Bruce Rhoads Elected AAAS Fellow

 

Bruce L. Rhoads

Bruce L. Rhoads, a professor of geography and geographic information science at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, been elected a 2016 Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. He was honored “for distinguished contributions to physical geography and fluvial geomorphology, particularly for defining flow and sediment dynamics of stream confluences and river meanders.” According to his university profile, Rhoads has worked on the fluvial dynamics of streams in the Midwest for over 30 years.

Rhoads earned a bachelor’s from Shippensburg University and a master’s from Michigan State University. He completed his doctorate at Arizona State University.

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The Neighborhoods of Boston … and Beyond

Boston – Newbury Street Brownstones. Creative Commons License David Ohmer via Compfight.

Every day is a new day in Boston. Parks and green spaces are sprouting up all over, new hotels have recently opened, and more are soon to break ground. New restaurants are joining Boston’s distinctive dining scene and the vibrant Seaport District has added to the city’s already dynamic downtown neighborhoods. Below is an overview of the many diverse neighborhoods in and around Boston.

The Back Bay:  The Back Bay was planned as a fashionable residential district, and was laid out as such by the architect Arthur Gilman in 1856. Having traveled to Paris, Gilman was heavily influenced by Baron Haussmann’s plan for the new layout of that city.  The result of Gilman’s inspiration is reflected in the Back Bay thoroughfares that resemble Parisian boulevards.

In the mid-19th century, Boston’s Back Bay tidal flats were filled in to form the 450-acre neighborhood, which we now know as the Back Bay.  Prior to this time, the Back Bay was used for little more than milling operations.

As the tidal flats were slowly filled in, beginning at the edge of the Public Garden and extending westward, residential construction followed.  Because the land filling efforts proceeded slowly, construction advanced concurrently on filled-in lots as they became available.  As a result, most blocks in the Back Bay date from approximately the same era and, when viewed in sequence, illustrate the changing tastes in and stylistic evolution of American architecture over the course of the mid- to late 19th and early 20th centuries.

Commercial buildings were erected alongside these residential structures, primarily on Newbury and Boylston Streets. Commercial development began on Boylston Street around 1880 and on Newbury Street in the early 20th century. While new structures were built for some of these commercial ventures, others adapted existing row houses for their purposes.  This early example of adaptive reuse helped to maintain the Back Bay’s uniform appearance.

Today, it’s easy to understand why the Back Bay is one of America’s most desirable neighborhoods. Newbury Street, Boylston Street, and Commonwealth Avenue are lined with unique shops, trendy restaurants, and vintage homes, making the Back Bay an extremely fashionable destination for Boston residents and visitors. In fact, it’s not uncommon to spot celebrities strolling up and down these picturesque streets. This bustling neighborhood also houses the two tallest members of Boston’s skyline, the Prudential Center, and the John Hancock Tower, in addition to architectural treasures such as Trinity Church and the Boston Public Library, the first public lending library in the United States.

Beacon Hill: A 19th-century residential area north of Boston Common, Beacon Hill is named for the location of a beacon that once stood here atop the highest point in central Boston. Beacon Hill is now topped by the gleaming gold dome of the State House.  Stroll this charming half-square-mile neighborhood filled with townhomes and mansions, to discover a delightful maze of red bricked sidewalks and cobblestone streets with working gas lamps, local boutiques, popular restaurants, and quaint B&Bs.

Winding along the north slope of Beacon Hill is the Black Heritage Trail, which explores the history of Boston’s 19th century African-American community.  Highlights along the 1.6 mile trail include: The African Meeting House (1806) – the nation’s oldest existing black church built by free black Bostonians; the Abiel Smith School (1835) – the first public school for black children; and the Hayden House, an important station on the Underground Railway for escaping slaves.

Downtown Crossing: Shoppers can browse for Boston keepsakes, one-of-a-kind gifts and the latest fashions along this bustling pedestrian mall at the intersection of Summer and Washington Streets. Some of Boston’s oldest landmarks can be found here, such as the 19th-century Old South Meeting House, where a meeting of more than 5000 colonists resulted in the Boston Tea Party of 1773.

