التسميات

الثلاثاء، 13 مارس 2018

Population geography: lifecourse matters - Adrian J. Bailey


Population geography: lifecourse matters

Adrian J. Bailey 

School of Geography, University of Leeds, Leeds LS2 9JT, UK


Progress in Human Geography 33(3) (2009) pp. 407–418

Key words: age, childhood, family, generation, time.


I Introduction 

  Concerning itself with the spatial nature of society’s populations, scholarship in population geography continues to reflect and, in some instances, lead wider discussions about relational thinking that span the social sciences. This review aims to describe how research on lifecourse geographies carries themes of relationality while contributing new knowledge on topics that include: mobility, work, housing, childhood, changing families1 and social networks, age, generation, disability, health and well-being inequalities, and vulnerability.

  Geographical engagements with life course/ life-course/lifecourse research are well established, if not always visible (Hopkins and Pain, 2007). Recent developments build on antecedents from behavioural geography, regional science, feminist geography, and population studies (Huff and Clark, 1978; Frey, 1984; Courgeau, 1985; Warnes, 1986; Wagner, 1989; Chant and Radcliffe, 1992; Odland and Shumway, 1993; Katz and Monk, 1993; van Wissen and Dykstra, 1999). However, a poststructural emphasis upon how power relations constitute and are constituted by the spaces of groups and groupings reworks this legacy in new directions. For example, a priori ‘life cycle’ categorizations of age and the deterministic timbre of stage and time are seen as normalized and politically problematic categories of analysis. Yet, this is not to deny the very real role of structural dependencies, synchronizations, and sequences that flow through the lives of individuals and social institutions. Here I am interested in what lifecourse research adds to the recognition that: ‘spatial contexts are not passive … geometries of power “populate” places in a way that produces not only uneven geographies of labour, but that connects places to a global system’ (Findlay, 2005: 432). To capture how lifecourse research both develops and reworks, this review is organized in three substantive sections that highlight: biographies and careers and how these flow and are sequenced through an individual life; the linking and synchronization of lives in and through space; inequalities over lifecourses and their theorization.

II Biographies, transitions, and events 

  Interested in patterns of order and orders of patterns in the often banal practices of everyday life, lifecourse scholarship seeks to describe the structures and sequences of events and transitions through an individual’s life (Elder, 1985; Hareven, 2000).

  Geographers have turned to individual biographies to organize such accounts (for example, Halfacree and Boyle, 1993; Silvey and Lawson, 1999). Biographies help relate trajectories (or ‘careers’, including residential location, mobility, work, incarceration) to transitions (such as the demographic triumvirate of birth, death, and migration events, and nest-leaving, partnering, separating, retirement) and the spaces and times they fl ow through (Dykstra and van Wissen, 1999).

  The production and experience of individual mobility biographies has been studied in relation to patterns of work, housing, and household organization at a variety of scales and historic times (Hägerstrand, 1970; Sandefur and Scott, 1981; Clark and Huang, 2003; Li, 2004; Flowerdew and Al-Hamad, 2004; Pooley et al., 2005; Plane et al., 2005; Naess, 2006; Axhausen, 2007; Scheiner, 2007). A number of recent papers suggest that mobility biographies cross-cut spheres of production and social reproduction. For example, Kulu (2008) relates mobility behaviour in Austria to employment, partnership, and childbirth events. Frändberg (2008) uses a time-space path perspective to explore the mobility biographies of a group of 162 young Swedes and reports complex, but systematic, relationships between temporary mobility (including holidays and trips to second homes) and migration. Tying together what are often treated as discrete literatures on mobility, tourism and migration informs transnational theorizations of social spaces and networks (Olwig, 2003; George, 2005). Integrating mobility and migration biographies also extends knowledge of the strategies international migrants use in response to the changing institutional regulation of immigration (Poot and Sanderson, 2007). The institutional organization of social insurance in Sweden, Germany, and the USA explains how the different mobility regimes in these counties reflect national variations in the rates of events and transitions including occupation mobility, job displacement, household demography (DiPrete, 2002). 

   The trajectories and transitions of work, employment, and livelihood comprise a second focus of activity (van Hoven and Pfaffenbach, 2003). Research on the migration-employment nexus relates the sequencing of migration to transitions in and out of the labour market and to wage characteristics (Cooke, 2003), and highlights the roles of gender and family organization (Nilsson, 2001; Kofman, 2004; Smith and Bailey, 2006), and housing markets (Clark and Withers, 2002; Davies-Withers and Clark, 2006). Housing careers contribute to the development of such housing markets (Kendig, 1995; Clark et al., 2003). Research on housing careers also suggests that ‘the extent to which housing quality increases over the life course is lastingly influenced by (the timing of ) experiences in the educational, labour market and household careers’ (Feijten and Mulder, 2005: 583). Supporting this are explorations of how the cultural dynamics of intergenerational wealth transfers affect the housing opportunities of young adults (Murdie, 2002; Tomassini et al., 2003; Kurz, 2004; Feijten, 2005). 

  Descriptions of transitions between childhood, adolescence and adulthood also weave together the spheres of production and social reproduction (Holloway and Valentine, 2000; McKendrick, 2001; Aitken, 2001; Valentine, 2003). Space plays an important role in mediating transitions, through gender systems (McDowell, 2002), the structure of educational opportunities and markets (Mulder and Clark, 2002; Punch, 2004; Hopkins, 2006a), transnational family networks (Orellana et al., 2001; Pribilsky, 2001; Smith, 2006), and structural relations of poverty and inequality (Ansell, 2004; Furlong and Cartmel, 2007; van Blerk, 2008). Such transitions have been connected to processes of globalization through debates on scale (Ruddick, 2003; Horschelmann and Schafer, 2005) and social reproduction (Mitchell et al., 2004; Katz, 2005). One way in which understanding of the institutional contexts of transition into adulthood has been advanced is through careful analysis of how the increasingly prevalent practices of incarceration and youth justice both implicate and transform lifecourse constructions (Pettit and Western, 2004). For example, Brown (2007: 227) argues that ‘the juvenile court pathologized urban childhood, and reinforced a spatial division within society between urban youth of color and ideal childhoods thought to punctuate suburban, middle-class, white families’. Gilmore’s (2007) analysis of incarceration practices in California describes how ideas about motherhood are brought into sharp relief through the strategies women utilize to ‘reclaim their children’ (Chapter 5). 

