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9 mar 2020 · Some of them may have a clear disciplinary background; for example, “regional identity” papers fit into geography, while “place identity” papers, into environmental psychology. However, there also exists chaos where mixed meanings of place identity are embodied in these two kinds of articles.
26 lut 2018 · In this paper, I explore the classic geographic concepts of space, place, and scale and apply them to a consideration of the body and of selfhood. In doing so, I trace out two markedly different ‘geographies of the self’.
1 sty 2007 · scape relationship can be defined in terms of their primary focus on space vs. place. In the following, we discuss the best known theories in each of the two groups .
21 kwi 2020 · Place is an inescapable aspect of daily life and is intimately linked to our life experiences. An expanding body of research has investigated how place shapes the “geography of opportunity” as well as students’, families’, and stakeholders’ experiences in and around schools.
29 lis 2022 · Introduction. Behavioral geography is an approach to human geography that attempts to understand human activity in space, place, and environment by studying it at the disaggregate level of analysis—at the level of the individual person.
7 sie 2024 · In human geography and its subfields (social, cultural, urban, etc.), sense of place is often used to embrace various socio-cultural, emotional, and psychological meanings attributed to places (see works of Cresswell, 2014; Seamon & Mugerauer, 1985). Humans use sense of place to connect their cognitive, affective, and conative meanings with ...
The distinction between different definitions of place (open vs. closed, discouraging vs. inviting strangers) is closely linked to the distinction between two types of social capital: bonding vs. bridging (Putnam, 2000) or strong vs. weak ties (Granovetter, 1973). The bonding social capital is typical of closed local communities while the ...