South End: The historic South End has the largest Victorian brick row house district in the nation, and has recently emerged as a vibrant urban center with fabulous art studios, experimental theaters and independent boutiques and restaurants. Explore it on foot to discover community garden plots, tiny bakeries and some of the city’s best dining.

Fenway/Kenmore Square: While this neighborhood may best be known as the home of the Red Sox and Fenway Park, it is also one of Boston’s academic and cultural hubs.  Nearly a dozen of the 70 colleges and universities located in the area can be found here giving the neighborhood an unmistakably energetic feel. Not far from Kenmore Square, you’ll find the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Museum of Fine Arts and Symphony Hall.

Rickshaw
Rickshaw. Bruno Zaffoni via Compfight.

Chinatown: Boston’s Chinatown is the third largest Chinese neighborhood in the country.  Renowned for its concentration of restaurants, Chinatown’s converted historic theaters now serve up decadent dim sum feasts. Beyond the neighborhood’s elaborately decorated gate, stroll the alleys for herbal shops, barbecues and Asian markets stocked with vegetables and spices. During the Chinese New Year and August Moon Festival, the streets are filled with dancing dragons, traditional music, and martial arts demonstrations.

Theatre District: Boston’s Theater District hosts an endless array of Broadway shows. Productions at the Colonial Theatre, Opera House Boston, along with the Citi Performing Arts Center, attract theatergoers of all ages. Bordering Chinatown, the area is also home to dozens of restaurants and bars offering fare in a wide range of prices. From Chinese to Thai to upscale contemporary American cuisine, the area is the ideal place for a pre-show meal.

The North End: With dozens of eateries serving homemade pasta, fresh bread, imported olive oil, cannoli, and cappuccino, the North End is infused with the flavor of its rich Italian history. Colonial-era sites are hidden throughout the neighborhood including Paul Revere’s house, the Old North Church, and Copp’s Hill Burying Ground. The North End comes alive in the summertime with feasts, festivals, and processions.

South Boston Seaport District: Boston’s waterfront is a vibrant mix of residential condos, marinas, hotels, artists’ lofts and restaurants. The city’s Institute of Contemporary Art is an architectural masterpiece overlooking the harbor. Nearby, the newly renovated Boston Children’s Museum invites your inner child to enjoy and explore the world around you. The Boston Convention & Exhibition Center also calls the Seaport District home, as does the Seaport Hotel & World Trade Center.

Cambridge:  Just a bridge away across the Charles River, MIT and Harvard University help create the progressive flavor of Cambridge.  Often referred to as Boston’s Left Bank, it’s the spirited, slightly mischievous side of Boston and has an atmosphere and attitude all its own.  Packed with youthful vitality and international flair, it’s a city where Old World meets New Age in a mesmerizing blend of history and technology.

As a captivating, offbeat alternative to Boston’s urban center, the “squares” of Cambridge are charming neighborhoods rich in fine dining, eclectic shopping, theaters, museums and historical sites. Each square is a vibrant, colorful destination with a personality all its own, offering a unique selection of everything from restaurants, shopping, and music to technology and innovation.

As the East Coast’s leading hub for high-tech and biotech, Cambridge has a creative, entrepreneurial spirit. With over 3,000 hotel rooms, Cambridge is also a popular destination for professional meetings and conferences, offering the largest hotel inventory in New England outside of Boston.

Cambridge is the birthplace of higher education in America. Harvard College was founded in 1636, and across town, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) is known as the epicenter of cyberculture. Both universities house renowned museum collections and tours that are open to the public.

Beyond Boston: In addition to everything within the city limits, some of Massachusetts’ most scenic and historic towns are just a short distance from the city center. There are sights to see at every turn.

Hawthorne in Bronze, Salem, MA.
Hawthorne in Bronze, Salem, MA. Melinda Stuart via Compfight.

North of Boston: The charm and lure of the sea draw visitors north. The oceanside town of Winthrop is minutes from downtown Boston. Winthrop’s beaches are popular destinations for festivals and special events throughout the summer.