   While the fi eld continues to focus on how events constitute population groups, the range of events studied tends to be restricted to births, deaths, migration, and family formation events (Bailey, 2005). Yet, other events function as rites of passage, circulate norms and social meanings, and play roles in constituting groups (Teather, 1999; Fannin, 2004). Further analyses of lifecourse geographies should expand the concept of event and consider, for example, memorials, anniversaries, public commemorations, roadside markers, festivals and so on (see Kong, 2001).

III Synchronization and contingency 

  Interest in how individuals and groups organize their lives in relation to others, society and its institutions motivates lifecourse analyses of linking and, more specifi cally, practices and ideologies of synchronization. As with human geography more generally, this relational thrust has been accompanied and enriched by a consideration of space and place – specifi cally, sensitivity to the ways in which contingencies affect synchronization. Such research stands to contribute to extant debates on spatial contingency although paradoxically, and as intimated, has had less to say about ‘temporal’ contingency, despite the call for such insights (Massey, 2005) and the demonstrated potential for lifecourse research to contribute such material (Hockey and James, 2003).

  A growing appreciation of the ‘family’ context of linked lives and synchronization is coincident with calls for studies that transcend individual-level analysis (Mulder and Wagner, 1993; Kofman, 2004; Bergeron and Potter, 2006; Clark and Huang, 2006). Coordinating multiple lives in a family context both enables and constrains the timing of migration, as suggested by Bailey et al.’s (2004) description of how dual-career couples make location decisions in relation to the needs of elderly parents, and the economic and cultural resources such generations provide to working parents and their children. Such synchronization has implications for gender relations: Schwanen’s (2007) analysis of the repetitive cycles of chauffeuring children to school by parents in dual-earner families reports that while fathers take on many of these trips their arrangement continues to reflect gender ideologies. Holmes (2006) considers the locational decisions of dual-career couples and suggests that decisions to live apart that balance emotional labouring with working biographies are more likely at certain lifecourse moments than others. Resurreccion and van Khanh (2007) also highlight the importance of the timing of cooperation strategies between women and men in reproducing gender relations, and distance themselves from performativity frameworks that assume linear accumulations of cooperation. There are important connections to research on the geographic connections between family members (Smith, 1998; Joseph and Hallman, 1998; Rogerson et al., 1997; Hardill, 2002) and how the synchronizing strategies of partnering extend gender ideologies over space (Walton-Roberts, 2004). 

   The importance of spatial and temporal contingency in mediating how synchronization affects social norms and the circulation of power more generally emerges as a key theme in the interdisciplinary analyses of transnational families (Bryceson and Vuorela, 2002; Asis et al., 2004; Parreòas, 2005). Moreover, this literature calls attention to synchronization through extended family and kin linkages and, most generally, over multiscaled social networks (Waters, 2002; Kobayashi and Preston, 2007; Bashi, 2007; Conway and Potter, 2007). Mulder (2007) calls for attention to how the ‘extra household’ context of family relations affects residential choices. Such diverse social networks operating outside the ‘family’ are increasingly important in the face of rising immigrant populations which attach greater weight to family networks, the changing nature of intergenerational wealth transfers under neoliberal conditions, and the growing diversity in living arrangements beyond the nuclear family. Yet, despite some helpful analyses of temporal contingencies (including Neven, 2002, and Bonvalet et al., 2007), theoretical progress remains elusive (Bailey and Boyle, 2004). 

  In addition to richer accounts of gender relations, family relations, and social networks, attention to sequence and temporal contingency also contributes to ongoing discussions of the relationality of age and generation. For example, while ideas of childhood and generation have been reworked through critiques of the localized and normalized discursive practices that defi ne groups using dualisms and biological referents (ie, children are not yet adults, generations are defi ned with reference to a common origin event; Valentine, 1995; Harper and Laws, 1995; Pain et al., 2000; Stewart, 2005), new lifecourse-framed work explores the implications of temporal contingencies and norms for age and generation. Van Blerk and Ansell (2006) describe how structural failure, poverty, and HIV-AIDS have led many southern African children to experience biographies, transitions, and linkages in socially disrupted and spatially dislocated ways, with implications for norms of social hierarchy and the ideologies of childhood that circulate. Vanderbeck (2005) reads a sedentarizing narrative into the schoolhouse experiences of Traveller children in Britain. This calls into question parents’ ability to meet the development needs of their children and thus reworks the meaning of childhood and idealized childhood both within the community, and nationally. Leiter et al.’s (2006) examination of how recent US citizenship frameworks reorder the access that children and parents receive to social citizenship calls into question generationally based understandings of adult–child relations, with further implications for understandings of immigrant childhoods and the mediating role of state institutions upon such group constructions. More broadly, the implications of the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child for childhood is discussed by Skelton (2007). Explorations of the contingencies of generational identity and consciousness have also led to less normative constructions of population groups (Andrews et al., 2006). Indeed, the ways that spatial contingency engenders and cements the values and beliefs that lend generational consciousness have concerned McHugh (2007: 294) and colleagues for a number of years. He focuses on the role of age-restricted communities in reworking generation, and connects personal narratives and life histories with national stories that circulate as national mythologies through everyday and historic times.

