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In this paper, we critically analyze the response to the COVID-19 pandemic, highlighting not only the breadth of knowledge geographers have already contributed to this assessment, but also the surprisingly limited critique within... more
In this paper, we critically analyze the response to the COVID-19 pandemic, highlighting not only the breadth of knowledge geographers have already contributed to this assessment, but also the surprisingly limited critique within geography, social sciences and the broadly defined “Academic Left” of the authoritarian dimension of the public health policies of 2020 onwards. We conclude with a number of research questions for the aftermath of the pandemic, with the hope that they will help spur the growth of a new wave of anti-authoritarian Leftist geographical thinking that reaffirms the centrality of human rights and civil liberties to making the world a better place.
Key words: COVID-19; authoritarianism; public health; Academic Left; pandemic response.
HOW TO CITE: Simandan, D., Rinner, C., Capurri, V., (2023). The academic left, human geography, and the rise of authoritarianism during the COVID-19 pandemic. Geografiska Annaler: Series B, Human Geography, https://doi.org/10.1080/04353684.2023.2168560.
Even though Pietraszewski acknowledges the tentative nature of the theory and the multiple lines of adjacent research needed to flesh it out, he insists that the finite set of primitives he identified is necessary and sufficient for... more
Even though Pietraszewski acknowledges the tentative nature of the theory and the multiple lines of adjacent research needed to flesh it out, he insists that the finite set of primitives he identified is necessary and sufficient for defining social groups in the context of conflict. In this commentary I expose three interrelated conundrums that cast doubt on this simplistic presumption.

How to reference: Simandan, D. (2022). Social groups and the computational conundrums of delays, proximity, and loyalty. Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 45, E121, https://www.doi.org/10.1017/S0140525X21001205.
Our research seeks to answer whether immigrants see the act of relocating to a different country and the place-based intercultural encounters associated with this migration as being conducive to wisdom. The study is interested in... more
Our research seeks to answer whether immigrants see the act of relocating to a different country and the place-based intercultural encounters associated with this migration as being conducive to wisdom. The study is interested in qualitatively analysing the spatial constitution of wisdom and the perceptions of wisdom that immigrants possess. This situated approach looks at wisdom in relation to narrativity, subjectivity, and positionality, as opposed to the now-dominant psychological view of wisdom as a quantifiable phenomenon that can be measured on a positivist scale. Both inter-country migration and living amongst other ethnicities in migrant cities are spatial processes of relevance to our attempt to think geographically about how people become wiser. We investigate empirically and develop the foregoing themes by drawing on in-depth semi-structured interviews conducted with Romanian immigrants in Ontario, Canada, between 2014 and 2018.

How to cite: Kutor, S.K., Raileanu, A. and Simandan, D., 2022. Thinking geographically about how people become wiser: an analysis of the spatial dislocations and intercultural encounters of international migrants, Social Sciences & Humanities Open. 6(1): 100288, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ssaho.2022.100288
Scholars in the field of population health need to be on the constant lookout for the danger that their tacit ideological commitments translate into systematic biases in how they interpret their empirical results. This contribution... more
Scholars in the field of population health need to be on the constant lookout for the danger that their tacit ideological commitments translate into systematic biases in how they interpret their empirical results. This contribution illustrates this problematic by critically interrogating a set of concepts such as tradition, trust, social capital, community, or gender, that are routinely used in population health research even though they carry a barely acknowledged political and ideological load. Alongside this wider deconstruction of loaded concepts, I engage critically but constructively with Lindström et al.'s paper "Social capital, the miniaturization of community, traditionalism and mortality: A population-based prospective cohort study in southern Sweden" to evaluate the extent to which it fits with other empirical findings in the extant literature. Taking as a point of departure the intriguing finding that social capital predicts cardiovascular and all-cause mortality only for men, but not for women, I argue that future research on the nexus of social capital, health, and mortality needs to frame gender not only as a demographic and statistical variable, but also as an ontological conundrum and as an epistemological sensibility.
DOI (Open Access): https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ssmph.2021.100971
Drawing on semi-structured in-depth interviews with Romanian immigrants in Ontario, Canada, conducted between 2014 and 2018, this paper explores how the experiences acquired by the Romanian immigrants through migration and multicultural... more
Drawing on semi-structured in-depth interviews with Romanian immigrants in Ontario, Canada, conducted between 2014 and 2018, this paper explores how the experiences acquired by the Romanian immigrants through migration and multicultural intercourse facilitate the development of personal wisdom. We show how our research participants perceived these geographical processes of migration and place-based multi-ethnic co-habitation to account for their growing wiser than their earlier selves. Specifically, we organize the description of these perceptions into three interrelated themes: (1) changes in perspective, (2) the learning of new things, and (3) the role of place in fostering wisdom. Against this background, the paper also highlights the boundary conditions within which these processes may or may not foster the development of wisdom, acknowledging that not all migratory and multicultural experiences lead to prosocial and adaptive outcomes. Our discussion of these boundary conditions with the research participants coalesced into five recurrent themes: (1) adaptation to the new environment and social system, (2) the role of the host environment as a boundary condition, (3) the problem of unmet expectations, (4) the magnitude of the cultural shocks, and (5) the language barrier. Bearing the complex politics of these boundary conditions in mind, we argue that the experience of international migration and subsequent cross-cultural interaction can be usefully understood as a "fertile ground" for the flourishing of personal wisdom, which itself can act as an individual and collective resource for cohabitation in multicultural settings.

How to cite: Kutor, S.K., Raileanu, A., Simandan, D., 2021. International migration, cross-cultural interaction, and the development of personal wisdom. Migration Studies, volume 9, issue 3, pp. 490-513, https://doi.org/10.1093/migration/mnz049
The ‘four epistemic gaps’ interpretation of positionality and situated knowledges developed in the anchor article goes significantly beyond Donna Haraway’s original formulation of the thesis of situated knowledges. It does so by... more
The ‘four epistemic gaps’ interpretation of positionality and situated knowledges developed in the anchor article goes significantly beyond Donna Haraway’s original formulation of the thesis of situated knowledges. It does so by organizing the study of the processes that provincialize and politicize perception and cognition alongside a logical sequence of epistemic gaps that shape the quantity and content of information accessible to different subjectivities. In this contribution, I address four sets of productive tensions and constructive criticisms sparked by the anchor article and highlight how they can help fulfill the promise of a generative research program that engages multiple other voices.
