Welcome to the October 2023 edition of the EUC Research Update听 - bringing you highlights from research activities at 91亚色's . We invite you to view our past updates on our Research News page.
Research Spotlights

Patricia Perkins on building climate-resilient commons.

Sergio Guerra on hauntology, Hip-Hop and diasporic memory in the colonial Anthropocene.

Abidin Kusno on Jakarta: A city of a thousand dimensions.

Behnaz MoradiGhiasabadi on forest management systems based on IoT technology.

Kaitlin Pal on applications of ecological footprint and biocapacity to Saugeen Ojibway Nation land claims.

Isaac Thornley on ideology, disavowal, and the politics of the trans mountain expansion.
Accolades, Appointments, and Awards

Congratulations to 91亚色 Honorary Doctorate . Bassey is a Nigerian architect, poet and environmental activist. He received an Honorary Doctor of Laws at EUC鈥檚 convocation ceremony (shared with Glendon, Education, Lassonde and Science) this October.
Bassey is director of the ecological think tank (based in Nigeria) and member of the steering committee of 鈥 a network resisting the expansion of fossil fuels extraction in the Global South. Bassey鈥檚 books include among others. He recently authored an article titled "" (Resilience, 2023). For more info, see .

A warm welcome to our new EUC postdoctoral researcher . Mohtat graduated with Ph.D. in Planning from the Faculty of Environment at the University of Waterloo. Her research focuses on equity and justice in urban climate change adaptation, flood risk management, and green infrastructure planning. She has experience in developing GIS analysis, participatory mapping activities, and public engagement processes for advancing climate justice. She has an MA degree in post-disaster reconstruction and a BSc in architectural engineering. As EUC's post-doctoral researcher in climate change, housing, and equity, she will engage in exploratory research to generate insights into the current state of knowledge on how climate change is impacting the most vulnerable communities in urban Canada. Her postdoctoral fellowship is funded by Gore Mutual Insurance in partnership with Social Innovation Canada.

CITY Institute and EUC postdoctoral fellow, , has been awarded a听 for a project called "Beyond Esri: Making Abolition in Geography" with听Jane Henderson听(Dartmouth College),听Leah Montange听(University of Toronto), and the听.听The project aims to uncover the carceral-financial relationships between Esri and law enforcement actors, increase awareness among geographers about Esri鈥檚 role in policing and surveillance, and encourage critical reflexivity for abolitionist praxis within the discipline of geography. Smyth is part of Linda Peake's听 project. Her role in the project is to comparatively analyze interview and life history data on the theme of money, debt, and finance in women鈥檚 everyday lives. Her research has been published in听;听;听; and听. Smyth's research work has been featured in the .
Publications and Reports
Basu, R. (2023) . Concluding chapter in David Giband, Kevin Mary, Nora Nafaa (Eds) . Springer, Human Geography collection.
Biorklund, L. (2023). . Journal of Refugee Studies. August.
Creutzig, F., Goetzke, F., Ramakrishnan, A., Andrijevic, M., and Perkins, P. (2023). . Global Environmental Change, Volume 82.
Duker, P., Vandergeest, P., & Klanarongchao, S. (2023). Conservation and Society Advance online publication. 10.4103/cs.cs_129_22, October.
Keil, R. (2023). in edited by Patrick Le Gal猫s and Jennifer Robinson. 1st Edition, September. London, Routledge.
Keil, R. (2023). . sub\urban. zeitschrift f眉r kritische stadtforschung.
Montero, S. and Sotomayor, L. (2024). . EURE, Vol. 50, No. 149.
Olusegun, C., Ojo, O., Olusola, A. et al. . Modeling Earth Systems and Environment.
Remmel, T. (2023). Functions for Estimating Centrographic Statistics. License GPL-3. CRAN Repository.
EUC Media Coverage and Events

EUC's online seminar series kicks off this November! With the theme "," the series will bring together degrowth scholars with EUC faculty moderators for dialogues on degrowth.
Organized by Lina Brand Correa with and MES Degrowth IDS group members -- Kelly Gingrich, Elaine Howarth, Shahed Shafazand and Anna Stratton -- the seminar series will explore the concept of degrowth - what it is (and isn鈥檛), some key debates in this emerging academic field and social movement, and how it connects to big questions around environmental and urban change.
Session 1 will be held on Wednesday, November 22, 1pm on the topic 鈥Degrowth: A slogan, a movement or a concept?鈥 with guest speakers, Peter Victor and Elena Hofferberth with Anna Zalik as moderator. Discussion will focus on the origins of degrowth, the controversies around its name, the advances in recognition of degrowth in academia, grassroots initiatives and political debates, and the directions of future research and action on degrowth. .

Deborah Barndt has been recently interviewed in Spanish by EUC PhD graduate Tania Hernandez who works in the Mexican parliament for a weekly podcast, .
The focus of the interview is their new collective book, co-authored with EUC PhD alumni Lauren Baker and Alexandra Gelis.