  Lifecourse research on intergenerational relations also focuses on the contingencies of synchronization, drawing from studies of children (Alanen and Mayall, 2001), elderly (McHugh, 2003), immigrant communities (Hopkins, 2006b; Pieke, 2007), and social reproduction (Mitchell et al., 2004). Seeing it an important cross-cutting agenda that should focus on the family and non-family contexts of such relations, Vanderbeck (2007) draws on Riley and Riley (2000) and Mayall and Zeiher (2003) to foreground processes of ‘generationing’ that link social constructions of generations and generational relations to intersections between biographies, historical times, and social times that play over the spaces of lifecourses. Vanderbeck’s argument (pp. 213–15) further expands the existing focus beyond the family, and beyond heteronormative scripting of lifecourse intersections by pointing to research suggesting ‘distinctive’ spatialites and temporalities in the rhythms and sequences of queer lives (notably, Halberstam, 2005). 

  A cluster of research on ‘disabling’ processes likewise draws on notions of linkage and sequence in space to posit less essentialized readings of disability (Imrie and Edwards, 2007). Thomas (2004) traces how the space of the home and its use by disabled bodies and others with overlapping activity spaces recasts the experience of home, perpetuating a ‘disabling’ feeling and practice. Holt (2004) argues that the state, through its promulgation of a sanctioned ‘national’ curriculum, sets temporal parameters on the development of students; by failing to ‘keep up with’ targets and timings, constructions of disability are produced and circulated in the spaces and times of educational biographies, with implications for the classifi cation and streaming of children. Indeed, many studies shed light on how synchronization is enabled and constrained by institutions and regulations (Mayer and Schopflin, 1989; Cohen, 1997). 

IV Theorizing inequality over 

lifecourses 

  Understanding how lifetime accumulations of experiences, resources, and vulnerabilities impact and circulate inequality has motivated lifecourse analysis of how early life experiences put individuals into, and take them out of, harm’s way, how particular places and moments take on significance in the perpetuation of structural disadvantage, and how individuals and groups use which resources to enhance economic and social participation.

  Methodologically diverse biomedical and health studies explore the role of lifecourse structures for triggering and maintaining inequality in health outcomes (Davey-Smith et al., 1997; Graham, 2001). Using aggregated data from Canada, Prus (2007) fi nds increasing health inequalities between socioeconomic status groups with age, suggesting the persistence of strong early life infl uences. Focusing on the educational outcomes of young adults, Murasko (2007) similarly concludes that early life experiences – in this case, locus of control and self-esteem – exert a systematic impact upon later life. Lake et al. (2004) highlight the importance of childhood diet for affecting the development of chronic diseases (Popkin, 1993), and tie the food choices of adolescents to lifecourse processes surrounding their transition to adulthood. Lifecourse readings of violence against women receive growing but relatively limited attention (Menjivar and Salcido, 2002; Jiwani, 2005). 

  Lifecourse analyses of economic inequalities and well-being have drawn on work– life balance and role theory to trace the impact of role balances and compromises in middle life upon lower incomes and inequality in later life (Evandrou and Glaser, 2004). The consequences of migration sequencing for employment inequalities between White and non-White students is a theme taken up by Faggian et al. (2006). This research asks how the type of migration strategy used upon graduation from a UK university is linked to an earlier lifecourse decision to migrate to study and to characteristics of the course of study, the local area, and the student. NonWhite students leave their homes to study at a lower rate compared with White students with ‘long term implications, in that their [non-White] subsequent migration propensities and consequently their long term incomes will be reduced relative to those who were more mobile at the earlier stage’ (p. 470). In describing variations in the international migration strategies of UK students, Findlay et al. (2006) argue that unequal access to secondary higher education may act to reproduce social disadvantage.

   Another body of research explores how material and discursive dimensions of lifecourses can be mobilized to increase the social, economic, and political participation of individuals and groups. The importance of social networks runs through Blank and Torrecilha’s (1998) research on Mexican, Puerto Rican, and Cubans in the USA to support the lifecourse view that immigrant adults boost their participation by organizing residential careers and extended family living arrangements in ways that ‘generate resources’ for caring for young children and elders (see also Donker’s 2004 analysis of Ghanian immigrants’ adaption strategies in Canada, and Salaff and Greve, 2004). Bergen et al. (2003) focus on the strategies in everyday life used by women to combat chronic illness. Smith and Holt (2007) call for a lifecourse view of how (student) gentrifiers participate in complex urban housing markets. Their view extends oversimplistic lifecycle accounts of nest-leaving by probing historical intersections between transformations in higher education and studentifi cation and the circulation of social norms surrounding home–work transitions and family belonging. Goldstein (2003) tracks the roles of humour and the development of lifecourse narratives that use humour to structure, synchronize, and connect the sometimes banal and often oppressive events of everyday life among poor populations in Rio de Janeiro. The potential of disrupting sedentarist norms and fostering participation through ideologies of mobility is explored by Uteng (2006), who asks what happens when the ‘roots’ of genealogical order and hierarchy are disrupted by the ‘routes’ of mobility in framing daily understandings of identity and belonging? Here migration – mobility – is made more than movement through its transformative action upon temporality, such that, at least for these immigrants, it offers capabilities that can increase active participation in society, and reduce inequality.