Simandan, D., (2019). “Beyond Haraway? Addressing constructive criticisms to the ‘four epistemic gaps’ interpretation of positionality and situated knowledges” Dialogues in Human Geography [2017 impact factor 10.214, rank 1/84 Geography], vol. 9(2), pp. 166-170, https://doi.org/10.1177/2043820619850272 .
The contribution by De Dreu and Gross (2019) oversimplifies the complexity of the topic. I provide counterarguments that undermine the two sweeping contentions on which the paper's argument depends and I argue that asymmetric conflict is... more
The contribution by De Dreu and Gross (2019) oversimplifies the complexity of the topic. I provide counterarguments that undermine the two sweeping contentions on which the paper's argument depends and I argue that asymmetric conflict is best understood at the finer grained level of studying the sequences of strikes and counter-strikes the rival actors have in store for one another. How to cite: Simandan D (2019) "Levels of analysis and problems of evidential support in the study of asymmetric conflict". Behavioral and Brain Sciences [citation impact 17.194; rank 4/267 Neurosciences, 1/53 Behavioral Sciences], vol. 42, https://doi.org/10.1017/S0140525X19000682
Surprises are refuted expectations and therefore an inevitable concomitant of errors of anticipating the future. This paper argues that the timing is just right for a spatial account of surprise, or rather, for a geography of personal and... more
Surprises are refuted expectations and therefore an inevitable concomitant of errors of anticipating the future. This paper argues that the timing is just right for a spatial account of surprise, or rather, for a geography of personal and social change that deploys the trope of surprise to help explain how and why change happens. Whether we are surprised by what transpires in our surroundings or we are surprising ourselves by leaping forward in impetuous deeds of reinventing who we are, the common denominator of these processes of becoming is that they produce geographical space and are produced by it. To cite this paper: Simandan, D., 2020. Being surprised and surprising ourselves: a geography of personal and social change. Progress in Human Geography, 44(1), pp. 99-118. https://doi.org/10.1177/0309132518810431
Individual and collective actors are typically engaged in several simultaneous co-evolutionary matching dynamics with their opponents, and this process creates a relentlessly evolving political-economic landscape. When an actor makes a... more
Individual and collective actors are typically engaged in several simultaneous co-evolutionary matching dynamics with their opponents, and this process creates a relentlessly evolving political-economic landscape. When an actor makes a move that is detrimental to another actor, the latter is likely to strike back with a countermove that nullifies the initial threat, or compensates for it. To understand the time-geography created by these move-countermove dynamics, the paper (a) delineates criteria for classifying competitive counterforces, (b) provides a detailed typology of delays encountered in competitive landscapes, and (c) illustrates the relevance of this research to economic and political geographies.
How to cite: Simandan D (2019) “Competition, delays, and coevolution in markets and politics”, Geoforum , vol. 98, pp. 15-24, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.geoforum.2018.09.014
Feminist and queer epistemologies have been influential throughout the social sciences by means of the development of a set of interrelated approaches involving positionality, partiality, reflexivity, intersectionality, and the highly... more
Feminist and queer epistemologies have been influential throughout the social sciences by means of the development of a set of interrelated approaches involving positionality, partiality, reflexivity, intersectionality, and the highly politicized thesis of situated knowledge. This article aims to operationalize these approaches by introducing an anti-humanist, politically attuned, and historically contextualized framework, which postulates that one’s knowledge is inevitably incomplete and situated because information about the world always reaches one through a channel that is constituted by four epistemic gaps: (1) ‘possible worlds versus realized world’, (2) ‘realized world versus witnessed situation’, (3) ‘witnessed situation versus remembered situation’, and (4) ‘remembered situation versus confessed situation’.
Simandan D (2019) “Revisiting positionality and the thesis of situated knowledge” Dialogues in Human Geography [2017 impact factor 10.214, rank 1/84 Geography], vol. 9(2), pp. 129-149, https://doi.org/10.1177/2043820619850013
Actors in competitive environments are bound to decide and act under conditions of uncertainty because they rarely have accurate foreknowledge of how their opponents will respond and when they will respond. Just as a competitor makes a... more
Actors in competitive environments are bound to decide and act under conditions of uncertainty because they rarely have accurate foreknowledge of how their opponents will respond and when they will respond. Just as a competitor makes a move to improve their standing on a given variable relative to a target competitor, she should expect the latter to counteract with an iterative lagged asymmetric response, that is, with a sequence of countermoves (iteration) that is very different in kind from its trigger (asymmetry) and that will be launched at some unknown point in the future (time lag). The paper explicates the broad relevance of the newly proposed concept of " iterative lagged asymmetric responses " to the social study of temporality and to fields as diverse as intelligence and counterintelligence studies, strategic management, futures studies, military theory, and long-range planning. By bringing out in the foreground and substantiating the observation that competitive environments place a strategic premium on surprise, the concept of iterative lagged asymmetric responses makes a contribution to the never-ending and many-pronged debate about the extent to which the future can be predicted.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/0961463X17752652
This article provides an analysis of the problematic of foresight in traditional Chinese thought, articulating it with current developments in the epistemology of futures studies, planning theory, and strategic management. It is argued... more
This article provides an analysis of the problematic of foresight in traditional Chinese thought, articulating it with current developments in the epistemology of futures studies, planning theory, and strategic management. It is argued that in Chinese thought the answer to the question " Can the future be predicted? " depends on the forecasting horizon: whereas the immediate future can be sensed and taken advantage of by immersing oneself in the evolving situation, the remote future is fundamentally unpredictable. These dual answers are entrenched in discussions of what constitutes wisdom, opening up productive spaces of encounter between the problematic of foresight and the problematic of wisdom. https://doi.org/10.6531/JFS.2018.22(3).00A35
The task of studying the impact of social class on physical and mental health involves, among other things, the use of a conceptual toolbox that defines what social class is, establishes how to measure it, and sets criteria that help... more
The task of studying the impact of social class on physical and mental health involves, among other things, the use of a conceptual toolbox that defines what social class is, establishes how to measure it, and sets criteria that help distinguish it from closely related concepts. One field that has recently witnessed a wealth of theoretical and conceptual research on social class is psychology, but geographers' and sociologists' attitude of diffidence toward this " positivistic " discipline has prevented them from taking advantage of this body of scholarship. This paper aims to highlight some of the most important developments in the psychological study of social class and social mobility that speak to the long-standing concerns of health geographers and sociologists with how social position, perceptions, social comparisons, and class-based identities impact health and well-being.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2017.11.037
This intervention contributes to recent work in urban geography that integrates the conceptual frameworks of assemblages and actor-network theory by highlighting two additional directions that require a more rigorous and detailed... more
This intervention contributes to recent work in urban geography that integrates the conceptual frameworks of assemblages and actor-network theory by highlighting two additional directions that require a more rigorous and detailed theorization. The first direction concerns the relationship between contingency and necessity in urban assemblages and actor-networks and this paper delineates four specific propositions as a starting point for further reflection. The second direction suggests that urban assemblages and actor-networks require a more explicit vocabulary for thinking about competition and cooperation within and between cities. To this end, the paper introduces a new concept – delayed asymmetric counterforces – that can foster a better understanding of competition-induced urban change and destabilization. The novel concept is developed in conjunction with a typology of delays in competitive urban dynamics, which helps illuminate how delayed asymmetric counterforces are both a cause and an effect of the complexity inherent in the urban realm.
