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Nikos Kapitsinis

@nikoskapitsinis

Assistant Professor in Economic Geography, University of Copenhagen

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09.09.2023
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Latest posts by Nikos Kapitsinis @nikoskapitsinis

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Happening now, demo for Palestine in the occasion of the EU summit, Copenhagen

01.10.2025 09:48 πŸ‘ 2 πŸ” 0 πŸ’¬ 0 πŸ“Œ 0
A graphic showing the title page of The Geographical Journal on a blue background with The GJ in large letters on the right hand page. On the left hand page are eight tiles showing the Special Section 'Legacies of Austerity', with the names of papers in the issue. The names of the papers and authors are as follows:

1) 'Legacies of Austerity: Editorial Introduction' by Sander van Lanen & Sarah Marie Hall
2) 'Family Hubs and the vulnerable care ecologies of child and family welfare in austerity' by Tom Disney et al.
3) 'Relational legacies and relative experiences: Austerity, inequality and access to special educational needs and disability (SEND) support in London, England' by Rosalie Warnock
4) 'Lived experiences of utilities-based indebtedness in Greece: Tracing the afterlives of austerity' by Aliki Koutlou
5) 'Grassroots temporary urbanism as a challenge to the city of austerity? Lessons from a self-organised park in Thessaloniki, Greece' by Matina Kapsali
6) 'De-municipalisation? Legacies of austerity for England's urban parks' by Andrew Smith et al.
7) 'Austerity's afterlives? The case of community asset transfer in the UK' by Neil Turnbull
8) 'Austere futures: From hardship to hope?' by Julie MacLeavy

A graphic showing the title page of The Geographical Journal on a blue background with The GJ in large letters on the right hand page. On the left hand page are eight tiles showing the Special Section 'Legacies of Austerity', with the names of papers in the issue. The names of the papers and authors are as follows: 1) 'Legacies of Austerity: Editorial Introduction' by Sander van Lanen & Sarah Marie Hall 2) 'Family Hubs and the vulnerable care ecologies of child and family welfare in austerity' by Tom Disney et al. 3) 'Relational legacies and relative experiences: Austerity, inequality and access to special educational needs and disability (SEND) support in London, England' by Rosalie Warnock 4) 'Lived experiences of utilities-based indebtedness in Greece: Tracing the afterlives of austerity' by Aliki Koutlou 5) 'Grassroots temporary urbanism as a challenge to the city of austerity? Lessons from a self-organised park in Thessaloniki, Greece' by Matina Kapsali 6) 'De-municipalisation? Legacies of austerity for England's urban parks' by Andrew Smith et al. 7) 'Austerity's afterlives? The case of community asset transfer in the UK' by Neil Turnbull 8) 'Austere futures: From hardship to hope?' by Julie MacLeavy

A graphic showing the title page of The Geographical Journal on a blue background with The GJ in large letters on the right hand page. On the left hand page are nine tiles with standard articles, with the names of papers in the issue. 

1) 'The rise of education-featured gated communities in Chinese cities: (Re)producing the enterprising self via the entrepreneurial local state–capital nexus' by Shenjing He
2) 'Policy-driven education-led gentrification and its spatiotemporal dynamics: Evidence from Shanghai, China' by Rong Cai, Lirong Hu & Shenjing He
3) 'The market formation of private sector, purpose built student accommodation in Sheffield 2000–2019' by Carl Lee
4) 'Evaporation losses from residential swimming pools and water features under climate variability and change' by Alicia Cumberland & Robert Wilby
5) 'Forecasting urban shifts post-earthquake: LULC change analysis in Elazığ, Turkey using ANN and Markov models' by Fatih Sunbul,  Enes Karadeniz,  Mustafa Taner Sengun &  Muhammed Kocaoglu
6) 'Care-ful encounters: A case for empathetic youthful encounters with coastal environments' by Mark Holton
7) 'How do you like your rivers? Portraying public perception and preference for urban rivers in China via a combined visual and textual analysis' by Yixin Cao,  Wendy Yan Chen & Karl Matthias Wantzen
8) 'Understanding place-to-place interactions using flow patterns derived from in-app mobile phone location data' by Mikaella Mavrogeni,  Justin van Dijk & Paul Longley
9) 'Gender difference in space–time fixity from household structure in urban China: A case study of Beijing' by Hongbo Chai,  Patrick Witte,  Stan Geertman &  Dick Ettema