Five miles from the heart of Boston is a magnificent three-mile stretch of unbroken shoreline in Revere. Sea lovers stroll along the beautiful salt-water marshes and look forward to the annual Sand Sculpting Festival in July.

Nearby, historic Salem is one of the country’s oldest cities, with streets retaining an 18th-century charm. Sites to visit in Salem include The House of the Seven Gables, a National Historic Landmark forever immortalized by author Nathaniel Hawthorne, the Peabody Essex Museum, a museum of international art and culture housing one of the best Chinese art collections outside of China, and the Salem Witch Museum, where you can experience the Salem witch trials of 1692.

Whale-watching expeditions and harbor cruises are popular activities in the Cape Ann towns of Gloucester and Rockport. Both feature fine seafood restaurants, art galleries, and small inns.

Lowell, in the heart of the Merrimack River Valley, was home to the American Industrial Revolution and famed author Jack Kerouac. Lowell’s Heritage State Park and National Historic Park and the Lowell Folk Festival in July should not be missed.

South of Boston: With its close proximity to Boston (eight miles away), convenient access to major highways and public transportation, as well as numerous historic sites and attractions, the town of Quincy is ideally situated to host meetings, conventions, and large tour groups.

Quincy is the birthplace and summer home of presidents John Adams and John Quincy Adams. It also the shops and restaurants of picturesque Marina Bay and nearby destinations for rock climbing and harbor cruises.

An hour’s drive from Boston, Plymouth offers a resort-oriented seaside setting with 21 miles of coastline and a small-town feel. It has become a popular tourist stop and a great destination for meetings and conventions.  Visitors can enjoy championship golf courses, whale watching, sailing, and shopping. This is also the place to find attractions such as Plimoth Plantation and the Mayflower II, a full-scale reproduction of the original Pilgrim ship. From now through 2020, Plymouth will be celebrating Plymouth 400, the 400th anniversary of the 1620 Mayflower voyage, the landing of the Pilgrims and the founding of Plymouth Colony.

Just a little further south of Boston is Battleship Cove in Fall River, a maritime heritage museum featuring the world’s largest collection of historic naval ships including the Battleship U.S.S. Massachusetts.  Nearby is the New Bedford Whaling Museum, celebrating the region’s rich whaling history.

Also South of Boston are Cape Cod and the islands of Nantucket and Martha’s Vineyard. This area has become a haven for those who seek the peaceful inspiration of natural seaside beauty. Visitors can savor the local seafood delicacies and enjoy excellent beaches.  For those looking for something a little more active, fishing, golf, antiquing and shopping abound.

Though the Cape is a world apart from many other destinations in its charms and services, it lies within easy reach of Boston’s Logan International Airport, just 50 miles away. Local flights from Boston to Hyannis are available as well as excellent bus transportation and limousine service. The tip of Cape Cod, Provincetown, can be accessed from Boston on a high-speed ferry that takes only 90 minutes.

Martha’s Vineyard and Nantucket can be reached by ferry from Woods Hole and Hyannis. Air transportation is available from Boston, New York City and several Cape towns to both islands’ airports.

West of Boston: The picturesque towns of Lexington and Concord complement any visit to the Boston area. It was on Lexington Green, in the early morning hours of April 19, 1775, that Captain John Parker of the Colonial Militia announced, “Don’t fire unless fired on. But if they mean to have a war, let it begin here.” Those words and the battle that followed changed the course of history.

Sites to visit in Concord include The Old Manse, Old North Bridge, and the Concord Museum. The Concord Museum has been collecting American artifacts since before the Civil War and features treasures including the “one, if by land, and two, if by sea” lantern immortalized by Longfellow’s “Paul Revere’s Ride.”

Additional sites west of Boston include Waterworks Museum, the deCordova Sculpture Park and Museum and historic Old Sturbridge Village, which brings 19-century New England back to life. Visitors can also go skiing at Wachusett Mountain from late November through early April.

New England:  If you were to draw a two-hour circle around Boston, you’d hit all six New England States.  Visitors to Boston find that once they are here, it’s easy to get around by train or car to visit the other states that comprise this great region.

