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CFP AAG 2017: Geographies of Care in the Spaces and Places of International
Development



Annual Meeting of the American Association of Geographers

Boston, April 5-9, 2017



Co-organizers: Roberta Hawkins and Amy Kipp (University of Guelph)



With the “moral turn” in human geography, academics in the field are
currently considering issues surrounding the geographies of care.
Specifically, feminist and critical development geographers are exploring
care as it relates to the relationships between and within the spaces and
places of the Global North and the Global South both in terms of care work
and in terms of caring about others, or notions of responsibility (see
Raghuram, 2016).



The unequal power dynamic of the care relationship that often exists in the
field of development has been critiqued as a legacy of colonialism
(Raghuram, Madge & Noxolo, 2009). With the increasing interconnectedness of
the globe, however, the traditional spaces in which care occurs is rapidly
changing (Luh Sin, 2010). New institutional arrangements of development
involving private citizens, philanthropists and entrepreneurs add
complexity to our understandings of care and responsibility, particularly
across distance (e.g. Richey & Ponte, 2014).



The session seeks papers that address questions such as: how far one can
care, how care is enacted/embodied in particular places and how conceptions
of space and place impact care? The use of feminist, postcolonial or
critical development studies theories is encouraged. We invite papers
related to these themes and beyond:



·      Feminist perspectives on care and development

·      Caring at a distance

·      Postcolonial conceptions of care

·      Care work and embodiment

·      New actors and responsibilities in international development

·      The geographies of care and responsibility

·      Ethics of care

·      Ethical consumption

·      Volunteer tourism

·      Humanitarianism and aid work



Please send abstracts of 250 words by October 18th, 2016 to: Amy Kipp

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*References:*



Luh Sin, H. (2010). Who are we responsible to? Locals’ tales of volunteer
tourism. *Third             World Quarterly* 35(1): 1–21.

Raghuram, P. (2016) Locating care ethics beyond the Global North *ACME*
15(3). http://ojs.unbc.ca/index.php/acme/issue/view/99



Raghuram, P., Madge, C., & Noxolo, P. (2009). Rethinking responsibility and
care for a postcolonial world. *Geogforum *40: 5-13.



Richey, L. A., & Ponte, S. (2014). New actors and alliances in
development. *Third
World Quarterly* 35(1): 1-21.