A graphic showing the title page of The Geographical Journal on a blue background with The GJ in large letters on the right hand page. On the left hand page are nine tiles with standard articles, with the names of papers in the issue. 1) 'The rise of education-featured gated communities in Chinese cities: (Re)producing the enterprising self via the entrepreneurial local state–capital nexus' by Shenjing He 2) 'Policy-driven education-led gentrification and its spatiotemporal dynamics: Evidence from Shanghai, China' by Rong Cai, Lirong Hu & Shenjing He 3) 'The market formation of private sector, purpose built student accommodation in Sheffield 2000–2019' by Carl Lee 4) 'Evaporation losses from residential swimming pools and water features under climate variability and change' by Alicia Cumberland & Robert Wilby 5) 'Forecasting urban shifts post-earthquake: LULC change analysis in Elazığ, Turkey using ANN and Markov models' by Fatih Sunbul, Enes Karadeniz, Mustafa Taner Sengun & Muhammed Kocaoglu 6) 'Care-ful encounters: A case for empathetic youthful encounters with coastal environments' by Mark Holton 7) 'How do you like your rivers? Portraying public perception and preference for urban rivers in China via a combined visual and textual analysis' by Yixin Cao, Wendy Yan Chen & Karl Matthias Wantzen 8) 'Understanding place-to-place interactions using flow patterns derived from in-app mobile phone location data' by Mikaella Mavrogeni, Justin van Dijk & Paul Longley 9) 'Gender difference in space–time fixity from household structure in urban China: A case study of Beijing' by Hongbo Chai, Patrick Witte, Stan Geertman & Dick Ettema

A graphic showing the title page of The Geographical Journal on a blue background with The GJ in large letters on the right hand page. On the left hand page are five tiles with commentaries and RGS-IBG Regulars, with the names of papers in the issue.

1) 'On commons, state institutions and capitalism' by Ioannis Rigkos-Zitthen & Nikos Kapitsinis
2) 'From The Hague to the margins: The ICC, feminist geopolitics and alternative legal futures' by Sarah Klosterkamp & Alex Jeffrey
3) 'Everyone's talking about climate change actions, but can we learn from Wales’ approach?' by Lynda Yorke,  Athanasios Dimitriou,  Sonya Hanna,  Corinna Patterson,  Sara Parry & Georgina Smith
4) 'Presidential address and record of the Royal Geographical Society (with IBG) AGM 2025' by Dame Jane Francis
5) 'Royal Geographical Society (with IBG) Medals and Awards celebration 2025' by Jane Francis,  Murray Gray,  BΓΈrge Ousland,  Gillian Rose,  Susan Smith & Dariusz WΓ³jcik

A graphic showing the title page of The Geographical Journal on a blue background with The GJ in large letters on the right hand page. On the left hand page are five tiles with commentaries and RGS-IBG Regulars, with the names of papers in the issue. 1) 'On commons, state institutions and capitalism' by Ioannis Rigkos-Zitthen & Nikos Kapitsinis 2) 'From The Hague to the margins: The ICC, feminist geopolitics and alternative legal futures' by Sarah Klosterkamp & Alex Jeffrey 3) 'Everyone's talking about climate change actions, but can we learn from Wales’ approach?' by Lynda Yorke, Athanasios Dimitriou, Sonya Hanna, Corinna Patterson, Sara Parry & Georgina Smith 4) 'Presidential address and record of the Royal Geographical Society (with IBG) AGM 2025' by Dame Jane Francis 5) 'Royal Geographical Society (with IBG) Medals and Awards celebration 2025' by Jane Francis, Murray Gray, BΓΈrge Ousland, Gillian Rose, Susan Smith & Dariusz WΓ³jcik

πŸ“’New Issue of The GJ!πŸ“’

πΊπ‘’π‘œπ‘”π‘Ÿπ‘Žπ‘β„Žπ‘¦ 𝑖𝑛 π‘‘β„Žπ‘’ 𝑃𝑒𝑏𝑙𝑖𝑐 πΌπ‘›π‘‘π‘’π‘Ÿπ‘’π‘ π‘‘

September's Issue features the 'Legacies of Austerity' Special Section alongside 9 papers, 3 commentaries, and records of the 2025 RGS-IBG Medals and Awards ceremony.