Demonic geography is an approach to practicing human geography that operates from the premise that there are no such immaterial entities as 'souls', 'spirits', 'minds', integrated, stable 'selves', or conscious 'free will'. This paper... more
Demonic geography is an approach to practicing human geography that operates from the premise that there are no such immaterial entities as 'souls', 'spirits', 'minds', integrated, stable 'selves', or conscious 'free will'. This paper elaborates the theoretical framework of demonic geography by spelling out how it is different from non-representational theory and by articulating it with recent developments in experimental psychology, neuroscience, and the philosophy of mind. Counterintuitively, the paper shows that the deflationary, materialistic ontology of human nature espoused by demonic geography need not lead to meaninglessness, unhappiness, or the collapse of moral behaviour. Instead, subscribing to demonic geography opens up new ways to find meaning, to pursue happiness, and to live the good life.
A discussion of the wise stance in biomedical research as an epistemological attitude that systematically combines multiple perspectives, coupled with a reflection on the path-dependent politics of biomedical knowledge production.
An analysis of how the integrated model of allostasis enables a more rigorous and detailed understanding of the mechanisms through which economic exploitation and social exclusion negatively affect well-being and health.
An analysis of the role of neoliberalism, contempt, and allostatic load in the social dynamics of tuberculosis.
This paper introduces several theoretical tools for the analysis of the geographies of institutional transformation and inter-institutional competition under neoliberalism, through the case study of a peripheral trade union from Western... more
This paper introduces several theoretical tools for the analysis of the geographies of institutional transformation and inter-institutional competition under neoliberalism, through the case study of a peripheral trade union from Western Romania to which the author has had a privileged epistemic access. The first part of the paper discusses the truth-effects arising of this access, the second summarises the theoretical background of the research by means of the metaphor of 'polymorphous chorologies', the third excavates the history of the trade union through a five-fold grid of concern (including money and material resources, emotions, political networking, scale performance, and know-how), and the final, concluding part, theorises the failure of this trade union, and pleads for a form of active reflexivity in the practice of research.
Research Interests:
Critical Theory, Collective Bargaining (Industrial And Labor Relations), Organizational Behavior, Economic History, Sociology, and 149 more
This is an introduction to a debate consisting of three articles and a reply, published in 2012 in The International Journal of Urban and Regional Research (volume 36, issue 1).
Calvert K and Simandan D (2010) Energy, space, and society: a reassessment of the changing landscape of energy production, distribution, and use Journal of Economics and Business Research XVI(1), pp. 13-37. ABSTRACT: While geography has... more
Calvert K and Simandan D (2010) Energy, space, and society: a reassessment of the changing landscape of energy production, distribution, and use Journal of Economics and Business Research XVI(1), pp. 13-37.
ABSTRACT: While geography has always mattered for the energy sector, the relative effects of location and distance on the economics of energy regimes are increasing as we begin to deploy more renewable energy technologies. This reintroduction of the friction of distance is leading to an energy landscape that is far different from fossil-based regimes. The new energy paradigm, based as it is upon the physics and the economics of renewable energy, is being reflected in the landscape as distributed, decentralized, and diversified patterns of energy generation. Because the increased use of renewable energy technologies is beginning to change the spatial patterns of political and socioeconomic activities, a thorough understanding of these patterns is crucial to increasing the socio-political acceptability of new technologies and to avoiding the socially costly unintended consequences of policy and investment decisions.  This paper proposes a theoretical foundation upon which economists and economic geographers could scaffold their analyses of the spatial characteristics of the economics of energy use.  To this end, we bring together two complementary conceptualizations of economic geography: firstly, as the study of the effects of location and distance on energy economics, and secondly, as the study of the ways in which political, economic, and technological energy-related practices give rise to particular spatial patterns of socio-economic welfare. We end the paper by developing the concept of energy rationality and showing how it relates to discussions of metarationality, common sense, and wisdom.
Research Interests:
Critical Theory, Environmental Engineering, Economic History, Landscape Ecology, Sociology, and 350 more
This paper critically reviews the current status of the concept of distance in human geography in order to argue that recent experimentally-driven work in construal-level theory offers ample opportunities for recasting distance as a key... more
This paper critically reviews the current status of the concept of distance in human geography in order to argue that recent experimentally-driven work in construal-level theory offers ample opportunities for recasting distance as a key geographical trope. After analysing the four entangled dimensions of distance revealed by construal-level theory (spatial distance; temporal distance; social distance; and hypothetical distance), the paper articulates this research program from experimental psychology with geographical work on non-representational theory, geographical imaginations/imaginative geographies, learning as a geographical process, TimeSpace theorizing, and ontogenetic understandings of space. It is argued that the subjective understanding of distance afforded by construal-level theory can rescue distance from its entrenched association with positivistic geography and spatial analysis. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.geoforum.2016.07.018
This article develops a " polymorphic " approach to policy analysis, that is, an approach that draws on multiple forms of spatial reasoning. Specifically, the proposed framework deploys scale and network not merely as epistemological... more
This article develops a " polymorphic " approach to policy analysis, that is, an approach that draws on multiple forms of spatial reasoning. Specifically, the proposed framework deploys scale and network not merely as epistemological devices that make sense of " horizontal " and " vertical " politico-institutional structures , but as co-constitutive ontological processes that involve an ever-shifting interplay among legacies, rhythms, and events. This polymorphic approach, we argue, facilitates the identification and the examination of the mobilization of social networks and of the attendant cross-scalar interactions that must be articulated whenever a given policy is framed as a sensible and politically viable place-based solution. The novel conceptual framework is then applied to the empirical investigation of the formulation of the complex moral, political, and economic environment that enabled the emergence of Ontario's controversial Ethanol in Gasoline Regulation. Our polymorphic approach reveals how this regulation is a (failed) attempt to reconcile Canada's legacy as a resource-based economy and Ontario's legacy as a manufacturing-based economy where value is added, with the need for more rational and less harmful resource extraction and for greener fuels that can sustain the current order. We build on the lessons drawn from this case study to suggest that our approach has wider applicability in that it can help create a process-oriented, dynamic, and multi-dimensional geography of policy-making.
