<p>In the context of debates about segregation within the UK, this paper maps the residential geography of two groups of White British school children, one of which was in secondary school in 2011 and the other in 2017. To present that geography, hexograms are introduced as a complement to visually balanced cartograms, both of which seek to address the problems of invisibility and distortion encountered with more conventional choropleth and cartogram maps. The nature of these problems is introduced, our solutions discussed, and the methods applied to the case study, which allow changes in the geography to be seen.</p
This article provides an account of how spatial divisions permeate imaginaries of the UK’s geography...
ABSTRACT. This paper argues that models of school choice suggesting evidence for (ethnic) segregatio...
The consumption of private and state education, both at primary and secondary level, is markedly dif...
In the context of debates about segregation within the UK, this paper maps the residential geograph...
Through the use of new mapping techniques, in particular cartogrammetry, this book depicts the socia...
Our regional graphic maps deprivation for small neighbourhoods in England in a way that enables the ...
London is a divided city whose divisions are often discussed, but far less often revealed, through c...
The Black Lives Matter movement has increased attention paid to whiteness and education. This paper ...
This study will look at some of the issues involved in representing ethnic residential segregation. ...
A series of major reforms during the 1980s and 1990s have led to the transformation of the education...
Graphicacy is now recognised as the strong and distinctive contribution of geography to the school c...
Cartograms have long been used to highlight the uneven distribution of a phenomenon over a given are...
Between the first two decades of the 21st century, the gentrification of the academic subject of Geo...
Although school atlases represent a major sector in cartographic publishing, we know little about ho...
Geodemographic classifications are used to understand social phenomena. Within the private sector, f...
This article provides an account of how spatial divisions permeate imaginaries of the UK’s geography...
ABSTRACT. This paper argues that models of school choice suggesting evidence for (ethnic) segregatio...
The consumption of private and state education, both at primary and secondary level, is markedly dif...
In the context of debates about segregation within the UK, this paper maps the residential geograph...
Through the use of new mapping techniques, in particular cartogrammetry, this book depicts the socia...
Our regional graphic maps deprivation for small neighbourhoods in England in a way that enables the ...
London is a divided city whose divisions are often discussed, but far less often revealed, through c...
The Black Lives Matter movement has increased attention paid to whiteness and education. This paper ...
This study will look at some of the issues involved in representing ethnic residential segregation. ...
A series of major reforms during the 1980s and 1990s have led to the transformation of the education...
Graphicacy is now recognised as the strong and distinctive contribution of geography to the school c...
Cartograms have long been used to highlight the uneven distribution of a phenomenon over a given are...
Between the first two decades of the 21st century, the gentrification of the academic subject of Geo...
Although school atlases represent a major sector in cartographic publishing, we know little about ho...
Geodemographic classifications are used to understand social phenomena. Within the private sector, f...
This article provides an account of how spatial divisions permeate imaginaries of the UK’s geography...
ABSTRACT. This paper argues that models of school choice suggesting evidence for (ethnic) segregatio...
The consumption of private and state education, both at primary and secondary level, is markedly dif...