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GEOG3777: EVERYDAY ECONOMIES

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Type Open
Level 3
Credits 10
Availability Not available in 2024/2025
Module Cap
Location Durham
Department Geography

Prerequisites

  • Any Level 2 Geography Module

Corequisites

  • None

Excluded Combinations of Modules

  • None

Aims

  • To encourage critical reflection on the relationship of consumption and consumers to contemporary economies
  • To reflect on a range of concepts and theoretical approaches suitable to understanding economies through the everyday
  • To develop a grounded understanding of everyday economies through field research

Content

  • Work on economies, whilst increasingly heterodox, is still in a zone which has economies in a box, separate from other areas of cultural, social and political life. This is increasingly untenable on a number of levels. Economies increasingly depend on consumption acts to keep them going, witness recession, austerity. Without consumers buying things economies fail to hold together. At same time, the relation of consumption to economies has deepened through the rise of virtual/digital economies and the emergence of the prosumer. Consumers don't just stabilise markets by purchasing manufactured goods; rather, they produce them, and are critical to production in certain areas, for example through the recovery of materials from waste via recycling, and in energy markets (e.g. through the take up of solar technologies). There is, therefore, a strong imperative to think hard about the role of consumers in marketisation. This is not just a matter of the prosumer. It is also important to consider how, with the rise of the digital economy and the increased uptake of digital devices, goods flow directly from distribution warehouses to consumers. Not only does this demonstrate the centrality of consumers to the reordering of economic life; it by-passes the infrastructure and investment that has characterised retail capital for generations (high streets, shopping centres, malls). The effects, combined with recession, are increasingly discernible in the retail landscape. Further, the rise of digital technologies has allowed consumers to produce markets from used consumer goods. eBay, Gumtree and p2p exchange sites are just some of the instances of such markets.
  • This module will consider these transformations and examine their implications, conceptually, empirically and geographically, through a research project conducted by students and focused on the NE region. At its heart, the module asks, and hopefully answers, a set of research questions. To what extent are these changes genuinely transformative? Can consumers and households be thought of as an economic engine? To what extent do we need to start thinking in terms of everyday economies?

Learning Outcomes

Subject-specific Knowledge:

  • On successful completion of this module, students will be able to:
  • Critically evaluate the relationship of consumption and consumers to contemporary economies
  • Critically reflect on a range of concepts and theoretical approaches to understanding economies through the everyday

Subject-specific Skills:

  • On successful completion of this module, students will be able to:
  • Evaluate and apply key concepts and approaches to contemporary problems and issues
  • Demonstrate an understanding of how field research informs conceptual development

Key Skills:

  • On successful completion of this module, students will be able to:
  • Demonstrate a variety of oral communication skills, including working effectively in a team, designing a collaborative research project and formal presentation in a conference setting using visual aids
  • Demonstrate a capacity to reflect on the relationships between field research and argumentation based on literature
  • Demonstrate an ability to synthesise information and to develop competences regarding argumentation in relation to contemporary issues and problems

Modes of Teaching, Learning and Assessment and how these contribute to the learning outcomes of the module

  • Lecture content will introduce key trends, developments and concepts. Lectures will be open format to encourage discussion, and will involve group activity
  • Workshops dedicated to research project design and analysis
  • A group research project, on an approved topic from a list generated by the module convenor, to be conducted in the North East region. This is supported by the workshops
  • A class conference. This will report the findings from the research projects

Teaching Methods and Learning Hours

ActivityNumberFrequencyDurationTotalMonitored
Open-format lectures5Varies1.5 hours7.5 
Workshop11.5 hours1.5 
Dedicated research project consultation workshops22 hours4 
Class conference (seminar)13 hours3Yes
Self-guided student fieldworkVariesVaries10 hours10Yes
Student Preparation and Reading74 
Total100 

Summative Assessment

Component: Individual Research Project ReportComponent Weighting: 80%
ElementLength / DurationElement WeightingResit Opportunity
Individual Research Project Report4xA4 pages (or equivalent) plus supplementary material100 
Component: Group Conference PresentationComponent Weighting: 20%
ElementLength / DurationElement WeightingResit Opportunity
Group Conference Presentation10 minutes per group100 

Formative Assessment

Short research proposal; group project presentations

More information

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