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E-grāmata: Handbook on the Changing Geographies of the State: New Spaces of Geopolitics

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  • Formāts: PDF+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 06-Oct-2020
  • Izdevniecība: Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781788978057
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  • Formāts: PDF+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 06-Oct-2020
  • Izdevniecība: Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781788978057

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This authoritative Handbook presents a comprehensive analysis of the spatial transformation of the state; a pivotal process of globalization. It explores the state as an ongoing project that is always changing, illuminating the new spaces of geopolitics that arise from these political, social, cultural, and environmental negotiations. Drawing together a diverse set of expert contributors, this book showcases compelling scholarship on the changing geographies of the state. Chapters examine the state from a range of theoretical angles and analyse a variety of relevant themes, including feminist geographies, the relationship between state and environment, urbanization, security geographies, nation-building, and geographical political economies. The book considers the state as spatial in both form and outlook, illustrating how it occupies existing and constantly-changing political geographic conditions, and how it is maintained by the practices of categorizing and managing territory. Taking a multidisciplinary approach, this Handbook will be a valuable resource for academics and students across a range of subjects, including human geography, international relations, political science, spatial planning, and urban studies. The key case studies explored will also provide valuable examples for scholars and policy-makers seeking a better understanding of the broad scope of geopolitics in a globalizing world.

This authoritative Handbook presents a comprehensive analysis of the spatial transformation of the state; a pivotal process of globalization. It explores the state as an ongoing project that is always changing, illuminating the new spaces of geopolitics that arise from these political, social, cultural, and environmental negotiations.

Recenzijas

It is an excellent collection of contributions, drawing together many parallel streams and deserves to be on the reading agenda of researchers and students alike. -- David Newman, Geography Research Forum The Handbook on the Changing Geographies of the State, with a comprehensive geographical scope, and with academic powerhouses such as John Agnew and Jason Dittmer, immediately positions itself as a collection demanding attention. -- Franck Billé, Eurasian Geography and Economics 'This Handbook introduces readers to key ideas and issues related to geography and state power in the 21st century. A compelling collection, it investigates the production and transformation of the state, focusing on the spatial practices and expressions of political power over time. The volume brings together an extraordinary group of contributors, presenting researchers and students with a rich compendium of expert knowledge on the state as a form of social and political organisation that remains vital to understand and interrogate in these turbulent times.' --Katharyne Mitchell, University of California, Santa Cruz, US

