AAG Announces 2022 Award Recipients

The American Association of Geographers congratulates the individuals and entities named to receive an AAG Award. The awardees represent outstanding contributions to and accomplishments in the geographic field.

2022 Glenda Laws Award

The Glenda Laws Award is administered by the American Association of Geographers and endorsed by members of the Institute of Australian Geographers, the Canadian Association of Geographers, and the Institute of British Geographers. The annual award and honorarium recognize outstanding contributions to geographic research on social issues. This award is named in memory of Glenda Laws—a geographer who brought energy and enthusiasm to her work on issues of social justice and social policy.

Rebecca Torres, University of Texas at Austin

Photo of Rebecca TorresDr. Rebecca Torres is an associate professor in the Department of Geography and the Environment at the University of Texas at Austin. She is a mid-career scholar whose research on migration and asylum connects to an array of pressing social issues including detention of unaccompanied children and youth, racialization of immigration law, cartel violence, climate change, immigrant policing, and refugee receptivity. Dr. Torres’ work is that of a scholar-activist who unites academics from the US and Latin America with policymakers and advocates to engage in qualitative and participatory field research. Her NSF-funded Geographies of Displacement project is a key example of this integrative work. In the words of one nominator, “Rebecca’s conception of research is never done in isolation of the wider social needs and issues facing marginalized communities.”

In the spirit of Glenda Laws, Dr. Torres’ commitment to justice and care for marginalized communities extends to her community service and mentorship roles. Several committee members recalled Dr. Torres’ co-organizing the 2018 Race, Ethnicity, and Place Conference in Austin, for which she garnered NSF funding to fully integrate local activists in conference activities. In terms of mentorship, Dr. Torres not only supports a large cadre of graduate and undergraduate students in geography at UT Austin, but she also advises students from the Lozano Long Institute for Latin American Studies (also at UT Austin), which primarily recruits students from Mexico and Latin America. Earlier in her career, Dr. Torres served as academic advisor to the Workers’ Defense Fund in Texas, functioned as senior personnel in the AAG’s NSF-funded “ALIGNED” project supporting diversity and inclusion in geography, and initiated a dual language immersion collaboration (“Los Puentes” at East Carolina University) between local public schools and her university. These examples further illustrate her role as scholar-activist.

Dr. Torres’ steadfast advancement of social justice through scholarship and community bridge building is highly deserving of the AAG Glenda Laws Award.


2022 AAG Harm de Blij Award for Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching

This annual award recognizes outstanding achievement in teaching undergraduate Geography including the use of innovative teaching methods. The recipients are instructors for whom undergraduate teaching is a primary responsibility. The award consists of $2,500 in prize money and an additional $500 in travel expenses to attend the AAG Annual Meeting, where the award will be conveyed. This award is generously funded by John Wiley & Sons in memory of their long-standing collaboration with the late Harm de Blij on his seminal Geography textbooks.

Andrew Jolly-Ballantine, University of Connecticut

Photo of Andrew Jolly-BallantineDr. Andrew Jolly-Ballantine is a highly innovative teacher. He developed the University of Connecticut’s Sustainable Community Food Systems program and minor. This program helps undergraduates become food system leaders through an internship experience that focuses on issues of food justice, community action, food production, and sustainability. He supported this initiative by obtaining a 5-year $500,000 USDA-NIFA grant.

Jolly-Ballantine has also worked with the Center for Students with Disabilities and the University of Connecticut’s Center for Excellence in Teaching & Learning to improve understanding of disabilities in the classroom through the development of materials that have helped faculty understand and better address the range of disabilities students may face in their studies. Among many other contributions to geography education, he developed a long-standing undergraduate service-learning partnership with the GrowWindham community garden in Willimantic, CT. Every year, this partnership has engaged University of Connecticut students in projects pertaining to issues of food security, organic gardening, and community building.

For these and many more reasons, the AAG is pleased to recognize Andrew Jolly-Ballantine with the AAG Harm J. de Blij Award for Excellence in Undergraduate Geography Teaching.


2022 AAG E. Willard and Ruby S. Miller Award

This annual award recognizes members of the Association who have made truly outstanding contributions to the geographic field due to their special competence in teaching or research. Funding for the award comes from the estate of Ruby S. Miller. More than one award may be awarded each year. Each award includes $1,000 and a commemorative plaque.

Anne Bonds, University of Wisconsin Milwaukee

Photo of Anne BondsDr. Anne Bonds, a faculty member at the University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, is selected to receive the 2022 Miller Award. Bonds is a scholar of urban and economic geography whose work undertakes critical studies of race, gender and poverty. Bonds’ scholarship has focused on prison expansion as a mode of economic development in the rural mountain West, and more recently on post-incarceration survival strategies of women in Milwaukee. Bonds has also contributed to collaborative efforts to transform important aspects of academic life: co-authoring a framework for “slow scholarship” that intervenes in the ongoing neo-liberalization of universities, as well co-authoring the brave and groundbreaking publication in 2019 entitled, “It’s time to recognize how men’s careers benefit from sexually harassing women in Academia,” published in Human Geography.

Bond’s work as an innovative and creative scholar is exemplified by her leadership in a collaborative community-engaged project, Transforming Justice. This project brought together Milwaukee community leaders and abolitionist scholars to engage with the history and debates over mass incarceration in Milwaukee. Out of this project grew a series of workshops as well as a youth video collective focusing on safety, segregation, and justice in Milwaukee. The youth-produced films have been shown in classrooms across the city, community screenings, and formed the basis of a UWM Design Challenge. Through this work, Bond seeks to make Milwaukee a more racially and economically just place.

