“The American policymaking sphere has long been dominated by political scientists and economists. While I have nothing against these disciplines, and acknowledge that they have made important contributions to our public discourse, I am also concerned that we have not always heard the full range of perspectives on important questions of the day.  Geography has a different perspective to offer, and our public discourse is impoverished without it.

Seth Dixon‘s insight:

Spatial thinking needs to be infused into many of our public conversations, and geographers collectively need to find ways to be a part of them.

See on mn2020.org