GEO Flashcards
Why do we need geography now? What is it’s goal? Example?
We need geography now to ground and explain the complexities of everyday life, uniquely with interdisciplinary approaches.
Geography works in service of a better world by organizing society, people, environment, politics, etc, in the aim of solving everyday problems
Ex. Raffi’s Research: Heat Domes increasing negative effect on livability & affordability of Vancouver’s housing crisis by eviction of tenants to install AC, increasing prices. To solve this problem, AC was proposed to be an essential utility, such as water, electricity, etc.
What is Critical Geographical Approach? Example?
Describing the (1) proximate drivers and identifying their multiple (2)
structural drivers through (3) research and the careful consideration
of how the claim might (4) shape the bounds of the problem and its
possible solutions.
What are proximate causes? Example?
The cause of the everyday challenge; the seemingly obvious, direct, close.
The bus is late; proximate causes could be traffic, construction, weather, etc.
Caribou at risk of extinction due to forestry, oil, gas mining developments that cause habitat degradation.
What are structural causes? Example?
Root causes driving or contributing to the challenge; the historical, political, geographical causes that have become assumed normal everyday happenings.
Government still approves developments by deriving legitimacy from economic growth and benefits of growth. Overprediction and uneven distribution of economical benefits for Indigenous communities.
What are evidence gathered by research that support structural causes?
Historical examples (ex. Government has passed numerous projects, subsidies and tax breaks to development projects), geographical analysis (ex. melting of glaciers), economic institutions/actions (ex. REIT, car lobbying)
What are implications for social and political change after analyzing causes?
The ways in which we can have agency over our everyday life and the challenges we face.
Ex. Reporting misconceptions of industrial development through news outlets, transferring SROs to public hands for higher standards of living, etc.
What is Henry Lefebvre’s perspective of the everyday life? Example?
The everyday is not just a familiar experience, but a paradox or a contradiction, something that is known and unknown, the everyday is a problem of research. Looking closely at the everyday can reveal wider social and political patterns and dynamics.
A women buying a bag of sugar speaks to the economical state of her country, her habits, culture, class, income level, the political state, etc.
Settler Colonialism
A structure that did not leave or succeed Indigenous assimilation, used to occupy Indigenous lands and replicate Euro-Canadian political and economic institutions, facing continuous resistance.
Ex. Musqueam history, Pacific Spirit Park, Resource extraction
Indigenous Self-Determination & Agency
Indigenous Self-Determination: ability of Indigenous nations to freely determine their political status and freely pursue their economic, social and cultural development.
Ex. Indigenous nations are not homogenous, they have diverse opinions, political positions & diverse experiences with colonial and capitalist structures. Opposing or participating in colonial activities, the Indigenous are trying to achieve self-determination with tremendous structural constraints.
Agency: capacity to act, to shape structures & conditions under conditions not of our own choosing
Key Structural Forces with Housing
Land
- Enclosure+Neoliberal Capitalism
Property
- Commodification: hypercommodification, deregulation, globalization
Real Estate
- Financialization: decoupling of residential needs, Delta Rent, Gentrification-Rent Gap
Asset
Neoliberal Capitalism
Instead of providing essential social and public services (healthcare, education, clothing, food, etc.) they are placed into the hand of private markets
Enclosure
The process of policy of fencing in waste or common land so as it to make it private property, pursued in Britain 18th-early 19th centuries.
Commodification & Hypercommodification + Implications
Commodification: general process by which the economic value of a thing dominates its other uses. Products are only commodities because they have a dual nature, exchange value & use value
Hyper Commodification: all material + legal structures of housing turned into commodities: land, labour, etc
Implications: housing is no longer a right, social/cultural/emotional values ignored, living space becomes distributed based on ability to pay and produce profit, but ability to pay is unequal
3 Structures Speeding Up Commodification
- Deregulation: weakening or abolishing of regulations, customs & rules governing residential property making real estate a more liquid commodity, but still deeply involved.
- Financialization: increasing power and prominence of actors and firms that engage in profit accumulation through the servicing and exchanging of money and financial instruments. Don’t ever see the building, causing serious consequences for those who live there
- Globalization: foreigner involvement, symptomatic decoupling of housing from residential needs & people, attracting to global investor’s needs & people
Use Value vs Exchange Value
Use Value: utility/use to satisfy a human need related to physical material properties, diverse & not always what producer intends them to be
Exchange Value (price that one pays for commodity): ratio/value at which a commodity can be exchanged for other commodities on a market, expressed through money