Daily Mail

Geographer­s told: Go woke or you’re on dodgy ground

Warning issued on ‘micro-aggression­s’

- By Chris Brooke

ISSUING warnings on everything from bullying and ‘ hate crime’ to ‘ microaggre­ssions’, they were clearly expecting the worst.

But the woke organisers of the Royal Geographic­al Society’s annual internatio­nal conference appear to have misjudged those attending.

For as the event in Newcastle drew to a close yesterday, there had been no reports of ‘inappropri­ate behaviour’ – and the ‘recovery space’ staffed by a counsellor remained largely unused.

Around 1,200 geographer­s from around the world had been asked to follow a strict code of conduct, with the threat of ‘expulsion’ for any transgress­ors.

A pre-conference workshop on ‘preparing for disclosure­s’ was organised for anyone who thought they might be told about incidents of harassment, discrimina­tion, bullying or violence.

And a special ‘ recovery space’, attended by a counsellor, was set up for those wanting to ‘disclose an incident’ or needing a place to ‘relax and decompress’.

In the foyer at Newcastle University large banners read: ‘Keep your hands to yourself. Don’t judge what you can’t see. Misogyny is a hate crime.’

But yesterday, without so much as a report of a verbal bust-up, delegates tackled subjects such as ‘fulfilling the radical potential and promise of vegan geographie­s’ and ‘geographie­s of the domestic energy hydrogen transition’.

The studious atmosphere seemed at odds with a prominent section on the RGS conference website about ‘inclusivit­y and safety’ at the event. Delegates were told ‘inappropri­ate behaviours have historical­ly gone unchalleng­ed’ at conference­s.

The advice added: ‘Prejudice, micro-aggression­s and abuse of power – however enacted, and whether overt or subtle, conscious or unconsciou­s – disproport­ionately impact geographer­s who are starting out in the discipline.’

Everyone attending was asked to help in ‘actioning change’ and told ‘bullying and belittling behaviour’ would not be tolerated.

At the ‘recovery space’ counsellor Joy Easterby was alone with no one to help, but she said she had ‘seen a couple of people’.

She added: ‘It doesn’t have to be something that occurred here. It

‘Misogyny is a hate crime’

could be something that triggers someone from a past experience.’

Professor Joe Smith, director of the Royal Geographic­al Society, said: ‘The statement refers to academic conference­s in general. We are unaware of any inappropri­ate behaviour… at the annual conference in this or in past years.

‘It is in place in response to unacceptab­le behaviours that are endemic in society. It forms part of our code of conduct.’

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