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Dear Critters,

Please look forward to the exciting conference for geographers organized by
EUGEO <http://eugeo2015.com/> from 30th August to 2th September in the
wonderful city of Budapest, Hungary. *Abstract submission
<http://eugeo2015.com/registration> has been extended to 15th March*.
Critical geographers might be especially interested in the following
sessions <http://eugeo2015.com/sessions>:


<http://eugeo2015.com/>


*P19: **Geography, empires, nations and the role of geographical societies*

*Organisers:*
*Róbert Győri* [log in to unmask]
*Charles Withers* [log in to unmask]

*Session Outline:*
We invite papers from researchers interested in how geographical societies
in the past have offered not only their services and expertise, but also
their maps and databases in order to further the national and imperial
goals of different European states. Of particular interest are papers that
explore the various ways in which geographical societies and their members
were involved in war efforts, peace preparations, and the production of
nationalist and imperialist propaganda.


*P58: **Urban political economies of Eastern Europe from a global
perspective*

*Organisers:*
*Márton Czirfusz* [log in to unmask]
*Zoltán Gyimesi* [log in to unmask]
*Zsuzsanna Pósfai* [log in to unmask]

*Session Outline:*
Despite convergences between urban geographies of neoliberal capitalism,
global urban change is highly uneven, developing along divergent paths.
This session proposes to analyse recent Eastern European urban trends,
including growing social inequalities within and between cities, a critical
understanding of processes of decision-making and urban diversity
management, and policy networks of inter-city competition and branding in a
political economic approach. The venue of the EUGEO conference in
post-socialist Budapest offers us a good opportunity to reflect upon the
previous decades of neoliberal capitalism in Eastern European urban
development within global processes and planetary urbanization (Brenner and
Schmid 2012). We also propose to look at how critical urban studies can
offer theoretical and methodological tools to understand and challenge
urban power relations.

We invite both conceptual and empirical papers addressing – but not limited
to – the following questions:
- How might a comparative and historical understanding of global urbanism
help us decipher and eventually counteract current political economies in
Eastern European cities?
- To what extent can the notions of urban neoliberalism, urban
entrepreneurialism and urban growth coalitions be applied to Eastern
European cities?
- What are the emerging spatial manifestations of uneven power relations
and social struggles in Eastern European cities from a global perspective?
- What are the roles of trans-scalar governmentality (Majoor and Salet
2008) and supra-national institutions (such as the EU) in Eastern European
regimes of accumulation?
- What is the role of critical urban studies at the intersections of
policy-making, academia and activism in different geographical contexts?


*P17: Geographies of nature – understanding, sense making, knowledge making*

*Organisers:*
*Zoltán Gyimesi* [log in to unmask]
*Ferenc Jankó* [log in to unmask]

*Session Outline:*
Scientific research concerning nature–human relationship is a recurrent
theme in the last few decades among many disciplines, producing various
critical reflections and heated debates. Geographers have emphasized that
our understanding of nature as a resource or as a physical phenomenon is
excessively narrow, while environmental studies provide a promising
interdisciplinary platform for connecting natural and social scientists.
How our natural environment is socially constructed and locally perceived?
What are the viable strategies for environmental resilience on different
interconnected scales (local, regional, global)? How should we critically
understand environmental governance in the reproduction of inequalities?
This session invites papers dealing with various connecting questions,
including the historically changing social constructions and
representations of nature, the cultural and political roles of public
attitudes towards the natural environment, the moral challenges of
environmental conflicts, security and justice, the changing possibilities
for environmental activism and grassroots movements, and the sustainable
strategies of local cultures to resilience. Critical studies are also
invited focusing on the shifting political economies of environmental
governance and policy-making, nature-capital relations and the role of the
social production of nature in reproducing social inequalities and
underdevelopment, the financialization or commodication of nature (e.g.
land grabs) under ecological regimes generating environmental crises, and
recent controversies in environmental knowledge production (e.g. climate
change).



All the best,
Zoltán Ginelli (Gyimesi)
*PhD student*
*Eötvös Loránd University*
*Faculty of Science, Institute for Earth Sciences*
*Department of Social and Economic Geography*
*H-1117 Budapest, Pázmány Péter sétány 1/C*
*See me at the department website
<http://tgf.elte.hu/doktoranduszok/gyimesi-zoltan>.*
*See me at academia.edu <https://elte.academia.edu/Zolt%C3%A1nGyimesi>.*