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Elgar Research Agendas outline the future of research in a given area. Leading scholars are given the space to explore their subject in provocative ways, and map out the potential directions of travel. They are relevant but also visionary.Over the past decade, digital geographies has emerged as a dynamic area of scholarly enquiry, critically examining how the digital has reshaped the geography of our world. Bringing together authors working at the cutting-edge of the field, and grounding abstract ideas in case studies, this Research Agenda looks at the ways in which technology has altered all aspects of society, culture and the environment.Chapters explore four key themes: the role of technology infrastructures; the ways that winners and losers are created at the digital margins; the power of the digital to create new spaces; and the ways that the digital is changing research methods. Critically outlining the state of play around these topics, each chapter unpacks a case study related to pioneering research, suggesting possible avenues for research that digital geographers might pursue. The Research Agenda concludes with an identification of three priority areas for future work: the intimate nature of our relations with technology; approaches to resisting the power of technology companies; and finally, the need for more interdisciplinary approaches to examining digital geographies.Rooted in the subject areas of technology, geography, sociology and political science, A Research Agenda for Digital Geographies will be greatly valuable to human and socio-cultural geographers, and digital social scientists with an interest in how the digital affects society and space.
Edited by Tess Osborne, Lecturer in Human Geography, School of Geography, Geology and the Environment, University of Leicester and Honorary Research Fellow, School of Geography, Earth and Environmental Science, University of Birmingham and Phil Jones, Reader in Cultural Geography, School of Geography, Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Birmingham, UK
Contents:1 Introduction to A Research Agenda for DigitalGeographies 1Tess Osborne and Phil JonesPART I DIGITAL INFRASTRUCTURES AND TECHNOLOGIES2 Digital geographies and the location economy:towards a transdisciplinary research agenda 19Peta Mitchell, Marcus Foth and Markus Rittenbruch3 Do digital technologies have politics? Imaginaries,practices and socio-political implications of civicblockchain 27Fabio Iapaolo, Chiara Certom. and Paolo Giaccaria4 Concepts for robot geographies 41Shanti Sumartojo5 The radio spectrum: an imperceptible infrastructure? 53Daisy CurtisPART II DIGITAL METHODS AND APPROACHES6 Virtual reality, place and affect 69Zoe Gardner, Katy Bennett and Stefano De Sabbata7 Wearable biosensors: an agenda for digitalembodied methods 83Tess Osborne, Paulo Morgado, Daniel Paiva andH. Shellae Versey8 Digital film in therapeutic landscapes 97Rosie Knowles9 Doing digital children’s geographies, imperfectly:methodological reflections on a child-led digitaltour in a slum neighbourhood in the Philippines 111Aireen Grace AndalPART III DIGITAL MARGINS10 Situating data: a critique of universalistapproaches to data 127Azadeh Akbari11 The digital geographies of an asylum seeker:exploring the political potential of digitalself-representation for marginalised populations 133Seerat Kaur12 Trusting data: the everyday geographies of gaymen and digital data 147Carl Bonner-Thompson13 Digital geographies and ecologies 159Jonathon Turnbull and Adam SearlePART IV DIGITAL SPACEMAKING14 Geographies of the metaverse 177Phil Jones15 Disruptive spacemaking and extended reality 187Rosie Wright16 Digital placemaking: experiencing places throughmobile media 199Maciej Gł.wczyński17 The mundane digital geographies of public space:a speculative visual approach 211Robert Lundberg18 Conclusion: toward a research agenda for digitalgeographies 225Phil Jones and Tess OsborneIndex 231
‘Covering a wide range of topics and areas of research in short and effective chapters, Osborne, Jones, and a diverse group of collaborators have assembled a useful guide to the multiple trajectories, current state of knowledge, and future possibilities of digital geographies.’