Once the showplace of opulence for New York’s high society, today’s visitors to Newport, Rhode Island, can tour its Gilded Age mansions and gardens, shop along the waterfront or enjoy the holidays with re-creations of Victorian parties and concerts. This modern and sophisticated seaside town is just one-and-a-half hours from Boston.

Mohegan Sun Casino in Connecticut is a major destination for glitz and gaming. This hot spot offers slot machines, poker, and blackjack, live entertainment, lounges, hotels, shopping and more. The casino is located two hours southwest of Boston by car, and can also be reached by bus or train.

From the quaint towns of Ogunquit and Kennebunkport to the cosmopolitan flair of Portland or Freeport with its designer outlets and LL Bean flagship store, visitors can explore timeless villages, antique or outlet stores and numerous beaches in Maine.

New Hampshire offers visitors the charm and history of Portsmouth, a rich arts-and-culture scene, and exciting mountain skiing adventures. From the capital city of Burlington on Lake Champlain to small towns and villages, Vermont offers visitors outdoor adventures and artisan experiences.


Courtesy www.bostonusa.com.

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Mainstreaming Human Rights in Geography and the AAG

Nearly all geographers are concerned about human rights, and in their personal and professional lives seek meaningful ways to act on these concerns and values. The AAG and the discipline of geography intersects with human rights in numerous ways. This special theme within the 2017 AAG Annual Meeting will explore intersections of Human Rights and Geography, and will build on the AAG’s decade-long initiatives on Mainstreaming Human Rights in Geography and the AAG. An Interview with Noam Chomsky by Doug Richardson will keynote this theme at the 2017 Boston Annual Meeting.

This theme will feature 50 sessions with more than 250 presentations at the intersection of human rights and geography. Speakers from leading human rights organizations, academia, government, and international organ- izations will address human rights challenges around the world.

A sampling of featured speakers includes:

  • Noam Chomsky, Institute Professor and Professor of Linguistics Emeritus, MIT
  • Mike Posner, former Assistant Secretary of State for Human Rights
  • Terry Rockefeller, Board of Directors, Amnesty International USA
  • Colette Pichon Battle, Executive Director, US Human Rights Network
  • Stéphane Bonamy, Deputy Head, International Committee of the Red Cross
  • Lee Schwartz, Director, Office of the Geographer and Global Issues, US State Department
  • Susannah Sirkin, Director of International Policy and Partnerships, Physicians for Human Rights
  • Jessica Wyndham, Interim Director, Scientific Responsibility, Human Rights and Law Program, AAAS
  • Eric Rosenthal, Executive Director and Founder, Disability Rights International
  • Douglas Richardson, Executive Director, American Association of Geographers
  • Beth Simmons, U-Penn Law and NAS Committee on Human Rights
  • Harvard Humanitarian Initiative (four presenters from Harvard)
  • Audrey Kobayashi, Queen’s University
  • Hilary Zainab, Research Director, Standby Task Force
  • Kathryn Hanson, Smithsonian Museum Conservation Institute
  • Sheryl Beach, University of Texas at Austin
  • Balakrishnan Rajagopal, Head, International Development Group, MIT
  • Colin Kelley, Columbia Center for Climate and Security
  • Stephen Marks, Department of Global Health and Policy, Harvard University
  • Tawanda Mutasah, Senior Director for Law and Policy, Amnesty International

Sample session topics include:

Wednesday, April 5 

  • Health and human rights
  • Crime, brutality, and violence
  • Global Carceral Geographies I: Carceral Experiences
  • Global Carceral Geographies II: Carceral Societies
  • Global Carceral Geographies III: Confining the Other
  • Global Carceral Geographies IV: Carceral Intersections
  • (De)Stigmatising Sexscapes: Politics, Policy and Performance I: Porn, Pleasure & Performance