For all these reasons, the AAG is pleased to recognize Dr. Anne Bonds with the 2022 AAG E. Willard and Ruby S. Miller Award.

Heejun Chang, Portland State University

Photo of Heejun ChangDr. Heejun Chang, a professor at Portland State University, is selected to receive the 2022 Miller Award. Chang’s research focuses on human modification of the hydrological system and interactions among climate change, land use change, and water management as they affect water quantity, quality, demand, floods, and hydrological ecosystem services. As a broadly trained geographer, he uses multiple methods from process-based modeling to spatial statistics to field observations to interviews for understanding complex transdisciplinary water issues across scales.

Chang has an impressive publication record of more than 150 peer reviewed publications, and is known for stakeholder-engaged research. In the Portland Metro Area, his research often involves local community groups and governing bodies, and his research in the region has helped improve infrastructure, including green infrastructure, building a region that is more resilient to weather and climate extremes. Chang has been a very able scientific ambassador between the US and Korea. He has sponsored a number of Korean scholars to the US, has collaborated on Korean urban water issues, and has initiated comparative studies between cities in Korea and the US. Chang’s contributions to the field of geography have had real impact, and he strives for socially relevant outcomes to his research efforts and stakeholder engagements.

Professor Chang’s high-impact societally relevant geographic research make him a worthy recipient of the 2022 AAG E. Willard and Ruby S. Miller Award.


2022 AAG Award for MA/MS Program Excellence

This annual award and cash prize honors Geography departments and Geography programs within blended departments that have significantly enhanced the prominence and reputation of Geography as a discipline and demonstrated the characteristics of a strong and engaged academic unit. The award honors non-PhD granting Geography programs at both the baccalaureate and master levels.

Department of Geography and Geosciences’ Master of Science in GIS Management at Salisbury University

The Department of Geography and Geosciences’ Master of Science in GIS Management (MSGISM) at Salisbury University demonstrates strong innovation in addressing the needs of the profession and the training of students. Their approach is forward thinking and provides both students and potential future employers with a form of co-education and training that is remarkable. The MSGISM has achieved a platform to enable online and in-person degree formats, focusing on professional development as the core value.

The MSGISM is an excellent program that shows the value of focusing both on student needs and program strengths. By concentrating on management issues, Salisbury speaks to a very important need among online and in-person GIS programs. Many programs focus on the technology, more than the equally important human issues involved implementing new technologies like GIS. Professional development is front and center in the MSGISM and the faculty involved in the project are impressive.

The Master’s program at Salisbury is enviable by almost any measure. The AAG particularly recognizes their strong professional training and the working relationship fostered between students in the program and the challenges practitioners encounter in the real world. Students at Salisbury’s MSGISM program gain strong knowledge in GIS skills and management in preparation for fulfilling careers.

The AAG is pleased to recognize the Department of Geography and Geosciences’ Master of Science in GIS Management (MSGISM) at Salisbury University with the 2022 AAG Program Excellence Award.

Honorable Mention: East Tennessee State University

Embedded within the Department of Geosciences, East Tennessee State University’s (ETSU) Master’s Program in Geosciences has demonstrated strong growth and solid scholarship and professional training opportunities for the students. Additionally, the sheer variety and quantity of outreach being carried out by the program is impressive for a program its size. The leaders of the program have also worked hard to develop a positive department climate.

The Master’s Program in Geography at University of Massachusetts Amherst’s Department of Geosciences is impressive in several areas. Most importantly, it demonstrates effective strategies for reviving and rebuilding a program that had faced major cuts. Furthermore, the faculty have cultivated student interest in Geography, as well as support among their Geoscience colleagues. This program clearly articulates the role and importance of Geography within the larger Geoscience Department.


The 2022 J. Warren Nystrom Award

Photo of Hilary FaxonThis prestigious annual prize distinguishes a paper based upon a recent dissertation in geography. Nystrom was the AAG Executive Director from 1966-1979, and an exceptional educator and professor of geography with a long and productive career in international relations as a senior official in Foreign Policy at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, an international relations consultant, and Senior Fellow at The Brookings Institution. 2022 Nystrom Committee Members are Dawn Drake, Missouri Western University, Elvin Delgado, Central Washington University, and Richard Quodomine, City of Philadelphia.

Hilary Faxon, University of California Berkeley

Welcome to the digital village: networking geographies of agrarian change


The 2022 William L. Garrison Award for Best Dissertation in Computational Geography

This biennial award supports innovative research into the computational aspects of geographic science. The award is intended to arose a deeper general understanding of the important role that advanced computation can play in the complex problems of space-time analysis, that lie at the core of geographic science.

Gengchen Mai, Stanford University

Geographic Question Answering with Spatially-Explicit Machine Learning Models


The 2022 AAG-Kauffman Awards for Best Paper and Best Student Paper in Geography & Entrepreneurship

This award identifies innovative research in business, applied or community geography that is relevant to questions related to entrepreneurs and their firms as well as to practitioners and policymakers. Award winners and runners up will be invited to present their research in a session highlighting geography and entrepreneurship at the 2022 AAG Annual Meeting.

2022 Best Paper Award

Emily Yeh, University of Colorado, Boulder – The cultural politics of new Tibetan entrepreneurship in contemporary China: Valorisation and the question of neoliberalism

2022 Best Paper Award Runner-Up

Xuanyi Nie, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health – The Connection between Healthcare and Innovation: Examining the Collocation of Public Tertiary Hospitals and Biotech Startups in Chinese Cities

2022 Best Student Paper Award

Sara Tornabene, University of North Carolina Charlotte – Rail transit investments and economic development: Challenges for small businesses

2022 Best Student Paper Award Runner-Up

Eleanor Davis, University of South Carolina – Deciphering small business community disaster support using machine learning


The 2022 Anne U. White Grant

This grant enables people, regardless of any formal training in geography, to engage in useful field studies and to have the joy of working alongside their partners.

