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Library | Material Type | Item Barcode | Call Number | Shelf Location | Status | Item Holds |
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Summary
Summary
Liberty and freedom are frequently invoked to justify political action. Presidents as diverse as Woodrow Wilson, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, John F. Kennedy, Ronald Reagan, and George W. Bush have built their policies on some version of these noble values. Yet in practice, idealist agendas often turn sour as they confront specific circumstances on the ground. Demonstrated by incidents at Abu Ghraib and Guantánamo Bay, the pursuit of liberty and freedom can lead to violence and repression, undermining our trust in universal theories of liberalism, neoliberalism, and cosmopolitanism.
Combining his passions for politics and geography, David Harvey charts a cosmopolitan order more appropriate to an emancipatory form of global governance. Political agendas tend to fail, he argues, because they ignore the complexities of geography. Incorporating geographical knowledge into the formation of social and political policy is therefore a necessary condition for genuine democracy.
Harvey begins with an insightful critique of the political uses of freedom and liberty, especially during the George W. Bush administration. Then, through an ontological investigation into geography's foundational concepts--space, place, and environment--he radically reframes geographical knowledge as a basis for social theory and political action. As Harvey makes clear, the cosmopolitanism that emerges is rooted in human experience rather than illusory ideals and brings us closer to achieving the liberation we seek.
Table of Contents
Preface | p. ix |
Prologue | p. 1 |
Part 1 Universal Values | p. 15 |
1 Kant's Anthropology and Geography | p. 17 |
2 The Postcolonial Critique of Liberal Cosmopolitanism | p. 37 |
3 The Flat World of Neoliberal Utopianism | p. 51 |
4 The New Cosmopolitans | p. 77 |
5 The Banality of Geographical Evils | p. 98 |
Part 2 Geographical Knowledges | p. 123 |
6 Geographical Reason | p. 125 |
7 Spacetime and the World | p. 133 |
8 Places, Regions, Territories | p. 166 |
9 The Nature of Environment | p. 202 |
Epilogue: Geographical Theory and the Ruses of Geographical Reason | p. 249 |
Notes | p. 285 |
Bibliography | p. 309 |
Index | p. 325 |