School of Geography - Research Publications

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    Commuter lives: a review symposium on David Bissell's Transit Life
    Latham, A ; Edensor, T ; Hopkins, D ; Fitt, H ; Lobo, M ; Mansvelt, J ; McNeill, D ; Bissell, D (WILEY, 2020-02)
    Abstract This article presents a series of commentaries on Transit Life: How Commuting is Transforming Our Cities, published by MIT Press in 2018. Centring on an in—depth case study of Sydney, the book argues the need to attend carefully to the fine—grained detail of the commuting experience. In all sorts of ways, Transit Life presents a way of thinking about urban transportation radically different from that used by mainstream transport planners and geographers. Geographical Research asked six researchers—Tim Edensor, Michele Lobo, Debbie Hopkins, Helen Fitt, Juliana Mansvelt, and Donald McNeill—to reflect on what kind of research vistas might be opened up bring the tools of cultural geography and mobility research to the world of commuting. Here are their responses, rounded out by a reply by David Bissell, Transit Life's author.
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    Keeping the family silver: The changing meanings and uses of Manchester's civic plate
    Edensor, T ; Sobell, B (SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD, 2021-09)
    This article explores the shifting uses and meanings of Manchester civic plate, a huge silver dining service purchased in 1877 to coincide with the opening of the city’s neo-Gothic Town Hall. The authors explore how the silver collection has successively forged relations with a host of different people, places and objects, exemplifying the changing processes through which objects are understood, utilized, valued, maintained, stored and curated. Three key processes are deployed to illuminate these shifting entanglements: the use of the silver to express municipal prestige and advance particular cultural values, the maintenance procedures that have responded to the silver’s vital material constituency and practices of display, storage and curation. In accounting for these diverse and volatile processes, the article argues for the virtues of theoretical breadth in exploring the multiplicities of material culture.
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    Global-scale remote sensing of mine areas and analysis of factors explaining their extent
    Werner, TT ; Mudd, GM ; Schipper, AM ; Huijbregt, MAJ ; Taneja, L ; Northey, SA (ELSEVIER SCI LTD, 2020-01)
    Mines are composed of features like open cut pits, water storage ponds, milling infrastructure, waste rock dumps, and tailings storage facilities that are often associated with impacts to surrounding areas. The size and location of mine features can be determined from satellite imagery, but to date a systematic analysis of these features across commodities and countries has not been conducted. We created detailed maps of 295 mines producing copper, gold, silver, platinum group elements, molybdenum, lead-zinc, nickel, uranium or diamonds, representing the dominant share of global production of these commodities. The mapping entailed the delineation and classification of 3,736 open pits, waste rock dumps, water ponds, tailings storage facilities, heap leach pads, milling infrastructure and other features, totalling ~3,633 km2. Collectively, our maps highlight that mine areas can be highly heterogeneous in composition and diverse in form, reflecting variations in underlying geology, commodities produced, topography and mining methods. Our study therefore emphasises that distinguishing between specific mine features in satellite imagery may foster more refined assessments of mine-related impacts. We also compiled detailed annual data on the operational characteristics of 129 mines to show via regression analysis that the sum area of a mine's features is mainly explained by its cumulative production volume (cross-validated R2 of 0.73). This suggests that the extent of future mine areas can be estimated with reasonable certainty based on expected total production volume. Our research may inform environmental impact assessments of new mining proposals, or provide land use data for life cycle analyses of mined products.
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    Rendering mine closure governable and constraints to inclusive development in the Andean region
    Gregory, GH (Elsevier BV, 2021-08-01)
    Although the early stages of mining are often associated with promises of socioeconomic development based on economic growth, limited oversight of mine closure practices has tended to deliver lingering social, economic, and environmental problems across the Andean region. New and revised legislation, policies, and regulations that address mine closure in the region demonstrate what I argue are attempts to render mine closure governable—that is, the circumscribing of mine closure as an ‘intelligible’ and strictly technical problem, amenable to state intervention, without challenging existing bureaucratic processes or political economic structures. Such narrow framings of mine closure exclude possibilities for local consultation and participation, and, by extension, hinder the relationship between mine closure and a more socioeconomically inclusive and less environmentally damaging form of post-mine development. I outline discrete attempts to make mine closure more easily governable in the Andean region, with detailed focus on the cases of Colombia and Chile, and show that this process also tends to render local populations invisible. I point to the conspicuous disconnect between high hopes for mining's contribution to Andean states' economic growth and concrete possibilities for post-mine development based on ideas of equity, inclusion, and social justice. I conclude by pointing to the need for legal and regulatory institutions in the Andean region that more actively facilitate the creation and distribution of benefits, services, and livelihood opportunities following mine closure.
