AAG Glenda Laws Award
Deadline: December 31, 2024
The Glenda Laws Award is administered by the American Association of Geographers and endorsed by members of the Institute of Australian Geographers, the Canadian Association of Geographers, and the Institute of British Geographers. The annual award recognizes outstanding contributions to geographic research on social issues. This award is named in memory of Glenda Laws—a geographer who brought energy and enthusiasm to her work on issues of social justice and social policy. All early to mid-career scholars involved in geographic research on one or more social issues will be eligible for this award. Nominations should include two letters of recommendation from scholars or members of community organizations familiar with the research upon which the nomination is based, a curriculum vitae, and a scholarly paper based on original research.
The award is presented at the Awards Ceremony at the AAG Annual Meeting. In addition, the Awardee(s) will be invited to contribute a publication to Social and Cultural Geography that uses their scholarship and experiences to offer perspectives on advancing geographic research on social issues, social justice, and social policy.
Applications
Complete nominations must be received by the deadline (Eastern Standard Time). Nominations will consist of:
- The nominee’s current CV that identifies at least one scholarly paper based on original research;
- A cover letter detailing outstanding contributions to geographic research on social issues application; and
- Two letters of recommendation. Letters of recommendation are directly requested in the application portal.
For questions or difficulties, please contact grantsawards@aag.org or call the AAG at 202-234-1450.
As with all other AAG awards, eligibility also rests on the candidate being in compliance with the AAG Professional Conduct Policy. Nominations may be rescinded, and the award may also be revoked for any candidate or awardee who is found in violation of the AAG’s Professional Conduct Policy.
As with all AAG awards, the JEDI Committee may decline to make an award in any given year.
AAG Glenda Laws Award Recipients
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Mohammed Rafi Arefin
Mohammed Rafi Arefin, assistant professor of geography at the University of British Columbia, is recognized both for his outstanding research on political ecologies of urban waste in the global North and South and for his unwavering commitment to environmental and climate justice. Dr. Arefin embodies the spirit of the Glenda Laws Award in his efforts to help establish a Centre for Climate Justice (CCJ) at UBC that connects the university with communities on the front lines of climate disruption. In addition to putting the university’s resources in service of diverse communities in British Columbia, the CCJ provides an activist network to advocate for substantive policy changes around issues of housing, sovereignty, and political freedoms. Dr. Arefin must also be recognized for his tireless efforts to bring international attention to the incarceration of political activists in Egypt ahead of the UN’s COP27 climate summit in Sharm el-Sheikh.
2024 AAG Glenda Laws Award
Mohammed Rafi Arefin
2024 AAG Glenda Laws Award
Mohammed Rafi Arefin, assistant professor of geography at the University of British Columbia, is recognized both for his outstanding research on political ecologies of urban waste in the global North and South and for his unwavering commitment to environmental and climate justice. Dr. Arefin embodies the spirit of the Glenda Laws Award in his efforts to help establish a Centre for Climate Justice (CCJ) at UBC that connects the university with communities on the front lines of climate disruption. In addition to putting the university’s resources in service of diverse communities in British Columbia, the CCJ provides an activist network to advocate for substantive policy changes around issues of housing, sovereignty, and political freedoms. Dr. Arefin must also be recognized for his tireless efforts to bring international attention to the incarceration of political activists in Egypt ahead of the UN’s COP27 climate summit in Sharm el-Sheikh.
Shiloh Krupar
Shiloh Krupar’s work combines scholarship on nuclear politics and policy with performance-based community activism. Her creativity and her commitment to public scholarship are remarkable. Among her many noteworthy projects are the National Toxic Land/Labor Conservation Service, a faux government agency that enlists artists-activists to propose projects focused on the environmental legacies of American militarism to actual government agencies. In addition, her A People’s Atlas of Nuclear Colorado invites the public to learn about, and to engage with, the history of the Cold War and nuclear landscapes in Colorado. This interactive digital atlas, which tackles Colorado’s nuclear military-industrial complex, represents stunningly innovative, interdisciplinary, collaborative and public facing scholarship that stretches the political and social scope of what it is that an atlas can do. In receiving this award, Dr. Krupar wishes to acknowledge her long-term collaborator on these projects, Sarah Kanouse. She is affiliated with Georgetown University.