Savannah Collins-Key, University of Tennessee, will continue dendrochronology studies with partner Jeffrey Collins-Key, for a project titled Knoxville Wood Anatomical Anomalies as Indicators of Hemlock Woolly Adelgid Infestations in Eastern Hemlock, Great Smoky Mountains National Park, Tennessee

Kathleen Epstein, Cornell University, with partner Michael MacDonald, will undertake a project titled Emotional dimensions of wildlife disease dynamics Examining the rural experience of biosecurity governance.


The 2022 Marble-Boyle Undergraduate Achievement Award in Geographic Science

The Marble-Boyle Undergraduate Achievement Award recognizes excellence in academic performance by undergraduate students from the U.S. and Canada who are putting forth a strong effort to bridge geographic science and computer science as well as to encourage other students to embark upon similar programs. The award is an activity of the Marble Fund for Geographic Science of the AAG.

Matthew DeWitte, University of Wisconsin Eau Claire

Keegan Moynahan, University of Massachusetts Amherst

Zimo Xiao, University of Illinois


2022 Research Grant recipients

The AAG provides small Research Grants of $500 to support direct costs for fieldwork and research.

Mary Biggs, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Zhengke Zhou, The Chinese University of Hong Kong

Matthew Pflaum, University of Florida

Daniel Yonto, The University of Alabama

Romao Oliveira Wellington, Federal University of Ceará


2022 Dissertation Research Grant recipients ($1,000/each)

The AAG provides support for doctoral Dissertation Research in the form of grants up to $1,000 to PhD candidates of any geographic specialty.

Carlos Serrano, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Gabrielle Kirk, University of California, Davis

Lauren Fritzsche, University of Arizona

Anaïs Zimmer, University of Texas at Austin

Peter Nguyen, University of California Davis


2022 AAG Darrel Hess Community College Geography Scholarships

Outstanding students from community colleges, junior colleges, city colleges, or two-year educational institutions who will be transferring as geography majors to four-year universities receive support and recognition from this scholarship program, including $1,000 for educational expenses. The scholarship has been generously provided by Darrel Hess of the City College of San Francisco to 29 students since 2006.

Annalisa Hamm, transferring from Arapahoe Community College to University of Colorado Denver.

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Video: AAG 2022 Atlas Awardee Marcia McNutt

During her special presentation on March 1, 2022, AAG Atlas Awardee Marcia McNutt calls to geographers to help build the resilient planet of tomorrow that will sustain our children and grandchildren. She talked about stopping climate change, promoting sustainable use of resources, reducing inequality, halting pandemics, promoting public safety in response to natural and man-made hazards and increasing healthy lifespan among other issues.

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AAG 2023 Denver Vintage Map Postcard

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African Geographical Review Seeks Associate Editors

The African Geographical Review (AGR) is searching for new Associate Editors for the journal. To apply, please review the below. The completed application should be received by Friday April 8, 2022. 

1. Associate Editor—Human Geography 

2. Associate Editor—Physical Geography 

3. Associate Editor—Geospatial 

Background to the Journal 

The African Geographical Review (AGR) is a leading international peer reviewed journal for geographical scholarship relating to Africa. It publishes the highest quality research in all fields of geography, including human, nature – society, physical and the techniques. The journal publishes several types of articles, including research manuscripts, commentaries, methodological notes, field notes, featured reflections, and book reviews. 

The overall aims of the AGR are to enhance the standing of geography of and in Africa, to promote better representation of African scholarship, and to facilitate lively academic conversations regarding the African continent. 

We are proud to highlight that significant number of AGR submissions come from African scholars working globally and Institutions on the African Continent. 

I. ROLE 

The Associate Editors will work with the Chief Editor on all aspects of the African Geographical Review, a refereed journal published by Taylor & Francis, on behalf of the African Specialty Group of the Association of American Geographers. The Associate Editors shall serve a 3-year term, and if interested and available, be re-appointed for a second 3-year term (for a maximum of 6-years). Associate Editors would have the opportunity to apply to become Chief Editor during their first or second term. 

S/he must work hard to support the growth of the AGR which provides an excellent outlet for the publication of geographical material relating to Africa; enhancing the standing of African geography, and promoting a better representation of African scholarship. Additionally, s/he must commit themselves to ensuring that the journal maintains its reputation of publishing the best material on African geography scholarship. The Associate Editors work dutifully with the Chief Editor in the selection, editing, and publishing of all journal content. 

II. RELATIONSHIP WITH ASG AND AGR EDITORIAL BOARD 

The Editors report to the President of the ASG and regularly update the president on the status of the journal. Taylor & Francis is currently publishing the journal 4 times a year and will remain responsible for the marketing aspects of the journal. The Chief Editor and the Associate Editors will work with the publishers and the Editorial Board to ensure successful production of the 2 

AGR. In particular, the editors will supply Taylor & Francis with manuscripts in a timely manner and work with the ASG Chair to ensure that ASG journal subscribers have timely access to the journal. 

