Navigating turbulent waters

IF 2.9 2区 社会学 Q1 GEOGRAPHY
Sara Fuller
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Nonetheless, the personal and professional impacts of the waves currently buffeting the higher education sector cannot be underestimated.</p><p>However, the continuing relevance and vibrancy of the discipline of geography as a ‘meeting of the seas’ gives ongoing cause for optimism. In this context, it is a great privilege to contribute to the geographical community in Australia and beyond as the new Editor-in-Chief for <i>Geographical Research</i>. The coming months will provide an opportunity to reflect on the vision and purpose of the journal and ensure it continues to foreground the dynamic research, teaching, and praxis that characterise the discipline.</p><p>But this work cannot be undertaken without deeply and sincerely acknowledging the work of my Editor-in-Chief predecessor, Elaine Stratford. Put simply, the journal has flourished under Elaine’s leadership over the last decade. There will, I hope, be other opportunities to formally recognise Elaine’s contributions but the journal’s current success and reputation by any range of metrics—be that impact factor, international readership, or number of submissions—is a result of Elaine’s ongoing care, vision, and commitment. I draw readers’ attention to the tribute in the recent newsletter of the Institute of Australian Geographers (IAG) (<span>2024</span>) for more heartfelt reflections.</p><p>Elaine will continue as Senior Associate Editor to the benefit of the entire editorial team, and it is a collective I join with great enthusiasm. I am already indebted to Kirstie Petrou for her patience and knowledge as editorial assistant, and I have received a warm welcome from Brian Cook, Clare Mouat, Patrick Moss, Miriam Williams, and Alexander Burton in the editorial team as well as Simon Goudie and colleagues at Wiley. I look forward to developing relationships with the editorial board and colleagues at the IAG Council over time.</p><p>Of course, reflections on the purpose of <i>Geographical Research</i> need to be considered within their wider context. Returning to the metaphor of turbulent waters, the world of publishing is itself experiencing considerable disruption, not least from the growing impact of generative artificial intelligence. This will undoubtedly bring some ethical dilemmas to the forefront as we explore how AI tools are utilised in scholarly writing and journal publishing processes. Rapid transitions are also happening in terms of how journal papers are produced and published. While some of this will happen ‘behind the scenes’ and will not be immediately visible to readers, we will be collectively reflecting on our mechanisms for curating papers in order to maintain the visibility and currency of both present and past articles.</p><p>As an editorial team, we will also be grappling with questions of impact. At one level, this involves restating the long-standing goal to position <i>Geographical Research</i> as an international journal, but it also means building on the success of our webinars and other activities to consider what impact means to us in practice. We will be thinking hard about our social media strategy and identifying new platforms for sharing content. More to follow on all of this!</p><p>Above all, <i>Geographical Research</i> will remain a shared endeavour between editors, publishers, authors, reviewers, and readers. Its success will continue to rest on our collective care, integrity, and passion for our discipline, despite the turbulent waters we are navigating. I warmly welcome all contributions in support of this venture.</p><p>This issue of <i>Geographical Research</i> includes a commentary, three original stand-alone papers, and seven further original papers, introduced by an editorial, which form a special section on geographical approaches to climate change education. To start Patrick Moss (<span>2025</span>), as Associate Editor for the journal, offers a commentary on the importance of place and time in the context of resilience and in so doing considers how the concept might be positioned as an anchoring point for human and physical geography.</p><p>The first original paper is the Fay Gale memorial lecture delivered at the 2023 IAG conference in Perth. Emma Ligtermoet (<span>2025</span>) considers knowledge co-production in three different contexts: the historical co-production of knowledge of coastal freshwater floodplain Country of the Northern Territory, facilitating the Kunwinjku Seasons calendar, and enabling reflexive co-production praxis with sustainability science researchers at a national science institution. Ligtermoet reflects on experiences as an early career researcher and seeks to provoke readers to reflect on their own co-production praxis.</p><p>Next in this issue are two mixed methods papers that offer rich empirical findings and important conceptual and methodological insights. The paper by Rana Dadpour et al. (<span>2025</span>) presents a mixed methods study exploring urban liveability in Cairns and highlights the value of qualitative GIS methodologies in mapping the experiences of recent migrants. 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引用次数: 0

Abstract

I write this first Editor-in-Chief commentary while reflecting on my recent summer break in Aotearoa New Zealand. I was fortunate to spend some time at Cape Reinga in Northland. The lighthouse there marks a meeting point of the Tasman Sea and the Pacific Ocean, with whirlpools where the currents collide. These turbulent waters not only represent a special place in Māori culture but also serve as a contemporary metaphor for geography and geographers. Turbulence in the academy and the positioning of geography within such debates are, of course, now well-rehearsed conversations in Geographical Research and elsewhere. Nonetheless, the personal and professional impacts of the waves currently buffeting the higher education sector cannot be underestimated.

