“…In developing theories of relational space geographers have drawn on a variety of sources (Sheppard, 2008: 2608) including actor-network theory (Murdoch, 2006), feminist relational thought (England and Lawson, 2005), and the process-based ontologies of Deleuze and Guattari, Spinoza, Bergson, Whitehead, and others (Martin and Secor, 2013; Thrift, 2006; Whatmore, 2006; Marston et al, 2005; Massey, 2005). Recently, such thinking has played a significant role in work on care ethics (Cloutier et al, 2015; Ramdas, 2015; England and Henry, 2013), geopolitics (Dittmer, 2014), emotions and affect (Andrews et al, 2013), governance (Pollard and Samers, 2013), economic geography (Georgeson et al, 2014; Ahlqvist, 2013), migration (Collins, 2012; Gielis, 2011; Darling, 2010), urban politics (McGuirk, 2015, 2012; McCann and Ward, 2010), children’s geographies (Kullman, 2015, 2010; Tipper, 2011), anarchist geographies (Springer, 2014), neoliberalism (Peck et al, 2010), borders (Doevenspeck, 2011), the body (Abrahamsson and Simpson, 2011), civil society (Marshall and Staeheli, 2015), sexuality (Di Pietro, 2016), food security (Jarosz, 2014), the nonhuman (Buller, 2015, 2014; Shaw et al, 2013), and topology (Jones, 2014; Martin and Secor, 2013).…”