Within the social studies of children and children’s geographies a long-standing concern has been to study children’s everyday mobility, where mobility has been thought about as an individual independent capacity. In this paper we argue for a conception of mobility as an effect (or product) of multiple human, social, material including technological interdependent relationships and connections. We draw upon Actor-Network Theory, particularly in the way it has been developed in the so-called ‘new wave’ social studies of childhood and in relation to perspectives in wider studies of mobility. Bringing these frameworks to the study of children’s mobility suggests that everyday technologies, like the pushchair, can act as extensions of the self,...
The article aims to highlight the means of rhythmicity to social life from within a study of childre...
Since the 1960s, the definition of the family has changed greatly. From the nuclear family, immobile...
In this paper we consider the importance of ‘walking… just walking’ for many children and young peop...
International audienceDuring the last decades, social sciences and environmental psychology studies ...
Dominant discourses of childhood and mobility lead to the social, spatial and temporal placing of ch...
This book offers a critical and comprehensive analysis of children’s mobilities by focusing on its i...
This article proposes the need for a critical examination of the notion of children's 'independent m...
‘From cocooning to Skyping: an ethnographic study of mobilities in young children’s everyday lives i...
Children's perspectives are practically absent in new mobility studies. In this article, I wish to d...
In this paper I will present the main theoretical foundations of the ongoing ERC Starting Grant proj...
Geographers of childhood have variously accounted for the experiences of mobile children. Less has b...
Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2013.This study asserts that the every...
Mobility, in some form or another, drives our exploration of, and participation in, the world around...
The global decline of children's independent mobility is well documented. Whilst the Nordic countrie...
Drawing upon an extensive review of the literature, this chapter presents the main theoretical and m...
The article aims to highlight the means of rhythmicity to social life from within a study of childre...
Since the 1960s, the definition of the family has changed greatly. From the nuclear family, immobile...
In this paper we consider the importance of ‘walking… just walking’ for many children and young peop...
International audienceDuring the last decades, social sciences and environmental psychology studies ...
Dominant discourses of childhood and mobility lead to the social, spatial and temporal placing of ch...
This book offers a critical and comprehensive analysis of children’s mobilities by focusing on its i...
This article proposes the need for a critical examination of the notion of children's 'independent m...
‘From cocooning to Skyping: an ethnographic study of mobilities in young children’s everyday lives i...
Children's perspectives are practically absent in new mobility studies. In this article, I wish to d...
In this paper I will present the main theoretical foundations of the ongoing ERC Starting Grant proj...
Geographers of childhood have variously accounted for the experiences of mobile children. Less has b...
Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2013.This study asserts that the every...
Mobility, in some form or another, drives our exploration of, and participation in, the world around...
The global decline of children's independent mobility is well documented. Whilst the Nordic countrie...
Drawing upon an extensive review of the literature, this chapter presents the main theoretical and m...
The article aims to highlight the means of rhythmicity to social life from within a study of childre...
Since the 1960s, the definition of the family has changed greatly. From the nuclear family, immobile...
In this paper we consider the importance of ‘walking… just walking’ for many children and young peop...