However, the continuing relevance and vibrancy of the discipline of geography as a ‘meeting of the seas’ gives ongoing cause for optimism. In this context, it is a great privilege to contribute to the geographical community in Australia and beyond as the new Editor-in-Chief for Geographical Research. The coming months will provide an opportunity to reflect on the vision and purpose of the journal and ensure it continues to foreground the dynamic research, teaching, and praxis that characterise the discipline.

But this work cannot be undertaken without deeply and sincerely acknowledging the work of my Editor-in-Chief predecessor, Elaine Stratford. Put simply, the journal has flourished under Elaine’s leadership over the last decade. There will, I hope, be other opportunities to formally recognise Elaine’s contributions but the journal’s current success and reputation by any range of metrics—be that impact factor, international readership, or number of submissions—is a result of Elaine’s ongoing care, vision, and commitment. I draw readers’ attention to the tribute in the recent newsletter of the Institute of Australian Geographers (IAG) (2024) for more heartfelt reflections.

Elaine will continue as Senior Associate Editor to the benefit of the entire editorial team, and it is a collective I join with great enthusiasm. I am already indebted to Kirstie Petrou for her patience and knowledge as editorial assistant, and I have received a warm welcome from Brian Cook, Clare Mouat, Patrick Moss, Miriam Williams, and Alexander Burton in the editorial team as well as Simon Goudie and colleagues at Wiley. I look forward to developing relationships with the editorial board and colleagues at the IAG Council over time.

Of course, reflections on the purpose of Geographical Research need to be considered within their wider context. Returning to the metaphor of turbulent waters, the world of publishing is itself experiencing considerable disruption, not least from the growing impact of generative artificial intelligence. This will undoubtedly bring some ethical dilemmas to the forefront as we explore how AI tools are utilised in scholarly writing and journal publishing processes. Rapid transitions are also happening in terms of how journal papers are produced and published. While some of this will happen ‘behind the scenes’ and will not be immediately visible to readers, we will be collectively reflecting on our mechanisms for curating papers in order to maintain the visibility and currency of both present and past articles.

As an editorial team, we will also be grappling with questions of impact. At one level, this involves restating the long-standing goal to position Geographical Research as an international journal, but it also means building on the success of our webinars and other activities to consider what impact means to us in practice. We will be thinking hard about our social media strategy and identifying new platforms for sharing content. More to follow on all of this!

Above all, Geographical Research will remain a shared endeavour between editors, publishers, authors, reviewers, and readers. Its success will continue to rest on our collective care, integrity, and passion for our discipline, despite the turbulent waters we are navigating. I warmly welcome all contributions in support of this venture.

This issue of Geographical Research includes a commentary, three original stand-alone papers, and seven further original papers, introduced by an editorial, which form a special section on geographical approaches to climate change education. To start Patrick Moss (2025), as Associate Editor for the journal, offers a commentary on the importance of place and time in the context of resilience and in so doing considers how the concept might be positioned as an anchoring point for human and physical geography.

The first original paper is the Fay Gale memorial lecture delivered at the 2023 IAG conference in Perth. Emma Ligtermoet (2025) considers knowledge co-production in three different contexts: the historical co-production of knowledge of coastal freshwater floodplain Country of the Northern Territory, facilitating the Kunwinjku Seasons calendar, and enabling reflexive co-production praxis with sustainability science researchers at a national science institution. Ligtermoet reflects on experiences as an early career researcher and seeks to provoke readers to reflect on their own co-production praxis.

Next in this issue are two mixed methods papers that offer rich empirical findings and important conceptual and methodological insights. The paper by Rana Dadpour et al. (2025) presents a mixed methods study exploring urban liveability in Cairns and highlights the value of qualitative GIS methodologies in mapping the experiences of recent migrants. The final stand-alone paper in this issue comes from Suale Iddrisu et al. (2025) who explore issues of food security and sustainability in Ghana and delve into the impacts of urban expansion on farmer livelihoods.

Catherine Walker and colleagues (2025a) introduce the special section on geographical approaches to creative, hopeful, and inclusive climate change education. Their collection of papers (Magrane, 2025; McMeeking et al., 2025; Parsons et al., 2025. Portus et al., 2025; Satchwell et al., 2025; Trott, 2025; Walker et al., 2025a) provide rich examples from around the world to illustrate children and young people’s role as storytellers, as enablers of others’ stories, and as critical and empathetic listeners in the context of climate change. This special section will be further explored in an upcoming webinar later in the year.

