Nik Heynen
banner
nik-heynen.bsky.social
Nik Heynen
@nik-heynen.bsky.social

Geographer, University of Georgia | Spelman College | UGA's Cornelia Walker Bailey Program on Land, Sea and Agriculture | Shell to Shore | Birkley Heynen Environmental Foundation

https://linktr.ee/cornbreadheynen

Political science 35%
Sociology 23%

Snippet from the work we are doing on the Georgia coast.
Creating Living Shorelines in Georgia: Mission Possible
YouTube video by The Nature Conservancy
youtu.be
Announcing Antipode’s 10th Institute for the Geographies of Justice (IGJ), "Organizing and Solidarity in a Polycrisis", Toronto, 1-5 June 2026 antipodeonline.org/institute-fo... -- submit your application by 20 December 2025
Pls share: Applications open for Summer Institute in Economic Geography, Toronto, 5-10 July 2026

Featuring: Lars Coenen, Karen Lai, Devika Narayan and Stefan Ouma

Early career economic geographers (broadly defined) are welcome to apply. Stipends available. www.econgeog.net/Toronto2026
Toronto 2026 | Summer Institute in Economic Geography
www.econgeog.net

Taught Ntozake Shange’s “If I can Cook / You Know God Can” and “Bocas: A Daughter’s Geography” today. Felt worth sharing for folks who might not yet know this poem or haven’t read it in a while.
POEM: Bocas: A Daughter's Geography, Ntozake Shange, 1983 | Black Agenda Report
Ntozake Shange reminds us that whether we come from Haiti, Savannah, Luanda, or Palestine, we may not speak the same language, but “we fight the same old men.”
www.blackagendareport.com
“Fascism is not new. It wears a new dress, buys new boots—but it can only reproduce fear, denial, and the loss of will to fight.”

Toni Morrison’s timeless warning on fascism & censorship still rings out today.

inthesetimes.com/article/toni...

“Setting forms of identity, such as race, against class as fundamentally opposed bases of politics misrepresents how building working-class power works on the ground, both today and throughout history.”
The False Choice Between Identity Politics and Economic Populism
A left that ignores the differences within the working class will never build power.
hammerandhope.org

Proposals to “repair” or “restore” the planet therefore must answer the questions: Which ecosystems—and whose—will we repair and restore? Which—and whose—flourishings will we enable? What planet are we making, and for whom? @alybatt.bsky.social
The Value of Nature - Dissent Magazine
Why have some gifts of nature remained free?
www.dissentmagazine.org

In the tradition of “can’t stop, won’t stop”….

”In these cities, climate justice is more than a policy priority – it’s a survival strategy…. As federal funding evaporates, many cities are strengthening ties with frontline organizations — the local experts who’ve been leading the fight for decades.”
As Trump Guts Climate Justice Work, Coastal Cities Are Pushing Back
Federal support for climate resilience and environmental justice is collapsing. Cities across the country are stepping up.
www.rollingstone.com

“Memphis history is full of destructive alliances between local government and major industry, forcing working-class Black neighborhoods to accept ecological and corporal violence in order to boost the region's economy…But AI data centers also represent a troubling new frontier…..”
Musk’s Memphis xAI data center and the making of a ‘Digital Delta’ – Scalawag
The fight over xAI’s Colossus highlights a close alliance between Trump-style fascism and big tech in the South.
scalawagmagazine.org

“We’ve asked…the CEOs of banks like Citibank, JPMorgan Chase, insurance companies like Chubb and AIG — we’ve asked them to come to our communities, breathe the air, drink the water and get a taste of what we live every day. And they’ve refused to come. So we brought our community here to them.”
“Toxic Air”: Meet the Mother-Daughter Duo Fighting Pollution in Louisiana’s “Cancer Alley”
We’re joined by a mother-daughter duo from Louisiana’s “Cancer Alley.” Roishetta and Kamea Ozane are part of a group of environmental activists on a national tour to confront the financial backers of ...
www.democracynow.org

"They call us terrorists. We are being terrorised! Our doors are kicked open at four in the morning and our families dragged off to prison, never to be seen again....We are the ones who suffer all these horrors. They are the terrorists."

#Apartheid then, Apartheid now.
Unearthed: An exclusive interview with Abdullah Ibrahim published by The Wire in 1984
Abdullah Ibrahim performs at Le Guess Who? 2022 on Sunday, 13 November.
leguesswho.com

Important thinking going on at Clark Atlanta University this Fall. “Through A Du Boisian Lens: Informing Public Policy Through Empirical Social Research”.

Interesting #abolitionist connections to #energy geography here:

“….whaling’s role in funding abolition and providing economic opportunities for free Black Americans is undeniable. It was, in many ways, a bridge between the world of forced labor and the energy-driven economy of the modern age.”
Abolition wasn’t fueled by just moral or economic concerns – the booming whaling industry also helped sink slavery
New research shows that when the whaling industry in the US produced more products, the proportion of slaves also declined in the 1700s and 1800s.
theconversation.com

Reposted by Nik Heynen

The Gullah Geechee, descendants from enslaved West Africans who were forced to work in the Carolina Lowcountry, are struggling to preserve sacred traditions as wealthy northerners swallow up valuable property around Hilton Head Island. nyti.ms/4mmAwdW

Reposted by Nik Heynen

The Lowcountry Food Bank has provided culturally relevant foods like okra, squash and yams to the Gullah Geechee people in South Carolina for 20 years.
The US food bank keeping Gullah Geechee farming traditions alive: ‘Our local food is like no other’
www.theguardian.com

Reposted by Nik Heynen

No effective abolitionist and certainly no enslaved person walked up to a total stranger expressing dismay over the passage of the fugitive slave act to say, “well this is a racist country, what did you expect.” People kept organizing and building hope through collective resistance and rebellion.

