
Workshops at the Annual Conference
We are delighted to feature the following workshops at the conference as part of the wider programme. If workshops require sign up in advance, we will share the details here.
- Civic geographies (3): workshop, organised by Gemma Adams (National Civic Impact Accelerator), Zoe Williamson (National Civic Impact Accelerator) and Alison Blunt (Queen Mary University of London).
- Colours, pencils and paints: a walk-in creative workshop, organised by Josie Hamper (University of Oxford) and Maaret Jokela-Pansini (University of Oxford).
- Creative vulnerabilities in Latin America (workshop), organised by Nathan Waintrub (Universidad Mayor, Chile), Maria Jesus Alfaro-Simmonds (University of Sheffield) and Cristhian Figueroa (Universidad Tecnológica Metropolitana).
- Culture and heritage capital World Café, organised by Laura Taggart (Manchester Metropolitan University), Ajaz Ahmed (University of Glasgow), Elizabeth Bennett (University of Leeds) and Callum Reilly (National Trust).
- Fieldwork: how can it be made more inclusive for LGBTQ+ researchers, organised by Martin Zebracki (University of Leeds), Robin Hayward (University of Leeds) and Tilen Kolar (University of Leeds).
- New and emerging rural geographers (2): workshop, organised by Thomas Seale (University of Gloucestershire) and Aimee Morse (University of Gloucestershire).
- Participatory workshop: living with failure through care and creativity, organised by Eleanor Jupp (University of Kent), Dawn Lyon (University of Kent) and Tom Disney (Northumbria University).
- Pedagogy Cafe: teaching and learning (from) the Middle East and North Africa, organised by Aya Nussar (Durham University), Muna Dajani (London School of Economics), Iram Sammar (Kings College London), Sasha Engelmann (Royal Holloway, University of London), Dena Qaddumi (London School of Economics) and Olivia Mason (Newcastle University).
- Salty workshop, organised by Katy Beinart (University of Brighton), Alessio Mazzaro (University of Turin), Catherine Bertola (Teeside University) and Sophie Williamson (Goldsmiths, University of London).
- Sensory and speculative geographies, organised by Sarah Walker. (Manchester Metropolitan University) and Ellen Bishop (University of Glasgow).
- Sonic vulnerabilities: listening, collaging, and conversing with early motherhood, organised by Eva Neely (Victoria University of Wellington) and Kate Boyer (School of Geography and Planning, Cardiff University).
- Stitch Assembly, organised by Laura Pottinger (University of Manchester), Alison Jeffers (University of Manchester) and Poppy Budworth (Lancaster University).
- The composting heap: chicken sharing bucket, organised by Paul Hurley (The University of Southampton) and Kathryn Ashill (Artist).
- World Café on creative methods in energy demand research, organised by Llinos Brown (University of Leeds), Manon Burbidge (University of Manchester) and Angela Smith (University of Leeds).
- World Café on creativity and creative approaches to development geographies, organised by Katharina Richter (University of Bristol) and Sarah Peck (Northumbria University).
- What can we creatively learn here, that we can learn nowhere else?organised by Smriti Safaya (University of York) and Suzie Eden (University of York).
- Who killed my goat? Tales from creative research that uses Minecraft within a blend of outdoor and digital spaces with neurodivergent young people, organised by Tracy Ann Hayes (Plymouth Marjon University) and Adam Hart (The University of Salford).
- Writing for the journal Geography, organised by Matt Finn (University of Exeter) and Katie Willis (Royal Holloway).
- Writing successfully for the Journal of Geography in Higher Education, organised by Derek France (University of Chester), Sonja Rewhorn (Open University), Alan Marvell (University of Gloucestershire), Harry West (UWE, Bristol) and David Higgitt (University of Lancaster).