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Social Innovation Processes of Diffusion Space and planning Desing More-than-humanism Collectivist infrastructures
Baxter. J-S., (n.d.). Infrastructuring resistance at the periphery. Or, how material-discursive infrastructures materialise and topologically spread. In review. Baxter. J-S., (2021). Modes of spread in social innovation: a social topology case in rural Portugal. The Journal of Rural Studies. Baxter et al., (2021). Hybrid mapping methodology – a manifesto. SFB 1265 - Re-Figuration von Räumen- Working Paper Series. Technical University Berlin: Berlin Baxter. J-S, Novikova, M., and Umansteva, A., (2020). The Emergence, Spread and Impact of Social Innovation in Rural Regions. In Christmann, G. (ed.): Social Enterprises in Structurally Weak Rural Regions: Innovative Troubleshooters in Action: Handbook for Practitioners. 11.2020, 65. Erkner : Leibniz-Institut für Raumbezogene Sozialforschung
Jamie-Scott Baxter is an architect and spatial scientist. Between 2017-2020 Jamie was a Marie Sklodowska-Curie Fellow on the EU Horizon2020 MSCA project ‘RurAction: Social Entrepreneurship in Structurally Weak Rural Regions'. He is a PhD candidate at TU Berlin at the chair for Urban Design and Urbanization. Additionally, he is a research associate at the SFB 1265 ‘Re-figurations of Spaces’, TU Berlin, and an associate at the Leibniz Institute for Research of Society and Space.
Jamie works at the intersection of scientific research, practice and teaching often in transdisciplinary modes. His interests include social innovation and processes of diffusion in spatial planning, design, urban-rural relations, space and knowledge dynamics, infrastructures and infrastructuring, more-than-humanism, multi-sited ethnographies, mapping, and theory, currently including New Materialism, post ANT and STS, and process-relational approaches (to space).
For the last 15 years, Jamie has worked internationally on urban and rural contexts promoting and supporting innovative forms of ‘bottom-linked’ self-organisation in spatial planning.