III. DUTIES 

  • Work in partnership with the Chief Editor, the AGR publishers, the ASG Chair, and the AGR Editorial Board, to define the overall strategic direction for the journal. 
  • Actively solicit manuscripts for journal issues. 
  • Maintain regular communication with the Editorial Board and attend an annual meeting of the Editorial Board to discuss journal review policies and procedures and the general direction of the journal. 
  • Conduct initial screening of all manuscripts and forward those that meet Journal criteria to selected reviewers. 
  • Work with authors to revise manuscripts based on reviewers’ comments and the editors’ recommendations for improvement (e.g., clarity, development of ideas, scholarly accuracy, overall quality, and compliance with publication guidelines). 
  • Serve along with the Chief Editor as the primary liaison to authors. 
  • Return rejected manuscripts to authors with constructive formal letters. 
  • Coordinate journal production with the Chief Editor to ensure a regular production schedule. 
  • Together with the journal publishers and the Chief Editor, participate in journal promotion and development activities including sponsorships and other appropriate advertising. 
  • Perform other tasks as assigned by the Chief Editor. 

IV. QUALIFICATIONS 

The Associate Editors of the Journal must possess the following attributes: 

  • Excellent communication (oral, written, and editing) skills 
  • Be an active member of the AAG (ASG membership is an added advantage) 
  • Be a scholar in good academic standing 
  • Have excellent interpersonal skills 
  • Have creative ideas and approaches to expand the journals reach and diversity 

V. APPLICATION PROCESS: 

To apply for this position, please submit: 

  • a letter of interest that details your qualifications for the position, the specific position (Human, Physical, or Geospatial) and a visionary statement as the future editor of the journal (2-page max). 
  • a current curriculum vitae (5-page max) 

The completed application should be received by Friday April 8th, 2022. Please submit electronic copies of your application to the Co-chairs of the Search Committee, Dr. Ben Neimark ([email protected]) and Dr. Godwin Arku ([email protected]). 

Arrangements will be made to interview candidates virtually in April/May, 2022. Please contact Dr. Ben Neimark if you have any questions. 

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2022 AAG Specialty and Affinity Group Awards

Photo of bright sparkly lights on dark background
  • The AAG’s 75 interest-based specialty groups and eight affinity groups recognize their members accomplishments over the course of the year. Following are the awardees within each group for 2022:

Africa Specialty Group

Graduate Research Award, Matthieu Ahouangbenon, University of Delaware, Promoting climate smart agriculture within the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS): A mixed approach based on smallholder farmers inputs, in the context of climate change

Kwadwo Konadu-Agyemang Distinguished Scholar Award, Aondover Tarhule, Illinois State University


Animal Geographies Specialty Group

Graduate Student Presentation Award, Sarah-Maude Cossette, Observing each other: A multispecies fieldwork experience into the city interstices


Asian Geography Specialty Group

Graduate Student Paper Award, Xiaofeng Liu, University of Hong Kong

Graduate Student Research Fellowship

  • Olivia Meyer, University of Hawaiʻi, Mānoa
  • Mei-Huan Chen, Pennsylvania State University

Biogeography Specialty Group

Henry Cowles Excellence in Publication Award, Grant Elliott, University of Missouri

James J. Parsons Distinguished Career Award, Lori Daniels, University of British Columbia

Student Presentation Competition

  • Jared Crain, University of Tennessee Knoxville Department of Geography, Classifying Microscopic Charcoal Morphology to Improve Understanding of Fire History in Sediment Records from Neotropical Lakes (Master’s)
  • Julie Edwards, University of Arizona School of Geography, Development, and Environment, Multiple climate signals in quantitative wood anatomical measurements of Rocky Mountain bristlecone pine (Ph.D.)

Student Grant Proposal, Corey Aldred, University of Missouri – Columbia, Department of Geography, Threshold-induced establishment declines from intensifying drought stress at upper treeline in Southern Rocky Mountains (M.S. – 1st place)

Student Research Grant Proposal, Anaïs Zimmer, The University of Texas at Austin, Human environmental interactions in the deglaciating Alps and Tropical Andes (Ph.D.)

Student Research Award

  • Corey Aldred, University of Missouri, Threshold-induced establishment declines from intensifying drought stress at upper treeline in Southern Rocky Mountains (Master’s)
  • Anais Zimmer, University of Texas-Austin, Human environmental interactions in the deglaciating Alps and Tropical Andes (Ph.D.)

James J. Parsons Award for Lifetime Achievement in Biogeography, Lori Daniels, University of British Columbia

Henry C. Cowles Award for Best Biogeography Publication, Grant Elliot, University of Missouri, Hotter Drought as a Disturbance at Upper Treeline in the Southern Rocky Mountains


Caribbean Geography Specialty Group

Courtney Russell Award

  • Kristinia Doughorty, University of the West Indies, Mona, Assessing the socio-ecological resilience of nutmeg agroecosystems in Grenada
  • -Aleem Mahabir, University of the West Indies, Mona, Alternative domains of injustice: Exploring hope(lessness) and psychosocial resilience among residents of an excluded urban community

Cartography Specialty Group

Student Guided Poster Competition

  • Aiyin Zhang
  • Caleb Winebrenner
  • Lily Houtman

Master’s Grant, Lindsey Rotche, Human-centered avalanche risk mapping

Master’s Thesis Research Grant, Beatrice Abbott

Travel Grant for Underrepresented Groups

  • Caleb Winebrenner
  • Terra McKee

China Specialty Group

Annual Student Paper Awards

  • Mengdi Wu, The University of Hong Kong (winner)
  • Guanchi Zhang, Harvard Law School, The territorial foundation of China’s market transition (runner up)
  • Guannan Zou, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, The return of the proactive state? State roles in relation to firms in local development driven by innovative industries (runner up)

Outstanding Service Awards

  • Fulong Wu, University College London; His scholarship is world-class and he has significantly advanced the visibility of China research within and far beyond the geography discipline.
  • Carolyn Cartier, University of Technology Sydney; She is an early chair of China Specialty Group and an excellent author of many high-impact books and articles on China.