This paper highlights two of the ways in which an abundance of frequent and high-quality information can nonetheless lead an economic agent to failure. I begin with the problem of frequent information, continue with the problem of... more
This paper highlights two of the ways in which an abundance of frequent and high-quality information can nonetheless lead an economic agent to failure. I begin with the problem of frequent information, continue with the problem of abundant high-quality information, and end with a general reflection about the lesson these two problems may offer for economic geographical scholarship.
The paper shows how error statistical theory can be deployed to grasp the deeper epistemic logic of the peer-review process. The intent is to provide the readers with a novel lens through which to make sense of the practices of academic... more
The paper shows how error statistical theory can be deployed to grasp the deeper epistemic logic of the peer-review process. The intent is to provide the readers with a novel lens through which to make sense of the practices of academic publishing.
The single most important statement that can be made with regard to the logical status of human and physical geographical reasoning is that it belongs to the class of non-monotonic reasoning. In other words, geographical reasoning is... more
The single most important statement that can be made with regard to the logical status of human and physical geographical reasoning is that it belongs to the class of non-monotonic reasoning. In other words,  geographical reasoning is defeasible (i.e. earlier drawn conclusions can be defeated by the addition of new facts, some of which are generated by the very application of our ideas outside academe) and non-demonstrative (i.e. our beliefs about reality cannot be demonstrated once and for ever; we must do with building provisional arguments based on the current weight of the evidence, which itself changes with the times). Indeed, unlike mathematics, which is a closed world of formalisms that relies heavily on deduction, demonstration, and proof, geography studies and attempts to improve the real, messy world out there. Because that wild, unruly world is always in a process of becoming, the conclusions drawn yesterday may have to be abandoned today, and so on, without end in sight. The core virtue of geographical reasoning is not certainty, but adaptability. As the world changes, so do geography’s entertained beliefs about how to improve it. The point we are trying to make is that an alternative window into the nature of geographical reasoning, besides the one provided by the discipline’s key concepts, offers an opening toward the more subtle problematic of the mechanisms by which the updating of geographical beliefs operate.
Wisdom is at once one of the most elusive and most valued kinds of knowledge. Empirical research shows that, indeed, across cultures, people hope that life experience will eventually make them wiser. The problem is that, to date, the... more
Wisdom is at once one of the most elusive and most valued kinds of knowledge. Empirical research shows that, indeed, across cultures, people hope that life experience will eventually make them wiser. The problem is that, to date, the academic study of wisdom and of the processes by which it can be learned has been dominated by psychologists. The first part of the article reviews the state-of-the-art psychological scholarship on wisdom to show how that conceptualization lacks geographical sensitivity and therefore misses some of the crucial geographical mechanisms by which people become wiser. The second part of the article singles out and focuses on one such mechanism, namely, the learning of wisdom through geographical dislocations. By drawing on insights from the study of international migration, exile, and transculturation in postcolonial contexts, the final part of the article suggests specific learning processes that might strengthen the hypothesis that geographical dislocations and the attendant cross-cultural experiences they generate are often conducive to wisdom. La sabiduría es a la vez uno de los tipos de conocimiento más esquivos y más valorados. La investigací on empírica en verdad muestra que en todas las culturas la gente espera que la experiencia de la vida eventualmente los haga más sabios. El problema es que hasta ahora el estudio académico sobre la sabiduría y sobre los procesos por medio de los cualesésta puede alcanzarse ha estado dominado por los psicólogos. La primera parte del artículo revisa el estado del arte de la erudicí on psicoí ogica sobre este particular, para mostrar c ´ omo esa conceptualizací on carece de sensibilidad geográfica y en consecuencia deja de considerar algunos de los mecanismos geográficos cruciales mediante los cuales la gente se hace más sabia. La segunda parte del artículo escoge y se concentra en uno de tales mecanismos, o sea, el aprendizaje de la sabiduría por medio de las dislocaciones geográficas. A partir de la perspicacia del estudio de la migrací on internacional, el exilio y la transculturací on en contextos poscoloniales, la parte final del artículo sugiere procesos de aprendizaje específicos, que podrían fortalecer la hipótesis de que las dislocaciones geográficas y las experiencias culturales de vasto espectro generadas por aquellas a menudo llevan a la sabiduría. Palabras clave: distancia, dislocaciones geográficas, migrací on internacional, aprendizaje visceral, sabiduría.
In this introduction to the Focus Section “Learning as a Geographical Process,” I provide a context for the four articles that follow, by means of (1) making explicit the threefold rationale for this initiative; (2) relating this... more
In this introduction to the Focus Section “Learning as a Geographical Process,” I provide a context for the four articles that follow, by means of (1) making explicit the threefold rationale for this initiative; (2) relating this initiative with previous geographical scholarship on the problematic of learning; (3) highlighting the significance of the self-referential character of our work; (4) providing a brief outline of the articles that follow; and (5) pointing out the important fact that both “learning” and “geographical process” constitute semantically rich categories and that relating the two involves a many-to-many type of logical mapping.
This paper crosses the borders of human geography to bring back two related bodies of work from experimental psychology that investigate, in an unusual and refreshingly precise way, long-standing human geographical concerns with... more
This paper crosses the borders of human geography to bring back two related bodies of work from experimental psychology that investigate, in an unusual and refreshingly precise way, long-standing human geographical concerns with tem-porality, place and subject formations, meaning-making and well-being. It is argued that the traffic of ideas and empirical findings between human geography and experimental psychology can be mutually profitable if, and only to the extent that, it encompasses a sustained epistemological, methodological and political critique of the disciplinary practices that have yielded those ideas and findings.
The first part of the paper develops the argument that geographers should learn to decompose human memory into its constituent parts because then and then alone will we become attuned to the full range of ways in which we incorporate... more
The first part of the paper develops the argument that geographers should learn to decompose human memory into its constituent parts because then and then alone will we become attuned to the full range of ways in which we incorporate places into our beings. The second part of the paper articulates Stephen Hill's comments on episodic memory with my recent work on wisdom.
The paper compares and contrasts the critical stance with the wise stance in human geography and offers three alternative models for conceptualizing the relationship between these two stances.