Thursday, April 6 

  • Human Rights: Humanitarian Disaster Response and Protecting Cultural Heritage
  • Right to water and safe environments
  • (De)Stigmatising Sexscapes: Politics, Policy and Performance II: 2. Rights, Wrongs and Regulations
  • Documenting Evidence for Human Rights Tribunals and Litigation Using Geographic Research and Tools
  • Mainstreaming Human Rights in Geomorphology and Water Resources
  • (De)Stigmatising Sexscapes: Politics, Policy and Performance III: 3. Governance, Policing and Design
  • Updates and Trends at AAAS and the SHRC
  • Harvard Humanitarian Initiative panel
  • (De)Stigmatising Sexscapes: Politics, Policy and Performance IV: 4. Production, Consumption and Reflection
  • Article 15: Understanding the Human Right to the Benefits of Science to Help Progress and Its Applications
  • (De)Stigmatising Sexscapes: Politics, Policy and Performance V: 5. Mobilities, Immobilities and Boundaries
  • Noam Chomsky Interview—A Continuing Conversation with Geographers

Friday, April 7 

  • Social Media and Activism: Media and Communication Geography Session IV
  • Indigenous and marginalized groups
  • Policymaking under a human rights framework
  • Human Rights and Climate Change – Featured Panel
  • Geographies of Disability 1
  • Trump on Immigration Enforcement: the First 100 Days
  • Geographies of Disability 2
  • Refugees, asylum seekers, and IDPs
  • Emerging geographies of Post-Apartheid South Africa
  • Human rights education and research practice
  • Geographies of Disability 3

Saturday, April 8 

  • Territorial Articulations and Shifting Legal Geographies: Indigenous and Native Rights in the Americas 1
  • Planning the (White) City: Neoliberal Urbanism and the Rise of the Homogenous City I
  • Human Rights and Disabilities: High-Level Perspectives From the Academy and Beyond
  • Territorial Articulations and Shifting Legal Geographies: Indigenous and Native Rights in the Americas 2
  • Planning the (White) City: Neoliberal Urbanism and the Rise of the Homogenous City II
  • Human Rights Featured Panel
  • Confronting the (White) City: A Conversation
  • Indigenous Peoples and Climate Change
  • David Harvey Featured Lecture
  • Indigenous Peoples and Climate Change II
  • Sex and Gender in Election 2016
  • Historical Geography Specialty Group Plenary: Audrey Kobayashi
  • AAG Past President Election Panel

Sunday, April 9

  • Geographies of Aging, Health and Health Care 1
  • Spaces of Informality and the Governing of Slums
  • Geographies of Aging, Health and Health Care 2
  • Gender, sexual identity, and human rights
  • Geographies of Aging, Health and Health Care 3
  • Land Rights and Colonialism
  • Racial Scars that Still Reflected on the Space
  • Urban inequalities

AAG Human Rights Initiatives

During the past decade, the AAG has undertaken many initiatives to interact geography with human rights organizations and their work. A few examples include:

Science and Human Rights Coalition (SHRC): Hosted by the AAAS, the SHRC brings together dozens of scientific associations to advance crucial human rights work around the world.

AAG Geography and Human Rights Clearinghouse: With funding from the MacArthur Foundation, the AAG developed an inventory of geographic research and scholarship relating to human rights including bibliographic, informational, and research resources.

Geospatial Technologies and Human Rights: The AAG supported this AAAS project to develop applications and information resources for the non-governmental human rights community.

For more information, please visit https://www.aag.org/cs/geohumanrights.

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AAG Statement on President Trump’s Executive Order

The following is a Statement by the AAG Council on the recent Trump Executive Order limiting travel to the US from several countries.
The AAG is committed to supporting all AAG members who are impacted by this executive order.

We also are taking action in concert with several other organizations in Washington, DC., to attempt roll back the restrictions of this Executive Order. The AAG Council and Central Office are actively working with determination in this effort and will share regular updates with you. We also encourage all of our members to engage at the local and state levels with your own Congressional representatives, to express to them your own perspectives on this issue.

President Glen MacDonald and the governing Council of the American Association of Geographers (AAG) today issued the following statement:

Download a PDF copy of the Statement.

We are deeply concerned by the recent executive order that restricts the ability of AAG members and the broader geography community from certain countries from being able to enter or return to the United States.

This executive order is contrary to the values we hold dear in geography, which is an inherently open and international discipline. Diversity and international interactions in the field of geography are essential to addressing global issues including security, peace, economic well-being, and health, as well as to achieving global understanding of our world and understanding in our world.