Climate Specialty Group

Lifetime Achievement Award, Lesley-Ann Dupigny Giroux

John Russell Mather Paper of the Year, Yuechun Wang, Observed Influence of Soil Moisture on the North American Monsoon: An Assessment Using the Stepwise Generalized Equilibrium Feedback Assessment Method

Student Paper Competition

  • Julie Edwards (1st place)
  • Ben Weinger, UCLA (2nd place)
  • Ye Mu (3rd place)

Coastal and Marine Specialty Group

Norbert Psuty Student Paper Competition Winner, Robin Fail, Duke University, Possibilities for Centering Equity in Mariculture Development


Cultural and Political Ecology

Distinguished Career Award, Nancy Peluso

Field Study Award

  • Rachel Noel Arney
  • Emily Christina Melvin

Outstanding Publication Award, Adam M. Romero, University of Washington Bothell, Economic Poisoning: Industrial Waste and the Chemicalization of American Agriculture

Scholar-Activist Award, Samuel Kay, The Housing Spectrum, Temperature Extremes, and the Costs of Survival: A needs assessment for Unhoused Neighbors and Low-Income Renters

Student Paper Award, Nicole Van Lier, Reproductive Rationalities: Managing Industrial Water Appropriation and White Settler Authority in the St Clair-Detroit River Corridor, 1945-72


Cultural Geography Specialty Group

CGSG Adjunct Award

  • Elizabeth Nelson, Montana State University
  • Jacquelyn Johnston, Florida International University

Denis E. Cosgrove Research Grant

  • Kaitlin Stewart, University of North Texas – Department of Geography and the Environment, How receiving communities structure refugee settlement experiences: the case of Burmese immigrants in DFW (M.A.)
  • Ingrid Diaz, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Department of Geography, Feminizing plantation landscapes: Women, labor, and oil palm plantations in the Llanos of Colombia (Ph.D.)

CyberInfrastructure Specialty Group

CISG Robert Raskin Student Competition

  • Yuqin Jiang, University of South Carolina, Event Detection Method with Principal Component Analysis Based Sensor Placement (1st place)
  • Diya Li, Texas A&M University, A Geospatial Cyberinfrastructure for Street Level Flood Mapping and Emergency Management (2nd place)
  • Rebecca Vandewalle, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Synergizing High-Performance Computing and Network Science for Scalable Agent-Based Modeling of Human-Environment Interactions (3rd place)
  • Rajneesh Sharma, University of Georgia, A Smart-Sensing Based Cyberinfrastructure for Monitoring Belowground Soil Organic Carbon in Tidal Wetlands (4th place)
  • Yu Lan, The University of North Carolina at Charlotte, A web-based geographic framework for detecting and visualizing space-time clusters of infectious diseases: Using COVID-19 data in the United States as an example (4th place)

Development Geographies

Gary Gaile Travel Award

  • Siera Vercillo
  • Sujayita Bhattacharjee

Digital Geography

Graduate Student Paper Award

  • Jacob Saindon, University of Kentucky, Towards care-ful distraction: digital well-being and a politics of care during pandemic lockdowns in the U.S.
  • Ashley Hernandez, University of California, Irvine, The hood is not for sale: Collective Identity and Hood Solidarity in the Gentrification Debate in Boyle Heights and Beyond
  • Isaac Rivera, University of Washington, Department of Geography, Undoing Settler Imaginaries, Re-Imagining Digital Knowledge Politics

Racial Justice Research Award, Emma Gaalaas Mullaney, National Science Foundation Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Department of Community Sustainability College of Agriculture and Natural Resources, Michigan State University


Disability Specialty Group

IMGS Social Media Correspondent Travel Award, Ampai Thammachack, Queen’s University, In partnership with the RGS-IBG Geographies of Health & Wellbeing Research Group, the AAG Healthy & Medical Geography Specialty Group, and the 19th International Medical Geography Symposium (IMGS), the DSG co-sponsored a Social Media Correspondent funding opportunity at the June 2022 IMGS.

Todd Reynolds Student Paper Award, Erin Clancy, The Fantasy of Anorexia: Historical Entanglements of Evolutionary Thought, Food Restriction, and Curative Imaginaries


Economic Geography Specialty Group

Best Dissertation in Economic Geography

  • Nina Ebner, University of British Columbia, Lives on the Line: The (Re)Making of Uneven Development on the United States-Mexico Border
  • Clare Beer, University of California-Los Angeles, Bankrolling Biodiversity: Philanthro-environmentalism & Not-For-Profit Conservation Finance in Chile

Best Dissertation Award – Honorable Mention

  • Maximilian Buchholz, University of Toronto, A Relational Approach to Regional Economic Development: Essays on Migration, Globalization, and Inequality
  • Araby Smyth, University of Kentucky, Gender and Remittances: Lived Experiences of Women in Oaxaca, Mexico

Early Career Keynote Lecture in Economic Geography, Sage Ponder, Florida State University, Reimagining Public Finance for Climate and Racial Justice

Graduate Student Research Award in Economic Geography, Alejandra Bonilla Mena, Penn State University, Patterns and stages of real estate financialization in Latin American cities

Summer Institute in Economic Geography Travel Award

  • Sam Nowak, UCLA
  • Guillermo Bervejillo
  • Francesca Manning
  • Andrea Pollio
  • Valentina Castellini

Energy and Environment Speciality Group

Dissertation Data and Fieldwork Award

  • Adam Gallaher, University of Connecticut, Energy Transitions in Connecticut: Exploring low carbon solutions for transportation and electricity production
  • Andrea Furnaro
  • Caroline Griffith, University of Wisconsin-Madison
  • Erik Post, University of British Columbia

Best Student Paper Award, Edgar Virguez, Duke University, Assessing the effect of incorporating land-use parcel-level data and local zoning ordinances when quantifying renewable energy resources potential

Advancing Diversity and Inclusion Award, Wellington Romão Oliveira, Cearense Meteorology and Water Resources Foundation – FUNCEME, For promoting Diversity and Inclusion in the field of Energy Geography, Where is the clean energy? Contradictions in the discourse of wind farms in Northeastern Brazil

Professional Geographer Award, Benjamin Sovacool, Institute for Sustainable Energy – Boston University, Sovacool, BK, et al. “Dispossessed by decarbonisation: Reducing vulnerability, injustice, and inequality in the lived experience of low-carbon pathways,” World Development 131 (2021), 105116, pp. 1-14.

