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 2021-05-01 to 2025-05-01.)
ArticleCitations
Beyond informality: Expanding the scope of Southern smart urbanism63
Struggling over new asset geographies59
Mission impossible? The fugacity of the new and the persistence of the old as mechanisms of un-making futures57
Embracing the plurality of the carto-sphere55
Planetary rural thinking in digital geographies40
Geographies of super-philanthropy: Disaggregating the global philanthropic complex37
The extraordinary task of crafting a more ‘ordinary’ geography: Post-vanguardism and the art of not-knowing best34
Assetization and the ‘new asset geographies’31
State property, venture capital and the urbanisation of state capitalism31
Glitch epistemology and the question of (artificial) intelligence: Perceptions, encounters, subjectivities28
Witches as glitches: A response to Leszczynski and Elwood25
Decolonial leaps in more-than-human geographies22
Of spaces and freedoms, used and misused21
Follow the thing: Air rights20
Erratum to The extraordinary task of crafting a more ‘ordinary’ geography: Post-vanguardism and the art of not-knowing best19
Social reproduction, women’s labour and systems of life: A conversation16
Reproductive geography: Reproducing whiteness?16
Craving care in refugee camps14
Critical geography, Islam, and the possibility of engaging the more-than-critical13
Heirs to a future yet to come: Thoughts on colonial debts13
Dignity, mega-projects, and the problem of scale12
On storiation and what is washed ashore: The Anthropocene as big kahuna12
Mountains matter12
Transforming dispositions towards automation11
Social reproduction, precarity, and the ‘new asset geographies’11
Questions of cityness at the extensions: Law, discrimination and Cairo’s desert from the lens of Frantz Fanon’s urban passant10
Towards ‘a progressive sense of thick time’ and the future of geographical thinking9
Is this the humanism we have been looking for?9
Reimagining the national map9
Philanthropy’s invention of the ‘underclass’8
Coloniality in the colony: A response8
Still a long journey to decentralize geopolitics8
Desire’s misrecognitions, or the promise of mutable attachments8
Automation and environmental dispositions8
Of waters and bridges8
Finding ‘new’ geographies in dedications, acknowledgements, and citations7
Form, genre, voice, and authority in human geography: A speculative genealogy7
Mine/Machine7
Smart cities and their settings in the Global South: Informality as a marker7
On postcapitalist repair7
Muslim peripheries: A world regional perspective6
Reorienting GIScience for a data-intensive society6
The ‘post’ as powerful specific vocabulary6
Seven thoughts on seven ethics6
The radical contribution of what's in between M and M′6
The state of water6
Reclaiming planetary consciousness6
No man is an island6
Beyond the decolonial: Critical Muslim geographies5
The urban dialectic: Between distant time and thick time5
State-led venture capital as capitalist state-led ventures5
A sexuality pivot: Thinking through solidarity, geographies of sexuality, and a world in transition5
Worlding the geographies of homelessness: Informality, precarity, and theory from the Global South5
World-ending flatness5
Diversifying the compact city: A renewed agenda for geographical research5
Beyond binaries? Spatial possibilities in Southeast Asia5
Critical computation on a geographical register5
Legalizing war/militarizing law5
Governing with care, reciprocity, and relationality: Recognising the connectivity of human and more-than-human wellbeing and the process of decolonisation5
Emplacing the disposition toward automation5
Thinking (and feeling) with Anthropocene (Pacific) islands5
Between ontologies and practices: How to deal with democratic theory?4
On HIV assemblages, inequalities and subject formation4
Where is Liberland? Ideology and power beyond territory4
What planners can learn from geography or what geographers have overlooked about planning4
Geomorphic eugenics and the engineering of surplus territory4
Putting ‘rupture’ to work at the Three Gorges Dam4
The imperial in a global history of science of the British empire4
Smart city planning and the challenges of informality in India4
Clarifying rupture: An authors’ reply4
Theorising with urban China: Methodological and tactical experiments for a more global urban studies4
Why study the history of exploration?4
Making margins visible4
Revisiting ‘infrastructures of social reproduction’4
Critical Muslim geographies through a critical geography of Islamophobia4
Spacing sovereign debt4
The survey sciences in thin air4
Why a critical geopolitics cannot be Confucian4
Urban state venturism: On state-led venture capital investments in the urban process of capital accumulation4
Time and being awkward4
Uncanny frontiers: Amazon in outer space4
The world as abject: On less-than-human geographies4
Comrade Santos3
Haunted worlds, unknowable futures Petrus Liu, The Specter of Materialism: Queer Theory and Marxism in the Age of the Beijing Consensus , Durham: Duke University Press, 3
The fragmented sovereignty of the ummah: A response to Sidaway's manifesto3
‘Revolution of space’, autogestion, and appropriation of nature in Henri Lefebvre’s political and revolutionary project3
Cosmohistories and pluriversal dialogues: The future of the history of geography3
Gaia and the repositioning of the state territoriality: A dialogue with critical geopolitical ecology3
Who controls the infrastructure of social reproduction? Finance, reproduction, and resistance in educational landscapes3
Confucian geopolitics or Chinese geopolitics?3
Montage space: Extra scenes3
Making sense of foreign investment screening through sectoral analysis3
Crafting scholarly alliances for multispecies justice3
A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step: Towards a Confucian geopolitics3
Not waving but drowning3
Fissured thought for fractured times: Reflections on geography, ecology and the state3
Geographies of alcohol, drinking, and drunkenness through the lens of participatory video3
Moralization as class war3
Affective infrastructures and political organisation3
The point is to change it: Locating community geography and praxis in a neoliberalizing academia3
Feeling out of it: Displacement, disengagement and dispossession in experiences of brain fog3
Common problems or different questions: A critique of ‘assetization’3
The problem of the urban–rural binary in geography and political ecology3
Challenging opacity, embracing fuzziness: Geographical thought and praxis in a post-truth age3
Limit(ation)s, sustainability, and the future of climate migration3
What is the place of abandonment in planetary rural geographies?3
George Floyd, Minneapolis, and spaces of hope and liberation3
Toward a poetics of the abyss: Suspending wor(l)ds3
Navigating macro and micro across urban assemblages3
Assets and assemblage in the global countryside3
Mark Fisher and reimagining postcapitalist geographies3
Identifying the revolutionary agent in the radical project of autogestion3
Extending dialogues on the urban3
Towards a right to the rural?3
Moving towards a critical perspective on automation: Theories of technology, labour, and capitalism3
On colonial exceptionality, neoliberal coloniality, and legal interruptions3
Territorial futures: On belonging, caste, and pedagogy3
Re-labeling the underclass3
Encounters with For a New Geography3
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