What are the politics of inexpressiveness as a mode of encounter with biodiversity loss or climate change, and what might it reveal about contemporary conditions of possibility for engagement and responsibility in the face of planetary crises?
#unfeeling
18.11.2025 11:33 — 👍 2 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
Inherited Time
Inherited Time - A Hauntological History of Work in Educational Vocations; This book explores how the past and future shape our work and aspirations. Offering a fresh perspective on navigating…
For academics and students across #Management, #Education, and #Sociology, this book is a crucial resource for understanding contemporary organizations. It invites you to find new ways to care for the #FutureOfWork.
28.10.2025 10:53 — 👍 4 🔁 2 💬 1 📌 0
23.10.2025 05:40 — 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
In this paper, Justine Grønbæk Pors and I try to offer one possible answer. We suggest the notion of ‘the flailing self’ as a contemporary manifestation of youth work subjectivity, amidst conditions of unclarity toward norms of constant self-improvement, progress, and aspiration.
13.10.2025 08:04 — 👍 4 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
Sage Journals: Discover world-class research
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How can we make sense of the relation between youth, work, and the self? What does it mean to form oneself into the ’ideal worker’ in the current impasse, where it is not entirely clear if or how the promise of self-realisation through work endures or might begin to fray?
doi.org/10.1177/0018...
13.10.2025 08:04 — 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0
Professor of Human Geography @ Durham University. The geopolitics-development nexus | China-Africa relations | South-South flows | energy & infrastructural geographies
https://www.durham.ac.uk/staff/marcus-power/
digital identification // technology & migration // STS // sociology of tech
digital things, visual culture, cities, visual research methods. And sometimes academic life. Prof of Human Geography at the University of Oxford. I still blog, occasionally, here:
https://visualmethodculture.wordpress.com/
Professor of Geography at the University of Melbourne. Cultural geographies of mobilities, affect, embodiment, habit, automation, labour
https://findanexpert.unimelb.edu.au/profile/792958-david-bissell
Geographer at the University of Oxford. Nature recovery, agriculture, beavers, microbes amongst other interests.
Disseminating knowledge—through the publication of printed books, periodicals, and electronic files—beyond the confines of the University's campus.
Book publisher, est. 1925.
Geographer at Uni of Southampton. Research: refusal, tech, cities. Films: Breached/Machines in Flames. Book (forthcoming): Techno-Negative (Uni of Minnesota Press).
thomasdekeyser.com
Working to understand & support what it takes to deliver effective, inclusive & scalable nature recovery. https://naturerecovery.ox.ac.uk
Founded in 1928, the Department of Geography at Durham University is one of the leading centres of geographical research and education in the world.
Lapsed book editor; active environmental geographer. Doctoral student in Geography and the Environment at University of Oxford. Researching the politics and more-than-human geographies of eDNA in biodiversity monitoring.
Field philosopher and writer. Professor of Environmental Humanities at the University of Sydney. Author of "Flight Ways," "The Wake of Crows," and "A World in a Shell."
www.thomvandooren.org
Writer, teacher, dog lady, hen lady, kin maker
Progress in Human Geography is the peer-review journal of choice for those wanting to know about the state of the art in all areas of human geography research
Website: https://journals.sagepub.com/home/phg
TORCH (The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities) is a hub for intellectual collaboration and cross-disciplinary research projects, and is part of the Humanities Division at the University of Oxford.
PhD Student in Geography and the Environment | University of Oxford | Environmental Change Institute
Working with Scottish community landownership organisations to explore the relationship between communal property regimes and biodiversity recovery.
The Smith School of Enterprise and the Environment is a leading interdisciplinary academic hub at the University of Oxford focused upon teaching, research, and engagement with enterprise on climate change and long-term environmental sustainability.
Germinated in 1991 at the University of Oxford
One of the world’s first interdisciplinary research institutions, continuing to tackle the challenges of environmental change, its causes, impacts, and adaptive solutions.
Associate Professor @UoNGeography | Geographer researching #ToxicGeographies and #Refugees | he/him | 📚 TOXIC TRUTHS book (2020) Editor at Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space
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