TY - JOUR
T1 - Urban geography in crisis times
T2 - Insights from a feminist project
AU - Peake, Linda
AU - Katsikana, Mantha
AU - Adeniyi-Ogunyankin, Grace
AU - Datta, Anindita
AU - Basu, Swagata
AU - De Souza, Karen
AU - Ip, Penn Tsz Ting
AU - Marcus, Joy
AU - Ponce, Carmen
AU - Razavi, Nasya S.
AU - Smyth, Araby
AU - Yousuf, Biftu
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 Linda Peake et al.
PY - 2024/9/11
Y1 - 2024/9/11
N2 - In this short intervention addressing the impact of crises on geographical knowledge practices, we, members of GenUrb (a multi-sited, longitudinal, partnered urban research project), ask, "what counts as crisis?", sketching out epistemological and methodological points about our project's engagement with this call. We query the adeptness of dominant Eurocentric epistemologies in addressing crises, adopting the work of Bedour Alagraa, who places crises firmly within a historical-geographical colonial framing that conceptualizes crises not through rupture but through continuation. We illustrate the utility of this epistemological framing of crisis, honing in on the everyday violence that women continually experience, with our research in the cities of Cochabamba, Delhi, Georgetown, Ibadan, Ramallah, and Shanghai, showing that one in every two women participants had experienced intimate partner violence. We further ask what crises mean for the methodologies we adopt, specifically concerning questions of the co-production of knowledge and methods.
AB - In this short intervention addressing the impact of crises on geographical knowledge practices, we, members of GenUrb (a multi-sited, longitudinal, partnered urban research project), ask, "what counts as crisis?", sketching out epistemological and methodological points about our project's engagement with this call. We query the adeptness of dominant Eurocentric epistemologies in addressing crises, adopting the work of Bedour Alagraa, who places crises firmly within a historical-geographical colonial framing that conceptualizes crises not through rupture but through continuation. We illustrate the utility of this epistemological framing of crisis, honing in on the everyday violence that women continually experience, with our research in the cities of Cochabamba, Delhi, Georgetown, Ibadan, Ramallah, and Shanghai, showing that one in every two women participants had experienced intimate partner violence. We further ask what crises mean for the methodologies we adopt, specifically concerning questions of the co-production of knowledge and methods.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85204237460&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.5194/gh-79-283-2024
DO - 10.5194/gh-79-283-2024
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85204237460
SN - 0016-7312
VL - 79
SP - 283
EP - 288
JO - Geographica Helvetica
JF - Geographica Helvetica
IS - 3
ER -