Student Travel Award, Hernan Bianchi Benguria, Ph.D. Student in Geography, University of Toronto, Mineral Diplomacy, the Battery Lobby, and Politics of Abandonment in the Atacama Desert, Chile

Travel Award, Claire Burch, University of Oklahoma


Ethnic Geography Specialty Group

Distinguished Service Award, Edris Montalvo, Cameron University

Outstanding Dissertation Proposal Award, Scott Markley, University of Georgia, Planning Spatial Obsolescence: Racial Capitalism, the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation, and the Production of Racialized Devaluation


Feminist Geographies Specialty Group

Rickie Sanders Junior Faculty Award, Carrie Freshour

Susan Hanson Dissertation Proposal Award, Carla Macal, Cuerpo-Territorio: Intergenerational Trauma, Cultural Memory, and Cartographies of Healing among GuateMaya Feminist Groups

Glenda Laws Student Paper Award

  • Ivana Mulcahy, The Transgressed Body: Coping in a Patriarchal System
  • Jennifer Langill, I shouldn’t have to do this alone: Intersectional livelihoods and single Hmong women in Thailand

Jan Monk Service Award, Rachel Pain

Conference Support Award

  • Siera Vercillo, University of Waterloo
  • Devin Wright, Tulane University
  • Josie Wittmer, Queen’s University
  • Amrita Kumar-Ratta, University of Toronto
  • Melisa Argañaraz Gomez

Geographic Information Science and Systems

Student Honors Paper Competition

  • Wei Chen, Iowa State University, Large-scale Urban Building Function Mapping by Integrating Web-based Geospatial Data (1st place)
  • Hoeyun Kwon, University of Iowa, A space-time-semantics approach to identify and visualize collective discourse and sentiments during events on Twitter (2nd place)
  • Fangzheng Lyu, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, An Integrated CyberGIS and Machine Learning Framework for Fine-Scale Prediction of Urban Heat Island Using Satellite Remote Sensing and Urban Sensor Network Data (honorable mention)
  • Yanan Wu, The University of Texas at Dallas, Location analytics of routine occurrences (LARO) to identify locations with regularly occurring events with a case study on traffic accidents (honorable mention)
  • Karl Tacheron, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, A method of generating pedestrian walksheds to measure neighborhood walkability (honorable mention)

Geographies of Food and Agriculture

Book Award

  • Madeleine Fairbairn, University of California Santa Cruz, Fields of Gold: Financing the Global Land Rush (winner)
  • Pascale Joassart-Marcelli, San Diego State University, The $16 Taco: Contested Geographies of Food, Ethnicity, and Gentrification (runner up)

Graduate Research Award

  • Lilly Zeitler
  • Madison Barbour

Geography Education Specialty Group

Gail Hobbs Student Paper Competition, Kimberly Dare, Propelling UCSC Undergraduates of Color in Environmental Studies Through Mentorship


Geomorphology Specialty Group

Graduate Student Paper Award – Ph.D., Chelsy Salas, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, Spatial and Temporal Distribution of Suspended Sediment Concentrations from Different Floodplain Geomorphic Environments of a Lowland Meandering River


Graduate Student Affinity Group

Research and Support Award

  • Michelle Harangody, University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa
  • Chantal Victoria Bright, University of Manchester, Water Security, Peace and Fragility in Liberia: An African Ecofeminist Approach
  • Peter DeBartolo, University of Oxford
  • Savannah Collins-Key, University of Tennessee
  • Tami Okamoto
  • Phurwa Gurung, University of Colorado Boulder

Hazards, Risks, and Disasters Specialty Group

Gilbert F. White Dissertation Award, Oronde Drakes, The University of Iowa

Gilbert F. White Thesis Award, Ashleigh Price, University of Southern Mississippi

Jeanne X. Kasperson Student Paper Award

  • Forest Cook, Utah State University
  • Salvesila Tamima, University of North Texas
  • Md Asif Rahman, University of Iowa
  • Wenxin Yang, Arizona State University

Health and Medical Geography

Data Visualization Contest

  • Cara Wychgram, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
  • Dorothy Mandell, University of Texas

Jacques May Thesis Prize, Amanda Hall, University of Maryland (Doctoral)

Melinda S. Meade Student Travel Award

  • Shamayeta Bhattacharya, University of Connecticut
  • Kyunghee Ryu, University of Texas – Dallas
  • Suraiya Parvin, Penn State University
  • Lukman Fashina, East Tennessee State University
  • Yoonjung Ahn, Florida State University

Peter Gould Student Paper Award

  • Changzhen Wang, LSU
  • Rebecca Steed, The University of Utah

IMGS 2022 Travel Award, Penelope Mitchell, The University of Alabama

IMGS Social Media Correspondent Award, Ampai Thammachack

Jacques May Thesis Prize, Aida Guhlincozzi, University of Missouri (Doctoral)


Historical Geography

Andrew Hill Clark Paper Award

  • Emily Holloway, Clark University, Bodies in Transit: Speculation and the Biopolitical Imaginary (1st place)
  • Samuel Brandt, UCLA, The Brazilian Scene (2nd place)

