Related references
Note: Only part of the references are listed.
Article
Geography
Theresa Harada et al.
Summary: Access to transport is vital for older people's independence and social participation. However, transport planning often prioritizes the needs of urban commuters, putting seniors at risk of marginalization and inequality. This paper examines the travel patterns of a group of seniors in Sydney, Australia and argues that disincentivizing them from traveling during peak hours can have negative health and social outcomes. The study suggests that seniors may actually benefit from traveling during rush hour in material, social, and emotional ways.
SOCIAL & CULTURAL GEOGRAPHY
(2023)
Article
Geography
Claire Edwards et al.
Summary: This paper examines how disabled people navigate fear and hostility in their everyday lives. The study highlights the diverse understandings of safety and the spatial strategies employed by disabled individuals to respond to fear in different contexts. The paper suggests that relational thinking challenges binary assumptions about safety and vulnerability, and emphasizes the agentic potential of disabled individuals to negotiate and define safety in space.
SOCIAL & CULTURAL GEOGRAPHY
(2023)
Article
Geography
Siew Ying Shee
Summary: This paper explores the impact of emotional geographies on physical activity and emphasizes the importance of emotions in people's health engagement. By studying physical activity participants in Singapore, the paper highlights the influence of emotional histories and memories on people's access to physical activity spaces. The paper also examines how minority communities can actively transform these spaces to better fit their needs.
GENDER PLACE AND CULTURE
(2023)
Article
Geography
Karolina Doughty et al.
Summary: The COVID-19 pandemic has affected people's mental health, but access to nature has played an important role in maintaining wellbeing. This study reveals that increased interactions with nature during the pandemic led to intensified emotional and sensory experiences, a stronger sense of familiarity with surroundings, and an enhanced sense of wellbeing.
SOCIAL & CULTURAL GEOGRAPHY
(2023)
Article
Geography
Cathy McIlwaine et al.
Summary: This paper examines how women in the favelas of Mare, Rio de Janeiro, have responded to gendered violence during the COVID-19 pandemic by developing mutual support, self-care, and activism. It explores the concept of emotional-political communities as a means to mitigate violence and promote change.
SOCIAL & CULTURAL GEOGRAPHY
(2023)
Article
Geography
Timo Sysio
Summary: This article extends the geographical literature on diplomatic spatiality by considering the importance of the diplomatic home in everyday working life. It analyzes the affective atmospheres of the diplomatic home and the impact of micro-scale country-branding efforts on national culture and design, using the author's personal experiences and oral accounts of houseguests.
SOCIAL & CULTURAL GEOGRAPHY
(2023)
Article
Geography
Vanessa Banta et al.
Summary: This paper discusses the experiences of Filipino migrant workers, specifically female domestic workers and male seafarers, during the pandemic. These workers faced increased employer control and immobility, leading to precarious situations and mounting debt. The paper highlights the impact of the pandemic and regulatory failures on these temporary workers and their families.
TRANSACTIONS OF THE INSTITUTE OF BRITISH GEOGRAPHERS
(2023)
Article
Geography
Xiaomei Cai et al.
Summary: The importance of adapting to later life is increasingly recognized by older people as their concerns about health and wellbeing grow. This article presents findings from fieldwork in Guangzhou, China, which highlight the therapeutic effects of singing together in the park for older people. Singingscape, as a therapeutic space, encompasses physical relaxation, social interaction, and emotional imagination, contributing to the wellbeing of older people. The authors argue for the importance of constructing urban public spaces that support older people's everyday leisure activities.
EMOTION SPACE AND SOCIETY
(2023)
Article
Geography
Robin Finlay
Summary: This study examines the formation of Moroccan diaspora in the city of Granada in southern Spain and how the Muslim history of Al-Andalus impacts their diaspora consciousness. It reveals the complex interpretations of diasporic home influenced by histories and geographies, leading to a desire for multiple diasporic journeys and settlements. The entanglement of urban and regional histories can reconfigure normative notions of the diaspora condition, reshaping senses of home beyond traditional nation-state boundaries.
TRANSACTIONS OF THE INSTITUTE OF BRITISH GEOGRAPHERS
(2022)
Article
Geography
Yi Yu et al.
Summary: This paper examines the implications of TikTok on older adults through analyzing the accounts of older Chinese TikTok celebrities. The empirical study reveals that TikTok facilitates social interactions of older digital celebrities and creates a caring environment. However, TikTok also promotes the healthy ageing paradigm prioritized by the Chinese government, which marginalizes older adults with diseases, disabilities, or dependency on others.
Editorial Material
Geography
Jennifer Owen et al.
EMOTION SPACE AND SOCIETY
(2022)
Article
Geography
Sarah Peck et al.
Summary: This paper addresses the lack of attention to the everyday impacts of economic citizenship schemes on local communities, environments, and notions of citizenship. By reviewing existing literature and considering the lens of 'everyday geographies,' the paper provides additional insights into how economic citizenship regimes shape local economies, societies, and environments, and how they intersect with the lives of ordinary citizens.