2023 AAG Glenda Laws Award
Shiloh Krupar
2023 AAG Glenda Laws Award
Shiloh Krupar’s work combines scholarship on nuclear politics and policy with performance-based community activism. Her creativity and her commitment to public scholarship are remarkable. Among her many noteworthy projects are the National Toxic Land/Labor Conservation Service, a faux government agency that enlists artists-activists to propose projects focused on the environmental legacies of American militarism to actual government agencies. In addition, her A People’s Atlas of Nuclear Colorado invites the public to learn about, and to engage with, the history of the Cold War and nuclear landscapes in Colorado. This interactive digital atlas, which tackles Colorado’s nuclear military-industrial complex, represents stunningly innovative, interdisciplinary, collaborative and public facing scholarship that stretches the political and social scope of what it is that an atlas can do. In receiving this award, Dr. Krupar wishes to acknowledge her long-term collaborator on these projects, Sarah Kanouse. She is affiliated with Georgetown University.
Willie J. Wright
Willie J. Wright has made his mark in the discipline with his scholarship on Black geographies and urban studies. He is committed to social justice and to community engagement while also embarking on creative partnerships with cultural institutions. His current project (with Dr. Sage Ponder) on the Jackson People’s School, funded by the Antipode Foundation, and his year-long Galveston Artist Residency are all worthy of note and praise. He is deeply committed to advancing the fight and struggle for justice in communities long written out of mainstream geographic scholarship. Dr. Wright is also a board member of the Cooperative Community of New West Jackson, Mississippi, a grassroots resident-led community development organization.
As an Assistant Professor at the University of Florida, Dr. Wright has made vital contributions to social justice teaching, including a dedicated course on Social Justice in the City and a graduate course on Black Geographies. He is committed to community-oriented scholarship and bridging the gap between the academy and knowledge that exists within communities. This is crucial because knowledge creation is not a one-way street but is reflected in the intersection between the ‘Ivory Tower’ and community activists and organizers working to transform communities.
2023 AAG Glenda Laws Award
Willie J. Wright
2023 AAG Glenda Laws Award
Willie J. Wright has made his mark in the discipline with his scholarship on Black geographies and urban studies. He is committed to social justice and to community engagement while also embarking on creative partnerships with cultural institutions. His current project (with Dr. Sage Ponder) on the Jackson People’s School, funded by the Antipode Foundation, and his year-long Galveston Artist Residency are all worthy of note and praise. He is deeply committed to advancing the fight and struggle for justice in communities long written out of mainstream geographic scholarship. Dr. Wright is also a board member of the Cooperative Community of New West Jackson, Mississippi, a grassroots resident-led community development organization.
As an Assistant Professor at the University of Florida, Dr. Wright has made vital contributions to social justice teaching, including a dedicated course on Social Justice in the City and a graduate course on Black Geographies. He is committed to community-oriented scholarship and bridging the gap between the academy and knowledge that exists within communities. This is crucial because knowledge creation is not a one-way street but is reflected in the intersection between the ‘Ivory Tower’ and community activists and organizers working to transform communities.
Rebecca Torres
Rebecca Torres, University of Texas at Austin for her steadfast advancement of social justice through scholarship and community bridge building.
2022 AAG Glenda Laws Award
Rebecca Torres
2022 AAG Glenda Laws Award
Rebecca Torres, University of Texas at Austin for her steadfast advancement of social justice through scholarship and community bridge building.
Jen (Jack) Gieseking
2021 Jen (Jack) Gieseking, University of Kentucky, for scholarship that combines critical urban theory, GIS, and digital humanities to study queer, feminist, and trans geographies
2021 AAG Glenda Laws Award
Jen (Jack) Gieseking
2021 AAG Glenda Laws Award
2021 Jen (Jack) Gieseking, University of Kentucky, for scholarship that combines critical urban theory, GIS, and digital humanities to study queer, feminist, and trans geographies
Pavithra Vasudevan
2021 Pavithra Vasudevan, University of Texas at Austin for her feminist-inspired, participatory action research calling attention to environmental racism, and also for her inspirational pedagogy.