Carville Earle Research Award

  • Samuel Orndoff, San Diego State University & University of California, Santa Barbara, Research proposal in southern California (Indigenous peoples and environmental justice)
  • John J. (Jack) Swab, University of Kentucky, Intertwined Histories?: Urban Geography and Urban Sociology at the University of Chicago (Tie for first place)

Human Dimensions of Global Change

Student Research Award, Matthieu Jean-Claude Ahouangbenon, University of Delaware, To support research for their project, titled Integrating farmers’ decisions and high-resolution geospatial data for an improved crop-climate modeling framework


Landscape Specialty Group

Landscape Photography Competition

  • Mitchell Snyder, University of California, Davis, for his photo “Rodeo” (1st place)
  • Wellington Romão Oliveira, Universidade Federal do Ceará, for his photo of a Brazilian woman fishing (2nd place and People’s Choice Award)

Conference Registration Award, Morgan Rogers, UCLA


Latin America Specialty Group

Best Paper Award, Clare Marie Beer, UCLA, Bankrolling Biodiversity: The Politics of Philanthropic Conservation Finance in Chile

Solidarity Conference Support Award

  • Ulises Moreno-Tabarez, London School of Economics
  • Tami Okamoto, Cambridge

M.A. Fieldwork Award, Andrea Pimentel Rivera, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Cooperative Futures and Infrastructure Justice in Passenger Ferry Travel in Vieques, Puerto Rico

Ph.D. Fieldwork Award, Ingrid Alexia Diaz Moreno, University of North Carolina, Feminizing the Agrarian Frontier: Women Workers and Oil-Palm Plantation Landscape in the Llanos of Colombia


Latinx Geographies

Mutual-Aid Funding

  • Aideen Ocallaghan
  • Alana de Hinojosa
  • Camille Samuels
  • Cassidy Tawse-Garcia
  • Alejandra Bonilla
  • Corrin Turkowitch
  • Annelise Straw
  • Katrina Ward
  • Gianmaria Lenti
  • Ana Beatriz da Silva
  • Hilary Malson
  • Inari Sosa Aranda
  • Tagimamao Melanie Bean
  • Lauren Perez-Bonill

Mutual Aid Award, Lucien Meadows

Translation Services, Semaj Moore


Legal Geography

Graduate Student Presentation Award

  • Alicia Danze, A Case for Court Watch as Feminist Geopolitical Method for Immigration Research
  • Yanin Kramsky, A Case Study of Bodily Normativity in California’s Wildfire Governance
  • Jae Page, Necronationalism and the Law: A Legal Geography of Canada’s Deathscapes

Mountain Geography Specialty Group

Chimborazo Student Research Grant Award, Jamie Alumbaugh, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, The Holocene Drought History of an Andean Páramo


Paleoenvironmental Change

Butzer Award, Scott Mensing, University of Nevada-Reno,

Mosley Thompson Award, Anna Klimaszewski-Patterson, California State University-Sacramento, Klimaszewski-Patterson, A., Morgan, C.T. and Mensing, S., 2020. Identifying a Pre-Columbian Anthropocene in California. Annals of the American Association of Geographers, 111(3), pp.784-794

Student Poster/Presentation Award

  • Taber Friedel, Florida Atlantic University, Reconstructed vegetation of the past 400 years at Laguna Carse, Costa Rica
  • Ichchha Thapa, Indiana State University, Quantifying interactions of climate and disturbance events that drive forest dynamics in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem (M.S.)
  • Hang Li, Indiana State University, The spatial effects of the NDVI reconstruction in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem derived from the tree-ring (Ph.D.)

Political Geography

Alexander B. Murphy Dissertation Enhancement Award, Xiaofeng Liu, The University of Hong Kong, Sustainable Development with Chinese Characteristics? The Politics of the Green Belt and Road Initiative

Julian Minghi Distinguished Book Award, Orhon Myadar, University of Arizona, Mobility and Displacement: Nomadism, Identity, and Postcolonial Narratives in Mongolia

Ph.D. Paper Award, Allen Hai Xiao, University of Wisconsin-Madison, ‘The Belt and Road Initiative’ and Chinese Overseas Diplomatic Authorities: Discursive Representations and the Geopolitical Outreach in Africa

Richard Morrill Public Outreach Award, Evan Centanni, Political Geography Now

Stanley D. Brunn Junior Scholar Award, Julie Klinger, University of Delaware

Virginia Mamadouh Outstanding Research Award, Gregory Thaler, with Cecilia Viana and Fabiano Toni: From Frontier Governance to Governance Frontier: The Political Geography of Brazil’s Amazon Transition


Recreation, Tourism, and Sport

Early Career Researcher Paper Award, Anna-Maria Walter, University of Oulu, The self in a time of constant connectivity: Romantic intimacy and the ambiguous promise of mobile phones for young women in Gilgit, northern Pakistan

Student Paper Award, Katarzyna Emin, University of Florida, Brand Awareness in Textual Data: An Analysis of TripAdvisor Reviews on UNESCO World Heritage Sites in Poland


Regional Development and Planning

Ashok K. Dutt Award for Best Graduate Student Paper

  • Grete Gansauer, Montana State University, Beyond city limits: infrastructural regionalism in rural Montana, USA
  • Ning Xiong, University of Utah, Tech Firm Births and Agglomeration Economies: (Un)Related Variety, Specialization, and Spatial Externalities

