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#ArcGIS Instant #Apps: It all starts with the web #map tinyurl.com/596cmvfa

#mapping #dataviz #WebGIS #GIS #esri #GISchat #geospatial #ArcGISApps #TheScienceOfWhere #geosky

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Screenshot of a paper abstract in Geo: Geography and Environment by Robin Tutunaru, Julia Uhde, Frederic Wrage, Bodo Schneider, Stefan Schweiger & Uwe Holzhammer (2026) entitled: 'Observing Regional Energy Transition Preferences—An Interactive Energy Transition Tool for Scenario Mapping Applied to the Case of Ingolstadt Region, Germany' with an orange banner at the top.

Screenshot of a paper abstract in Geo: Geography and Environment by Robin Tutunaru, Julia Uhde, Frederic Wrage, Bodo Schneider, Stefan Schweiger & Uwe Holzhammer (2026) entitled: 'Observing Regional Energy Transition Preferences—An Interactive Energy Transition Tool for Scenario Mapping Applied to the Case of Ingolstadt Region, Germany' with an orange banner at the top.

💡New in Geo💡

'Observing regional energy transition preferences—An interactive energy transition tool for scenario mapping applied to the case of Ingolstadt region, Germany' by Robin Tutunaru et al.

doi.org/10.1002/geo2... #geosky

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Querying Nature and (Anti‐/De‐)coloniality: Introduction to the Symposium The introduction to this Symposium outlines how actually existing movements contest various forms of “colonial Natures,” from settler property regimes to extractive frontiers and conservation landsca...

As usual, @antipodeonline.bsky.social sets a standard for radical scholarship. #geosky
onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/...
Great SI on Nature and Anti-/decoloniality

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Unsere Kolleginnen von der Arbeitsgruppe #Wirtschaftsgeographie der @uni-wuerzburg.de richten vom 12.-13. November 2026 die nächste Projektwerkstatt Wirtschaftsgeographie in #Würzburg aus. Deadline für Abstracts ist der 31. Mai 2026.
#GeoSky
www.geographie.uni-wuerzburg.de/wirtschaftsg...

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#geosky people 🪨 ⚒️ are there any documented landslides that have a failure plane along a carbonate layer, where the failure is known to have occurred because the caves became so extensive that the layer lost strength and caused collapse? 🧐

Like, not sinkhole collapse but a whole layer sliding?

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Video: Advice for Clear & Effective #ArcGISDashboard design tinyurl.com/3eesmkuh

#dashboards #dataviz #GIS #esri #arcgis #bestpractices #GISchat #geospatial #ArcGISApps #TheScienceOfWhere #geosky

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#GeoSky #GISchat

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This is really great fun! 🤩

#GeoSky #GISchat

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Add #geospatial #PDFs to your #ArcGIS Field #Maps workflows tinyurl.com/3k6n7ety

#FieldOperations #mobile #GIS #DataCollection #esri #mapping #GISchat #TheScienceOfWhere #geosky

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The FOSS4G North America @foss4gna.bsky.social 2025 Special Issue with @stacksjournal.bsky.social is taking shape! We need reviewers for 4 articles:
📝PCA + Convolution Kernels
📝Machine Learning-Optimized Tile Grids
📝Bridge Impacts in Rwanda
📝Gaps in Rural Access

DM me to sign up! #gischat #geosky

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Tomorrow, #EsriTraining webinar: #Metadata Essentials for #AI-Ready #GIS tinyurl.com/5n9ad79x

#DataMgmt #esri #ArcGIS #mapping #GISchat #geospatial #ArcGISPro #ArcGISOnline #TheScienceOfWhere #geosky

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Screenshot of a paper abstract in Geo: Geography and Environment by Pratik Mishra & Laurie Parsons (2026) entitled: 'Rest in a Warming Workplace: Resituating the Science and Policy of Non-Work Under Climate Change' with an orange banner at the top.

Screenshot of a paper abstract in Geo: Geography and Environment by Pratik Mishra & Laurie Parsons (2026) entitled: 'Rest in a Warming Workplace: Resituating the Science and Policy of Non-Work Under Climate Change' with an orange banner at the top.

