Beschreibung:
Barney Warf is a Professor of Geography at the University of Kansas. Much of his research concerns producer services and telecommunications, particularly the geographies of the internet, including fiber optics, the digital divide, e-government, and internet censorship. He views these topics through the lens of political economy and social theory. He also maintains an active interest in political geography, including elections, voting technologies, and the U.S. electoral college. Currently, he serves as editor of GeoJournal, editor-in-chief for geography for Oxford Bibliographies On-Line, and edits a series of geography texts. His teaching interests include urban and economic geography, the history of geographic thought, globalization, and contemporary social theory.
This timely, insightful and expert-led volume interprets the 2020 U.S. Presidential election from a geographical standpoint, with a focus on its spatial dimensions.
1. Introduction: The 2020 Presidential Election in Context 2. From Voting to Vice President: 100 Years of Women in U.S. Politics 3. The Economic and Psychological Origins of Right-Wing Radicalization in the U.S. 4. The Geography of the 2020 Election's Presidential/Congressional Voting Gap 5. Contesting Control of the Senate: The Georgia Senate Elections, 2020-2021 6. Covid-19, Race, and the 2020 Election in Wisconsin 7. Political Ramifications of the Jacob Blake Shooting in Kenosha, Wisconsin on the 2020 Presidential Election 8. Diseased Democracy: Geographies of the Covid-19 Pandemic and its Impact on the 2020 Presidential Election 9. "The Apartment above a Meth Lab"? Participation in and Impacts of the 2020 U.S. Election in Canada 10. Fear, Joy, and Socialism in Cuban and Cuban-American Perspectives of the 2020 Presidential Election 11. "I was Robbed": Election as Title Match