All Stories

  1. Reconnecting to the social: Ontological foundations for a repurposed and rescaled SIA
  2. Ethics as first method: Reframing geographies at an(other) ending-of-the-world as co-motion
  3. Indigenous rethinking challenging White academic privilege
  4. Challenging the colonial legacy of/at Macquarie
  5. Relationships, social networks and the emergence of recovery-based river management: implications for practice and policy
  6. Decolonizing People, Place and Country: Nurturing Resilience across Time and Space
  7. Supporting champions in river management
  8. Metro infrastructure planning in Amsterdam: how are social issues managed in the absence of environmental and social impact assessment?
  9. Reflecting on How Social Impacts are Considered in Transport Infrastructure Project Planning: Looking beyond the Claimed Success of Sydney’s South West Rail Link
  10. Witnessing, saving, serving? A relational approach to community development in the suburbs of a global city
  11. The importance of relational values in river management: understanding enablers and barriers for effective participation
  12. Indigenous Geographies
  13. Land Rights
  14. Limitations of Technical Approaches to Transport Planning Practice in Two Cases: Social Issues as a Critical Component of Urban Projects
  15. New Indigenous geographies
  16. Dr William James Albert Jonas AM (1941‐2019)
  17. Resettling, disconnecting or displacing? Attending to local sociality, culture and history in disaster settings
  18. Unsettling the taken (-for-granted)
  19. Forests, law and customary rights in Indonesia: Implications of a decision of the Indonesian Constitutional Court in 2012
  20. Recovering local sociality: Learnings from post-disaster community-scale recoveries
  21. Decolonizing property in Taiwan: Challenging hegemonic constructions of property
  22. Indigenous rights vital to survival
  23. Island Geographies: Essays and ConversationsElaineStratford, editor, Routledge, London and New York (Routledge Studies in Human Geography Series), 2017, xiv + 198 pp, ISBN 9781138921726 (hdbk), 9781315686202 (ebk)
  24. Reframing Indigenous water rights in ‘modern’ Taiwan: reflecting on Tayal experience of colonized common property
  25. Follow-up and social impact assessment (SIA) in urban transport-infrastructure projects: insights from the parramatta rail link
  26. Practicing Sociogeomorphology: Relationships and Dialog in River Research and Management
  27. Weaving Indigenous and sustainability sciences to diversify our methods
  28. Corrigendum
  29. Geographic contributions to institutional curriculum reform in Australia: the challenge of embedding field-based learning
  30. Towards Closure? Coexistence, remoteness and righteousness in Indigenous policy in Australia
  31. Prospects for, and Challenges of, Research Design and Training in Cross-Disciplinary Environmental Management Research
  32. Procedural Vulnerability and Institutional Capacity Deficits in Post-Disaster Recovery and Reconstruction: Insights from Wutai Rukai Experiences of Typhoon Morakot
  33. The idea of ‘Country’: Reframing post-disaster recovery in Indigenous Taiwan settings
  34. Ecological Footprinting as a Top-Down and Bottom-Up Approach to Complete Campus Engagement and Transformation Towards the One Planet Goal
  35. Organisational Capacity for Engaging with Indigenous Australians
  36. Indigenous geographies III
  37. Coexisting with Fire? A Commentary on the Scale Politics of Adaptation
  38. Intercultural capacity deficits: Contested geographies of coexistence in natural resource management
  39. New geographies of coexistence: Reconsidering cultural interfaces in resource and environmental governance
  40. Here, there, everywhere
  41. Ethnogeomorphology
  42. Procedural vulnerability: Understanding environmental change in a remote indigenous community
  43. YOSHIDA Michiyo: Women, Citizenship and Migration: The Resettlement of Vietnamese Refugees in Australia and Japan
  44. Indigenous geographies II
  45. Sustainability Assessment
  46. Theoretical Foundations
  47. Indigenous geographies I
  48. Book Reviews
  49. Natural and Unnatural Disasters: Responding with Respect for Indigenous Rights and Knowledges
  50. Knowing/Doing
  51. Geography for and with indigenous peoples: indigenous geographies as challenge and invitation
  52. Sustainable indigenous futures in remote Indigenous areas: relationships, processes and failed state approaches
  53. Invisible institutions in emergencies: Evacuating the remote Indigenous community of Warruwi, Northern Territory Australia, from Cyclone Monica
  54. Participation
  55. Environmental Management
  56. Resource Tenure
  57. Frontier imaginings and subversive Indigenous spatialities
  58. Indigenous Geographies
  59. Land Rights
  60. Institutional change in natural resource management in New South Wales, Australia: Sustaining capacity and justice
  61. (Re)asserting Indigenous Rights and Jurisdictions within a Politics of Place: Transformative Nature of Native Title Negotiations in South Australia
  62. Creating Anti-colonial Geographies: Embracing Indigenous Peoples? Knowledges and Rights
  63. Hidden Histories in Geography: A politics of inclusion and participation
  64. Rethinking the building blocks: ontological pluralism and the idea of ‘management’
  65. On Teaching and Learning Resource and Environmental Management: reframing capacity building in multicultural settings
  66. Editorial
  67. The importance of process in social impact assessment: Ethics, methods and process for cross-cultural engagement
  68. Elspeth Anne Young (1940-2002)
  69. Scale and the other: Levinas and geography
  70. Rethinking Resource Management
  71. Second Nature: The History and Implications of Australia as Aboriginal Landscape
  72. Constructing Engagement: Geographical education for justice within and beyond tertiary classrooms
  73. Constructing Engagement: geographical education for justice within and beyond tertiary classrooms
  74. Editorial: For Whom do we Teach?: The paradox of 'excellence'
  75. Some thingsdochange: indigenous rights, geographers and geography in Australia
  76. Scale as relation: musical metaphors of geographical scale
  77. Victims of Development: Resistance and Alternatives
  78. SIA, SUSTAINABILITY, AND DEVELOPMENTALIST NARRATIVES OF RESOURCE REGIONS
  79. Heritage Management in New Zealand and Australia: visitor management, interpretation and marketing.
  80. Aborigines, bauxite and gold
  81. Book reviews
  82. Social Impact Assessment as ‘Applied Peoples' Geography’
  83. Mining and Indigenous Peoples in Australasia.
  84. Can SIA empower communities?
  85. “A world in a grain of sand”: towards a reconceptualisation of geographical scale
  86. Mining and Indigenous People in Australasia
  87. Aborigines and restructuring in the mining sector: vested and representative interests
  88. Book reviews
  89. Social impact assessment and resource development: issues from the Australian experience
  90. Resource Development and Aborigines: The Case of Roebourne 1960–1980
  91. Scale
  92. Ontological Pluralism in Contested Cultural Landscapes