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CFP AAG 2018: *Mapping Urban In/justice*
New Orleans, LA / April 10-14, 2018
Organizers: Taylor Shelton (Mississippi State University) and Dillon
Mahmoudi (University of Maryland Baltimore County)

How can mapping reveal previously unseen urban injustices or misunderstood
phenomenon?

In 1973, David Harvey remarked that “mapping even more evidence of man’s
patent inhumanity to man is counter-revolutionary in the sense that it
allows the bleeding-heart liberal in us to pretend we are contributing to a
solution when in fact we are not.” But rather than simply documenting these
inhumanities, examples abound of mapping and data being used to actively
challenge entrenched forms of inequality and the processes that produce
them. Building on the power imbued in maps and data by powerful
institutions, mapping is increasingly leveraged as a key means of drawing
attention to, and developing new understandings of, urban inequality. While
there is a persistent challenge in ensuring that cartographic visualization
and quantitative data analysis do more than just “expiate guilt without our
ever being forced to face the fundamental issues,” these tools and methods
have just as much potential to advance a substantive, radical critique of
the status quo as any other approach.

This session seeks papers that demonstrate the utility of not only thinking
critically about the intersections of mapping and urban inequality, but
actually doing mapping and data analysis in order to reveal and better
understand the variety of social and spatial forms these injustices take in
contemporary cities. While the utility of maps and data to bring attention
to urban injustices is powerful in its own right, these kinds of
representations can not only help to prove that such injustices exist, but
also allow us to develop new ways of conceptualizing and addressing them.

Possible topics might include, but are not limited to:

   - Use of novel datasets or visualization techniques to understand urban
   injustices
   - Inequalities in housing, transportation, infrastructure, etc.
   - Counter-mapping as an activist strategy
   - Participatory and community-based mapping
   - Mixed-methods mapping (e.g., mental and cognitive mapping, qualitative
   GIS)
   - Mapping that redraws boundaries
   - Power and il/legibility in mapping

Interested participants should send abstracts of 250 words or less to
Taylor Shelton ([log in to unmask]) and Dillon Mahmoudi (
[log in to unmask]) by October 11.

Best,
Dillon
-- 
Dillon Mahmoudi
Assistant Professor
Department of Geography and Environmental Systems
University of Maryland, Baltimore County