Monday, October 15, 2007
CLUSTER BOMBS CANCELLED & LONDON CCTV EVENT - NOW IN 2008
It is the same sort of a story for cluster bombs so this is now cancelled. This is a shame, but a tour of torture is on the cards and supporters are needed.
Sunday, September 23, 2007
Geographer?
A Global Presence?
At present people have visited this blog from over forty different countries on six continents. If people from all these countries were willing to take part in Guerrilla Geography activities we would be a real (grassroots) force to be reckoned with. For such a worldwide movement to work participation is crucial, so if you are reading this and want to join or mirror an event please do get in contact.
Your ideas...
No matter where you are in the world if you have a geographical idea, concept or issue that you think that the public would be interested in why not take it too them through direct (public education) action in the name of Guerrilla Geography? Email your thoughts to guerrillageography@gmail.com or pass comment on this post.
Monday, September 17, 2007
Guerrilla Geography: Day 3, Reading Cluster Bombs
Cluster Bombs and Landmines directly change the geography of lives across the world in a wide range of ways from preventing industries functioning effectively and the demographics of communities to the geographies of young people and hearding of livestock.
Key facts on cluster bombs according to Handicap International.
* 98% of recorded casualties are civilians.
* 27% of casualties are children.
* 67% casualties are killed or injured in course of earning their livelihood.
* 24 countries and regions are affected by cluster munitions worldwide.
* 5% to 30% of cluster bombs fail to explode on impact.
* 34 countries produce at least 210 different types of cluster bombs and 73 countries stockpile cluster bombs.
* The UK currently stockpiles and exports cluster bombs and used them during the war in Iraq.
Read more here:
http://www.landmineaction.org/support/email/
http://www.clusterbombs.org.uk/
For this event we will create a fake cluster bomb site to raise awareness of how these weapons change the geography of peoples lives and the role of the UK in this global industry. An opinion 'cluster map' will be created by supporters which will then be posted to David Miliband, Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs.
Location: Reading, UK (or a mirror event where you are)
Time: 1pm
Date: 04/11/07
To join this event and find out more please email guerrillageography@gmail.com or post your thoughts here.
Monday, August 27, 2007
Guerrilla Geography: Day 2, London CCTV
The next Guerrilla Geography event is going to be based on our fun in Birmingham. While the focus is on London this time, we want as many mirror events to take place across the world as possible. If you can't make it to London but want to be a part of this event, just set up your own Guerrilla Geography CCTV event. Mirror events in Sydney (Australia), Tallinn (Estonia) and Manchester (UK's north) are already on the cards.
If you are outside of the UK and want to join in contact us so that we can post your event on our Facebook page and this blog.
Here are the details of the London event so far:
After the success of the first Guerrilla Geography Day (focusing on CCTV in Birmingham and recieved attention from local TV and radio) we're now looking for geographers (University Students, Teachers, Academics, Professionals, Geography Lovers...) to getting people 'thinking geographically' across Central London with a focus on Oxford Street. This time we want the London and national media to sit up , think geographically and recognise the field as it should do.
Time & Place: Saturday 20th October between 13:00 and 17:00 in Central London.
Aim: To challenge the public’s spatial awareness of “hidden” geographies.
Objective: For the public(s) to see the world differently.
Method: Invading (personal, social, commercial, security etc.) space dressed as on-foot ‘CCTV’. The cameras will be held by guerrilla geographers who will be wearing boiler suits with the words ‘Official Geographic CCTV Unit. Give Geography its Place.’ on them.
Kit you need: Empty CCTV housing (bigger the better with cable to go into backpack), White disposable boiler suit (as found at B&Q and Homebase), bright backpack (ideally red), dark shoes/trainers, adhesive letters to fix onto CCTV housing as on the website.
Kit supplied: GGTV ID Badge, Guerrilla Geography Stickers (London Event Only)
Saturday, August 25, 2007
Geography is all about..........
To me Guerrilla Geography Day 1 was not about campaigning against CCTV. In fact I'm in favour of CCTV, I'm pleased that there are three cameras that cover my car parking space at home! I believe that if you have done nothing wrong then you have nothing to fear from CCTV. However, CCTV is an important Geographic issue.
Whilst out in Birmingham on Guerrilla Geography Day 1 alot of people posed the question "Why is CCTV anything to do with Geography?" To me, as a geographer, that answer is a simple one. Geography is a about space and place and CCTV controls space, affects how people feel in space and affects how people behave in space. For example I feel that my car is safer if parked in a space with CCTV and therefore, if given a choice, I will park in a place with CCTV coverage. Thats just one example of how CCTV affects how I feel and behave in different spaces!
Im now very much looking forward to Guerrilla Geography Day 2 and using the event to educate more people about what modern Geography is and how it is relevent to our day to day lives.
So....... calling all Geograpy Teachers, Students, Graduates and other Geographers join in with day 2 and maybe we can do something even more radical for day 3!
Friday, August 17, 2007
Why I became a guerrilla for the day!
I think it is worth sharing exactly how I ended up in a boiler suit waving an empty CCTV camera around in the middle of
Thursday, August 16, 2007
GGTV Birmingham
Guerrilla Geography TV Day 1 Video (Preview)
Guerrilla Geographers on BBC West Midlands 6pm News 16.08.07
Guerrilla Geographers on BBC WM Radio at 7.40am 16.08.07
...but it could have been and so we are organising a massive Guerrilla Geography Day 2: LONDON - and we need you to join us in this massive public (direct action) event. Geography university students, academics, teachers, professionals...
Full report to follow....
Monday, August 13, 2007
Day One: Birmingham
Aim: To challenge the public’s spatial awareness of “hidden” geographies.
Objective: For the public(s) to see the world differently.
Method: Invading (personal, social, commercial, security etc.) space dressed as on-foot ‘CCTV’. The cameras will be fitted to the guerrilla geographers who will be wearing boiler suits with the words ‘GGTV Geographer’ on them.
Rationale
a) the landscape
CCTV. Like the hidden geology of the Earth, some people do not see it and even more do not think about the individuals, organisations and processes that work behind it. Others want CCTV, believing that it will make them safer, despite the patchy research on its effectiveness.
Skeptics fear Big Brother control of the streets.
So CCTV and the institutions behind it have the power to change how we behave on our own and with each other. It interacts with government control, commercial power, crime, house prices, migration, insurance, poverty, terror, racism, litter, transport and ultimately the geography of our lives... where will I live? how should I get there? As guerrilla geographers we will be using the controversy and personal relationships that people have with these issues and the landscape to question of this technology.
b) the individual
As geographers we love scale. We love zooming in and out (Google Earth porn), just like CCTV does. We are visual people and looking at things turns us on, as it does many people. The thing is, there is cultural etiquette that is followed to make sure that we do not ‘take up’, ‘infiltrate’, ‘invade’, ‘push’ or ‘encroach’ on ‘personal’ or ‘private’ space. Most people would especially not do this to important or official people, people having an argument or kissing passionately... and certainly not in large numbers?
Well... this is what CCTV can and does do. Mass arrays of zooming CCTV remotely invade
our personal space...
c) And so....
What better way to stimulate discussions about hidden geographies (even if people do not call them ‘geography’), space, place, control, power, proximity... then to dress as walking CCTV cameras and invade some space(s)?