Ron Martin's recent critique of the canonical model of regional path dependence constitutes a significant original contribution to evolutionary economic geography, and is likely to open up a whole new range of promising directions of... more
Ron Martin's recent critique of the canonical model of regional path dependence constitutes a significant original contribution to evolutionary economic geography, and is likely to open up a whole new range of promising directions of theoretical debate and empirical research. In the first part of my commentary, I highlight and discuss the following two assumptions implicit in his work: (1) broader and less restrictive models are better than narrow and restrictive ones; and (2) economic geographers are better served by a model that emphasizes change than by one that emphasizes continuity. In the second part of my commentary, I suggest that Martin's own alternative model could be further developed by: (1) replacing the binary distinction between 'path as movement to stable state' and 'path as dynamic process' with a continuum; (2) avoiding, with the help of mereology, the hasty generalization to regional economies of processes of change originally theorized in the context of institutions; and (3) tracing the implications for evolutionary economic geography of the recent analytical work on contingency — a hitherto under-theorized concept that has been central to evolutionary reasoning in general, and to the problematic of lock-ins in particular. A number of recent developments indicate that evolutionary economic geography is engaged in a process of thorough re-evaluation of its conceptual foundations. The focus of this commentary is on what I take to be by far the most promising of these developments, namely Ron Martin's (2010) proposal for a major move beyond the canonical model of regional path dependence. According to Martin, the reasons for the inadequacy of the canonical model are, first, its narrow and restrictive applicability, and second, its conceptual reliance on problematic equilibristic thinking. In more substantive terms, the canonical model is guilty of emphasizing continuity rather than change, whereas Martin feels that economic geographers need a model that stresses change rather than continuity. With this belief in mind, he ventures outside geography, into political science and historical sociology, in a search for ways of thinking about institutional path dependence that hold the promise of avoiding the connotations of stasis implied by the metaphor of 'lock-ins'. He finds four such promising ideas (layering/delayering, conversion, structured variety and recombination) and proposes that they have 'readily identifiable counterparts' (ibid.: 22) in the geographical study of local and regional economies. The culmination of his work is a synthesis (ibid.: Figure 5) that dialectically surpasses both the thesis of the canonical model and the antithesis to it that emerged in I would like to thank Keith Chapman and two IJURR referees for reading and commenting on an earlier version of this commentary.
One of the significant developments in the interdisciplinary field of judgment and decision making is the classification of environments as a function of (a) their capacity to enable people to learn from experience (kind environments vs.... more
One of the significant developments in the interdisciplinary field of judgment and decision making is the classification of environments as a function of (a) their capacity to enable people to learn from experience (kind environments vs. wicked environments) and (b) the consequences of having failed to understand and adapt to them (exacting environments vs. lenient environments). Based on the premise that 'environment' is a key geographical concept, I explore the usefulness of appropriating these classifications in geography and argue that they can stimulate normative work on the possible contours of a better world as well as illuminate in novel ways long-standing geographical concerns with the problematic of fairness. Les figures de l'environnement : ´ eléments de réflexion sur les bases envisageables d'un monde meilleur Parmi les innovations qui ont marqué la recherche interdisciplinaire sur le jugement et la décision, se trouve la classification des environnements définie en fonction : a) d'un mécanisme de base par lequel on peut tirer des enseignements de l'expérience (des environnements sains par opposition aux environnements hostiles) et b) des effets néfastes liés au fait que l'on n'a pasété en mesure de comprendre et de s'adapter (des environnements rigoureux par opposition aux environnements permissifs). En partant du principe selon lequel « l'environnement » est un concept central en géographie se pose la question de la pertinence de situer ces classifications dans une perspective géographique. Cetté etude fait valoir qu'elles peuvent en effet dynamiser les travaux afin de formuler des normes permettant d'´ etablir les bases envisageables d'un monde meilleur et de jeter un nouveí eclairage sur les enjeux géographiques autour de la problématique de l'´ equité. Mots clés : environnement, normativité, néolibéralisme, géographies de la moralité, apprentissage, ´ equité
Barnes and Sheppard (2009) assume that an anti-monist and anti-reductionist economic geography is desirable and that this desirability is so obvious that no argument needs to be advanced in its support. This commentary challenges this... more
Barnes and Sheppard (2009) assume that an anti-monist and anti-reductionist economic geography is desirable and that this desirability is so obvious that no argument needs to be advanced in its support. This commentary challenges this assumption and suggests that a monist and reductionist economic geography organized around the idea of truth-seeking is neither unthinkable nor unpalatable. In order to flesh out this idea, the commentary builds on recent work in the philosophy of scientific induction to show why one of its less publicized advances – error statistical theory – holds far more promise for the future development of economic geography than Barnes and Sheppard's vague and nebulous 'engaged pluralism'.
This paper argues that, in order to take place, space and scale more seriously in the study of our discipline, we have to complement the pervasive understanding of geography as a tradition of thought or an extended conversation with an... more
This paper argues that, in order to take place, space and scale more seriously in the study of our discipline, we have to complement the pervasive understanding of geography as a tradition of thought or an extended conversation with an understanding of our discipline as a tradition of practice, in which the main focus is on the becoming of geographers. It is argued that the theme of 'what it takes to be a good geographer' is a fertile way to study this process of becoming. The four main advantages of this approach are illustrated empirically in the body of the argument by the author's reflections on his socializing within two very different geographical traditions.
The paper provides a detailed theoretical framework for understanding the relationship between contingency and necessity, and applies it to major schools of thought in the social sciences. Key words: social theory; cultural theory;... more
The paper provides a detailed theoretical framework for understanding the relationship between contingency and necessity, and applies it to major schools of thought in the social sciences.

Key words: social theory; cultural theory; political theory; legal theory; political economy;  historiography; social sciences; historical institutionalism; epistemology; gender studies;

How to cite:
Simandan, D. (2010) Beware of contingency. Environment and planning D: Society and Space, 28(3), pp. 388 - 396.
This paper dwells in a large space of encounter between theorizing poverty and the poverty of theorizing, through operating with ‘theory’ as means for [and end of] activating tropes as, and for, political interventions. In the first part,... more
This paper dwells in a large space of encounter between theorizing poverty and the poverty of theorizing, through operating with ‘theory’ as means for [and end of] activating tropes as, and for, political interventions. In the first part, I explain how the paper weaves that space of encounter (the theoretical tools), why it weaves it on (and for) a vigorously located empirical background (The Romanian Carpathians), and what are the stakes of the whole enterprise. Then, the second part unpacks the cultural circuit of poverty, resource management, and industrialisation in the Romanian Carpathians along three relations (industrialization and poverty, justice and poverty, patriotism and poverty) creatively activated by the communist practices of governmentality, so as to make scarcity more bearable. The rather optimistic conclusion signals the need to consider the body an effective site of resistance to the practices of governmentality, and alternative directions of thinking scales and regions, and insists on the politics and potentialities of critical theorizing.

