Geographies of Hope-in-Praxis: Collaboratively decolonizing relations and regenerating relational spaces

Author:

Hazlewood Julianne A1,Middleton Manning Beth Rose2,Casolo Jennifer J34

Affiliation:

1. University of California, Santa Cruz, California, USA and Roots & Routes IC, Santa Cruz, California, USA

2. Native American Studies, University of California, Davis, California, USA

3. Pluriversidad Maya Ch'orti', Association Instituto de Ciencia y Tecnología Maya Ch'orti' Upejkna'r e Ja', Camotán, Chiquimula, Guatamela;

4. Institute of Development Policy, University of Antwerp, Antwerp, Belgium and Instituto de investigación y Desarrollo, Nitlapan, University; Centroamericana-Nicaragua, Managua, Nicaragua

Abstract

As burgeoning new forms of authoritarianism and fascism expand their reach, Geographies of Hope-in-Praxis stem from the locus of the present moment. Constellations of peoples re-rooted into place refuse Western ideals of democracy and development and engage with one another in new arrangements based on ancestral ways of knowing. In this Environment and Planning E: Nature and Space issue on Geographies of Hope-in-Praxis (GgsHope-in-Praxis), we step into ongoing conversations about hope, push back on business as usual, and amplify understandings of initiatives to (re)assemble different kinds of wor(l)ds. Our collection “geographizes” hope by digging into hope’s praxes—theories with action. Resurgent versions of hope can be better understood within the contexts of six dimensions—place, alliance, the unthinkable, perseverance, resilience, and the (im)possible—that provide diverse lenses for delving deeper into hope's complex topographies. Together, the articles reach across regional differences and bridge on-the-ground approaches. We activate hope through long-term, reciprocal, and accountable community-based methodologies in Brazil, Ecuador, the Philippines, and Southeast Alaska, California, and Kentucky in the USA. GgsHope-in-Praxis come to life in the process of collaboratively decolonizing relations and regenerating relational spaces. Vines of hope creep into crevices to interrupt and transform oppressive systems, intertwine to (re)weave localized communities together in living networks, and expand realities to increasingly join in solidarity with one another and amplify diverse pathways towards environmental-with-racial justices.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Geography, Planning and Development,Development,Nature and Landscape Conservation,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law

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