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    Troubling the idealised pageantry of extractive conflicts: Comparative insights on authority and claim-making from Papua New Guinea, Mongolia and El Salvador
    Lander, J ; Hatcher, P ; Bebbington, DH ; Bebbington, A ; Banks, G (PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD, 2021-04)
    This article challenges simplified and idealised representation of conflicts between corporations, states and impacted populations in the context of extractive industries. Through comparative discussion of mineral extraction in Papua New Guinea, Mongolia and El Salvador, we argue that strategies of engagement over the terms of extraction vary significantly as a result of the interaction between relations of authority and recognition in the context of specific projects and the national political economy of mining. As mineral extraction impinges on their lands, livelihoods, territories and senses of the future, affected populations face the uncertain question of how to respond and to whom to direct these responses. Strategies vary widely, and can involve confrontation, litigation, negotiation, resignation, and patronage. These strategies are targeted at companies, investors, the national state, local government, multilateral institutions, and international arbitrators. We argue that the key to understanding how strategies emerge to target different types and scales of authority, lies ultimately with inherited geographies of state presence and strategic absence. This factor shapes the construction of “community” claim-making in relation to state and non-state authorities, and calculations regarding the relative utility of claiming rights or mobilizing relationships as a means of seeking redress, compensation or benefit sharing. In the context of plural opportunities for claim-making, we query whether plurality is more emancipatory or, ironically, more constricting for impacted populations. In response to this question, we argue that “community” strategies tend to be more effective where they remain linked in some way to the territorial and legislative structure of the national state.
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    Negotiating the mine Commitments, engagements, contradictions
    Bebbington, A ; Estefanía Carballo, A ; GREGORY, G ; Werner, T ; Havice, E ; Valdivia, G ; Himley, M (Routledge, 2021)
    This Handbook provides an essential guide to the study of resources and their role in socio-environmental change.
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    Political ecologies of the post-mining landscape: Activism, resistance, and legal struggles over Kalimantan's coal mines
    Toumbourou, T ; Muhdar, M ; Werner, T ; Bebbington, A (ELSEVIER, 2020-07)
    This study explores contestation over the meanings, rules and practices of coal mine reclamation and mine closure in the context of East Kalimantan, Indonesia's major coal producing province. As mining intensified in the province, and coal was mined out, concessions were left with large mine voids un-refilled and abandoned without closure – many within close vicinity to human settlements. Following an extended campaign led by a diverse group of social movement actors, utilising various advocacy and litigation strategies, the East Kalimantan legislature adopted a provincial regulation in 2013, reinforcing higher-level regulations that mandate coal mining companies to conduct reclamation and post-mining clean up. The regulation was the first time that activists had directly influenced policy regulating mining at the sub-national level in Indonesia. Yet the policy outcome alone has not been sufficient to shape change: an estimated 1735 coal mine voids remain un-refilled in East Kalimantan, and the number of human fatalities from deaths in mine voids continues to grow. Remediation of mine sites is rarely performed to return land to its pre-mined conditions. By bringing together relevant scholarship in political ecology, the politics of development and legal geography, we analyse the relationships between pact-making, political settlements, contestation and policy reform related to the governance of post-mine landscapes.
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    COVID-19 and the case for global development
    Oldekop, JA ; Horner, R ; Hulme, D ; Adhikari, R ; Agarwal, B ; Alford, M ; Bakewell, O ; Banks, N ; Barrientos, S ; Bastia, T ; Bebbington, AJ ; Das, U ; Dimova, R ; Duncombe, R ; Enns, C ; Fielding, D ; Foster, C ; Foster, T ; Frederiksen, T ; Gao, P ; Gillespie, T ; Heeks, R ; Hickey, S ; Hess, M ; Jepson, N ; Karamchedu, A ; Kothari, U ; Krishnan, A ; Lavers, T ; Mamman, A ; Mitlin, D ; Tabrizi, NM ; Muller, TR ; Nadvi, K ; Pasquali, G ; Pritchard, R ; Pruce, K ; Rees, C ; Renken, J ; Savoia, A ; Schindler, S ; Surmeier, A ; Tampubolon, G ; Tyce, M ; Unnikrishnan, V ; Zhang, Y-F (PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD, 2020-10)
    COVID-19 accentuates the case for a global, rather than an international, development paradigm. The novel disease is a prime example of a development challenge for all countries, through the failure of public health as a global public good. The COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted the falsity of any assumption that the global North has all the expertise and solutions to tackle global challenges, and has further highlighted the need for multi-directional learning and transformation in all countries towards a more sustainable and equitable world. We illustrate our argument for a global development paradigm by examining the implications of the COVID-19 pandemic across four themes or 'vignettes': global value chains, digitalisation, debt, and climate change. We conclude that development studies must adapt to a very different context from when the field emerged in the mid-20th century.