2021 AAG Glenda Laws Award
Pavithra Vasudevan
2021 AAG Glenda Laws Award
2021 Pavithra Vasudevan, University of Texas at Austin for her feminist-inspired, participatory action research calling attention to environmental racism, and also for her inspirational pedagogy.
Martina Angela Caretta
2020 Martina Angela Caretta, Lund University, works on the human-environment interactions of women and water, but that does not adequately describe the depth, breadth or impact of her work. She has been asked to serve as a Coordinating Lead Author of the 6th UN Intergovernmental Panel on the Climate Change Assessment Report. Caretta is as dynamic a teacher as she is a researcher.
2020 AAG Glenda Laws Award
Martina Angela Caretta
2020 AAG Glenda Laws Award
2020 Martina Angela Caretta, Lund University, works on the human-environment interactions of women and water, but that does not adequately describe the depth, breadth or impact of her work. She has been asked to serve as a Coordinating Lead Author of the 6th UN Intergovernmental Panel on the Climate Change Assessment Report. Caretta is as dynamic a teacher as she is a researcher.
Farhana Sultana
Farhana Sultana, Maxwell School, Syracuse University for her work as a courageous scholar/activist and public intellectual
2019 AAG Glenda Laws Award
Farhana Sultana
2019 AAG Glenda Laws Award
Farhana Sultana, Maxwell School, Syracuse University for her work as a courageous scholar/activist and public intellectual
Sharlene Mollett
2018 Sharlene Mollett from the University of Toronto Scarborough is recognized for her outstanding work as a critical social geographer, who has made a significant impact on feminist political ecologies. She has been influential in establishing the study of postcolonial intersectionality through her work on Latin America. Dr. Mollett intends to inspire justice-orienhted debates in geography and contribute to on-the-ground change in development practice.
2018 AAG Glenda Laws Award
Sharlene Mollett
2018 AAG Glenda Laws Award
2018 Sharlene Mollett from the University of Toronto Scarborough is recognized for her outstanding work as a critical social geographer, who has made a significant impact on feminist political ecologies. She has been influential in establishing the study of postcolonial intersectionality through her work on Latin America. Dr. Mollett intends to inspire justice-orienhted debates in geography and contribute to on-the-ground change in development practice.
Sarah Hunt
2017 Sarah Hunt from the University of British Columbia is recognized for her committment to knowledge mobiliztion, social justice, and super scholarship. She explores geographies of resistance and resurgence in the intimate, everyday relations of indigenous people and communities. Dr. Hunt’s writing has been published in numerous books and scjholarly jourbals, as well as in popular media outlets such as mediaINDIGENA, decolonization.org, and Op Eds for The Globe and Mail and CBC Aboriginal.
2017 AAG Glenda Laws Award
Sarah Hunt
2017 AAG Glenda Laws Award
2017 Sarah Hunt from the University of British Columbia is recognized for her committment to knowledge mobiliztion, social justice, and super scholarship. She explores geographies of resistance and resurgence in the intimate, everyday relations of indigenous people and communities. Dr. Hunt’s writing has been published in numerous books and scjholarly jourbals, as well as in popular media outlets such as mediaINDIGENA, decolonization.org, and Op Eds for The Globe and Mail and CBC Aboriginal.
Joshua Inwood
2015 Joshua Inwood from the University of Tennessee-Knoxville for signifiicantly advancing the ideas of social justice, anti-racism, and peace from a geographic perspective in his article, “Critical pedagogy and the fierce urgency of now: opening up space for critical reflections on the U.S. civil rights movement.”
2015 AAG Glenda Laws Award
Joshua Inwood
2015 AAG Glenda Laws Award
2015 Joshua Inwood from the University of Tennessee-Knoxville for signifiicantly advancing the ideas of social justice, anti-racism, and peace from a geographic perspective in his article, “Critical pedagogy and the fierce urgency of now: opening up space for critical reflections on the U.S. civil rights movement.”
Juanita Sundberg
2014 Juanita Sundberg from the University of British Columbia for her commitment to social justice, which is deeply embedded in both her teaching and scholarship.
