Journal ArticleParallel publicationPublished versionDOI: 10.48548/pubdata-2580

Bridging senses of place and mobilities scholarships to inform social-ecological systems governance: A research agenda

Chronological data

Date of first publication2024-05-13
Date of publication in PubData 2025-11-20

Language of the resource

English

Related external resources

Variant form of DOI: 10.1016/j.apgeog.2024.103286
Gottwald, S., Kołodyńska, I., Buchecker, M., Di Masso, A., Fagerholm, N., Frąckowiak, M., Hakkarainen, V., Kajdanek, K., Lau, U., Manzo, L. C., Ortiz-Przychodzka, S., Pearson, J., Quinn, T., Rogowski, Ł., Stedman, R., Stewart, W. P., Trąbka, A., Williams, D. R., von Wirth, T., Zawieska, J., & Raymond, C. M. (2024). Bridging senses of place and mobilities scholarships to inform social-ecological systems governance: A research agenda. Applied Geography, 167, Article 103286
Published in ISSN: 0143-6228
Applied Geography

Abstract

Uncertainty and change are increasingly commonplace as communities respond to impacts of social-ecological change including climate change, and dangerous levels of pollution. Given the extent of these crises, new approaches are needed to support responses. Here we identify challenges and discuss insights that the nexus of Senses of place (SoP) and mobilities research offers in navigating such uncertainty. We conducted a two-round Delphi, followed by a workshop, and collaborative writing process with a global network of researchers with expertise in either or both SoP and mobilities research. Participants identified five challenges at the place-mobility nexus that emerge when a social-ecological system is disrupted. We use the 2022 Odra River fish die-off to exemplify the identified challenges: 1) accounting for power dynamics, inequalities and motility; 2) doing justice to more-than human actors; 3) integrating multiple and sometimes nested spatial scales; 4) considering temporalities of place and mobilities, and 5) embracing multisensoriality. To address these challenges, we recommend drawing on diverse methods and knowledge co-creation processes that combine more-than-human perspectives, multisensoriality, and engage in the dynamic relations between places to understand people-place disruptions in the face of socio-spatial precarity. Addressing such knowledge gaps requires stronger collaboration of mobilities and place researchers.

Keywords

Senses of Place; Mobility; Social-Ecological System; Ecological Catastrophe; Odra River; Research Agenda

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Research