  This research also addresses what makes strategies of participation more successful in some places, and at some times, than others. Growing sensitivity to why some places are healthy and therapeutic, and others degenerative (Smyth, 2008: 124) may foreground not only how health sequences unfold across an individual’s biographical times, but jointly through the historical and social times of these place contexts. Using linked longitudinal and historical data, Curtis et al. (2004) show that the place contexts of early life (including the degree of local unemployment) do exert a systematic affect upon later life illness. Grundy (2006) notes how the promotion of healthy lifestyles, coping strategies, and social networks throughout the lifecourse can ensure elderly people accumulate a range of resources that can offset vulnerabilities. Maxey (2004) focuses on the participation of children in intentional communities through the circulation of non-adultist norms that develop in particular places.

  What emerges is a complex articulation between the accumulation of life experience and resources, contingency, and inequality and participation. Readings of embodied lifecourses have emerged as ways of ‘socializing’ corporeality and appreciating the social geometries of the lifecourse, while preserving the integrity of self-society mediations (Hockey and James, 2003). Conradson and McKay (2007: 170) note that affect, emotion, and the subjectivity of self arise as an ‘embodied physiological state that emerges through relational encounter’, with Sheller and Urry (2006) opening up ‘mobilities’ as such locales of encounter. Within population geography there are calls for the analysis of embodied vulnerabilities that focus both on individual and group experiences of hardship and upon the ‘chains of infl uence’ that circulate disadvantage (Heikkila, 2005; Philo, 2005: 443). Futhermore, Flamm and Kaufman (2006) contribute to broadening the treatment of temporality by uncovering changing ideologies of motility in historical time, although the changing nature of participation across social time has received less attention (Southerton, 2006, is one exception). Pursuing the idea of what might be acceptable timespans for coordinating lifecourse activities, Schwanen (2006) argues that clock-time defi nitions alone will miss the relational, material, and embodied nature and meaning of such couplings and intersections.

   A further set of lifecourse theorizations focus on experiences of temporality. Jarvis et al. (2001) and Jarvis (2005) focus on working families and report that the true costs of time squeeze are related to housing affordability, childcare shortages, transport failures, and school choice. Bauman (2007: 3) argues that spans of biographical times are increasingly fragmented with the past being no guide to the future, and ‘a swift and thorough forgetting of outdated information [and experience] and fast ageing habits can be more important to the next success than the memorization of past moves and the building of strategies on a foundation laid by previous learning’ (italics in original). Indeed, for Butler (2004), participation in political community can be enabled through a socially and relationally transacted performance of grief. As lifecourse resources, processes of remembering and forgetting emerge as productive topics for reflection, not least, of course, because memories ‘are always mediated’ (Chamberlain and Leydesdorff, 2004: 229), with gaps, silences, and absences presumably unfolding over lifecourses in relational ways.

V Conclusion 

  This review has attended to how lifecourse matters matter. Through the development of increasingly interdisciplinary agendas and relational frameworks research outlines less normative views of terms like age, family, generation, and groups, while expanding knowledge of childhood, old age, processes of disabling, generationing, and gendering. This interdisciplinarity – also refl ected in the growth of such nodes as the National Centre for Lifecourse Research (New Zealand), the ESRC Seminar on Time Space and the Life Course (UK), and the Bronfenbrenner Life Course Center (Cornell, USA) – has implications for intradisciplinarity (for example, opportunities for lifecourse work on health inequalities; Smyth, 2008: 119). 

  A key strength of this work is the progress toward appreciating how the spaces and spatial contingencies of everyday life matter for strategies of production and social reproduction. Discussions of lifecourse contingencies, participation, and embodiment hook up with broader discussions in the discipline about, for example, care (McDowell, 2004; Lawson, 2007), hark back to Hettner’s (1927) point that the fi eld might roam across the spheres of production and settlement/ consumption, and advance the field’s engagement with materiality through contributions to global discussions on vulnerability, including the International Geographical Union’s Commission on Population and Vulnerability (Findlay, 2005). 

  An ongoing challenge remains theorizing spatiality and temporality in ways sensitive to their mutually constitutive relationship (May and Thrift, 2001). For example, Brown and Colton (2001) suggest that events surrounding ‘death’ may function to reconstitute space and time, Cwerner (2001) and Zerubuval (2003) link the spaces and times of community to the circulation of social division, and Jarvis (2005) suggests ‘city time’ and ‘urban inequality’ are co-constitutive and mutually implicated across and of the lifecourse. Such studies inspire accounts that avoid new fixity and hierarchy, and that resonate with a fl uidity and fl eetfootedness that seems to be the way of lifecourses.

Note 1. 

  Buzar et al.’s (2005) review of household matters provides the specifi c impetus for this review, not to mention inspiration for the title.

References 

Aitken, S. 2001: Geographies of young people: the morally contested spaces of identity. London: Routledge. 

Alanen, L. and Mayall, B., editors 2001:Conceptualizing child-adult relations. London: Routledge. 

Andrews, G.J., Kearns, R.A, Kontos, P. and Wilson, V. 2006: ‘Their fi nest hour’: older people, oral histories, and the historical geography of social life. Social and Cultural Geography 7, 153–77.

Ansell, N. 2004: Secondary schooling and rural youth transitions in Lesotho and Zimbabwe. Youth and Society 36, 183–202. 

Asis, M.M.B., Huang, S. and Yeoh, B.S.A. 2004: When the light of the home is abroad: unskilled female migration and the Filipino family. Singapore Journal of Tropical Geography 25, 198–215.

Axhausen, K. 2007: Activity spaces, biographies, social networks and their welfare gains and externalities: some hypotheses and empirical results. Mobilities 2, 15–36. 

Bailey, A.J. 2005: Making population geography. London: Hodder Arnold. 

Bailey, A.J. and Boyle, P. 2004: Untying and retying family migration in the new Europe. Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 30, 229–42. 

Bailey, A.J., Blake M.K. and Cooke, T.J. 2004: Migration, care, and the linked lives of dual-earner households. Environment and Planning A 36, 1617–32. 