The City Institute held a research seminar series chaired by Stefan Kipfer titled "Divide and displace: The birth of carceral urban planning in Montreal featuring Ted Rutland from Concordia University with EUC alumna, Jamilla Mohamud as discussant.
The talk examined the history of les Belangers, a group of young Haitians in northeast Montreal who decided to stand together against white racial violence in the early 1980s, the police response to the group, and how the police response was part of a larger political-economic transformation in Montreal. The talk argued that dynamics of racial violence and counter-violence - the struggle of groups like Belangers - are an essential part of the gradual emergence of neoliberal and carceral forms of urban planning.

The National University of Singapore (NUS) Press recently sponsored a of Abidin Kusno's new book: . In this book, Kusno teases out some of the dimensions that have given shape to contemporary Jakarta, including the city鈥檚 expanded flexibility in accommodating capital and labour, the formal and the informal, and the consistent lack of planning which can be understood as both politics and poetics of governing.
The book, which has been described as "richly textured, revealing, brilliant and original", is the first publication in NUS new book series, Across the Global South - Built Environments in Critical Perspective featuring Kusno and series editors Anoma Pieris, Farham Karim, and Lee Kah Wee.

October is Fair Trade month and 91亚色 is ready to announce that it will be a Fair Trade Campus soon!
The event coincides with the re-launch of Las Nubes coffee at 91亚色 and in celebration, EUC, LAPS and held a Fair Trade panel event with the theme: Fair Trade and Sustainable Development: How fair trade benefits farmers, their communities, and the environment.
Las Nubes Director Felipe Montoya and Associate Director Ana Martinez participated in the panel discussion along with Jonathan Duran (CoopeAgri), Bill Barrett (Planet Bean Coffee) and Gavin Fridell (St. Mary's University).

What is Indigenous Design and Planning and why do we need it in our communities? Listen and find out as Dr Ted Jojola, a distinguished professor from the University of New Mexico (and visitor at EUC in February 2023) drops by podcast hosted by Paulette Moore, EUC PhD candidate and founding member and co-owner of the media-arts collective informed by traditional Onkwehon:we (Indigenous) teachings and focused on revitalizing communities through stories of land, language, and relationships. The Aunties Dandelion is partnering with Jojola and his Indigenous Design and Planning Institute (ID+PI) beginning in late January on a limited podcast series (6 episodes - every two weeks) about ID+PI's work in rematriating brownfield sites. Each episode will highlight a case study including a burn site on Navajo Nation, an Indigenous community battling climate change and relocation in western Alaska, and the rematriation of an historically contaminated site that eventually became the First Americans Museum in Oklahoma City.

Luisa Sotomayor and Mark Winfield were featured in 91亚色U Magazine on .
The article authored by John Lorinc highlights the environmental features of the Markham Campus that reflect 91亚色鈥檚 commitment to the UN鈥檚 17 Sustainable Development Goals, and are part of the University鈥檚 strategy to achieve net zero by or before 2049. 91亚色 is also part of a broader move across the post-secondary sector to drive low-carbon design, including in new student residence projects.
Sotomayor underscores the importance of looking into the potential benefits of affordable and sustainable housing especially for students. The potential synergies, adds Winfield, Co-Chair of EUC鈥檚 , should have particular resonance with post-secondary institutions that are under increasing pressure to provide or develop better and more affordable housing for students.

Patricia Wood and David Rossiter (Western Washington University, and 91亚色 Geography PhD Alumnus) launched their book , which has been shortlisted for the 2023 Lieutenant Governor's Historical Writing Awards.
Commentaries were provided by Leora Gansworth (91亚色 Geography Alumna/Provostial Indigenous Postdoctoral Fellow at Osgoode Law School) and Matt Farish (Department of Geography and Planning, University of Toronto).
During the talk, the authors highlighted the unstable ideological foundation of land and title arrangements in British Columbia such that divergent historical geographies 鈥 land as sovereignty, land at the disposal of the state, land as a site to invest capital 鈥 have been used to secure citizenship for some and undermine it for others.
Contact Us
The EUC Research Update is compiled by the Research Office at EUC: Associate Dean Research, Graduate & Global Affairs Philip Kelly, Research Officer Rhoda Reyes, and Work-Study Students Xinyu Mei and Lorraine Wong. Thanks to Paul Tran for the web design and development.
We welcome the opportunity to pass along research-related information and achievements from our whole community - faculty, postdocs, visiting scholars, students, and retirees.
News for future updates can be submitted using the EUC Kudos and News form, circulated monthly. Or, send your news directly to: eucresea@yorku.ca
If you are not on the EUC community listserves, but would like to receive this Research Update each month, send an email to eucresea@yorku.ca
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