在湍流中航行
我写这篇第一篇总编辑评论的时候,正在反思我最近在新西兰奥特罗阿度过的暑假。我很幸运地在北国的雷因加角度过了一段时间。那里的灯塔标志着塔斯曼海和太平洋的交汇点,洋流碰撞的地方有漩涡。这些汹涌的水域不仅代表了Māori文化中的一个特殊位置,而且也作为当代地理学家和地理学家的隐喻。当然,学术界的动荡和地理学在这种辩论中的定位,现在已经成为《地理研究》和其他地方的常客。然而,目前冲击高等教育部门的这股浪潮对个人和职业的影响是不可低估的。然而,地理学学科作为“海洋的相遇”,其持续的相关性和活力使人们有理由继续保持乐观。在这种背景下,我很荣幸能够作为《地理研究》的新主编为澳大利亚和其他地区的地理学界做出贡献。接下来的几个月将提供一个机会来反思期刊的愿景和目的,并确保它继续展现该学科特征的动态研究、教学和实践。但是,如果没有对我的前任主编伊莱恩·斯特拉特福德所做的工作表示深切和真诚的感谢,这项工作就无法开展。简而言之,过去十年,在伊莱恩的领导下,《华尔街日报》蓬勃发展。我希望将来会有其他的机会来正式认可Elaine的贡献,但是期刊目前的成功和声誉,无论是影响因子、国际读者还是投稿数量,都是Elaine持续关注、远见和承诺的结果。我提请读者注意澳大利亚地理学家协会(IAG)最近的通讯(2024)中的致敬,以获得更多发自内心的思考。伊莱恩将继续担任高级副主编,为整个编辑团队带来好处,我怀着极大的热情加入了这个团队。我已经感谢Kirstie Petrou作为编辑助理的耐心和知识,我也受到了编辑团队中的Brian Cook, Clare Mouat, Patrick Moss, Miriam Williams和Alexander Burton以及Simon Goudie和Wiley的同事们的热烈欢迎。我期待着随着时间的推移,与IAG理事会的编辑委员会和同事们发展关系。当然,对地理研究目的的反思需要在其更广泛的背景下考虑。回到湍流的比喻,出版业本身正经历着相当大的颠覆,尤其是来自生成式人工智能日益增长的影响。当我们探索人工智能工具如何用于学术写作和期刊出版过程时,这无疑会带来一些伦理困境。期刊论文的制作和出版方式也在发生快速转变。虽然其中一些将发生在“幕后”,读者不会立即看到,但我们将共同反思我们的论文管理机制,以保持现在和过去文章的可见性和流通性。作为一个编辑团队,我们还将努力解决影响力问题。在一个层面上,这包括重申将《地理研究》定位为一本国际期刊的长期目标,但它也意味着在我们的网络研讨会和其他活动的成功基础上,考虑在实践中对我们的影响意味着什么。我们将认真考虑我们的社交媒体战略,并确定分享内容的新平台。更多的跟随这一切!最重要的是,《地理研究》仍将是编辑、出版商、作者、审稿人和读者共同努力的成果。它的成功将继续依赖于我们的集体关怀、诚信和对我们学科的热情,尽管我们正在航行的是动荡的水域。我热烈欢迎支持这项事业的所有捐助。本期《地理研究》包括一篇评论、三篇独立的原创论文和另外七篇由社论介绍的原创论文,这些论文构成了气候变化教育的地理方法专题。帕特里克·莫斯(Patrick Moss, 2025)是该杂志的副主编,他首先对复原力背景下地点和时间的重要性进行了评论,并在此过程中考虑了如何将这一概念定位为人文和自然地理学的锚点。第一篇原创论文是在2023年珀斯IAG会议上发表的Fay Gale纪念演讲。 Emma Ligtermoet(2025)考虑了三种不同背景下的知识合作生产:北领地沿海淡水泛滥平原国家知识的历史合作生产,促进昆温州季节日历,以及与国家科学机构的可持续性科学研究人员进行反思性合作生产实践。利特莫特反思了作为一名早期职业研究者的经历,并试图激发读者反思自己的合作生产实践。接下来是两篇混合方法的论文,它们提供了丰富的实证发现和重要的概念和方法见解。Rana Dadpour等人(2025)的论文提出了一项探索凯恩斯城市宜居性的混合方法研究,并强调了定性GIS方法在绘制近期移民经历方面的价值。本期的最后一篇独立论文来自Suale Iddrisu等人(2025),他们探讨了加纳的粮食安全和可持续性问题,并深入研究了城市扩张对农民生计的影响。凯瑟琳·沃克及其同事(2025a)介绍了关于创造性、充满希望和包容性的气候变化教育的地理方法的特别部分。他们的论文合集(麦格兰,2025;McMeeking et al., 2025;帕森斯等人,2025。Portus等人,2025;Satchwell等人,2025;Trott, 2025;Walker等人,2025a)提供了来自世界各地的丰富例子,以说明儿童和年轻人在气候变化背景下作为故事讲述者,作为他人故事的推动者,以及作为批判性和同理心的倾听者的角色。这个特别的部分将在今年晚些时候的网络研讨会上进一步探讨。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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