Society, Space, and Social Justice


Geographies of Intersectionality

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Edited by Jennifer Y. Pomeroy, Vandana Wadhwa, Contributions by Caitlin M. Alcorn, Luis Emilio Cecchi, Emmanuel Eliot, Lillie Greiman, Poojitha Kondabolu, Craig Ravesloot, Rayna Sage, Vidyamali Samarasinghe
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LEXINGTON BOOKS
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Format:
PAPERBACK
Pages:
212

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Jennifer Y. Pomeroy is assistant professor of geography in the Department of History and Political Science at York College of Pennsylvania. Vandana Wadhwa is founder and CEO of Meridian R&C LLC.

Acknowledgments Introduction Part I - Emerging and Continuing Spaces of Social Injustice Chapter 1: Community Starts at Home: Toward Equitable Housing for People with Disabilities Andrew Myers, Lillie Greiman, Brendan Hogg, Rayna Sage, Craig Ravesloot Chapter 2: Environmental Justice and Outdoor Spaces: Structural Racism's Persistence, and the Dynamics of Change Yonit Yogev Chapter 3: Subversion of Gender Justice: Public Policy on Sri Lankan Migrant Housemaids Vidyamali Samarasinghe Chapter 4: Territorialization of Violence: Temporality and Scale: The HIV/AIDS Epidemic in Mumbai, India, in the Mid-1990s Emmanuel Eliot Chapter 5: A Woman's Place: Examining Perceptions of Urban Social Space in India Vandana Wadhwa and Jennifer Y. Pomeroy Part II - Structural Approaches to Social Justice Chapter 6: Intersectional Organizing as an Approach to Social Justice: Lessons from Brazil's Domestic Workers' Movement Caitlin M. Alcorn Chapter 7: Freedom, Justice and Space: Infrastructure as a Driver of Spatial Justice? Luis Emilio Cecchi Chapter 8: AIDS and Aid in Uganda: PEPFAR-Social Justice or Structural Violence? Vandana Wadhwa and Poojitha Kondabolu Conclusion: Reflections on 'Tranquil Waters' Index About the Contributors

Geographers often study social justice through the lens of class, caste, race, or gender. In Society, Space, and Social Justice, Jennifer Pomeroy and Vandana Wadhwa take an intersectional approach to the multidimensional issues of social justice, which are intertwined with globally expressed spatial connotations. This edited collection is unique and should be critically acclaimed. -- Saraswati Raju, retired, Jawaharlal Nehru University This politically and intellectually powerful book is for anybody who thinks social justice is no longer on the agenda. Far from a monolithic concept, the rich case studies in this collection stretch our understanding of the complex struggles that social justice must necessarily overcome. -- Nik Heynen, University of Georgia All readers-regardless of discipline and standpoint-will find much to stimulate their thinking and challenge their assumptions. Co-editors Vandana Wadhwa and Jennifer Pomeroy have assembled a passionate collective of scholars and practitioners who critically explore social injustices in remarkably diverse contexts and through multiple perspectives. Contributors engage with themes of medicalization of the body and geographies of care, critical race theory and socio-environmental injustice, human rights and the right to spatial freedom in contexts ranging from North America to South Asia, and from South Africa to South America. Among the challenges of most edited volumes is to offer a whole that is more than the sum of its disparate chapters. Wadhwa and Pomeroy have done a wonderful job: This representative selection of original studies is no small achievement. What makes their volume stand out is how the individual chapters-collectively-contribute to our more empathetic understandings of the ongoing need for social justice in multiple contexts. -- Jeremy Tasch, Towson University This edited collection is of extreme value to those teaching, researching, and working at the intersections of social justice and structural violence in various locations around the world. The geographers contributing to this volume use an applied approach to engage with structural justice across genders, ethnicities, (dis)abilities, and countries in a manner that is unique for its inclusiveness. Society, Space, and Social Justice represents an important and sophisticated step in the study of spaces of (in)justice across a wide variety of topics and is a contemporary example of the importance of geography and these particular geographers to that analysis. One of the unique aspects of this collection is the steps the authors suggest to advocate for a more just society. This applied approach, combined with a thorough conceptual framework, will be of great use in the discipline. The theoretical and applied aspects of this volume make it a go-to text for health geography, feminist geography, urban geography, and other (sub)disciplines concerned with making the world a more just place in which to live. -- Cynthia Pope, Central Connecticut State University

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