The AAG community, like universities and other associations across the United States, has long been deeply enriched by researchers, scholars, and students from around the world, including the affected countries, coming to study, teach, share knowledge, and learn. It is critical that the United States continues to welcome geographers and others of all backgrounds and nationalities. This is not only just and ethical, but our nation’s ability to remain a global leader in innovation, science, research, and education depends on it.

The AAG welcomes all of our members and the international scientific community to participate in our association’s activities, including at our Annual Meetings which provide the world’s largest forum for international exchange of scholarship, research, and applications in geography, to over 9,000 attendees annually. This year an extraordinary special session will discuss the challenges we now face and draw upon the insight and help of our membership.

We are committed to supporting all AAG members who are impacted by this executive action. The Council and Executive Director are actively working with determination in this effort and will provide regular updates.

 

 

 

Glen MacDonald
President

 

 

 

Douglas Richardson
Executive Director

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Second Annual ‘GeoHumanities’ GeoPoetics Poetry Reading

The first annual GeoPoetics Poetry Reading was held on March 29 at the 2016 AAG Annual Meeting in San Francisco. It was organized by the editors of the new AAG journal, GeoHumanities. Cecil Giscombe, University of California – Berkeley, is pictured here during his reading.

GeoHumanities has organized a GeoPoetics poetry reading to take place at the 2017 AAG Annual Meeting in Boston with accomplished poets from Boston and New England. These include Stephen Burt (poet, critic and professor of poetry at Harvard), January O’Neill (poet and professor at Salem State University, executive director of the Massachusetts Poetry Festival), Danielle Legros Georges (faculty member at Lesley University and Boston’s Poet Laureate), Joseph Massey (author of the recent Illocality from Wave books), and Jill McDonough (poet and professor at UMass Boston. Three times recipient of the Pushcart Prize). All of these poets approach place, and particularly the places of Boston and New England, in fresh and slant-wise ways that force us to see our world in new ways.

The first GeoHumanities GeoPoetics Poetry reading took place at the 2016 AAG Annual Meeting in San Francisco. The session featured a range of accomplished Bay Area poets including Cecil Giscombe, Douglas Powell, Mary Burger, Judy Halebsky and Lyn Hejinian. In each case the poets read work that crossed the boundaries of geography and poetry and represented some of the finest examples of “earth writing”. The session attracted a large and enthusiastic audience.

Session Information: GeoHumanities GeoPoetics Poetry Reading at the 2017 AAG Annual Meeting, Boston

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Newly Renamed ‘Annals’ Section “Physical Geography and Environmental Sciences”

The Annals of the American Association of Geographers has a newly renamed “Physical Geography and Environmental Sciences” section. It’s our hope that this section of the journal will identify with physical geographers, in addition to being open in a multidisciplinary sense to the Environmental Sciences. By explicitly stating “Physical Geography” in the section name, we’d like to encourage more physical geographers to submit their best work to the Annals. The AAG was founded in part by physical geographers, so the new section name is also a way of recognizing and honoring the long tradition of physical geography within the broader scope of our wide-ranging modern field of Geography.

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Ryan Habron Interns at AAG for Spring Semester

Ryan Habron is a senior at the University of Maryland pursuing a B.S. in Geographical Sciences. His focuses include GIS, Computer Cartography, and Remote Sensing. He hopes to use these skills to monitor transportation, and other urban planning tasks in his future career.

During his internship at the AAG, he will work on obtaining attestations from 250 high schools for a proposed AP GIS&T course. He will also work on other related programs and projects, including outreach, research, website and the Annual Meeting.

When not at school or at work he is usually at a Maryland basketball game. Go Terps!

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James Hansen To Address Climate Change at AAG Annual Meeting

James Hansen, courtesy NASA

James Hansen, known for his climate research and his Congressional testimony on climate change that raised awareness of global warming, will deliver a featured talk on climate change, moderated by AAG President Glen MacDonald, at the AAG annual meeting in Boston on April 7, 2017.

