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	Call for Panelists

	Graduate Student Panel- Anti-racism politics in the city: a graduate
student roundtable
	Session Sponsored by the Urban Geography Specialty Group
	Session Type: Panel session, roundtable discussion

	Organizers: Rachael Baker, York University; Emma Slager, University of
Washington

	Panel theme: Emerging graduate student research and praxis on urban
anti-racist politics

	Call for Panelists:
	The call to thematically focus on Black Geographies during the 2018 annual
American Association of Geographers meeting is, as theme organizers LaToya
Eaves are Aretina Hamilton say, timely, and upholds Katherine
McKittrick’s declaration that “black matters are spatial matters.” At
the same time, the thematic focus on Public Engagement in Geography
emphasizes the importance of scholar activism, public pedagogy, and
participatory action research. Bringing these two themes together, we
acknowledge that the field of geography is bound to the work of colonialism
and spatial dispossession  of people of color and argue that to commit to
the work and worldings of advancing Black Geographies, there is an
additional opportunity to hold ourselves accountable as emerging scholars,
to structure our research and methodologies in ways that advance
publicly-oriented anti-racist values and practice. Beyond the actual study
of anti-racist mobilizations, we seek contributions on this panel from
graduate students who take on anti-racism as a practice within their
research, reflexively, epistemologically, methodologically, and
politically, focusing particularly on work in urban contexts.
	Potential topics proposed by panelists could include:
-Urban Afrofuturism(s) and anti-racist worlding
-Anti-racist methodologies
-Critical epistemological practices
-Anti-racist and public pedagogies
-Positionality and anti-racist ethics
-Anti-racism and fieldwork
-Anti-racism and public scholarship
	Submission Procedure:

	Graduate students who are interested in taking part in this roundtable
discussion should submit two questions that guide your research, as well as
a brief synopsis (300 words max) outlining how you integrate anti-racism
politics into your urban geographic research and praxis. The questions that
shape our discussion will be drawn directly from the submissions of
selected panelists. Accepted panelists will also be asked to submit 4-5
annotated references that inspire your research. These annotated sources
will be distributed among panel participants to help broaden the range of
sources we use in our work and will be made available to audience members
as a ‘take-away’ from the session.
	If you are interested in participating, please send your submission to
Rachael Baker ([log in to unmask]) and Emma Slager ([log in to unmask]
(mailto:[log in to unmask])) by October 18, 2017. Selected participants will
be notified by October 20, 2017 and will then need to register for the 2018
AAG by October 25th. Please note that this is a panel session, so you will
not need to submit an abstract to the AAG for this session though you will
need to register and provide the session organizers with your PIN. AAG
registrants may be a panelist in one session, in addition to one session
for which they submit an abstract.
Rachael Baker, Doctoral Candidate
Canada-US Fulbright Student Researcher
York University/ Wayne State University
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