🌏New in Geo🌏

'Rest in a warming workplace: Resituating the science and policy of non-work under climate change' by Pratik Mishra & @laurieparsons.bsky.social

This paper presents a critical review of rest under heat stress and rest as mitigation strategy.

doi.org/10.1002/geo2... #geosky

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Edit Your Way with the Web Editor #ArcGIS Instant Apps Template tinyurl.com/bddm27dp

#editing #DataMgmt #WebGIS #GIS #esri #mapping #ArcGISApps #GISchat #geospatial #TheScienceOfWhere #geosky

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Area | RGS Geography Journal | Wiley Online Library This paper presents a novel, material method of representing food waste inside domestic refrigerators with Post-It notes and ‘fridge maps’ to trace food as it moves out of the fridge to become food w...

New in Area:

'Tracing waste: Using post-it notes and "fridge maps" to record food waste in household refrigerators' by @emmaatkins.bsky.social

This paper presents a novel material method of visually representing food waste inside domestic fridges.

doi.org/10.1111/area... #geosky

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FOSS4G North America is in Sacramento, CA this November! Network and meet people in all aspects of the geospatial industry from users to developers by joining the planning team. Voice your interest here: www.foss4gna.org#contact

#gischat #geosky

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Screenshot of a paper abstract in The Geographical Journal by Robin Finlay, Matthew C. Benwell & Peter Hopkins (2026) entitled: 'Domesticating the UK's Hostile Environment: Forced Migrants' Lived Experiences of Making ‘Home’' with a blue banner at the top.

In this paper, we analyse the lived experiences of forced migrants in dispersal accommodation in the UK, contributing to understandings of the policies and politics of the hostile environment immigration regime in relation to the domestic sphere. More specifically, our research addresses the relative dearth of work exploring the intimate lived experiences of forced migrants by considering how the asylum regime shapes understandings of home and constrains processes of homemaking. We examine how material and social aspects of dispersal accommodation work to limit forced migrants' sense of home. We show how ‘out of place’ materialities, such as leaks, damp and infestations of insects, alongside broken and absent material fittings, such as decaying and missing furniture, undermine the making of a safe and comfortable home. We also illustrate how social relations within and around dispersal accommodation, including relationships and encounters with neighbours and flatmates, can undermine one's sense of home and belonging. By illustrating the interconnections of the material and social, we contribute to understandings of forced migrants' experiences of housing that are constituted through an assemblage of people, objects, relations, emotions and broader political policies. Whilst forced migrants respond to precarious housing through diverse coping strategies, this paper shows that within the context of a hostile UK asylum and migration system, the ability to make home is highly constrained.

Screenshot of a paper abstract in The Geographical Journal by Robin Finlay, Matthew C. Benwell & Peter Hopkins (2026) entitled: 'Domesticating the UK's Hostile Environment: Forced Migrants' Lived Experiences of Making ‘Home’' with a blue banner at the top. In this paper, we analyse the lived experiences of forced migrants in dispersal accommodation in the UK, contributing to understandings of the policies and politics of the hostile environment immigration regime in relation to the domestic sphere. More specifically, our research addresses the relative dearth of work exploring the intimate lived experiences of forced migrants by considering how the asylum regime shapes understandings of home and constrains processes of homemaking. We examine how material and social aspects of dispersal accommodation work to limit forced migrants' sense of home. We show how ‘out of place’ materialities, such as leaks, damp and infestations of insects, alongside broken and absent material fittings, such as decaying and missing furniture, undermine the making of a safe and comfortable home. We also illustrate how social relations within and around dispersal accommodation, including relationships and encounters with neighbours and flatmates, can undermine one's sense of home and belonging. By illustrating the interconnections of the material and social, we contribute to understandings of forced migrants' experiences of housing that are constituted through an assemblage of people, objects, relations, emotions and broader political policies. Whilst forced migrants respond to precarious housing through diverse coping strategies, this paper shows that within the context of a hostile UK asylum and migration system, the ability to make home is highly constrained.

New in The GJ:

'Domesticating the UK's hostile environment: Forced migrants' lived experiences of making "home"' by @robinfinlay.bsky.social et al.

doi.org/10.1111/geoj... #geosky

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#GeoSky #GISchat

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Screenshot of a paper abstract in Geo: Geography and Environment by Yuan Feng, Yu Jia & Ying Miao (2026) entitled: 'A Systematic Review of Agent-Based Modelling of Residential Low-Carbon Energy Technology Uptake and Its Integration of Place-Based Approach' with an orange banner at the top.