Key words: governmentality, materialist semiotics, environmental transformation, human and natural resources, poverty, development, justice, nationalism
Research Interests:
Critical Theory, Discourse Analysis, History, European History, Modern History, and 264 more
The title in English: "The cultural fundaments of the American model. A transdisciplinary approach in human geography" - this 240 pp. book was written in Romanian and published in 2000 with Dacia Press, Cluj-Napoca.
The title in English: "The truth regimes of the past. An enquiry into the historiography and history of geography" - this 370 pp. treatise was written in Romanian and published in 2002 with "Aurel Vlaicu" University Press. The full text... more
The title in English: "The truth regimes of the past. An enquiry into the historiography and history of geography" - this 370 pp. treatise was written in Romanian and published in 2002 with "Aurel Vlaicu" University Press. The full text is available online here at academia.edu - click on the set of eleven pdf files to download the full book. Textul integral al volumului poate fi citit online: priviti lista celor 11 fisiere in pdf si veti putea sa descarcati intregul volum.
Simandan D (2005) "New Ways in Geography" Timisoara, Editura Universitatii de Vest/ West University Press, 230 pp. The first part of the volume - "Old Ways" - addresses the question whether geography as we know it is worth keeping. The... more
Simandan D (2005) "New Ways in Geography" Timisoara, Editura Universitatii de Vest/ West University Press, 230 pp.

The first part of the volume - "Old Ways" - addresses the question whether geography as we know it is worth keeping. The first chapter argues that traditional scientific disciplines are not as bad as we sometimes like to think they are. This argument is then deployed in the second chapter to investigate whether geography specifically is worth keeping. The chapter concludes that even if we admit a Cinderella status for geography among the disciplines, this aspect brings some secondary benefits out of which a rejuvenated geography can emerge. The second part of the book – "New Ways" – discusses some lines of flight towards this rejuvenated geography. Given the editorial constraints, I selected three possible new ways on which I have started to work lately. Thus, chapter three explores the stakes of an engagement between geography and metaphysics in the analytic tradition, chapter four makes some suggestions about how to understand the relativity of norms in geographical practice, and chapter five brings together two case studies that help explain why we need to pay sustained attention to the vicious logic of epistemic neglect.
Research Interests:
Critical Theory, Discourse Analysis, Sociology, Social Theory, Geography, and 165 more
Simandan D (2006) "Marginally Modern. Psychoanalysis and the deconstruction of inadequate communities" Arad, ‘Vasile Goldis’ University Press, 264 pp. The book aims to present a critical history of the process of modernisation in the... more
Simandan D (2006) "Marginally Modern. Psychoanalysis and the deconstruction of inadequate communities" Arad, ‘Vasile Goldis’ University Press, 264 pp.

The book aims to present a critical history of the process of modernisation in the margins of Europe, more specifically in Romania and, to a lesser extent, in Norway. By modernisation I mean the assemblage of theories and practices produced by the European Enlightenment and concerned with how to develop rather primitive cultures into civilized cultures (industrialised, urbanised, educated). This broad definition includes neoliberalism and communism as particular ways in which modernisation can proceed. Throughout the book, I analyse modernity in its various guises: Ceausescu's communist regime, Norway's welfare capitalism, or the neoliberal transformations taking place in both Norway and Romania since the early 1990s. The feeling of inadequacy resulting from the marginal condition of both countries has been crucial in triggering their juxtaposition in my research project. One can be modern in a number of ways. What Romania and Norway have in common is that they are marginally modern. The signifier "marginally" produces many slippages of meaning, but they all tend to suggest a negative register. What I do try to show is that a psychoanalytical reading of the history of modernisation in the two countries is very fruitful for deconstructing current hegemonic discourses in both Norway and Romania. There are still many politicians and intellectuals in the two countries who recite the tropes of inadequacy, and their recitations serve the political purposes of neoliberalism and neo-imperialism. I have tried to show that there is nothing inherently wrong with being Romanian and/or Norwegian and that the very obsession that something is fundamentally wrong indicates a cultural neurosis of marginality that does not help the two countries in any way.
Research Interests:
Critical Theory, Discourse Analysis, Modern History, Cultural History, Economic History, and 259 more
Simandan D (2005) "Pragmatic Scepticism and the Possibilities of Knowledge" Timisoara, Editura Universitatii de Vest/West University Press, 256 pp. This book distiled my own way of understanding the relation between epistemology,... more
Simandan D (2005) "Pragmatic Scepticism and the Possibilities of Knowledge" Timisoara, Editura Universitatii de Vest/West University Press, 256 pp.

This book distiled my own way of understanding the relation between epistemology, ontology, and politics, and the best name I found for labelling that way is pragmatic scepticism. Throughout the book, I stay away from the temptation to give a dictionary-like definition of this philosophy. I do not even like to think of it as a philosophy. Instead, I see pragmatic scepticism as a way of being and as a way of relating. A way of being human, i.e. enmeshed in language and limited by our senses; and a way of relating, i.e. crafted by the happy and sad encounters with theories, things, and lifeís happenings. The book is structured in three parts, which together give a sense of the potentials of pragmatic scepticism: as a way of thinking about the world, as a way of approaching theoretical dilemmas, as a way of mapping one's inner contradictions. The first part of the book introduces pragmatic scepticism in relation to the general questions underwriting the philosophy of knowledge and the study of science. The second part is more specific in that it deploys the pragmatic sceptical attitude to the central metatheoretical questions of the discipline of geography. The last part of the book groups under the heading "philosophies of struggle" two more applied essays on the political economy and the political epistemology of conflicts over knowledge in the globalised landscape of higher education in general and geography in particular.
Research Interests:
Critical Theory, Discourse Analysis, Sociology, Cultural Studies, Feminist Sociology, and 247 more
Geographers have become increasingly preoccupied with the problematic of the future in recent decades, but it would be misleading and premature to think of this emerging, diffuse, inchoate area of research as a distinct subdiscipline.... more
Geographers have become increasingly preoccupied with the problematic of the future in recent decades, but it would be misleading and premature to think of this emerging, diffuse, inchoate area of research as a distinct subdiscipline. Leaving aside the general overviews of the field, this chapter structures the presentation of the current state of the geographies of the future into six interrelated clusters of scholarship: (1) historical and cultural geographies of the future; (2) geographies of uncertainty, risk, and contingency; (3) geographies of algorithms, artificial intelligence, automation, and autonomous vehicles; (4) the future as a problem for neoliberal governmentality; (5) geographies of post-capitalist futures; and (6) race, gender, and the future.