PROGRESS IN HUMAN GEOGRAPHY
(2022)
Article
Geography
Elaine Lynn-Ee Ho
Summary: This progress report examines the evolution of debates on the spatial ontologies and epistemologies of power in social geography by drawing on recent geographical literature on assemblages, infrastructures, and topology. It argues that each of the three approaches mentioned illuminates certain qualities of the relationship between sociality and space, providing researchers with a particular way of seeing and knowing the world. The report concludes by emphasizing the need to consider what might be overlooked through the choice of spatial vocabularies and reflecting on how spatial theorizing can promote social justice.
PROGRESS IN HUMAN GEOGRAPHY
(2022)
Article
Psychology, Clinical
Shirlena Huang et al.
Summary: This paper explores the emotional complexities of eldercare in the context of transnational families by studying the impact of geographical distance on caregiving and the modulation of emotions related to receiving care. The analysis is based on in-depth interviews with 17 older Singaporeans with at least one adult child residing overseas. The study also investigates the aging futures envisioned by the elderly and the emotions they negotiate, particularly in anticipation of changing health situations.
AMERICAN BEHAVIORAL SCIENTIST
(2022)
Article
Geography
Marco Gemignani et al.
Summary: Clapping and singing, as affective happenings, played important roles during the pandemic, both in alleviating feelings of isolation and providing mutual support, and in intensifying emotions that were already present in neoliberalism. They served as liberatory practices of solidarity and resistance against the changes induced by the pandemic, while also contributing to the dominant narratives of social resilience, docile bodies, and biopolitics. Furthermore, they operated as neoliberal technologies of the self, emphasizing individual agency, behavioral control, and the sacrifice of specific subjects.
EMOTION SPACE AND SOCIETY
(2022)
Article
Geography
Siew Ying Shee
Summary: Engagements with personal digital data have become increasingly common. However, digital data is not objective and neutral, as it is often politicised and influenced by specific values and assumptions about human experiences. This paper focuses on the socio-cultural differences in digital practices, using the example of users of digital food-tracking devices in Singapore. The findings highlight the epistemological tensions that arise from constantly balancing algorithmic advice and socio-cultural norms when engaging with digital health technologies, and the spatial and temporal implications on people's health practices.
Article
Geography
Shanti Sumartojo et al.
Summary: This article contributes to robot geographies by exploring the concept of robotic 'liveliness' through the lens of new materialism, considering robots' agential capacities in different ways. By analyzing the deployment of robots during the COVID-19 pandemic, the potential for robots to emerge as 'caring subjects' is speculated, suggesting that their liveliness can lead to critical perspectives on their use in 'caring' roles.
SOCIAL & CULTURAL GEOGRAPHY
(2022)
Article
Geography
Yang Shen et al.
Summary: This study examines the emotional labor of rural migrant workers in China's urban service sector, as well as the negotiation of power and status between urban employers and rural migrant workers through intersecting emotional and migration regimes. The study introduces the concept of 'translocal emotional reflexivity' to analyze the complex relationship between emotional regimes and subjectivities, and explores the process of 'institutionalized individualization' in the regulation and performance of emotional labor in China over the past decade.
SOCIAL & CULTURAL GEOGRAPHY
(2022)
Article
Geography
Laura Rodriguez Castro et al.
Summary: Individualized, maternalist and marketized discourses of childcare are prevalent in Australia. Mothers are primarily responsible for childcare, either doing the work themselves or arranging informal or paid childcare. One significant task for employed mothers is taking care of children during their commute. Our study with 45 Australian employed mothers using mapping/graphic elicitation interviews reveals that their commuting experiences are influenced by negotiations with intensive mothering and 'ideal worker' ideologies, resulting in feelings of guilt, shame, and stress. Spatial and temporal organization of childcare, as well as incompatibilities between commuting transport needs and public transport and parking, contribute to these tensions. Taking an emotional geographies perspective, we challenge linear understandings of commuting and mainstream transport and planning work, and emphasize the importance of considering emotional and relational dimensions in mothers' everyday geographies of care and paid work.
SOCIAL & CULTURAL GEOGRAPHY
(2022)
Article
Geography
Richard Yarwood et al.
Summary: This article discusses the impact of military service on the lives of children with parents serving in the military, focusing on how spaces like home, school, and recreational clubs shape their identities as service children. It advocates for highlighting children's voices to counter commonly-held discourses of heroism or victimhood.
Article
Geography
Caroline Faria et al.
Summary: A postcolonial ethics of care urges feminist geographers to establish caring relationships with research partners and spaces, recognizing the colonial origins of such practices. This approach entails responsibilities in addressing historical injustices and spatial power dynamics.
EMOTION SPACE AND SOCIETY
(2021)
Article
Geography
Elaine Lynn-Ee Ho
Summary: This report explores the renewed attention to time and temporality in the social sciences, particularly in the field of social geography. It highlights the importance of conceptualizing time in analyzing social relations, inequalities, and justice. The report discusses three key domains: intimate space-times, migration and social inequalities, and human-nature relations.