Screenshot of a paper abstract in Geo: Geography and Environment by Yuan Feng, Yu Jia & Ying Miao (2026) entitled: 'A Systematic Review of Agent-Based Modelling of Residential Low-Carbon Energy Technology Uptake and Its Integration of Place-Based Approach' with an orange banner at the top.

🌏New in Geo🌏

'A systematic review of agent-based modelling of residential low-carbon energy technology uptake and its integration of place-based approach' by Yuan Feng et al.

doi.org/10.1002/geo2... #geosky

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We created a new global map of forests and tree crops for 2020 at 10 meter resolution using satellite embeddings. After testing several machine learning methods, we found that simple linear models performed as well as or better than more complex ones. The map identifies forests with 91 % accuracy and separates tree crops with low confusion with forests. This shows that satellite embeddings can support reliable and efficient global forest monitoring and inform international and national policies.

We created a new global map of forests and tree crops for 2020 at 10 meter resolution using satellite embeddings. After testing several machine learning methods, we found that simple linear models performed as well as or better than more complex ones. The map identifies forests with 91 % accuracy and separates tree crops with low confusion with forests. This shows that satellite embeddings can support reliable and efficient global forest monitoring and inform international and national policies.

Introducing GEM-Forest, a 10m Global EMbedding-based #forest and tree crop map for 2020 that combines linear SVM and Google DeepMind's AEF satellite #embeddings.

Read the preprint: doi.org/10.5194/egus...

@valeriomarsocci.bsky.social @adamhastie.bsky.social #philab

#GISChat #GeoSky #EOChat

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Screenshot of a paper abstract in Area by Olivia Mason (2026) entitled: 'Doing geography amidst precarity' with a black banner at the top.

Neoliberal agendas are increasingly shaping both what it means to do geography but also who can do geography. This is especially true for early career academics. In this intervention I suggest the question of why we do geography is increasingly being buried as we simply survive in the neoliberal academy. What I argue is that the experiences of what it means to enter, get a job in, and then stay in the neoliberal academy are defining mine and others' experiences of being an academic. The number of job interviews undertaken, grants applied for or stories of precarity now dominate discussions rather than our research itself. These challenges in turn alter the ability to do geography research, especially research that involves long-term ethnography and/or else overseas fieldwork. Yet, I also argue that there are ways we can create more caring and careful research environments. Drawing on examples and experiences, this paper will end by exploring the acts of collective care, solidarity and resistance that can speak to the questions of what geography is for and why we do geography.

Screenshot of a paper abstract in Area by Olivia Mason (2026) entitled: 'Doing geography amidst precarity' with a black banner at the top. Neoliberal agendas are increasingly shaping both what it means to do geography but also who can do geography. This is especially true for early career academics. In this intervention I suggest the question of why we do geography is increasingly being buried as we simply survive in the neoliberal academy. What I argue is that the experiences of what it means to enter, get a job in, and then stay in the neoliberal academy are defining mine and others' experiences of being an academic. The number of job interviews undertaken, grants applied for or stories of precarity now dominate discussions rather than our research itself. These challenges in turn alter the ability to do geography research, especially research that involves long-term ethnography and/or else overseas fieldwork. Yet, I also argue that there are ways we can create more caring and careful research environments. Drawing on examples and experiences, this paper will end by exploring the acts of collective care, solidarity and resistance that can speak to the questions of what geography is for and why we do geography.

New in Area:

'Doing geography amidst precarity' by @oliviamason.bsky.social

This short piece is part of the ongoing Special Section: 'Dialogues in Radical Geography'.

doi.org/10.1111/area... #geosky

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Last touches on a report for Progress in Human Geography. Any lit in EconGeo you want to see featured? Condition: work needs to exhibit a deeper understanding of market/monopoly/monopsony/infrastructural power, mono-/oligipolistic competition, Bigness and be rooted primarily in Geography. #geosky

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Love this: ‘….reckless optimism in face of climate change’ (E. Nelson, Montana State University) #aag2026 #GeoSky

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Please join us for our final two organized sessions at #AAG2026! #geography #geosky

at 10:10am, Black Geographies and Palestinian Liberation

and at 12:50pm, No Geographic Technology for Apartheid

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Screenshot of a paper abstract in Geo: Geography and Environment by Christoph Neger, Cody Evers, Kapil Yadav & Octavio Romero Cuapio (2026) entitled: 'Mapping Fire Management: A Spatial Social Network Approach' with an orange banner at the top.