HOW TO CITE: Simandan, D., 2023. “Geographies of the Future.” In Oxford Bibliographies in Geography. Ed. Barney Warf. New York: Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/OBO/9780199874002-0257
This entry discusses the concept of distance in the context of human geography’s other key concepts. The introduction provides a brief overview of how distinct conceptual toolboxes help distinguish academic disciplines from one another.... more
This entry discusses the concept of distance in the context of human geography’s other key concepts. The introduction provides a brief overview of how distinct conceptual toolboxes help distinguish academic disciplines from one another. Against this general background, a brief overview of the history of the concept of distance in Anglo-American geography is provided. Central to this history is the role distance played during the theoretical and quantitative revolution, as well as the more recent rethinking of distance that highlights its multiple dimensions and the importance of subjectivity. The entry concludes with an overview of how distance has been deployed in recent urban and economic geographies to understand processes of agglomeration and the spatial dynamics of innovation. How to cite: Simandan, D., 2020. Distance. In: Kobayashi, A. (Ed.), International Encyclopedia of Human Geography, 2nd edition. vol. 3, Elsevier, pp. 393–397. https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/B978-0-08-102295-5.10723-1
This article (1) defines industrialization and indicates ways in which it can be measured, (2) highlights the importance of the timing of industrialization and the inherent limits to the proper scientific explanation of this phenomenon,... more
This article (1) defines industrialization and indicates ways in which it can be measured, (2) highlights the importance of the timing of industrialization and the inherent limits to the proper scientific explanation of this phenomenon, (3) disentangles the often confused conceptual relation between industrialization and capitalism, (4) explicates the causal links between industrialization and modernization, (5) undertakes a brief assessment of the relative costs and benefits of industrialization, and (6) discloses the defining contours of scholarship on industrialization in Anglo-American human geography and illustrates it with a recent attempt to integrate the field with the help of a master metaphor called 'recursive cartographies'. Its portrayal of economic reality as interplay of legacies, rhythms, and events conveys the usefulness of spatial thinking in industrialization research.
How to cite: Simandan, D., 2020. Industrialization. In: Kobayashi, A. (Ed.), International Encyclopedia of Human Geography, 2nd edition. vol. 7, Elsevier, pp. 255–260. https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/B978-0-08-102295-5.10086-1
This entry discusses the ontological and epistemological status of 'the economy' as well as the social theoretical critique of economics, economism, and the scarcity assumption. It then addresses the theoretical controversy surrounding... more
This entry discusses the ontological and epistemological status of 'the economy' as well as the social theoretical critique of economics, economism, and the scarcity assumption. It then addresses the theoretical controversy surrounding the distinction between the formal economy and the informal economy. The entry concludes by highlighting the role of social theory in both the emergence of heterodox economics and the ongoing articulation of political economy approaches with poststructuralist, performative, and feminist perspectives.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1002/9781118430873.est0103
The entry begins with a definition of geography and with a description of what the discipline shares with the other social sciences and what makes it distinctive among them. Terminological clarifications are provided with regard to the... more
The entry begins with a definition of geography and with a description of what the discipline shares with the other social sciences and what makes it distinctive among them. Terminological clarifications are provided with regard to the relationship between human geography and physical geography, and between human geography and urban geography. After a brief history and overview of human geography’s engagement with social theory, the entry offers a discussion of the politicization of contemporary human geography and of how this phenomenon is reflected in theory building and concept development.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1002/9781118430873.est0464
Simandan D (2009) Industrialization, In R Kitchin & N Thrift, (Eds.), International Encyclopedia of Human Geography , Oxford: Elsevier, volume 5, pp. 419-425. ABSTRACT: This article (1) defines industrialisation and indicates ways in... more
Simandan D (2009) Industrialization, In R Kitchin & N Thrift, (Eds.), International Encyclopedia of Human Geography , Oxford: Elsevier, volume 5, pp. 419-425.
ABSTRACT: This article (1) defines industrialisation and indicates ways in which it can be measured, (2) highlights the importance of the timing of industrialisation and the inherent limits to the proper scientific explanation of this phenomenon, (3) disentangles the often confused conceptual relation between industrialisation and capitalism, (4) explicates the causal links between industrialisation and modernisation, (5) undertakes a brief assessment of the relative costs and benefits of industrialisation, and (6) discloses the defining contours of scholarship on industrialisation in Anglo-American human geography and illustrates it with a recent attempt to integrate the field with the help of a master metaphor called ‘recursive cartographies’. Its portrayal of economic reality as interplay of legacies, rhythms, and events conveys the usefulness of spatial thinking in industrialisation research.
The paper analyses human resources, human capital, and the labor market through a five-fold typology of individual patterns of behavior in the workplace, inspired from feminist psychoanalysis and affective neuroscience.
Research Interests:
Organizational Behavior, History, Cultural History, Economic History, Sociology, and 168 more
The chapter discusses the process of industrialization, development, and modernization in the margins of Europe, by comparing practices of governmentality and the nation-building projects of Romania and Norway. The theoretical framework... more
The chapter discusses the process of industrialization, development, and modernization in the margins of Europe, by comparing practices of governmentality and the nation-building projects of Romania and Norway. The theoretical framework draws on Freudian psychoanalysis, feminist psychoanalysis, Michel Foucault, Benedict Anderson, Actor-Network Theory, feminist theory, and postcolonial theory.
Research Interests:
Critical Theory, Discourse Analysis, History, European History, Modern History, and 208 more
The chapter introduces a simple theoretical framework called "recursive cartographies" and applies it to the analysis of the social and environmental conflict surrounding the plans for gold mining in the village of Rosia Montana, Romania.
