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Second Call for Papers: RGS-IBG Annual Conference, 26 - 28 August 2009,
Manchester

 


Geographies of expertise and experts


Sponsored by the Economic Geography Research Group

 

 

Organisers: 

James Faulconbridge, Department of Geography, Lancaster University

Sarah Hall, School of Geography, University of Nottingham

 

Framed by the power of 'knowledge based economy' discourses,
governments, firms and organizations have identified 'knowledge'
creation, circulation and exploitation as important sources of economic
growth, resilience and competitiveness for some time.  Such discourses
are underpinned by a belief that society and in particular the economy
needs certain forms of expertise and highly-skilled, 'talented'
professionals and citizens in order to manage issues as diverse as the
challenge of adapting to climate change through to innovation in
bio-technology.  Recently, political and corporate interest has centred
on the role of research, education and training in (re)producing such a
workforce and the ways in which such activities legitimate particular
forms of knowledge and expertise.  

 

There has been a growing body of academic research that scrutinises the
nature of expertise and the range of actors involved in (re)producing
and legitimating particular forms of expertise that are of value in
business and society more widely.  For example, in geography, Thrift
(2005) has explored how business schools together with management
consultants and business gurus circulate and legitimate particular forms
of expertise in what he terms 'soft capitalism'. Meanwhile, in
management studies, significant debates have emerged concerning the
possible future trajectories of MBA degrees and business schools.
However, relatively little attention has been paid to the diverse
geographies and spatialities involved in the (re)production and
circulation of expertise.  For instance, how are particular forms of
expertise tailored to particular geographical settings?  Moreover, why
is geographical sensitivity important for the effectiveness of experts
and bodies of expert knowledge? The aim of this session is, therefore,
to connect work on the (re)production of expertise with geographical
studies of knowledge.  In so doing, we hope that the sessions will
contribute to a more geographical sensitive understanding of the role of
actors in (re)producing expertise and the implications of their actions.
 
Specific topics might include, but are by no means limited to:

 

*         Theoretical approaches to spatial accounts of the
(re)production of expertise and experts (such as approaches using work
on the varieties of capitalism, relational and practice based approaches
and communities of practice).
 

*         The way experts and expertise move across space and the
effects of geographical heterogeneity on them. 

 
*         The geographically varied ways in which particular forms of
expertise are legitimated by actors such as gurus, consultants,
professional associations etc.

 

*         The methodological and political implications of foregrounding
questions of space and place in studies of the (re)production of
expertise and the work of experts.

 

*         The way institutions and organisations produce and circulate
expertise and geographical influences on this.

 

*         The relationship between vernacular knowledges and more
formally legitimated expertise

 

 

If you are interested in participating in this session please send an
abstract of your paper to James Faulconbridge
([log in to unmask]) and Sarah Hall
([log in to unmask]) by 23rd January 2009.

 

 

 

Dr James R Faulconbridge

Lecturer in Human Geography

Department of Geography

Lancaster University

Farrer Avenue

Lancaster

LA1 4YQ

UK

 

Telephone: +44(0)1524 510265

Email: [log in to unmask]
<mailto:[log in to unmask]>  

Homepage: http://www.geog.lancs.ac.uk/Members/jfaulconbridge
<http://www.geog.lancs.ac.uk/Members/jfaulconbridge> 

SSRN page: http://ssrn.com/author=546230
<https://exchange.lancs.ac.uk/exchweb/bin/redir.asp?URL=http://ssrn.com/
author=546230>