Maps are an essential tool to inform fire governance and management. For instance, they can highlight which areas are most vulnerable to adverse fire impacts or be used to plan interventions for risk reduction and prevention. In recent years, several studies have mapped the fire management activities and the networks between the multitude of involved actors. They build upon previous advances to combine quantitative and qualitative social network analysis with geographical analysis and cartography, aiming to highlight areas of opportunity to enhance fire governance. This paper continues this line of research, examining cooperation in fire management within the south-eastern part of the state of Chiapas. This area is the main fire risk area in Southern Mexico, characterised by the involvement of many different fire management actors. The paper proposes two advances to better visualise the networks between these actors—integration with modularity clustering and a thematic map integrating different spatial scales—and discusses the implications of these fire network maps for governance. The paper's main results are, first, the confirmation of the considerable influence of spatial distance and aspects of human and physical geography on network formation. Second, it shows the capacity of mapping to inform regional fire management arrangements.

Screenshot of a paper abstract in Geo: Geography and Environment by Christoph Neger, Cody Evers, Kapil Yadav & Octavio Romero Cuapio (2026) entitled: 'Mapping Fire Management: A Spatial Social Network Approach' with an orange banner at the top. Maps are an essential tool to inform fire governance and management. For instance, they can highlight which areas are most vulnerable to adverse fire impacts or be used to plan interventions for risk reduction and prevention. In recent years, several studies have mapped the fire management activities and the networks between the multitude of involved actors. They build upon previous advances to combine quantitative and qualitative social network analysis with geographical analysis and cartography, aiming to highlight areas of opportunity to enhance fire governance. This paper continues this line of research, examining cooperation in fire management within the south-eastern part of the state of Chiapas. This area is the main fire risk area in Southern Mexico, characterised by the involvement of many different fire management actors. The paper proposes two advances to better visualise the networks between these actors—integration with modularity clustering and a thematic map integrating different spatial scales—and discusses the implications of these fire network maps for governance. The paper's main results are, first, the confirmation of the considerable influence of spatial distance and aspects of human and physical geography on network formation. Second, it shows the capacity of mapping to inform regional fire management arrangements.

🔥New in Geo🔥

'Mapping fire management: A spatial social network approach' by Christoph Neger et al.

This paper is part of an ongoing Special Section: 'Mapping human-fire interactions'.

doi.org/10.1002/geo2... #geosky

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New article by Schirpke et al. in Nature-Based Solutions This is how urban green spaces should be designed to provide effective protection against heat.

Cities are heating up, but smarter green spaces can help cool them down 🌳 Our new study shows how trees, coverage & better distribution of urban green spaces can significantly reduce heat and improve access!

🔗 Learn more on our blog: www.geo.lmu.de/geographie/e...

#greensky #geosky 🧪

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today at #AAG2026 I'll be responding to some brilliant papers at this session on "Santa Cruz School of Political Ecology, Past and Future 2: New Directions." 2:30pm! #geosky

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please join us for two sessions at #AAG2026 today! #geosky

at 10:10am, "Resisting Scholasticide in Palestine"

at 12:50pm, "Israeli Regional Counterinsurgency & Normalization"

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Screenshot of a paper absract in Geo: Geography and Environment by Grace May, Meg Parsons & Karen Fisher (2026) entitled: 'Navigating Climate Governance: Intersectional Youth Visions of Just Urban Adaptation' with an orange banner at the top.

Screenshot of a paper absract in Geo: Geography and Environment by Grace May, Meg Parsons & Karen Fisher (2026) entitled: 'Navigating Climate Governance: Intersectional Youth Visions of Just Urban Adaptation' with an orange banner at the top.

🌏New in Geo🌏

'Navigating climate governance: Intersectional youth visions of just urban adaptation' by Grace May et al.

This paper explores how young women & gender-diverse youth experience barriers in urban climate adaptation in Auckland, Aotearoa New Zealand.

doi.org/10.1002/geo2... #geosky

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#GeoSky #GISchat

A big win for open data!

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our first panel starts in about an hour! join us to learn more about the BDS movement #aag2026 #geosky

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