Research Interests:
Environmental Engineering, Cultural History, Landscape Ecology, Sociology, Cultural Studies, and 202 more
The aim of this paper is to contribute to contemporary debates about postdisciplinarity by exploring how and why research and reflection on the problematic of wisdom can open up a space for freedom, expression, and disobedience in the... more
The aim of this paper is to contribute to contemporary debates about postdisciplinarity by exploring how and why research and reflection on the problematic of wisdom can open up a space for freedom, expression, and disobedience in the ways in which we get to know and hold on to what we know. As a starting point in this enquiry, I review existing conceptualizations of wisdom to highlight Alfred Norton Whitehead's undeservingly obscure definition of wisdom as the way in which we hold knowledge. Taking this definition as my working ground, I show how academic disciplines and postdisciplinarity can be discussed as distinct ways in which we can hold knowledge, whereby the former engender obedience to existing institutional imperatives, and the latter promotes disobedience to established protocols of enquiry and norms of " good " research. Contrary to common expectations, wisdom, I show, need not be associated with a conservative, cautious attitude, but instead can be thought of as an epistemic ideal that cultivates creativity, expression, and disobedient ways of thinking and gathering knowledge. I illustrate my theoretical points with biographical details of my own disobedient attempts to transcend my formal affiliation and training as a human geographer and to open up the narrow disciplinary understandings of wisdom emerging from philosophy and psychology.
In this paper I aim to stage an encounter between two rather disconnected streams of philosophical debate in order to explore how their intersection enables a finer-grained understanding of the likely pitfalls we face whenever we try to... more
In this paper I aim to stage an encounter between two rather disconnected streams of philosophical debate in order to explore how their intersection enables a finer-grained understanding of the likely pitfalls we face whenever we try to think geographically. The first stream revolves around explanationism, that is, about an attempt to solve the long-standing and elusive problem of induction by thinking of it in terms of inference to the best explanation. The second stream pertains to the pessimistic meta-induction in the philosophy of science cast in terms of the problem of unconceived alternatives in a given explanatory set. I show how these debates provide a more refined way of comprehending what is actually meant when we say that our reasoning as geographers is always already situated.
The recent findings that a) what people in all cultures most want is to be happy, and b) concern with equality and social justice is positively correlated with negative affect, are put together to explore whether they warrant a shift of... more
The recent findings that a) what people in all cultures most want is to be happy, and b) concern with equality and social justice is positively correlated with negative affect, are put together to explore whether they warrant a shift of focus in the social sciences, away from the worship of the ideal of equality, and towards the striving to achieve collective happiness. Using as a platform Nigel Thrift's thesis that space is the very stuff of life, I then appraise the merits and demerits of this shift, pinpointing ways in which the latest research on happiness from neuroscience and psychology could be incorporated and metabolised in geography. In the wake of this incorporation, I show that geography will turn demonic, because the study of space-as-life requires the discarding of the twin illusions of the self and of conscious free will and the acceptance of the fact that we all are bodies without souls.
I begin with a description of the pre-systematic practice of inference to common cause in a range of everyday geographies and then exploit this descriptive resting point to systematically expose the ontological and mathematical warrants... more
I begin with a description of the pre-systematic practice of inference to common cause in a range of everyday geographies and then exploit this descriptive resting point to systematically expose the ontological and mathematical warrants that ground this neglected variant of nonmonotonic reasoning. The ontological warrant consists in the deceptively simple facts that (a) a subset of the properties of geographical structures is information-preserving, (b) the flow of time can both increase and decrease informational entropy, and (c) geographical information can be ordered by its degree of diagnosticity. The mathematical warrant derives from the fact that the calculus of probabilities has the power to shield us from some of the epistemic vicissitudes of living in an uncertain world. More specifically, the vanishingly small probability that a growing set of unlikely facts would have separate causes drives inference to common cause by mobilizing the lay reasoner to scavenge the surrounding geographies in search for additional unlikely facts. I end the paper by bringing out its methodological implications for geographical scholarship.
Human geography has travelled a long distance from the days of the theoretical and quantitative revolution, to the extent that nowadays this discipline is dominated by post-positivistic thinking and non-quantitative approaches, and is... more
Human geography has travelled a long distance from the days of the theoretical and quantitative revolution, to the extent that nowadays this discipline is dominated by post-positivistic thinking and non-quantitative approaches, and is celebratory of the importance of subjectivity, as evidenced in areas as diverse as work on geographical imaginations and imaginative geographies, feminist and queer theory, and non-representational theory. The notion of distance has failed to keep pace with the transformation of geography and the social sciences and this failure is reflected in its unsurprising current neglect. Can distance be turned into a concept that is pregnant with meaning? Can we update the notion in such a way so that it resonates with, and supports the centrality given to the human subject in the social sciences? Can we morph it into a useable tool that genuinely improves how we think about the human subject geographically? I shall show that the answer to these questions is positive, provided that we are willing to travel to the blurry margins of social science and learn from how psychologists have understood to handle this concept.
My purpose in this presentation is to elaborate a user‐ friendly framework that articulates in an orderly and rigorous fashion the multiple meanings of information‐tracking in geography. In particular, I am interested in specifying the... more
My purpose in this presentation is to elaborate a user‐ friendly framework that articulates in an orderly and rigorous fashion the multiple meanings of information‐tracking in geography. In particular, I am interested in specifying the fine‐ grain logic by which information in the geographical landscape is preserved across ontological categories, through time. To this end, (1) I introduce a number of crucial distinctions from contemporary metaphysics and (2) highlight the importance of the relationship between the informational content of an attribute of a given geographical entity and the processes or events that explain the coming into being of that particular attribute. Throughout the presentation, I illustrate my theoretical points with examples from an assortment of subdisciplines of geography.
The paper revisits extant geographical conceptualisations of place and of the relationship between self and place in order to align our discipline's understanding of place with current developments in cognitive science and psychology.... more
The paper revisits extant geographical conceptualisations of place and of the relationship between self and place in order to align our discipline's understanding of place with current developments in cognitive science and psychology. More specifically, I describe, explain, and illustrate specific mechanisms by which our subjective experience of place is being structured. The key conceptual move enabling this surprising level of detail consists in decomposing the umbrella term "memory" and analysing in a systematic manner the multiple memory systems through which we encode the mark that a given place has had on us.
Ninety-minute talk with Andreu Ulied, as part of the Rebalance Talks Online conversations with visionary thinkers from the social sciences and humanities, mobility experts, stakeholders and European policy decision-makers on the topic of... more
Ninety-minute talk with Andreu Ulied, as part of the Rebalance Talks
Online conversations with visionary thinkers from the social sciences and humanities, mobility experts, stakeholders and European policy decision-makers on the topic of New Mobility Cultures and Policies. Dragos Simandan discusses his recent research, as well as the broader context of the COVID-19 pandemic. https://rebalancemobility.eu/being-guided-by-a-single-value-is-troubling-when-you-push-a-value-to-its-extreme-it-becomes-a-vice/