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Progress in Human Geography
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What's this?

The role of geography in public debate

Alexander B. Murphy

University of Oregon

H. J. de Blij

Michigan State University

B. L. Turner, II

Clark University

Ruth Wilson Gilmore

University of Southern California

Derek Gregory

University of British Columbia

Many geographers work on matters of great relevance for the issues facing society, but geography is rarely invoked in public debates over matters of contemporary concern. As a result, geographical perspectives are often missing from public discourse, and outmoded conceptions of geography are reinforced. This forum considers the importance and challenge of addressing this state of affairs. Four distinguished geographers who have been involved in different ways with the effort to raise geography's profile consider the possibilities and limitations of enhancing geography's public profile. Consideration is given to the prospects for raising the discipline's visibility in high-profile public venues, the role of geography in organized international research endeavors, the challenge of linking what geographers do to social activism, and the importance of questioning the unproblematized geographical ideas and discursive norms that already circulate in the public arena.

Key Words: geographic understanding • geography's public presence • institutional position • social relevance

Progress in Human Geography, Vol. 29, No. 2, 165-193 (2005)
DOI: 10.1191/0309132505ph538oa


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