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Apologies for cross-posting:

Call for Papers

*Urbanism and marginality in the Global South*

AAG Annual Meeting in New Orleans, April 10-14, 2018



*Organizer:* Aparna Parikh, Penn State

*Chair:* Azita Ranjbar, Ohio State

*Discussant:* Kate Derickson, University of Minnesota

*Deadline for Papers/ Panel Proposals:* October 13, 2017

*Sponsoring Specialty Groups:* Urban Geography Specialty Group, Asian
Geography Specialty Group, Geographic Perspectives on Women



This session will investigate relationships between neoliberal urbanization
and marginal labor in the Global South. The production and maintenance of
neoliberal spaces depends on a variegated labor force, large numbers of
whom are marginalized and rendered invisible in narratives of
modernization. This session aims to focus on research examining narratives
of differentially marginalized workforces to reveal contradictions within
processes of neoliberal urbanization in numerous global contexts.

Feminist scholars have long examined intimate, everyday experiences as
starting points to unravel the workings of global capitalism (see, for
example Wright 2006; Katz 2001; Peake and Rieker 2013). These examinations
suggest that “not only do global processes enact themselves on local ground
but local processes and small scale actors might be seen as the *very
fabric of globalization” *(Freeman 2001 in Mountz and Hyndman 2006,
emphasis in original). This session seeks to focus on research analyzing
experiences of this “fabric” to reveal the embedded particularity of
neoliberalism in a certain location (Brenner and Theodore 2002), as well as
its implications for other contexts. Possible themes for this session
include, but are not limited to:

   - Relations across scale, and significance of the everyday (see, for
   example Herod and Wright 2002; Mountz and Hyndman 2006; Pratt and Rosner
   2012)
   - Postcolonial urbanism and the politics of difference (see, for example
   Roy and Ong 2011; McFarlane and Robinson 2012; Varley 2013)
   - Thinking from the margins, and the Global South as a site of theory
   production (see, for example Roy 2005; Rao 2006; Derickson 2015)

Through these themes, this session hopes to investigate how everyday
processes of marginalization can illuminate the workings of global
structures of oppression; as enacted through capitalist, patriarchal and
racist systems.

Please email enquiries and abstracts (250 words) to Aparna Parikh (
[log in to unmask]) by *October 13*. Authors will be notified by October 20,
and must register for the conference and submit their abstracts through the
AAG website by the October 25 deadline to be added to the paper session.



*Works cited:*

Brenner, Neil, and Nik Theodore. 2002. “Cities and the Geographies of
‘actually Existing Neoliberalism.’” *Antipode* 34 (3): 349–379.

Derickson, Kate D. 2015. “Urban Geography I: Locating Urban Theory in the
‘urban Age.’” *Progress in Human Geography* 39 (5): 647–657.

Herod, Andrew, and Melissa W. Wright. 2002. *Geographies of Power: Placing
Scale*. Blackwell Malden, MA.

Katz, Cindi. 2001. “Vagabond Capitalism and the Necessity of Social
Reproduction.” *Antipode* 33 (4): 709–728.

McFarlane, Colin, and Jennifer Robinson. 2012. “Introduction—experiments in
Comparative Urbanism.” *Urban Geography* 33 (6): 765–773.

Mountz, Alison, and Jennifer Hyndman. 2006. *Feminist Approaches to the
Global Intimate*. JSTOR.

Peake, Linda, and Martina Rieker. 2013. “Rethinking Feminist Interventions
Into the Urban.” *Interrogating Feminist Understandings of the Urban*, 1.

Pratt, Geraldine, and Victoria Rosner. 2012. *The Global and the Intimate:
Feminism in Our Time*. Columbia University Press.
http://books.google.com/books?hl=en&lr=&id=lVirAgAAQBAJ&oi=
fnd&pg=PR9&dq=+The+Global+and+the+Intimate:+Feminism+in+Our+
Time&ots=0CXl-wFAzx&sig=aWIz6PAeMRpjv2L2F4qzApaAYvE.

Rao, Vyjayanthi. 2006. “Slum as Theory: The South/Asian City and
Globalization.” *International Journal of Urban and Regional Research* 30
(1): 225–32. doi:10.1111/j.1468-2427.2006.00658.x.

Roy, Ananya. 2005. “Urban Informality: Toward an Epistemology of
Planning.” *Journal
of the American Planning Association* 71 (2): 147–58.
doi:10.1080/01944360508976689.

Roy, Ananya, and Aihwa Ong. 2011. *Worlding Cities: Asian Experiments and
the Art of Being Global*. Vol. 41. John Wiley & Sons.

Varley, Ann. 2013. “Postcolonialising Informality?” *Environment and
Planning D: Society and Space* 31 (1): 4–22. doi:10.1068/d14410.

Wright, Melissa. 2006. *Disposable Women and Other Myths of Globalization*.
London: Taylor and Francis.