Dialogues in Human Geography

Papers
(The TQCC of Dialogues in Human Geography is 3. The table below lists those papers that are above that threshold based on CrossRef citation counts [max. 250 papers]. The publications cover those that have been published in the past four years, i.e., from 2020-11-01 to 2024-11-01.)
ArticleCitations
The nonhuman turn: Critical reflections on alienation, entanglement and nature under capitalism56
Geographies of ruralization44
Glitch epistemologies for computational cities43
Assetization and the ‘new asset geographies’35
Feeling otherwise: Ambivalent affects and the politics of critique in geography31
Anthropocene islands: There are only islands after the end of the world30
Repair and care: Locating the work of climate crisis26
Practicing conjunctural methodologies: Engaging Chinese capitalism24
Diversifying the compact city: A renewed agenda for geographical research22
Beyond the decolonial: Critical Muslim geographies20
What is ‘affective infrastructure’?20
Rupture: Towards a critical, emplaced, and experiential view of nature-society crisis19
Rural revitalization in China: Towards inclusive geographies of ruralization16
Forms and scenes of attachment: A cultural geography of promises16
GeoAI, counter-AI, and human geography: A conversation16
Dialogues for wellbeing in an ecological emergency: Wellbeing-led governance frameworks and transformative Indigenous tools12
Geographies of PrEP, TasP and undetectability: Reconceptualising HIV assemblages to explore what else matters in the lives of gay and bisexual men12
Theorising with urban China: Methodological and tactical experiments for a more global urban studies12
The nonhuman turn or a re-turn to animism? Valuing life along and beyond capital11
So what is assetization? Filling some theoretical gaps11
The power of terrain: The affective materiality of planet Earth in the age of revolution11
Undoing mastery: With ambivalence?11
Theorising urban development in China: ‘State entrepreneurialism’ from the ground up11
Thinking (and feeling) with Anthropocene (Pacific) islands10
Migration ethics in pandemic times10
Dignity in urban geography: Starting a conversation10
Smart city planning and the challenges of informality in India9
Geopoetics: Storytelling against mastery9
Montage space: Borderlands, micronations, terra nullius, and the imperialism of the geographical imagination9
Birthing across borders: ‘Contracting’ reproductive geographies9
One or several granular geographies?9
Planetary rural geographies9
The structure of informality: The Zambian copperbelt and the informal/formal dialectic8
Glitch epistemology and the question of (artificial) intelligence: Perceptions, encounters, subjectivities8
Inhabiting the extensions7
Keeping you post-ed: Space-time regimes, metaphors, and post-apartheid7
The problem of the urban–rural binary in geography and political ecology6
Theory and explanation in geography revisited: Mid-range causal theories and explanatory conjuncturalism6
For the place of terrain and materialist ‘re’-returns: Experience, life, force, and the importance of the socio-cultural6
Confucian geopolitics or Chinese geopolitics?6
Deadly serious: Humor and the politics of aesthetic transgression6
Reimagining the national map6
What is generated through rupture?5
Life from the fragments: Ambivalence, critique, and minoritarian affect5
Dimensions of repair work5
Dispositions towards automation: Capital, technology, and labour relations in aeromobilities5
Beyond the decolonial? Decolonial and Muslim feminist perspectives5
The possibility of islands in the Anthropocene5
Defetishizing the asset form5
Beyond geopoetics: For hybrid texts5
What and whose Confucianism? Sinophone communities and dialogical geopolitics5
Mark Fisher and reimagining postcapitalist geographies5
Where theories of terrain might land: Towards ‘pluriversal’ engagements with terrain5
Collective care and climate repair5
Density and the compact city5
Spacetimeunconscious5
Challenging opacity, embracing fuzziness: Geographical thought and praxis in a post-truth age5
The politics of (non)knowledge in the (un)making of migration5
Islands of (in)security in the Anthropocene4
Engaging with the non-human turn: A response to Büscher4
Crafting scholarly alliances for multispecies justice4
Reflections on the (continued and future) importance of Indigenous geographies4
Whose geography, whose future? Queering geography’s disciplinary reproduction4
Multiplicities of sandscapes and granular geographies4
Infrastructures of social reproduction: Schools, everyday urban life, and the built environment of education4
Bodies, borders, babies: Birthing in liminal spaces4
‘Mind the gap’: Responding to the indeterminable in migration4
George Floyd, Minneapolis, and spaces of hope and liberation4
The future of digital space: Gaming, virtual reality, and metaversal thinking4
Envisioning climate justice for a post-pandemic world4
Geopoetics: On organising, mourning, and the incalculable4
Geographies of the impossible4
Islam’s weight in global history: A response to Sidaway4
Beyond the rural–urban aporia4
Ruptures of the Anthropocene: A crisis of justice4
Distant time: The future of urbanisation from ‘there’ and ‘then’4
Glitching computational urban subjects4
A sexuality pivot: Thinking through solidarity, geographies of sexuality, and a world in transition4
Muslim peripheries: A world regional perspective3
Critical geography, Islam, and the possibility of engaging the more-than-critical3
The dangerous intensifications of surplus alienation, or why platform capitalism challenges the (more-than-)human3
The ethics and politics of migration research3
Desiring infrastructure3
Hong Kong as special cultural zone: Confucian geopolitics in practice3
Languages of din: Place, history, and paths3
Working through our differences: Limits of ontology in the ordinary lives of critical geographical theory3
Demunicipalisation, unaccountability by design and housing safety from below3
Beyond binaries? Spatial possibilities in Southeast Asia3
Island ceremony and submerged worlds3
Futuring geography’s pluralist pedagogy3
Is this the humanism we have been looking for?3
Desire’s misrecognitions, or the promise of mutable attachments3
Henri Lefebvre's conception of nature-society in the revolutionary project of autogestion3
Decentring whiteness in engaging Muslim geographies3
Glitches in the technonatural present3
The granularity of sand: Analogies of production, consumption, and distribution3
A manifesto for critical Muslim geographies3
Recognition and attunement in migration research3
Biopolitics, citizenship, and inequalities in HIV assemblages3
World-making, desire, and the future3
In what sense ruralization?3
Glitch cities3
The limits of territory and terrain3
On postcapitalist repair3
Stories we tell3
The oddity of desiring informality3
Witches as glitches: A response to Leszczynski and Elwood3
Attachment: A question of how and a question of why3
Follow the thing: Air rights3
Mapping affective infrastructures otherwise3
Grounding the compact city3
Unsettling relatonality: Attachment after the ‘relational turn’3
Agri-investment scholars of the world unite! The finance-driven land rush as boundary object3
Towards a Confucian geopolitics: A critical remark3
Thinking with the grain3
Unresolved tensions in green transitions: Retraining and the question of ‘how’?3
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