).  It wants to critically rehabilitate 
—rather than to judge or hide—immaturity, dependency, frivolousness  
and fallibility.

I welcome offers of papers or other contributions which explore all  
manner of immature geographies, and by 'immature geographers' (at  
whatever stage of their career they may find themselves).  Papers can  
be empirical, conceptual, or somewhere in between.  They might  
consider, but are by no means limited to, themes such as:

– the geographies of the immature (whatever age they may be).
– the various immaturities of the 'mature'.
– immaturity as a concept.
– the relationships between immaturity and maturity.
– methodological immaturity.
– immaturity and ethics.

If you would like to present a paper in this session, please send a  
title and an abstract (of no more than 200 words) to  
[log in to unmask] by 31st January 2007.

Lesley

- -
lesley-anne gallacher

institute of geography
university of edinburgh
drummond street
edinburgh
eh8 9xp

tel:	+44(0)131 650 2528
	+44(0)783 814 0686
fax:	+44(0)131 650 2542

http://www.geos.ed.ac.uk/homes/s0453363