Take a look here ⬇️

rgs-ibg.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/toc/14754959...

26.09.2025 14:32 πŸ‘ 8 πŸ” 9 πŸ’¬ 1 πŸ“Œ 0
Screenshot of a commentary abstract in The Geographical Journal by Ioannis Rigkos-Zitthen & Nikos Kapitsinis (2025) entitled 'On commons, state institutions and capitalism' with a blue banner at the top.

Within the contemporary context of multiple and overlapping crises, which critical scholars often call the Anthropocene epoch, commons and commoning have been presented as a promising way to approach and address the emerging problems. Commons are often presented as spaces antithetical to capitalism, governed in a radical democratic fashion. We argue that to deepen our knowledge on how commons contribute to politics of our times, we need to understand both the embodied relations of care within the commons and the ways commons are related to the state. On these grounds and by presenting commons as an empty signifier, we aim to provide a nuanced understanding of commons contribution to politics in the Anthropocene.

Screenshot of a commentary abstract in The Geographical Journal by Ioannis Rigkos-Zitthen & Nikos Kapitsinis (2025) entitled 'On commons, state institutions and capitalism' with a blue banner at the top. Within the contemporary context of multiple and overlapping crises, which critical scholars often call the Anthropocene epoch, commons and commoning have been presented as a promising way to approach and address the emerging problems. Commons are often presented as spaces antithetical to capitalism, governed in a radical democratic fashion. We argue that to deepen our knowledge on how commons contribute to politics of our times, we need to understand both the embodied relations of care within the commons and the ways commons are related to the state. On these grounds and by presenting commons as an empty signifier, we aim to provide a nuanced understanding of commons contribution to politics in the Anthropocene.

#OpenAccess in The GJ:

'On commons, state institutions and capitalism' by @ioannisrz.bsky.social & @nikoskapitsinis.bsky.social

This commentary explores the essential nature of commoning as a practice of collective care within today's political climate.

doi.org/10.1111/geoj... #geosky

16.07.2025 13:43 πŸ‘ 2 πŸ” 2 πŸ’¬ 0 πŸ“Œ 0
screenshot of title page of article with title, author information, and abstract

screenshot of title page of article with title, author information, and abstract

Online first at Space and Polity: "The more-than-human commons in a crisis-ridden context: the case of the women’s collective and the chamomile-bee commons in Skouries of Halkidiki, Greece" by @ioannisrz.bsky.social & @nikoskapitsinis.bsky.social
www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10....

20.06.2025 11:13 πŸ‘ 2 πŸ” 2 πŸ’¬ 0 πŸ“Œ 0
ISABEL PROJECT

This provided an excellent opportunity to align our efforts on fair regional labour market transformations under the green and digital transitions. /2

06.04.2025 13:53 πŸ‘ 0 πŸ” 0 πŸ’¬ 1 πŸ“Œ 0
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We just wrapped up a productive and inspiring General Assembly of the Isabel Horizon Research Project (2–3 April 2025) at the University of Copenhagen. /1
#isabelproject #EUresearch #HorizonEurope #JobCreation #employmenttrends #futureofwork #scientificresearch #EconomicResearch #LabourEconomics

06.04.2025 13:53 πŸ‘ 2 πŸ” 1 πŸ’¬ 1 πŸ“Œ 0
ISABEL PROJECT

Progress assessed, initial thoughts evaluated and next steps were agreed. Kudos to all partners for their dedication and inspiring insights!

isabelproject.eu

Stay tuned as we move forward! /end

06.04.2025 13:53 πŸ‘ 0 πŸ” 0 πŸ’¬ 0 πŸ“Œ 0
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Sage Journals: Discover world-class research Subscription and open access journals from Sage, the world's leading independent academic publisher.

New publication out now!

Together with @nikoskapitsinis.bsky.social we suggest understanding commons as an empty signifier, a way to highlight the messiness, within commons and co-depence of commons to state institutions and capital.

journals.sagepub.com/eprint/GFEGN...

14.03.2025 07:44 πŸ‘ 4 πŸ” 1 πŸ’¬ 0 πŸ“Œ 0
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For a free #Palestine, today, #Copenhagen. The beauty is on the streets

15.02.2025 15:32 πŸ‘ 3 πŸ” 0 πŸ’¬ 0 πŸ“Œ 0