PROGRESS IN HUMAN GEOGRAPHY
(2021)
Article
Geography
Josie Hamper et al.
Summary: Smartphone pregnancy apps have transformed the way pregnancy information is accessed and can facilitate the bonding work between expectant mothers and their future babies. Users practice relationships with family members and the expected baby through strategic sharing of information in everyday life. Users of pregnancy apps respond to ideas of physical and relational closeness during pregnancy, providing insights into the contemporary making of intimate relationships through digital technologies and geographies of parenting and pregnancy.
TRANSACTIONS OF THE INSTITUTE OF BRITISH GEOGRAPHERS
(2021)
Article
Geography
Reza Shaker
Summary: This article examines the everyday encounters of Muslims in public transport, focusing on the importance of affective atmospheres in othering practices and traveling with difference. It presents public transport as a crucial cross-cultural meeting place, contributing to the empirical evidence on the role of public transport, race, and religion in the othering of Muslims.
ANNALS OF THE AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF GEOGRAPHERS
(2021)
Article
Geography
Allan Watson et al.
Summary: This study explores the role of emotional labor in creating specific atmospheres through performances of individual and collective emotional labor on film sets. By examining the work of film directors on set, the focus is on behavior, body language, and conflict, offering a new understanding of how collective emotional labor stages atmospheres.
SOCIAL & CULTURAL GEOGRAPHY
(2021)
Article
Geography
Xin Wei Andy Tan
Summary: This study examines the formation of atmospheres by street performances in Taipei and their affectual and emotional resonance on space and people. Street performance objects and the urban streetscape are vitalized as part of street performance, with excessive potential in producing atmospheres. The spatio-temporal dimension of performance atmosphere is significant in generating memories and creating a therapeutic atmospheric space.
EMOTION SPACE AND SOCIETY
(2021)
Article
Geography
Regan Koch et al.
Summary: This paper explores the impact of digital technology on stranger encounters in urban life and introduces the concept of "stranger intimacy," highlighting how digital technology is making interactions between strangers more selective and private. The researchers call for more attention to be paid to these new forms of stranger intimacies in order to better understand their role in social and economic realms.
PROGRESS IN HUMAN GEOGRAPHY
(2021)
Article
Geography
Samuel Strong
Summary: This paper examines shame, its geographies, and its impact on austerity policies in Britain through a study of a Trussell Trust foodbank in the Valleys of South Wales. It reveals that shame not only affects foodbank users, but also plays a central role in understanding contemporary politics of austerity.
TRANSACTIONS OF THE INSTITUTE OF BRITISH GEOGRAPHERS
(2021)
Article
Geography
Thom Davies et al.
Summary: This editorial introduces a special issue that explores the notion of 'failure' in academia, highlighting the uncomfortable impacts and uneven experiences of failure across different spaces and career stages. The authors aim to push back against the fear and loneliness that failure can create in order to confront the neoliberal university. Refusing to accept the unrealistic expectations, impositions, and demands of the University-Industrial Complex is not considered a failure in this context.
EMOTION SPACE AND SOCIETY
(2021)
Article
Geography
Natasha A. Webster
EMOTION SPACE AND SOCIETY
(2020)
Article
Geography
Orlando Woods et al.
SOCIAL & CULTURAL GEOGRAPHY
(2020)
Article
Geography
Karin Schwiter et al.
Article
Geography
David Bissell
Article
Geography
Stephanie E. Coen et al.
TRANSACTIONS OF THE INSTITUTE OF BRITISH GEOGRAPHERS
(2020)
Article
Political Science
Kirsi Pauliina Kallio et al.
CITIZENSHIP STUDIES
(2020)
Article
Geography
Edward Hall et al.
Article
Geography
Agnieszka Leszczynski
Article
Geography
Ann E. Bartos et al.
GENDER PLACE AND CULTURE
(2019)
Article
Geography
Hannah Lyons
Article
Psychology, Social
Batja Mesquita et al.
EUROPEAN REVIEW OF SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY
(2017)
Article
Geography
Kye Askins et al.
SOCIAL & CULTURAL GEOGRAPHY
(2017)
Article
Criminology & Penology
Michael Ashworth
SOCIAL & LEGAL STUDIES
(2017)
Article
Geography
David Bissell et al.
SOCIAL & CULTURAL GEOGRAPHY
(2017)
Article
Geography
Vincent J. Del Casino
PROGRESS IN HUMAN GEOGRAPHY
(2016)
Article
Geography
Melissa W. Wright
PROGRESS IN HUMAN GEOGRAPHY
(2010)
Article
Geography
Steve Pile
TRANSACTIONS OF THE INSTITUTE OF BRITISH GEOGRAPHERS
(2010)
Article
Geography
Joanne Sharp
PROGRESS IN HUMAN GEOGRAPHY
(2009)
Article
Geography
Elaine Lynn-Ee Ho
ANNALS OF THE ASSOCIATION OF AMERICAN GEOGRAPHERS
(2009)
Review
Environmental Studies
Derek P. McCormack
ENVIRONMENT AND PLANNING A-ECONOMY AND SPACE
(2007)