2010
DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-8330.2009.00749.x
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Geographers Mobilize: A Network‐Diffusion Analysis of the Campaign to Free Ghazi‐Walid Falah1

Abstract: In summer 2006, Professor Ghazi-Walid Falah, a political geographer and editorin-chief of the journal Arab World Geographer, was arrested by Israeli police after taking photographs of rural landscapes in Northern Galilee. Falah was subsequently held for 23 days, incommunicado, and without charge. An international campaign to "Free Ghazi" was launched by his family, friends and colleagues, largely over academic listservs and other media. Utilizing social network analysis and contextualizing the campaign within … Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…Indeed, a rich cultural history is embedded in the landscape around us, a vernacular sequent occupancy (Whittlesey 1929) that holds the stories of our past if we are willing to see it. Finally, the act of obtaining gasoline to fuel modern mobility is performative in nature, an everyday geographical and cultural practice in which individuals intersect with wider social, economic, and political forces (Nash 2000;de Socio 2010). Active, derelict and zombie gasoline stations on Virginia's Eastern Shore reveal current and past cultural practices and economic functions reflective of life on the Shore, and how they have changed through the decades.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Indeed, a rich cultural history is embedded in the landscape around us, a vernacular sequent occupancy (Whittlesey 1929) that holds the stories of our past if we are willing to see it. Finally, the act of obtaining gasoline to fuel modern mobility is performative in nature, an everyday geographical and cultural practice in which individuals intersect with wider social, economic, and political forces (Nash 2000;de Socio 2010). Active, derelict and zombie gasoline stations on Virginia's Eastern Shore reveal current and past cultural practices and economic functions reflective of life on the Shore, and how they have changed through the decades.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the UK for example, 50 councils support the work of the “Nuclear Free Local Authorities” movement, where cities are encouraged to claim responsibility for disarmament, highlighting how their locality might present potential for empowerment and participation (Schregel, ). At a smaller scale still, De Socio () points to campaigns for local “nuclear‐free zones.” For example, activists in Worcester, Massachusetts, consciously sought small scale zones of nuclear disarmament, as a means of challenging the wider geopolitical status quo “from below” (Miller, ). These peaceful uses of zonal geographies highlight more prosaic aspects of nuclear technology.…”
Section: Zonesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In other words, new technological regimes may facilitate both enhanced and expanded counterpublic activity. In one case, for example, academic email listservs (a somewhat older form of social media) were used to mobilize a global network of academics to successfully press for the release of an imprisoned geographer (de Socio ).…”
Section: Section Ii: Understanding Digital Activismmentioning
confidence: 99%