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    The Political Economy of Deep Decarbonization: Tradable Energy Quotas for Energy Descent Futures
    Alexander, S ; Floyd, J (MDPI AG, 2020)
    This paper reviews and analyses a decarbonization policy called the Tradable Energy Quotas (TEQs) system developed by David Fleming. The TEQs system involves rationing fossil fuel energy use for a nation on the basis of either a contracting carbon emission budget or scarce fuel availability, or both simultaneously, distributing budgets equitably amongst energy-users. Entitlements can be traded to incentivize demand reduction and to maximize efficient use of the limited entitlements. We situate this analysis in the context of Joseph Tainter’s theory about the development and collapse of complex societies. Tainter argues that societies become more socio-politically and technologically ‘complex’ as they solve the problems they face and that such complexification drives increased energy use. For a society to sustain itself, therefore, it must secure the energy needed to solve the range of societal problems that emerge. However, what if, as a result of deep decarbonization, there is less energy available in the future not more? We argue that TEQs offers a practical means of managing energy descent futures. The policy can facilitate controlled reduction of socio-political complexity via processes of ‘voluntary simplification’ (the result being ‘degrowth’ or controlled contraction at the scale of the physical economy).
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    SISALv2: A comprehensive speleothem isotope database with multiple age-depth models
    Comas-Bru, L ; Rehfeld, K ; Roesch, C ; Amirnezhad-Mozhdehi, S ; Harrison, SP ; Atsawawaranunt, K ; Ahmad, SM ; Brahim, YA ; Baker, A ; Bosomworth, M ; Breitenbach, SFM ; Burstyn, Y ; Columbu, A ; Deininger, M ; Demény, A ; Dixon, B ; Fohlmeister, J ; Hatvani, IG ; Hu, J ; Kaushal, N ; Kern, Z ; Labuhn, I ; Lechleitner, FA ; Lorrey, A ; Martrat, B ; Novello, VF ; Oster, J ; Pérez-Mejías, C ; Scholz, D ; Scroxton, N ; Sinha, N ; Ward, BM ; Warken, S ; Zhang, H ; Apaéstegui, J ; Baldini, LM ; Band, S ; Blaauw, M ; Boch, R ; Borsato, A ; Budsky, A ; Rosell, MGB ; Chawchai, S ; Constantin, S ; Denniston, R ; Dragusin, V ; Drysdale, R ; Dumitru, O ; Frappier, A ; Gandhi, N ; Gautam, P ; Hanying, L ; Isola, I ; Jiang, X ; Jingyao, Z ; Johnson, K ; Vanessa Johnston, ; Kathayat, G ; Klose, J ; Krause, C ; Lachniet, M ; Laskar, A ; Lauritzen, SE ; Lončar, N ; Moseley, G ; Narayana, AC ; Onac, BP ; Racovitǎ, E ; Pawlak, J ; Ramsey, CB ; Rivera-Collazo, I ; Rossi, C ; Rowe, PJ ; Stríkis, NM ; Tan, L ; Verheyden, S ; Vonhof, H ; Weber, M ; Wendt, K ; Wilcox, P ; Winter, A ; Wu, J ; Wynn, P ; Yadava, MG (Copernicus Publications, 2020-10-27)
    Characterizing the temporal uncertainty in palaeoclimate records is crucial for analysing past climate change, correlating climate events between records, assessing climate periodicities, identifying potential triggers and evaluating climate model simulations. The first global compilation of speleothem isotope records by the SISAL (Speleothem Isotope Synthesis and Analysis) working group showed that age model uncertainties are not systematically reported in the published literature, and these are only available for a limited number of records (ca. 15 %, n = 107/691). To improve the usefulness of the SISAL database, we have (i) improved the database's spatio-temporal coverage and (ii) created new chronologies using seven different approaches for age- depth modelling. We have applied these alternative chronologies to the records from the first version of the SISAL database (SISALv1) and to new records compiled since the release of SISALv1. This paper documents the necessary changes in the structure of the SISAL database to accommodate the inclusion of the new age models and their uncertainties as well as the expansion of the database to include new records and the qualitycontrol measures applied. This paper also documents the age-depth model approaches used to calculate the new chronologies. The updated version of the SISAL database (SISALv2) contains isotopic data from 691 speleothem records from 294 cave sites and new age-depth models, including age-depth temporal uncertainties for 512 speleothems.