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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › DodgyDodgy - Wikipedia

    History. Formation and initial activity (1990–97) The band was formed by Nigel Clark, Mathew Priest, and Andy Miller. Clark and Priest had previously played together in the trio Purple, who relocated from Worcestershire to London in 1988.

  2. Disaster and generosity. N Clark. The Geographical Journal 171 (4), 384-386. , 2005. 64. 2005. Articles 1–20. ‪Professor of Human Geography, Lancaster University‬ - ‪‪Cited by 4,540‬‬ - ‪Anthropocene‬ - ‪Nature-Society Relations‬ - ‪Geophilosophy‬ - ‪Geopolitics‬ - ‪Social Theory‬.

  3. The Hon. Nigel Clarke, DPhil., MP, is Jamaica’s Minister of Finance and the Public Service and is Member of Parliament for St Andrew Northwestern. He has served as Ambassador of Economic Affairs where he represented Jamaica’s interests with multilateral institutions and as a Senator in the Upper House of the Jamaican Parliament between 2013 ...

  4. www.anthropocene-curriculum.org › contributors › nigel-clarkHome | Anthropocene Curriculum

    Nigel Clark is Professor of Human Geography at Lancaster University. Originally from Aotearoa New Zealand, he has a long-term interest in the way earth processes shape, perturb, and inspire social life. His current concerns include the pyrogeography of explosions, the evolution of human care and compassion, and interactions between the inner ...

  5. Nigel Clark - Lancaster University. Professor Nigel Clark. Research Overview. I look at how social life is shaped and perturbed by physical forces. The idea of the `Anthropocene’ prompts us to see human beings as geological agents.

  6. Nigel Clark offers in this book a unique position, and radical, on the links between human and non-human to question the contemporary "environmental crisis". The ambitious question the author asks is: How to live with others and things in this context of profound insecurity? ...

  7. 7 de feb. de 2017 · This article is an interview with Elizabeth Grosz by Kathryn Yusoff and Nigel Clark. It primarily addresses Grosz’s approaches to ‘geopower’, and the discussion encompasses an exploration of her ideas on biopolitics, inhuman forces and material experimentation. Grosz describes geopower as a force that subtends the possibility of politics.