“…It is not surprising then that scholars pursuing place-based research employ a variety of terms such as ‘emplacement’, ‘inhabiting place’, ‘ethics-in-place’ and ‘critical place inquiry’ (see short summary in Springgay and Truman, 2022) to examine the affective spatialities and temporalities of place, often influenced by feminist, anti-colonial, and more-than-human praxis oriented towards more just futures (e.g., Alaimo, 2016; Neimanis, 2017; Springgay and Truman, 2017; Truman, 2021). For instance, Collin's (2019) work on civic pride and shame in Nottingham, UK, illustrates how emotions, values, and practices can shape new forms of urban identity and resistance. Other examples include affective relations with place among (street) children and how everyday encounters, especially with fear, shape agency, inclusion, difference, contestation, and belonging (Witten et al, 2019; Gadd, 2021).…”