2014 AAG Glenda Laws Award
Juanita Sundberg
2014 AAG Glenda Laws Award
2014 Juanita Sundberg from the University of British Columbia for her commitment to social justice, which is deeply embedded in both her teaching and scholarship.
Minelle Mahtani
2012 Minelle Mahtani, University of Toronto for her outstanding research in the area of minority representation in geography, her contributions to the Geography Faculty Development Alliance and her use of multimedia to enhance diversity initiatives, demonstrating her oustanding efforts to encourage a more diverse discipline. Dr. Mahtani initiated a tradition, together with the editors of Social & Cultural Geography for an article celebrating the AAG Glenda Laws Awardee. Her inaugural article citation is: Minelle Mahtani (2014) Toxic geographies: absences in critical race thought and practice in social and cultural geography, Social & Cultural Geography, 15:4, 359-367, DOI: 10.1080/14649365.2014.888297
2012 AAG Glenda Laws Award
Minelle Mahtani
2012 AAG Glenda Laws Award
2012 Minelle Mahtani, University of Toronto for her outstanding research in the area of minority representation in geography, her contributions to the Geography Faculty Development Alliance and her use of multimedia to enhance diversity initiatives, demonstrating her oustanding efforts to encourage a more diverse discipline. Dr. Mahtani initiated a tradition, together with the editors of Social & Cultural Geography for an article celebrating the AAG Glenda Laws Awardee. Her inaugural article citation is: Minelle Mahtani (2014) Toxic geographies: absences in critical race thought and practice in social and cultural geography, Social & Cultural Geography, 15:4, 359-367, DOI: 10.1080/14649365.2014.888297
Nik Heynen
2010 Nik Heynen, University of Georgia for his work which has helped to define and advance the academic agenda in geography and cognate disciplines in a number of areas, particularly related to hunger, environmental justice, globalization, and emancipatory social struggles.
2010 AAG Glenda Laws Award
Nik Heynen
2010 AAG Glenda Laws Award
2010 Nik Heynen, University of Georgia for his work which has helped to define and advance the academic agenda in geography and cognate disciplines in a number of areas, particularly related to hunger, environmental justice, globalization, and emancipatory social struggles.
James Tyner
2007 James Tyner, Kent State University for his “long-standing and steadfast commitment in research and teaching to social justice,” including work on the geographies of race, religion, economics and labor, geopolitics and the morality of war
2007 AAG Glenda Laws Award
James Tyner
2007 AAG Glenda Laws Award
2007 James Tyner, Kent State University for his “long-standing and steadfast commitment in research and teaching to social justice,” including work on the geographies of race, religion, economics and labor, geopolitics and the morality of war
Michael Brown
2006 Michael Brown, University of Washington for his research focusing on the intersection of political, cultural, urban and health geographies, and particularly for his leadership in geographies of sexuality and the body.
2006 AAG Glenda Laws Award
Michael Brown
2006 AAG Glenda Laws Award
2006 Michael Brown, University of Washington for his research focusing on the intersection of political, cultural, urban and health geographies, and particularly for his leadership in geographies of sexuality and the body.
Karen Bakker
2005 Karen Bakker, University of British Columbia for her uncompromising commitment to advance understandings of the nature of governance, the significance of natural resources, and the importance of distributive justice in contemporary societies.
2005 AAG Glenda Laws Award
Karen Bakker
2005 AAG Glenda Laws Award
2005 Karen Bakker, University of British Columbia for her uncompromising commitment to advance understandings of the nature of governance, the significance of natural resources, and the importance of distributive justice in contemporary societies.
Vincent Del Casino Jr.
2004 Vincent Del Casino Jr., California State University, Long Beach, for his passionate commitment to ease the suffering of people with AIDS and HIV and to help in the prevention of these diseases, especially in marginalized and vulnerable communities.
2004 AAG Glenda Laws Award
Vincent Del Casino Jr.
2004 AAG Glenda Laws Award
2004 Vincent Del Casino Jr., California State University, Long Beach, for his passionate commitment to ease the suffering of people with AIDS and HIV and to help in the prevention of these diseases, especially in marginalized and vulnerable communities.