Volume 45, Issue 3 pp. 211-216

Cross-Disciplinarity in Australian Geography Presidential Address to the Institute of Australian Geographers’ Conference, Melbourne, July 20071

J.B. KIRKPATRICK

J.B. KIRKPATRICK

School of Geography and Environmental Studies, University of Tasmania, Private Bag 78, GPO, Hobart, Tasmania, Australia 7005. Email: [email protected]

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First published: 14 August 2007
Citations: 2

Abstract

The disciplinary space that geographers conceive to be theirs has all been previously possessed, or latterly colonised, by other disciplines. Geographers defend their existence on the basis of their oft-asserted, but never tested, cross-disciplinarity. The journals in which refereed papers were published by members of the Institute of Australian Geographers (IAG) and the papers in Australian Geographical Studies were analysed for the period 1998–2002 to test the hypothesis of cross-disciplinarity in both subject and method. IAG members do strongly tend to publish in more than one disciplinary area, and a large proportion of papers in Australian Geographical Studies are integrative across subdisciplines in geography, with many using more than one methodological approach. However, transgression of the physical geography/human geography divide was sufficiently uncommon to create a statistical break between sets of subdisciplines. Based on the data used in the present paper, Australian geographers can make a case for being members of a vital, integrative discipline, likely to make substantial advances in the hybrid spaces.

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