The daily commute to work and its related social histories have long been of interest to historical geographers and urban historians. This article revisits the existing scholarship on the nineteenth-century journey to work and outlines a new methodological framework that uses a historical GIS to overcome many of the challenges identified in previous studies. These challenges include a reliance on small, atypical samples of workers, approximations of the spatial relationship between home and work, and unrealistic interpretations of journeys travelled by using only Euclidean paths. Combining city directories and decennial censuses through the use of probabilistic record linkage techniques uncovers the relationship between work and home for ov...
analysis of journey to work patterns in human geography-by Kevin O’Connor The analysis of journey to...
In Canada, patterns of employment-related geographical mobility (E-RGM) are becoming more complex an...
The word ‘commute’ is said to come from the ‘commuting’ of fares paid by nineteenthcentury Americans...
The daily commute to work and its related social histories have long been of interest to historical ...
In the XIXth century the journey to work was one of the main constraints on intra-urban residential ...
There are large gaps in our knowledge of the journey to work in the first half of the twentieth cent...
In recent years, historians and historical geographers have become interested in the use of GIS to s...
This paper investigates the accuracy of theory and research suggesting that higher-status workers ar...
The paper uses original quantitative and qualitative evidence to examine changes in the distance tra...
The Pacific Northwest underwent rapid economic growth in the late 19th century and cities on both si...
This paper examines the consequences of the commuter transport revolution on working class labour ma...
The growth of public transport networks in the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries had pro...
This paper examines the consequences of the commuter transport revolution on working-class labour ma...
When taking a new job, either across town or across the country, individuals and families face the d...
This paper explores the ways in which a young woman who migrated from Londonderry to London in the 1...
analysis of journey to work patterns in human geography-by Kevin O’Connor The analysis of journey to...
In Canada, patterns of employment-related geographical mobility (E-RGM) are becoming more complex an...
The word ‘commute’ is said to come from the ‘commuting’ of fares paid by nineteenthcentury Americans...
The daily commute to work and its related social histories have long been of interest to historical ...
In the XIXth century the journey to work was one of the main constraints on intra-urban residential ...
There are large gaps in our knowledge of the journey to work in the first half of the twentieth cent...
In recent years, historians and historical geographers have become interested in the use of GIS to s...
This paper investigates the accuracy of theory and research suggesting that higher-status workers ar...
The paper uses original quantitative and qualitative evidence to examine changes in the distance tra...
The Pacific Northwest underwent rapid economic growth in the late 19th century and cities on both si...
This paper examines the consequences of the commuter transport revolution on working class labour ma...
The growth of public transport networks in the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries had pro...
This paper examines the consequences of the commuter transport revolution on working-class labour ma...
When taking a new job, either across town or across the country, individuals and families face the d...
This paper explores the ways in which a young woman who migrated from Londonderry to London in the 1...
analysis of journey to work patterns in human geography-by Kevin O’Connor The analysis of journey to...
In Canada, patterns of employment-related geographical mobility (E-RGM) are becoming more complex an...
The word ‘commute’ is said to come from the ‘commuting’ of fares paid by nineteenthcentury Americans...