This is the broad question or topic of this paper.
What is conservation finance? OR How is conservation finance profitable?
A keyword for this study.
What is migration?
These are two keywords for this study.
What are: Domesticity; carceral; troubled families; containment; security; subjectivation; prevention; resistances; Chile
This is the methodology this study employs.
What are surveys?
These are the methods this study employs.
What are ethnographic interviews and primary source analysis?
The researcher was actively involved with the industries being studied.
What is participant observation?
This is a subquestion of this research paper.
How do makeshift camps influence migration patterns?
These are the methods for this study.
Ethnography and participant observation.
These are two keywords of this study.
What are: epistemology; geographic research methods; open science; reproducibility; researcher survey
This is the broad question or topic of the paper.
What is DC’s identity?
These are three keywords for this study.
political economy; conservation; financialization; hostile takeover; timber investment management organizations
This is the broad question or topic for this study.
What is informal migration? OR How do we theorize the geographies of contemporary informal migration?
This is the broad question or topic of this paper.
What is the role of gender within the carceral system in Santiago, Chile?
This is the broad question or topic of this study.
How do geographic researchers perceive and practice reproducibility?
These are some subquestions of this paper.
What is the relationship between food cultures and gentrification in a city like DC? How can we use something like mambo sauce to understand these phenomena?
This question tells us why this study is important.
What does conservation finance tell us about nature and capitalism?
This question tells us why this study is important.
What do makeshift camps teach us about the importance of temporary “hidden geographies” to the lived experience of migration?
This is a subquestion of this paper's topic.
How do state programs make the connection between gender and carceral systems through “carceral domesticity”?
This question indicates that this paper uses mixed methods.
Why isn’t reproducibility a more common practice? OR What percent of geographers use reproducibility in their research?
This question tells us why this study is important.
What does a food like mambo sauce tell us about the race, class and power dynamics in urban US spaces?