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 2021-02-01 to 2025-02-01.)
ArticleCitations
Worlding planetary mine: A viewpoint from Ennore61
Inhabiting the extensions51
Representing territory beyond the map47
Colonial testimony and the spaces of anticolonial critique43
Beyond informality: Expanding the scope of Southern smart urbanism34
Situating Mark Fisher’s spatiality?32
Critical Muslim geographies through a critical geography of Islamophobia30
State property, venture capital and the urbanisation of state capitalism28
Assetization and the ‘new asset geographies’27
Human geography: Not ending but worlding the modern subject in new ways26
Autogestion, revolutionary spontaneity, and the trichotomy of body-mind-spirit25
Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick and the difference geography makes23
Navigating macro and micro across urban assemblages21
Languages of din: Place, history, and paths21
Dignity in urban geography: Starting a conversation20
Beyond the decolonial? Decolonial and Muslim feminist perspectives18
Embracing the plurality of the carto-sphere15
George Floyd, Minneapolis, and spaces of hope and liberation14
Encounters with For a New Geography13
Putting ‘rupture’ to work at the Three Gorges Dam12
Critical pedagogical engagement with Muslim geographies12
Many ideas of nation, many national maps12
Geographies of super-philanthropy: Disaggregating the global philanthropic complex12
Planetary rural thinking in digital geographies11
Struggling over new asset geographies11
Debt here, there and everywhere11
Feminist situated scholarship as the antidote to the necrolocution11
The geopolitics of queer solidarity11
The world as abject: On less-than-human geographies9
Arabia adrift9
The extraordinary task of crafting a more ‘ordinary’ geography: Post-vanguardism and the art of not-knowing best8
Ant logic and necrolocutors8
Glitch epistemology and the question of (artificial) intelligence: Perceptions, encounters, subjectivities8
Fissured thought for fractured times: Reflections on geography, ecology and the state8
Mission impossible? The fugacity of the new and the persistence of the old as mechanisms of un-making futures7
Biopolitics, citizenship, and inequalities in HIV assemblages7
A manifesto for critical Muslim geographies7
Grounding the compact city6
Undoing mastery: With ambivalence?6
Ruptures of the Anthropocene: A crisis of justice6
Indebted subjectivities: The case of Puerto Rico’s colonial debts6
The challenges and potentials of critical Muslim geographies6
The politics of (non)knowledge in the (un)making of migration6
Spacing sovereign debt6
The now-times of (post) apartheid5
The imperial in a global history of science of the British empire5
Geomorphic eugenics and the engineering of surplus territory5
The distorted mirrors of humor5
Situating and expanding the scope of dispositions towards automation5
Haunted worlds, unknowable futures5
Against critique, towards hope5
Passages to the outside: A prelude to a geophilosophy of the future5
Reimagining war and peace in Colombia5
The Uber ideology5
Where theories of terrain might land: Towards ‘pluriversal’ engagements with terrain5
Practising geography in/with technical worlds5
Agri-investment scholars of the world unite! The finance-driven land rush as boundary object5
On Lefebvre's orientalism and geography's Eurocentrism in Sidaway's ‘critical Muslim geographies’5
The possibility of islands in the Anthropocene5
Between ontologies and practices: How to deal with democratic theory?5
The Anthropocene Islands agenda4
Mark Fisher and reimagining postcapitalist geographies4
Milton Santos: From new geography to Black geography4
Situating strategic or hybrid Confucianism(s): Issues and problematics4
Limit(ation)s, sustainability, and the future of climate migration4
The dangerous intensifications of surplus alienation, or why platform capitalism challenges the (more-than-)human4
Contemporary Brazil is unequal and divided and Milton Santos’ geographical thought is still relevant4
Coming to terms with affective infrastructure4
Recuperating labour's environmental potential4
Craving care in refugee camps4
What’s left of China?4
Rooting debt4
Ambivalent methods, geographical difference, and the politics of feeling-knowing4
Seeing voices, sharing stories: The ordinary im/mobilities of working women4
Of elephants and discipline: For a recursive history of geography4
Henri Lefebvre's conception of nature-society in the revolutionary project of autogestion4
The politics of knowledge: Feminist strategies for transformation4
The possibilities of internationalism: Producing traveling geographies in a time of trouble4
Keeping you post-ed: Space-time regimes, metaphors, and post-apartheid4
Strategizing desire4
Putting the ‘public’ back into public schools in the US4
Humour, for whom?3
Transforming dispositions towards automation3
Erratum to The extraordinary task of crafting a more ‘ordinary’ geography: Post-vanguardism and the art of not-knowing best3
Thinking ‘with’ China: Material and conceptual challenges3
On living outside of capitalist space and time3
Moralization as class war3
Critical geography, Islam, and the possibility of engaging the more-than-critical3
Between hyperboles and litotes: The middle passage of everyday cartographic nationhood3
The fragmented sovereignty of the ummah: A response to Sidaway's manifesto3
Planetary vegetal thought3
For ordinary kindness in human geography3
What is the place of abandonment in planetary rural geographies?3
On storiation and what is washed ashore: The Anthropocene as big kahuna3
Economies of attachment: Promissory objects, differentiation, and other futures?3
Futures past and futures present: Geopolitical thought and intellectual history3
Reimagining the cartographic nation: In praise of risk taking3
Logistical futures and the Arabian Peninsula3
Does humor need to be serious to be taken seriously?3
Historicising the informal/formal dialectic: A reflection on the conceptualisation of informality versus the history of ‘informal’ economic activities3
A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step: Towards a Confucian geopolitics3
Comrade Santos3
Glitches in the technonatural present3
Territorial futures: On belonging, caste, and pedagogy3
For conjunctural geography: From method to counter-hegemonic practice3
Theory and explanation in geography revisited: Mid-range causal theories and explanatory conjuncturalism3
Witches as glitches: A response to Leszczynski and Elwood3
Social reproduction, precarity, and the ‘new asset geographies’3
‘Migration thinking’: Embracing mobility all the way down3
Islands, modernity, and other worlds that never end3
Toward a poetics of the abyss: Suspending wor(l)ds3
Social reproduction, women’s labour and systems of life: A conversation3
Decolonial leaps in more-than-human geographies3
Mountains matter3
Dignity, mega-projects, and the problem of scale3
Reproductive geography: Reproducing whiteness?3
Challenging opacity, embracing fuzziness: Geographical thought and praxis in a post-truth age3
Stories we tell3
Thoughts on ‘planetary rural geographies’: Commonalties of capitalist development, authoritarian populisms, and energy transition3
New orientations: Incoherence3
Beyond the rural–urban aporia3
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