All Stories

  1. The Genocidal Trail of Agrarian Capitalism: Guarani–Kaiowa's Struggle for Survival
  2. Indigeneity and Indigenous Politics: Ground-breaking Resources
  3. A reterritorialização e a luta pela água dos atingidos pela transposição do rio São Francisco no Nordeste brasileiro
  4. The reterritorialization and the struggle for water of those affected by the transfer of the São Francisco River in the Brazilian Northeast
  5. World out of difference: Relations and consequences
  6. GEOGRAFINDO AFETOS: escritos, imagens, intensidades
  7. Guarani-kaiowa’s political ontology: singular because common
  8. Making the Amazon a frontier: where less space is more
  9. Indigeneity and political economy: Class and ethnicity of the Guarani-Kaiowa
  10. Ontological politics and the struggle for the Guarani-Kaiowa world
  11. Indigenous Labor and Land Resources: Guarani–Kaiowa’s Politico–Economic and Ethnic Challenges
  12. Indigenous Peoples, Land-based Disputes and Strategies of Socio-spatial Resistance at Agricultural Frontiers
  13. Towards more effective online environmental information provision through tailored Natural Language Generation: Profiles of Scottish river user groups and an evaluative online experiment
  14. Challenges and contribution of indigenous geography: Learning with and for the Kaiowa-Guarani of South America
  15. Political agency of indigenous peoples: the Guarani-Kaiowa’s fight for survival and recognition
  16. Centralidade da Fronteira: Ensaio sobre a Origem e Evolução de Fronteiras Sócio-Espaciais
  17. Online and Offline Representations of Biocultural Diversity: A Political Ecology Perspective on Nature-Based Tourism and Indigenous Communities in the Brazilian Pantanal
  18. Amazon's dead ends: Frontier-making the centre
  19. The Politics of Agribusiness and the Business of Sustainability
  20. Colombia’s Fractured History and Continued Challenges Following the Havana Accord
  21. Consolidating the Past and Risking the Future: Colombia's Developmental Trajectory and the Prospects for a Lasting Peace in the Wake of the Havana Accord
  22. Seeding a narrow future and harvesting an exclusionary past: The contradictions and future scenarios of agro-neoliberalism in Brazil
  23. The Paradox of Water Abundance in Mato Grosso, Brazil
  24. Agribusiness and the Neoliberal Food System in Brazil
  25. Applying a ‘Value Landscapes Approach’ to Conflicts in Water Governance: The Case of the Paraguay-Paraná Waterway
  26. Places of Agribusiness: Displacement, Replacement, and Misplacement in Mato Grosso, Brazil
  27. Encroachment and entrenchment of agro-neoliberalism in the Centre-West of Brazil
  28. Addressing the Knowledge Gaps in Agroecology and Identifying Guiding Principles for Transforming Conventional Agri-Food Systems
  29. The Value Base of Water Governance: A Multi-Disciplinary Perspective
  30. Rent of agribusiness in the Amazon: A case study from Mato Grosso
  31. Questionando a pobreza nas fronteiras do desenvolvimento
  32. Place-making at the frontier of Brazilian agribusiness
  33. Water scarcity and the exclusionary city: the struggle for water justice in Lima, Peru
  34. Agriculture, Environment and Development
  35. Environmental communication in the Information Age: Institutional barriers and opportunities in the provision of river data to the general public
  36. The politico-ecological economy of neoliberal agribusiness: displacement, financialisation and mystification
  37. The Production of Poverty and the Poverty of Production in the Amazon: Reflections from Those at the Sharp End of Development
  38. Cracking the nut of agribusiness and global food insecurity: In search of a critical agenda of research
  39. Web as Corpus Supporting Natural Language Generation for Online River Information Communication
  40. Supply of Online Environmental Information to Unknown Demand: The Importance of Interpretation and Liability Related to a National Network of River Level Data
  41. The paradox of poverty in rich ecosystems: impoverishment and development in the Amazon of Brazil and Bolivia
  42. Prospects for Payments for Ecosystem Services in the Brazilian Pantanal: A Scenario Analysis
  43. Environmental Governance at the Core of Statecraft: Unresolved Questions and Inbuilt Tensions
  44. Institutional responses to climate change: opportunities and barriers for adaptation in the Pantanal and the Upper Paraguay River Basin
  45. The Political Ecology of the State
  46. Theorizing state-environment relationships
  47. The Adaptive Nature of the Neoliberal State and the State-led Neoliberalisation of Nature: Unpacking the Political Economy of Water in Lima, Peru
  48. The value of water values: departing from geography towards an interdisciplinary synthesis
  49. Assessing development and the idea of development in the 1950s in Brazil
  50. The Urban Political Ecology of Post-industrial Scottish Towns: Examining Greengairs and Ravenscraig
  51. Rethinking Brazil’s Pantanal Wetland
  52. The Brazilian Developmentalist State in Historical Perspective: Revisiting the 1950s in Light of Today's Challenges
  53. The prospects for the water management framework in the Douro, Portugal
  54. The persistent water problems of Lima, Peru: Neoliberalism, institutional failures and social inequalities
  55. The neoliberalization of water in Lima, Peru
  56. The geography of multiple scarcities: Urban development and water problems in Lima, Peru
  57. The Positioned Construction of Water Values: Pluralism, Positionality and Praxis
  58. The Political Geography of Environmental Regulation: Implementing the Water Framework Directive in the Douro River Basin, Portugal
  59. Water Sustainability and Politics – Examples from Latin America and Implications for Agroecology
  60. Bringing Water Regulation into the 21st Century: The Implementation of the Water Framework Directive in the Iberian Peninsula
  61. KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT FOR LAND DEGRADATION MONITORING AND ASSESSMENT: AN ANALYSIS OF CONTEMPORARY THINKING
  62. Applying the Strategic-Relational Approach to Urban Political Ecology: The Water Management Problems of the Baixada Fluminense, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
  63. Deliberative assessment in complex socioecological systems: recommendations for environmental assessment in drylands
  64. Cross-scale monitoring and assessment of land degradation and sustainable land management: A methodological framework for knowledge management
  65. Values, Meanings, and Positionalities: The Controversial Valuation of Water in Rio de Janeiro
  66. Integrating water and agricultural management: Collaborative governance for a complex policy problem
  67. The Political Nexus between Water and Economics in Brazil: A Critique of Recent Policy Reforms
  68. O que é justiça ambiental
  69. Water reforms in Brazil: opportunities and constraints
  70. Desenvolvimento nacional e gestão de recursos hídricos no Brasil
  71. The Challenge to Revert Unsustainable Trends: Uneven Development and Water Degradation in the Rio de Janeiro Metropolitan Area
  72. Regional development, nature production and the techno-bureaucratic shortcut: the Douro River catchment in Portugal
  73. Water Policy Making in Scotland: Political Demands and Economic Pressures
  74. The development and application of water management sustainability indicators in Brazil and Scotland
  75. Águas que não correm mais pro mar
  76. Assessing Water Requirements for Irrigated Agriculture in Scotland
  77. The Troubled Waters of Brazil: Nature Commodification and Social Exclusion
  78. A Framework of Indicators to Assess the Sustainability of Freshwater Systems
  79. Virtual Water in an Empty Glass: The Geographical Complexities behind Water Scarcity
  80. Water Resources Development in the SãTo Francisco River Basin (Brazil):Conflicts and Management Perspectives
  81. Expanding the Hydroinformatics Agenda