2021
DOI: 10.1111/tesg.12478
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A World Beyond Web of Science: AGORA Magazine's 35 Years in Dutch‐Language Human Geography

Abstract: Understanding human geography's development requires looking beyond high‐profile academic journals. Alternative publication circuits are spaces of experimentation and play an important role in the discipline's intergenerational reproduction. This paper narrates the 35‐year trajectory of AGORA Magazine, a Dutch–Flemish popular‐scientific early‐career publication focusing on a broad array of socio‐spatial issues. Uncovering AGORA's history guided by a network analysis of co‐occurring authors, we develop two main… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…It is in this respect encouraging that we now see the uncovering of forgotten or overlooked histories of radical and critical geography (with parallels to this article, e.g. de Craene et al 2021;Korf et al 2021).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 58%
“…It is in this respect encouraging that we now see the uncovering of forgotten or overlooked histories of radical and critical geography (with parallels to this article, e.g. de Craene et al 2021;Korf et al 2021).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 58%
“…Dutch geography traditionally had a practical empirical bent, relating to local and trans‐local issues of interest to public and policy debate in the Netherlands (De Craene et al . 2021). Over time, the Dutch human‐geographical discipline made a successful transition from a social science driven by colonial and educational purposes to one that reflected the interests of the Dutch welfare state, urban planning and international cooperation (De Pater 2001).…”
Section: The Future Of Geographic Society Journalsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…From the early 21st century onwards, numerous academic connections between early career researchers and professionals from the Netherlands and Flanders were established through the popular-scientific sociospatial journal AGORA Magazine (De Craene et al 2021). The comparably sizable influx in recent years of Dutch urban/geography researchers in Flanders has led to a further increase in terms of collaboration and co-authored research on topics as varied as tourism and cross-border regional development (Stoffelen & Vanneste 2017; In another example of such Dutch-Flemish collaborative efforts in which one of us was involved (van Meeteren et al 2016), it was argued that urban research can benefit from such multicultural engagements.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%