Bashi, V.F. 2007: Survival of the knitted: immigrant social networks in a stratifi ed social world. Palo Alto, CA: Stanford University Press. 

Bauman, Z. 2007: Liquid times. Malden, MA: Polity. 

Bergen, D., Moss, P. and Dyck, I. 2003: Women, body, illness: space and identity in the everyday lives of women with chronic illness. Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefi eld. 

Bergeron, J. and Potter, S. 2006: Family members and relatives: an important resource for newcomer’s settlement? Canadian Issues/Themes Canadien Spring, 76–80. 

Blank, S. and Torrecilha, R.S. 1998: Understanding the living arrangements of Latino immigrants: a life course approach. International Migration Review 32, 3–19. 

Bonvalet, C., Gotman, A. and Grafmeyer, Y., editors 2007: Family kinship and place in France. London: Southern Universities Press. 

Brown, E. 2007: ‘It’s urban living, not ethnicity itself’: race, crime, and the urban geography of high-risk youth. Geography Compass 1/2, 222–45. 

Brown, M. and Colton, T. 2001: Dying epistemologies. Environment and Planning A 33, 799–821. 

Bryceson, D. and Vuorela, U., editors 2002: The transnational family: new European frontiers and global networks. Oxford: Berg. 

Butler, J. 2004: Precarious life: the powers of mourning and violence. London: Verso. 

Buzar, S., Ogden, P.E. and Hall, R. 2005: Households matter: the quiet demography of urban transformation. Progress in Human Geography 29, 413–36. 

Chamberlain, M. and Leydesdorff, S. 2004: Transnational families: memories and narratives. Global Networks 4, 227–41. 

Chant, S. and Radcliffe, S.A. 1992: Migration and development: the importance of gender. In Chant, S., editor, Gender and migration in developing counties, New York: Belhaven Press, 1–29. 

Clark, W.A.V. and Huang, Y. 2003: The life course and residential mobility in British housing markets. Environment and Planning A 35, 323–39.

— 2006: Balancing move and work: women’s labour market exits and entries after family migration. Population Space and Place 12, 31–44. 

Clark, W.A.V. and Withers, S.D. 2002: Disentangling the interaction of migration, mobility, and laborforce participation. Environment and Planning A 34, 923–45. 

Clark, W.A.V., Deurloo, M.C. and Dieleman, F.M. 2003: Housing careers in the United States, 1968–93: modeling the sequencing of housing states. Urban Studies 140, 143–60. 

Cohen, P. 1997: Rethinking the youth question. London: Macmillan. 

Conradson, D. and McKay, D. 2007: Translocal subjectivities: mobility, connection, emotion. Mobilities 2, 167–74. 

Conway, D. and Potter, R. 2007: Caribbean transnational return migrants as agents of change. Geography Compass 1, 25–45. 

Cooke, T.J. 2003: Family migration and the relative earnings of husbands and wives. Annals of the Association of American Geographers 93, 338–49.

Courgeau, D. 1985: Interaction between spatial mobility, family, and career life-cycle: a French survey. European Sociological Review 1, 139–62. 

Curtis, S., Southall, H., Congdon, P. and Dodgeon, B. 2004: Area effects of health variation over the life-course: analysis of the longitudinal study sample in England using new data on area of residence in childhood. Social Science and Medicine 58, 57–74. 

Cwerner, S.B. 2001: The times of migration. Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 27, 7–36. 

Davey-Smith, G., Hart, G., Blane, D., Gillis, C. and Hawthorne, V. 1997: Lifetime socioeconomic position and mortality: prospective observational study. British Medical Journal 314, 547–52. 

Davies-Withers, S. and Clark, W.A.V. 2006: Housing costs and the geography of family migration outcomes. Population Space and Place 12, 273–89. 

DiPrete, T.A. 2002: Life course risks, mobility regimes, and mobility consequences: a comparison of Sweden, Germany, and the US. American Journal of Sociology 108, 267–308. 

Donker, M. 2004: Looking back and looking in: rethinking adaption strategies of Ghanian immigrant women in Canada. Journal of International Migration and Integration 5, 33–51. 

Dykstra, P. and van Wissen, L.J.G. 1999: Introduction. In van Wissen, L.J.G. and Dykstra, P., editors, Population issues: an interdisciplinary focus, New York: Kluwer, 1–22.

Elder, G., editor 1985: Life course dynamics. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press. 

Evandrou, M. and Glaser, K. 2004: Family, work, and the quality of life: changing economic and social roles through the lifecourse. Ageing and Society 24, 771–91. 

Faggian, A., McCann, P. and Sheppard, S. 2006: An analysis of ethnic differences in UK graduate migration behaviour. Annals of Regional Science 40, 461–71. 

Fannin, M. 2004: Domesticating birth in the hospital: ‘family-centered’ birth and the emergence of ‘homelike’ birthing rooms. In Mitchell, K., Marston, S.A. and Katz, C., editors, Life’s work: geographies of social reproduction, Malden, MA: Blackwell, 96–118. 

Feijten, P. 2005: Life events and the housing career: a retrospective analysis of timed effects. Delft: Eburon. 

Feijten, P. and Mulder, C. 2005: Life-course experience and housing quality. Housing Studies 20, 571–87. 

Findlay, A.M. 2005: Editorial: vulnerable spatialities. Population, Space, and Place 11, 429–39. 

Findlay, A.M., King, R., Stam, A. and RuizGelices, E. 2006: Ever reluctant Europeans: the changing geographies of UK students studying and working abroad. European Urban and Regional Studies 13, 291–318. 

Flamm, M. and Kaufmann, V. 2006: Operationalizing the concept of motility: a qualitative study. Mobilities 1, 167–89. 