Reposted by Nik Heynen

"How do different political blocs emerge in different places to influence carceral developments?" @lydiajean.bsky.social with Ruth WIlson Gilmore, ‪@craiggilmore.bsky.social & Judah Schept in Part 1 of their new carceral geography series. inquest.org/uneven-e...
Uneven Expansions - Ruth Wilson Gilmore, Craig Gilmore, Judah Schept, & Lydia Pelot-Hobbs - Inquest
In the fight to abolish prisons, it’s vital to attend simultaneously to the scale of U.S. mass incarceration and how it manifests differently in specific regions.
inquest.org

Reposted by Nik Heynen

I have a chapter in the New Planning Histories edited volume. Lots of great chapters covering a range of topics and cities!
link.springer.com/book/9789819...

“The #South got something to say.”
André 3000

(very teachable)

“The term ‘the Dirty South’ developed as a means to define hip hop music emerging from the Southeastern United States and was quickly understood as an abbreviation for the history and development of Black culture in the South.”
The Dirty South
YouTube video by Virginia Museum of Fine Arts
youtu.be

Toni Morrison (1981) for political ecologists: "I must confess, though, that I sometimes lose interest in the characters and get much more interested in the trees and animals....my editor says 'Would you stop this beauty business.' And I say 'Wait, wait until I tell you about these ants.'"
‘The Language Must Not Sweat’
A conversation with Toni Morrison.
newrepublic.com

Finally got to listen to @demonicgrounds.bsky.social on @blkstudies-podcast.bsky.social and it was great. Highly recommended. Also a good reminder that it’s time for me to re-read “The Bluest Eye” (and “Song of Solomon” too).

Reposted by Nik Heynen

“She wrote from her experience in a woman’s body and a dark skin, though never solely ‘as’ or ‘for.’ Sharply critical of chauvinism of all kinds, she was too aware of democracy’s failures to let herself embrace false integrations.”

Adrienne Rich on June Jordan, born on this day in 1936:
The Witness Takes a Stand - Boston Review
June Jordan wrote from her experience in a woman’s body and a dark skin, though never solely “as” or “for.”
www.bostonreview.net

The chapter @nikki-luke.bsky.social and I wrote was titled "The case for reparations, urban political ecology, and the Black right to urban life” and was in "Turning Up the Heat" edited by Maria Kaika, Roger Keil (@rkeil.bsky.social), Tait Mandler and Yannis Tzaninis.
Manchester University Press - Turning up the heat
Turning up the heat - Browse and buy the Paperback edition of Turning up the heat by Maria Kaika
manchesteruniversitypress.co.uk

Thinking about existing policy to be used to enact #reparations? Not long ago @nikki-luke.bsky.social and I were asked to boil down the main points from a chapter we wrote for @nextcity.org. The result was this op-ed titled "How Cities Are Experimenting With Reparations in Urban Policy”.
How Cities Are Experimenting With Reparations in Urban Policy
Op-ed: Land banking in Atlanta and community solar in New Orleans offer a roadmap for embedding reparative politics in city policies.
nextcity.org

Seems like a good time to revisit Mab Segrest.

“Memoir of a Race Traitor” became a classic text of white antiracist practice. bell hooks called it a “courageous and daring [example of] the reality that political solidarity, forged in struggle, can exist across differences.”
Mab Segrest | Memoir of a Race Traitor
Memoir of a Race Traitor: Fighting Racism in the American South
mabsegrest.com

“The lethality of many prisons, jails, and detention centers also lies in the cages' infrastructures, as many are built on toxic wastelands or sites that have already been destroyed by climate change, improper agricultural practices, and climate disasters.”
Abolition in the Era of Climate Change – Scalawag
As extreme temperatures and climate disasters rage on, incarcerated folks bear the brunt of the devastation.
scalawagmagazine.org

Reposted by Nik Heynen

#SapeloIsland’s #HoggHummock is one of the last #GullahGeechee island communities, but it's fighting for survival on multiple fronts. Rising #sea levels threaten to #flood the land, while development pressures risk changing the community's character and pushing out residents….
#AJC #SOLO #S2S
Can oyster shells save a sinking island off Georgia's coast?
YouTube video by Atlanta Journal-Constitution
youtu.be

Reposted by Nik Heynen

Atlanta is the most surveilled city in the United States.

But because the Atlanta Police Department claims that releasing the locations of these 60,000+ cameras will lead to terrorism, we’ve not been able to map their locations...

Until now. Read more 👇👇
City of Cameras
Atlanta is the most surveilled city in the United States. With 124.14 surveillance cameras per 1,000 people, we not only lead the country, we have more than twice as many cameras per capita as 2nd …
mappingatlanta.org

"By leaning on the island‘s rich ecology — and the Gullah Geechee people’s intimate knowledge of their land — scientists are hopeful they can keep #HoggHummock above the waves."

New story in #AJC about our collaborative work on Sapelo Island. Read it here: shorturl.at/ICATU. #SOLO #S2S