Hansen received a B.A. in physics and mathematics, an M.S. in astronomy and a Ph.D. in physics from the University of Iowa. From 1981 to 2013, he was the head of the NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies in New York City. Currently, he directs the Program on Climate Science, Awareness and Solutions at Columbia University’s Earth Institute.

Hansen is a member of the National Academy of Sciences, received the Heinz Award in the Environment for his global warming research, and was listed as one of Time Magazine’s 100 Most Influential People in 2006. The American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) selected him for its Award for Scientific Freedom and Responsibility.

He will also be honored as the 2017 AAG Honorary Geographer during the AAG awards luncheon in Boston on April 9, 2017.

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‘Annals of the AAG’ Welcomes New Editor

David R. Butler. Credit: Texas State University.

Our flagship journal, the Annals of the American Association of Geographers, begins the new year with a change of editorship for the newly named Physical Geography and Environmental Sciences section.

Mark A. Fonstad has completed two terms as editor of the Environmental Sciences section and is succeeded by David R. Butler, who assumes editorship of the Physical Geography and Environmental Sciences section.

David Butler is a Texas State University System Regents’ Professor in the Department of Geography at Texas State University. His accomplishments and experience spanning the discipline of geography are impressive, with research interests centering around geomorphology, biogeography, natural hazards, mountain environments and environmental change.

David has considerable editorial experience, including: serving as Section Editor for Geomorphology for the forthcoming AAG International Encyclopedia of Geography, as a section editor for the international journal Progress in Physical Geography, and as long-time book review editor for the journal Geomorphology. He has also guest edited/co-edited nine special issues of the journals Physical Geography, and Geomorphology. David is looking forward to leading the Physical Geography and Environmental Sciences section of the Annals: “It’s a tremendous honor to be selected to be editor of this section of the Annals, and I hope my many friends in physical geography will help out by submitting their best work for possible publication in the journal. Please put me to work!”

The AAG, the Publications Committee, and the rest of the Annals editorial team would like to express their heartfelt thanks to Mark Fonstad for his hard work over the last seven years. He has presided over a busy section, managing a heavy workload of manuscripts while ensuring that high quality and rigor were maintained.

The Annals of the AAG publishes six times a year (January, March, May, July, September and November) with one issue per year being a special themed issue. The upcoming March 2017 Special Issue is on the topic of Mountains. See the contents of the latest issue or browse all past issues. If you are interested in submitting a paper to the Annals, please refer to the information for authors.

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David Harvey To Deliver Featured Lecture at AAG Annual Meeting in Boston

David Harvey, one of the most influential figures in geography and urban studies, and among the most cited intellectuals of all time across the humanities and social sciences, will deliver a featured lecture, “Marx, Capital and the Madness of Economic Reason,” on April 8, 2017, at the AAG annual meeting in Boston.

For geographers and non-geographers across many disciplines and languages, David Harvey has established the importance of space and uneven geographical development to the survival of capitalist accumulation, the perpetuation of inequality, and the rise of neoliberalism. His body of work demonstrates the highly creative and consequential place that geographers can have in engaging in and shaping broader transdisciplinary discussions and debates.

After receiving his Ph.D. from the University of Cambridge in 1961, Harvey’s research focused on social science trends using quantitative methods towards spatial science and philosophical theory. In the early 1970s, Harvey moved to Johns Hopkins University concentrating on radical and Marxist geography. At that time, injustice, racism, and exploitation were evident and activism around those issues was front-and-center, especially in Baltimore. In 2001, he became a distinguished professor at the City University of New York where he still resides.

His books, including Explanation in Geography, Social Justice and the City; Limits to Capital; The Condition of Postmodernity; Justice, Nature and the Geography of Difference; Spaces of Hope; The New Imperialism; A Brief History of Neoliberalism and The Enigma of Capital are some of the most widely-cited, best-selling and controversial writings across many disciplines. Harvey was also one of the first contributors to the journal Antipode.

Among his many international honors are his fellowships with the British Academy and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. David Harvey will also receive the AAG Brunn Award for Creativity in Geography during the AAG awards luncheon on April 9, 2017. This annual AAG award recognizes a geographer who has demonstrated originality, creativity, and significant intellectual breakthroughs in geography.

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