Remote Sensing

Student Honors Paper Competition Award

  • Xiaoyue Tan, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Modeling the direction and magnitude of angular effects in nighttime light remote sensing (1st place)
  • Chishan Zhang, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, A phenology-guided Bayesian-CNN (PB-CNN) framework for crop yield estimation and uncertainty analysis (2nd place)
  • Blair Mirka, The University of New Mexico, Evaluation of thermal infrared imaging from uninhabited aerial vehicles for arboreal wildlife surveillance (3rd place)
  • Yunze Zang, Beijing Normal University, Mapping rapeseed in China using Sentinel data: an automated approach based on index-based sample generation and one-class classifier (ISG-OC) (3rd place)

Student Illustrated Paper Competition Award

  • Yin Liu, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, CropSow: a novel modeling framework to estimate field-level crop sowing date with multi-scale satellite time series (1st place)
  • Shuyu Chang, Pennsylvania State University, The application of remote sensing and machine learning to improve early warning systems for harmful algal events in the Highland Lake Chains, TX (2nd place)
  • Claire Wang, Clark University, Quantifying the time series pattern of a binary variable: land change across 36 years in Brazil (3rd place)

Student Paper Award, Bradi Heaberlin, Department of Geography and School of Informatics, Computing, and Engineering at Indiana University


Socialist and Critical Geography SG

James Blaut Award, Deondre Smiles, University of Victoria

Travel Award

  • Mikael Omstedt, University of British Columbia
  • Laura Williams, University of Hawaii Manoa
  • Stefan Norgaard, Columbia University
  • Elisa Favaro Verdi, University of São Paulo (USP)
  • Emma Gaalaas Mullaney

Organizing Fellowship, Leah Montange


Spatial Analysis and Modeling

John Odland Student Paper Competition

  • Lenka Hasova, University of Bristol (1st place)
  • Meiliu Wu, University of Wisconsin, Madison (2nd place)
  • Mehak Sachdeva, Arizona State University (3rd place)

Student Travel Award

  • Changzhen Wang
  • Jingyi Xiao
  • Jiuying Han
  • Yu Lan
  • Providence Adu
  • Weiying Lin
  • Yue Lin
  • Zijian Wan
  • Binbin Lin
  • Yunlei Liang
  • Leonardo Calzada
  • Seonga Cho
  • Gyoorie Kim

Transportation Geography

Edward L. Ullman Award, David Banister, University of Oxford, for contributions to the field of Transportation Geography

Dissertation Award, Paul Jung, University of North Carolina, Charlotte, Distance Friction and Spatial Interaction Dynamics of International Freight Transportation

Student Travel Award

  • Kyusik Kim, Florida State University
  • Jeff Allen, University of Toronto

Undergraduate Student Affinity Group

Undergraduate Student Poster Competition

  • Ruthanne Ward, Clark University, Effects of Adjusting the Calibration and Validation Interval on Simulating Forest Loss in Maranhao & Tocantins, Brazil
  • Christina Salzmann, University of Montana, High-Mountain Hazards in the Indian Himalaya: An Assessment of the Causes and Effects of the Chamoli Flood in 2021
  • Aloysie Kwizera, University of Texas at Austin, Change in Gender Role Attitudes Among East African Immigrants in the Dallas-Fort Worth Metro Area

Urban Geography Specialty Group

Glenda Laws Undergraduate Student Paper Award, Poon Kylie Yuet Ning

Graduate Student Paper Award, Albert Rossmeier

Virtual Conference Access Award

  • Sara Maani
  • Zhe Wang
  • Aleem Mahabir
  • Albert Rossmeier
  • Billy Southern
  • Chantal Rietdijk
  • Carolyn Swope
  • Ana Beatriz da Silva
  • Josh Merced

Alternative Modes of Scholarship Award, Billy Southern

Ph.D. Dissertation Award, Robert Chlala

Urban Geography Graduate Student Fellowship Award, Lauren Weber


Water Resources Specialty Group

Olen Paul Matthews and Kathleen A. Dwyer Fund for Water Resources Award, Dr. Thomas LaVanchy, Department of Geography, Oklahoma State University, Finding Community Voice for Water Justice after Day Zero

Student Research Presentation

  • Sumiya Bilegsaikhan, National University of Singapore, When there is too much, yet too little of the Nam Ou left: an everyday geography of water in northern Laos
  • Krista Harrington, Portland State University, Understanding Unlikely Alliances on Snake River Dam Removal through a Political Ecology Lens

Gilbert White Distinguished Career Award, Dr. Chansheng He, Western Michigan University

Student Research Paper, Wenjing Zhang, University of Melbourne, Centre, locality and the transition to sustainable urbanisation in China: water for the future city, Xiong’an

Student Research Proposal, Arun Pallathakda, Portland State University, Detection, classification, and mapping of stormwater infrastructure in Portland using AI and Google Street View


Wine Beer and Spirits

Student Paper/Poster Award, Walter Furness, Texas State University, Yeasty politics and entanglements with humans in synthetic biology

The Publication Award, Karl Raitz, University of Kentucky, Making Bourbon: Geographical History of Distilling in Nineteenth-Century Kentucky

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During her special presentation on March 1, 2022, AAG Atlas Awardee Marcia McNutt calls to geographers to help build the resilient planet of tomorrow that will sustain our children and grandchildren. She talked about stopping climate change, promoting sustainable use of resources, reducing inequality, halting pandemics, promoting public safety in response to natural and man-made hazards and increasing healthy lifespan among other issues.

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During her special presentation on March 1, 2022, AAG Atlas Awardee Marcia McNutt calls to geographers to help build the resilient planet of tomorrow that will sustain our children and grandchildren. She talked about stopping climate change, promoting sustainable use of resources, reducing inequality, halting pandemics, promoting public safety in response to natural and man-made hazards and increasing healthy lifespan among other issues.

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