In contrast to recent treatment of other social identities, geographers' work on age still focuses disproportionately on the social-chronological margins – the very young and (to a far lesser extent) the very old – and rarely connects them directly. We outline the benefits of creating relational geographies of age, in order to build out from the recent explosion of children's geographies, and discuss three helpful concepts: intergenerationality, intersectionality and lifecourse. We suggest that participation provides one epistemological vehicle for getting beyond geographies which are mainly adults'
Geographical gerontology can look like a niche subfield of geography or a tenuous overlap between th...
We seek to organise two sessions to explore the relationships of older people and ageing with place,...
The social sciences traditionally have tended to be adult-centric, with perspectives from and about ...
In contrast to recent treatment of other social identities, geographers' work on age still focuses d...
Dissatisfied with the notion that children and young people can be properly understood outside of th...
This special section builds on previous scholarship on geographies of ageing, and on relational and ...
Age is a conceptual challenge for geographical research due to its twofold character as a marker of ...
This chapter explores some of the important conceptual, theoretical and empirical developments and c...
This special section builds on previous scholarship on geographies of ageing, and on relational and ...
In this paper I suggest ways in which a geographical approach to grandparent identities could uccess...
This special section builds on previous scholarship on geographies of ageing, and on relational and ...
The intersection between geography and gerontology arises structurally in institutions and intellect...
This article explores the interplay of inequality, space and age(ing) from an intersectional perspe...
Drawing from work on mobilities and geographies of the lifecourse this collection is concerned with ...
From the early 1990s, the study of men and masculinities and the spatiality of their identities, has...
Geographical gerontology can look like a niche subfield of geography or a tenuous overlap between th...
We seek to organise two sessions to explore the relationships of older people and ageing with place,...
The social sciences traditionally have tended to be adult-centric, with perspectives from and about ...
In contrast to recent treatment of other social identities, geographers' work on age still focuses d...
Dissatisfied with the notion that children and young people can be properly understood outside of th...
This special section builds on previous scholarship on geographies of ageing, and on relational and ...
Age is a conceptual challenge for geographical research due to its twofold character as a marker of ...
This chapter explores some of the important conceptual, theoretical and empirical developments and c...
This special section builds on previous scholarship on geographies of ageing, and on relational and ...
In this paper I suggest ways in which a geographical approach to grandparent identities could uccess...
This special section builds on previous scholarship on geographies of ageing, and on relational and ...
The intersection between geography and gerontology arises structurally in institutions and intellect...
This article explores the interplay of inequality, space and age(ing) from an intersectional perspe...
Drawing from work on mobilities and geographies of the lifecourse this collection is concerned with ...
From the early 1990s, the study of men and masculinities and the spatiality of their identities, has...
Geographical gerontology can look like a niche subfield of geography or a tenuous overlap between th...
We seek to organise two sessions to explore the relationships of older people and ageing with place,...
The social sciences traditionally have tended to be adult-centric, with perspectives from and about ...