List of figures
ix
List of tables
x
List of contributors
xi
Preface and acknowledgements xx
Cover concept: the state as abstraction xxi
Michael Heller
Natalie Koch
1 Changing geographies of the state: themes, challenges and futures
1(29)
Sami Moisio
Andrew E.G. Jonas
Natalie Koch
Christopher Lizotte
Juho Luukkonen
PART I CONCEPTUAL POINTS OF DEPARTURE
2 Introduction: conceptual points of departure
30(3)
Sami Moisio
3 Cultural geographies of the state and nation
33(13)
Alex Jeffrey
4 The everyday state
46(15)
Rhys Jones
5 Feminist geographies of state power
61(11)
Dana Cuomo
Vanessa Massaro
6 Assemblage and the changing geographies of the state
72(10)
Jason Dittmer
7 The state and historical geographical materialism
82(11)
Kevin R. Cox
PART II NATIONALISM, IDENTITY AND THE STATE
8 Introduction: nationalism, identity and the state
93(3)
Natalie Koch
9 The great swindle of nationalist sovereigntism: on territory, psychology, and communication technologies
96(11)
Laca Muscara
10 Indigenous nationalisms as profound challenges to settler colonial regimes
107(12)
Kate Coddington
11 Orientalist-settler colonialism: foundations and practices of post-9/11 white nationalism in the United States
119(13)
Christabel Devadoss
Karen Culcasi
12 The `problem' of religion in the secular state: sectarianism and state formation in Lebanon
132(13)
Caroline Nagel
13 Building nations/building states/building cities: concrete symbols of identity
145(13)
Benjamin Forest
Sarah Moser
PART III GEOGRAPHICAL POLITICAL ECONOMIES OF THE STATE
14 Introduction: geographical political economies of the state
158(3)
Sami Moisio
15 Geoeconomics and the state
161(12)
John Agnew
16 The geography of policy-making: mobile policy, territory and state space
173(12)
Russell Prince
17 Neuroliberalism in the digital age: the emerging geographies of the behavioural state
185(13)
Mark Whitehead
18 The combined ascent of the austerity state and the security state and its changing geographies
198(14)
Bernd Belina
Tino Petzold
19 Feminist political economies of the Nordic welfare state: gendering the economy and economizing gender equality
212(13)
Hanna Ylostalo
PART IV THE STATE, ENERGY AND THE ENVIRONMENT
20 Introduction: the state, energy and the environment
225(3)
Natalie Koch
21 State of nature: on the co-constitution of resources, state and nation
228(12)
Tom Perreault
22 Governmentality and the global geopolitics of consumption-based environmental accounting
240(11)
Afton Clarke-Sather
23 Already existing dystopias: tribal sovereignty, extraction, and decolonizing the Anthropocene
251(12)
Andrew Curley
Majerle Lister
24 Sustainability as `corporate social responsibility': paradoxes of hydrocarbon development in the Russian Arctic
263(13)
Stephanie Hitztaler
Veli-Pekka Tynkkynen
25 Sovereignty and climate necropolitics: the tragedy of the state system goes `green'
276(12)
Meredith J. DeBoom
PART V SECURITY AND THE STATE
26 Introduction: security and the state
288(3)
Christopher Lizotte
27 Imagining the `outside' danger inside: the critical geopolitics of security and the armed forces in Latin America (1960-2018)
291(11)
Jeronimo Rios Sierra
Heriberto Cairo
28 The school-security nexus and the changing geographies of the state
302(11)
Nicole Nguyen
29 Spheres of influence
313(12)
Stefanie Ortmann
30 Cyberspace: the new frontier of state power
325(14)
Frederick Douzet
PART VI TERRITORY, THE STATE AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT
31 Introduction: territory, the state and urban development
339(4)
Andrew E.G. Jonas
32 Territory, the state and geopolitics of mega city-region development in China
343(12)
Yi Li
Fulong Wu
33 Competitive upscaling in the state: extrospective city-regionalism
355(13)
David Wachsmuth
34 Emerging citizenship regimes and rescaling (European) nation-states: algorithmic, liquid, metropolitan and stateless citizenship ideal types
368(17)
Igor Calzada
35 Post-crash cities: the Great Recession, state restructuring and urban governance
385(14)
Mark Davidson
36 `Urbanizations' of green geopolitics: new state spaces in global unsustainability
399(15)
Yonn Dierwechter
PART VII SPATIAL PLANNING AND THE STATE
37 Introduction: spatial planning and the state
414(3)
Juho Luukkonen
38 Private expertise and the reorganization of spatial planning in England
417(12)
Matthew Wargent
Gavin Parker
Emma Street
39 Metropolitanization as state spatial transformation
429(15)
Carola Fricke
Enrico Gualini
40 Transforming the geography of the welfare state through neoliberal spatial strategies: the case of Denmark
444(13)
Kristian Olesen
41 The absolutist city developer: predatory megaprojects and the state-planning nexus in Qatar
457(10)
Agatino Rizzo
42 State land concessions and the spatial politics of rural planning
467(14)
Miles Kenney-Lazar
Index 481
Edited by Sami Moisio, Professor of Spatial Planning and Policy, Department of Geosciences and Geography, University of Helsinki, Finland, Natalie Koch, Associate Professor of Geography, Department of Geography, Syracuse University, US, Andrew E.G. Jonas, Professor of Human Geography, Department of Geography, Geology and Environment, University of Hull, Christopher Lizotte, Lecturer in Human Geography, Oxford Brookes University, UK and Juho Luukkonen, University Lecturer in Geography, Department of Geography and Geosciences, University of Helsinki, Finland