2019
DOI: 10.1177/0309132519833453
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Diversity, representation, and the limits of engaged pluralism in (economic) geography

Abstract: Within geography writ large, and economic geography in particular, there has been increasing interest in ‘engaged pluralism’ – defined by its proponents as lively and respectful engagement across theoretical, methodological, and topical lines – to increase diversity and build mutual respect among scholars. Drawing on feminist and postcolonial scholarship, we offer a sympathetic critique of engaged pluralism, grounded in a review of publishing trends in economic geography. Our findings reveal theoretical inerti… Show more

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Cited by 46 publications
(42 citation statements)
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References 107 publications
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“…The debate has focused on whether to accept the full range of available methodological approaches, or whether to exclude approaches deemed insufficiently geographical in content or overly rigid in their methodological prescriptions. The recent flaring of the dispute (Rosenman et al 2019;Yeung 2019) underscores the persistence of tensions around methodological differences and highlights the absence of a robust set of criteria for adjudicating among approaches. A second, somewhat one-sided debate is concerned with the policy relevance of research and the extent to which the policy domain can or should influence academic research (Peck, 1999;Martin 2001).…”
Section: Introduction: Methodology Theory and Politicsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The debate has focused on whether to accept the full range of available methodological approaches, or whether to exclude approaches deemed insufficiently geographical in content or overly rigid in their methodological prescriptions. The recent flaring of the dispute (Rosenman et al 2019;Yeung 2019) underscores the persistence of tensions around methodological differences and highlights the absence of a robust set of criteria for adjudicating among approaches. A second, somewhat one-sided debate is concerned with the policy relevance of research and the extent to which the policy domain can or should influence academic research (Peck, 1999;Martin 2001).…”
Section: Introduction: Methodology Theory and Politicsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Engaged pluralism can be read as an attempt to cultivate economic geography’s intimate publics organized around a perceived shared affective orientation toward and alongside the subdiscipline (Berlant, 2011). Yet, as Rosenman et al (2019) show, this ‘feeling rule’ about economic geography does not necessarily reflect the actual realities of writing and publishing in economic geography, which continues to privilege a relatively narrow set of mostly white men scholars and topics (see also Cockayne et al, 2018). This particular appeal to pluralism, as a suggested (and, perhaps, rather singular) way of feeling and knowing about economic geography may not measure up to the object that it attempts to describe, or its set of associations that include institutional circumstances and researchers’ relationships to them.…”
Section: Queer Affects Minor Pluralismsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Writing this paper as part of Geography Compass' economic geography section, we thereby want to contribute to the long standing and continuing struggle of feminist scholars to expand the focus of economic geography (most recently cf. e.g., MacLeavy, Roberts, & Strauss, 2016; Pugh, 2018; Rosenman, Loomis, & Kay, 2020). As this study demonstrates once more, matters of care lie at the core of economic geography as a discipline.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%