Home » Addressing Anti-Black Racism » Recommended Readings & Films » “COVID-19’s Cracks, Climate Crisis, and Academia’s Role in Bringing about an Ontological Shift” Professional Geographer (2021).
“COVID-19’s Cracks, Climate Crisis, and Academia’s Role in Bringing about an Ontological Shift” Professional Geographer (2021).
Beverley Mullings is a professor and Associate Undergraduate Program Head in the Department of Geography and Planning at Queen’s University. Her research focuses on feminist political economy, social transformation, labour, neoliberalism, and intersectionality in the Caribbean and the diaspora.
Other publications from this author include:
- “Caliban, social reproduction and our future yet to come” in Geoforum 118 (4), 150-158 (2021)
- “Garrison Communities” in Keywords in Radical Geography: Antipode at 50, 141-145 (2019)
- “Reflections on mentoring as decolonial, transnational, feminist praxis” in Gender, Place and Culture: A Journal of Feminist Geography 25 (2), 1-18 (2019)
- “Cultivating an ethic of wellness in geography” in Canadian Geographer (2016)
- “Globalization and the territorializaton of the new Caribbean service economy” in Journal of Economic Geography 4 (3), 275-298. (2004)
- “Insider or outsider, both or neither: some dilemmas of interviewing in a cross-cultural setting” in Geoforum 30 (4), 337-350 (1999)