Publications - Amanda Thomas

Peer-reviewed Publications

Kiddle, R, Elkington, B, Jackson, M, Mercier, O, Ross, M, Smeaton, J and Thomas, A (under contract) Imagining Decolonisation. BWB Texts.

Simon, K, Diprose, G and Thomas, A (2019) Community led initiatives for climate adaptation and mitigation. Kōtuitui https://doi.org/10.1080/1177083X.2019.1652659

Thomas, A, Cretney, R and Hayward, B(2019) Geo-Ed: The Student Strike 4 Climate: justice, emergency and citizenship. New Zealand Geographer, 75, 96-100.

Thomas, A (2019) ‘Imagination’. In Antipode Editorial Collective (eds) Keywords in Radical Geography: Antipode at 50.Wiley and Sons, pp. 155-158.

Thomas, A. Stupples, P, Kiddle, R, Hall, M and Palomino-Schalscha, M (2019) Tensions in the tent: Civic engagement in Aotearoa New Zealand universities. Power and Education, 11(1), 96-110.

Bond, S, Diprose, G and Thomas, AC (2019) Contesting deep sea oil: politicisation-depoliticisation-repoliticisation. Environment and Planning C, 37(3), 519-538.

McGregor, A, Challies, E, Thomas, A, Astuti, R, Howson, P, Afiff, S, Kindon, S and Bond, S (2019) Sociocarbon cycles: assembling and governing forest carbon in Indonesia. Geoforum, 99(1), 32-41.

Thomas, A (2018). Political organisation and the environment’ In Jones, C., and Walsh, S. (eds), New Forms of Political Organisation. Auckland; Economic and Social Research Aotearoa, pp. 36-45. ISSN 2624-3482. Also available from https://esra.nz/political-organisation-environment/

McGregor, A, and Thomas, AC (2017) Forest-led development? A more-than-human approach to forests in Southeast Asian development. In McGregor, A., Miller, F. and Law, L. (eds.) Routledge Handbook of Southeast Asian Development, Routledge, pp. 392–407.

Thomas, AC (2017) Community construction and performance as a post-politicising process: catchment based freshwater management in Aotearoa New Zealand. Environment and Planning A, 49(6), 1413-1431.

Diprose, G, Bond, S, Thomas, AC, Barth, J and Urquhart, H (2017) The violence of (in)action: communities, climate and business-as-usual. Community Development Journal, 52(3), 488-505, special issue, “Solidarity, Organisation and Tactics: Chances and challenges for community development and social movements in the 21st century” edited by Niamh McCrea, Rosie R Meade and Mae Shaw.

Thomas, AC and Bond, S (2016) Reregulating for freshwater enclosure: a state of exception in Canterbury, Aotearoa New Zealand. Antipode, 48(3), 770-789.

Cretney, R, Thomas, AC and Bond, S (2016) Maintaining grassroots activism: Transition Towns in Aotearoa New Zealand. New Zealand Geographer, 72, 81-91.

Diprose, G, Thomas, AC and Bond, S (2016) ”It’s who we are”: eco-nationalism and place in contesting deep sea oil in Aotearoa New Zealand. Kōtuitui: New Zealand Journal of Social Sciences, 11(2), 159-173, special issue, “Social Movements, Resistance and Social Change in Aotearoa New Zealand”.

Thomas, AC (2015) Indigenous more-than-humanisms: relational ethics with the Hurunui River in Aotearoa New Zealand. Social and Cultural Geography 16(8), 974-990.

NZGS-PG Network (2014) Postgraduates performing powerfully in a changing academic environment. New Zealand Geographer 70, 61-68.

Diprose, G, Thomas, AC and Rushton, R (2013) Desiring more: complicating understandings of sexuality in research processes. Area 45(3), 292-298.

Non-peer Reviewed Publications

Interview with Sophie Handford (2019) ‘”Look nana, this is my future”: a conversation with climate strike organiser Sophie Handford’. Economic and Social Research Aotearoa. https://esra.nz/look-nana-future-conversation-climate-strike-organiser-sophie-handford/

Stephens, M, Foster, J, Taylor, D, Thomas, A and El Ojeili, C (2019) ‘Editorial: Responding to 15 March’. Counterfutures, 7.

Foster, J, Stephens, M, Taylor, D and Thomas, A (2017) ‘Editorial: Navigating activism and academia’. Counterfutures, 4, 1-21.

Interview with Moana Jackson, Taylor, D and Thomas, A (2017). ‘”We have come too far not to go further’”. Counterfutures, 4, 27-51.