Flowerdew, R. and Al-Hamad, A. 2004: The relationship between marriage, divorce, and migration in a British data set. Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 30, 339–51. 

Frändberg, L. 2008: Paths in transnational timespace: representing mobility biographies of young Swedes. Geografi ska Annaler B 90, 17–28. 

Frey, W.H. 1984: Life course migration of metropolitan whites and blacks and the structure of demographic change in large central cities. American Sociological Review 49, 803–27. 

Furlong, A. and Cartmel. F. 2007: Young people and social change: new perspectives. New York: McGraw Hill. 

George, S.B. 2005: When women come fi rst: gender and class in transnational migration. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press. 

Gilmore, R.W. 2007: Golden gulag: prisons, surpluses, crises, and opposition in globalizing California. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press. 

Goldstein, D.M. 2003: Laughter out of place: race, class, violence, and sexuality in a Rio shantytown. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press. 

Graham, H. 2001: Understanding health inequalities. Milton Keynes: Open University. 

Grundy, E. 2006: Ageing and vulnerable elderly people: European perspectives. Ageing and Society 26, 105–34. 

Hägerstrand, T. 1970: What about people in regional science? Papers of the Regional Science Association 24, 7–21. 

Halberstam, J. 2005: In a queer time and place: transgender bodies, subcultural lives. New York: New York University Press. 

Halfacree, K. and Boyle, P. 1993: The challenge facing migration research: the case for a biographical approach. Progress in Human Geography 17, 333–48. 

Hardill, I. 2002: Gender, migration, and the dual career household. London: Routledge. 

Hareven, T.K. 2000: Families, history and social change: life-course and cross-cultural perspectives. Boulder, CO: Westview Press.

Harper, S. and Laws, G. 1995: Rethinking the geography of ageing. Progress in Human Geography 19, 199–221. 

Heikkila, E. 2005: Mobile vulnerabilities: perspectives on the vulnerabilities of immigrants in the Finnish labour market. Population Space and Place 11, 485–97. 

Hettner, A. 1927: Die geographie: ihr wesen und ihr methoden. Breslau: Ferdinand Hirt. 

Hockey, J. and James, A. 2003: Social identities across the life course. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan. 

Holloway, S. and Valentine, G. 2000: Children’s geographies: playing, living, learning. London: Routledge.

Holmes, M. 2006: Love lives at a distance: distance relationships over the lifecourse. Sociological Research Online 11(3). Retrieved 2 October 2008 from http:// www.socresonline.org.uk/11/3/holmes.html 

Holt, L. 2004: Children with mind-body differences and performing (dis)ability in classroom microspaces. Children’s Geographies 2, 219–36. 

Hopkins, P.E. 2006a: Youth transitions and going to university: the perceptions of students attending a geography summer school access programme. Area 38, 240–47. 

— 2006b: Youthful Muslim masculinities: gender and generational relations. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers NS 31, 337–52. 

Hopkins, P.E. and Pain, R. 2007: Geographies of age: thinking relationally. Area 39, 287–94. 

Horschelmann, K. and Schafer, N. 2005: Performing the global through the local: globalization and individualization in the spatial practices of young East Germans. Children’s Geographies 3, 219–42. 

Huff, J.O. and Clark, W.A.V. 1978: Cumulative stress and cumulative inertia: a behavioural model of the decision to move. Environment and Planning A 10, 1101–19. 

Imrie, R. and Edwards, C. 2007: The geographies of disability: refl ections on the development of a sub-discipline. Geography Compass 1, 623–40. 

Jarvis, H. 2005: Moving to London time: household co-ordination and the infrastructure of everyday life. Time and Society 14, 133–54. 


Jarvis, H., Pratt, A.C. and Cheng-Chong, W. 2001: The secret lives of cities: the social reproduction of everyday life. Harlow: Prentice Hall. 

Jiwani, Y. 2005: Walking a tightrope: the many faces of violence in the lives of racialized immigrant girls and young women. Violence Against Women 11, 846–75. 

Joseph, A.E. and Hallman, B.C. 1998: Over the hill and far away: distance as a barrier to the provision of assistance to elderly relatives. Social Science and Medicine 46, 631–40. 

Katz, C. 2005: Growing up global. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press. 

Katz, C. and Monk, J. 1993: Full circles: geographies of women over the life course. London: Routledge. 

Kendig, D. 1995: A life course perspective on housing attainment. In Myers, D., editor, Housing demography: linking demographic structure and housing markets, Madison, WI: University of Wisconsin Press, 133–56. 

Kobayashi, A. and Preston, V. 2007: Transnationalism through the lifecourse: Hong Kong immigrants in Canada. Asia Pacifi c Viewpoint 48, 151–67. 

Kofman, E. 2004: Family related migration: a critical review of European Studies. Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 30, 243–62. 

Kong, L. 2001: Mapping ‘new’ geographies of religion: politics and poetics in modernity. Progress in Human Geography 25, 211–33. 

Kulu, H. 2008: Fertility and spatial mobility in the life course: evidence from Austria Environment and Planning A 40, 632–52. 

Kurz, K. 2004: Labour market position, intergenerational transfers and home ownership: a longitudinal analysis for West German birth cohorts. European Sociological Review 20, 141–59. 

Lake, A.A., Rugg-Gunn, A.J., Hyland, R.M., Wood, C.E., Mathers, J.C. and Adamson, A.J. 2004: Longitudinal dietary change from adolescence to adulthood: perceptions, attributions, and evidence. Appetite 42, 255–63. 

Lawson, V. 2007: Geographies of care and responsibility. Annals of the Association of American Geographers 97, 1–11. 

