Digital technologies increasingly mediate relations between humans and nonhumans in a range of contexts including environmental governance, surveillance, and entertainment …
A Watson, D Lupton - International Journal of Qualitative …, 2022 - journals.sagepub.com
Restrictions on physical movements and in-person encounters during the COVID-19 crisis confronted many qualitative researchers with challenges in conducting and completing …
Major changes to home life and work practices globally have been brought about by the COVID-19 crisis. Periods of strict restrictions placed on people's movements outside their …
While feminist geographers have long aimed to trouble the conceptions of the city/home (and, by extension, public/private) divides, the digital city and the digital home are still often …
HO Faxon - Annals of the American Association of Geographers, 2022 - Taylor & Francis
Almost 5 billion people—two thirds of the global population—now go online. The Internet has changed how we work, learn, govern, and fall in love. Yet despite its digital turn …
E McElroy - International Journal of Urban and Regional …, 2023 - Wiley Online Library
In this article I place tenant screening data grabbing practices in tension with the ongoing work of housing justice‐based tool making. While the tenant screening industry has spent …
Environmental values depend on social-ecological interactions and, in turn, influence the production of the underlying biophysical ecosystems. Understanding the nuanced nature of …
C Schurr, N Marquardt, E Militz - Progress in Human …, 2023 - journals.sagepub.com
Technologies are at the heart of geographic analysis. More-than-human geographies, actor- network theory, and new materialism have all called for attending to technological …
This article outlines the connections between technologies (mobile devices, photo-editing apps, social media, and so on), people, and digital/physical places through the lens of …