Leiter, V., McDonald, J.L. and Jacobson, H.T. 2006: Challenges to children’s independent citizenship: immigration, family, and the state. Childhood 13, 11–27. 

Li, S. 2004: Life course and residential mobility in Beijing, China. Environment and Planning A 36, 27–43. 

Massey, D. 2005: For space. London: Sage. Maxey, 

L. 2004: The participation of younger people within intentional communities: evidence from two case studies. Children’s Geographies 2, 29–48. 

May, J. and Thrift, N. 2001: Timespace. London: Routledge. 

Mayall, B. and Zeiher, H. 2003: Introduction. In Mayall, B. and Zeiher, H., editors, Childhood in generational perspective, London: Institute of Education, University of London, 1–24.

Mayer, K.U. and Schopflin, U. 1989: The state and the life course. Annual Review of Sociology 15, 187–209. 

McDowell, L. 2002: Transitions to work: masculine identities, youth inequality, and labour market change. Gender Place and Culture 9, 39–59. 

— 2004: Work, workfare, work/life balance and an ethic of care. Progress in Human Geography 28, 145–63. McHugh, K. 2003: Three faces of ageism: society, image, and place. Ageing and Society 23, 165–85. 

— 2007: Generational consciousness and retirement communities. Population, Space, and Place 13, 293–306. 

McKendrick, J. 2001: Coming of age: rethinking the role of children in population studies. International Journal of Population Geography 7, 461–72. 

Menjivar, C. and Salcido, O. 2002: Immigrant women and domestic violence: common experiences in different countries. Gender and Society 16, 898–920. 

Mitchell, K., Marston, S.A. and Katz, C., editors 2004: Life’s work: geographies of social reproduction. Oxford: Blackwell. 

Mulder, C.H. 2007: The family context and residential choice: a challenge for new research. Population Space and Place 13, 265–78. 

Mulder, C.H. and Clark, W.A.V. 2002: Leaving home for college and gaining independence. Environment and Planning A 34, 981–99. 

Mulder, C.H. and Wagner, M. 1993: Migration and marriage in the life course: a method for studying synchronized events. European Journal of Population 9, 55–76. 

Murasko, J.E. 2007: A lifecourse study on education and health: the relationship between childhood psychosocial resources and outcomes in adolescence and young adulthood. Social Science Research 36, 1348–70. 

Murdie, R.A. 2002: The housing careers of Polish and Somali newcomers in Toronto’s rental market. Housing Studies 17, 423–43. 

Naess, P. 2006: Accessibility, activity participation and location of activities: exploring the links between residential location and travel behaviour. Urban Studies 43, 627–52. 

Neven, M. 2002: The influence of the wider kin group on individual life-course transitions: results from the Pays de Hervé (Belgium), 1846–1900. Continuity and Change 17, 405–35. 

Nilsson, K. 2001: Migration, gender, and the household structure: changes in earnings among young adults in Sweden. Regional Studies 35, 499–511.

Odland, J.J.M. and Shumway, J.M. 1993: Interdependencies in the timing of migration and mobility events. Papers in Regional Science 72, 221–37. 

Olwig, K.F. 2003: ‘Transnational’ socio-cultural systems and ethnographic research: views from an extended fi eld site. International Migration Review 37, 787–811. 

Orellana, M.F., Thorne, B., Chee, A. and Lam, W.S.E. 2001: Transnational childhoods: the participation of children in processes of family migration. Social Problems 48, 572–91. 

Pain, R., Mowl, G. and Talbot, C. 2000: Difference and the negotiation of ‘old age’. Environment and Planning D 18, 377–93. 

Parreòas, R. 2005: Long distance intimacy: class, gender and intergenerational relations between mothers and children in Filipino transnational families. Global Networks 5, 317–36. 

Pettit, B. and Western, B. 2004: Mass imprisonment and the life course: race and class inequality in US incarceration. American Sociological Review 69, 151–69. 

Philo, C. 2005: The geographies that wound. Population Space and Place 11, 441–54. 

Pieke, F. 2007: The new Chinese migration order. Population Space and Place 13, 81–94. 

Plane, D.A., Henrie, C.J. and Perry, M.J. 2005: Spatial demography special feature: migration up and down the urban hierarchy and across the life course. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 102, 15313–18. 

Pooley, C.G., Turnbull, J. and Adams, M. 2005: Everywhere she went I had to tag along beside her: family, life course and everyday mobility in England since the 1940s. The History of the Family: An International Quarterly 10, 119–36. 

Poot, J. and Sanderson, L. 2007: Changes in social security eligibility and the international mobility of New Zealand citizens in Australia. PSC Discussion Paper 65. Waikato: University of Waikato, Population Studies Centre. 

Popkin, B.M. 1993: Nutritional patterns and transitions. Population Development Review 19, 138–57. 

Pribilsky, J. 2001: Nervios and ‘modern childhood’: migration and shifting contexts of child life in the Ecuadorian Andes. Childhood 8, 251–73. 

Prus, S.G. 2007: Age, socioeconomic status, and health: a population level analysis of health inequalities over the lifecourse. Sociology of Health and Illness 29, 275–96. 

Punch, S. 2004: The impact of primary education on school-to-work transitions for young people in rural Bolivia. Youth and Society 36, 163–82. 

Resurreccion, B.P. and van Khanh, H.T. 2007: Able to come and go: reproducing gender in female ruralurban migration in the Red River delta. Population Space and Place 13, 211–24. 

Riley, M.W. and Riley, J.W. 2000: Age integration: conceptual and historical background. The Gerontologist 40, 266–70. 

Rogerson, P.A., Burr, J.A. and Lin, G. 1997: Changes in the geographic proximity between parents and their adult children. International Journal of Population Geography 3, 121–36. 

Ruddick, S. 2003: The politics of aging: globalization and the restructuring of youth and childhood. Antipode 35, 334–62. 

Salaff, J.W. and Greve, A. 2004: Can women’s social networks migrate? Women’s Studies International Forum 27, 149–62. 

Sandefur, G. and Scott, W.J. 1981: A dynamic analysis of migration: an assessment of the effects of age, family, and career variables. Demography 18, 355–68. 

Scheiner, J. 2007: Mobility biographies: elements of a biographical theory of travel demand. Erdkunde 61, 161–73. 

Schwanen, T. 2006: On ‘arriving on time’, but what is ‘on time’? Geoforum 37, 882–94. — 2007: Gender differences in chauffeuring children among dual-earner families. The Professional Geographer 59, 447–62. 

Sheller, M. and Urry, J. 2006: The new mobilities paradigm. Environment and Planning A 38, 207–26. 

Silvey, R. and Lawson, V. 1999: Placing the migrant. Annals of the Association of American Geographers 89, 121–32. 

Skelton, T. 2007: Children, young people, UNICEF, and participation. Children’s Geographies 5, 165–81. 

Smith, D. and Bailey, A.J. 2006: International family migration and differential labour-market participation in Great Britain: is there a ‘gender gap’? Environment and Planning A 38, 1327–43. 

Smith, D.P. and Holt, L. 2007: Studentification and ‘apprentice’ gentrifiers within Britain’s provincial towns and cities: extending the meaning of gentrifi cation. Environment and Planning A 39, 142–61. 

Smith, G.C. 1998: Residential separation and patterns of interaction between elderly parents and their adult children. Progress in Human Geography 22, 368–84. 

Smith, R.C. 2006: Mexican New York: transnational lives of new immigrants. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press. Smyth, F. 2008: Medical geography: understanding health inequalities. Progress in Human Geography 32, 119–27. 

Southerton, D. 2006: Analysing the temporal organization of daily life: social constraints, practices, and their allocation. Sociology 40, 435–54. 

Stewart, E. 2005: Exploring the vulnerability of asylum seekers. Population, Space, and Place 11, 499–512. 

Teather, E.K. 1999: Embodied geographies: spaces, bodies, and rites of passage. London: Routledge.

Thomas, P. 2004: The experience of disabled people as customers in the owner occupied market. Housing Studies 19, 781–94. 

Tomassini, C., Wolf, D.A. and Rosina, A. 2003: Parental housing assistance and parent-child proximity in Italy. Journal of Marriage and the Family 65, 700–15. 

Uteng, T.P. 2006: Mobility: discourses from the nonwestern immigrant groups in Norway. Mobilities 1, 437–64. 

Valentine, G. 1995: Out and about. International Journal of Urban and Regional Research 19, 96–111. 

— 2003: Boundary crossings: transitions from childhood to adulthood. Children’s Geographies 1, 37– 52. 

van Blerk, L. 2008: Poverty, migration and sex work: youth transitions in Ethiopia. Area 40, 245–53. 

van Blerk, L. and Ansell, N. 2006: Children’ experiences of migration: moving in the wake of AIDS in southern Africa. Environment and Planning D 24, 449–71. 

Vanderbeck, R.M. 2005: Anti-nomadism, institutions, and the geographies of childhood. Environment and Planning D 23, 71–94. 

— 2007: Intergenerational geographies: age relations, segregation, and re-engagements. Geography Compass 1/2, 200–21. 

van Hoven, B. and Pfaffenbach, C. 2003: Women’s work biographies in Mecklenburg-Westpommerania and South Thuringia. GeoJournal 56, 261–69. 

van Wissen, L.J.G. and Dykstra, P., editors 1999: Population issues: an interdisciplinary focus. New York: Kluwer. 

Wagner, M. 1989: Spatial determinants of social mobility: an analysis with life history data for three West German cohorts. In van Dijk, J., Folmer, H., Herzog, H. and Schlottman, A., editors, Migration and labor market adjustment, Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic, 241–64. 

Walton-Roberts, M. 2004: Transnational migration theory in population geography: gendered practices in networks linking Canada and India. Population Space and Place 10, 361–73. 

Warnes, A. 1986: The residential mobility histories of parents and children, and relationships to present proximity and social integration. Environment and Planning A 18, 181–94. 

Waters, J. 2002: Flexible families? ‘Astronaut’ households and the experiences of lone mothers in Vancouver, British Columbia. Social and Cultural Geography 3, 117–34. 

Zerubavel, E. 2003: Time maps: collective memory and the social shape of the past. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

Full Text 




ليست هناك تعليقات:

إرسال تعليق

آخرالمواضيع






جيومورفولوجية سهل السندي - رقية أحمد محمد أمين العاني

إتصل بنا

الاسم

بريد إلكتروني *

رسالة *

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...

آية من كتاب الله

الطقس في مدينتي طبرق ومكة المكرمة

الطقس, 12 أيلول
طقس مدينة طبرق
+26

مرتفع: +31° منخفض: +22°

رطوبة: 65%

رياح: ESE - 14 KPH

طقس مدينة مكة
+37

مرتفع: +44° منخفض: +29°

رطوبة: 43%

رياح: WNW - 3 KPH

تنويه : حقوق الطبع والنشر


تنويه : حقوق الطبع والنشر :

هذا الموقع لا يخزن أية ملفات على الخادم ولا يقوم بالمسح الضوئ لهذه الكتب.نحن فقط مؤشر لموفري وصلة المحتوي التي توفرها المواقع والمنتديات الأخرى . يرجى الاتصال لموفري المحتوى على حذف محتويات حقوق الطبع والبريد الإلكترونيإذا كان أي منا، سنقوم بإزالة الروابط ذات الصلة أو محتوياته على الفور.

الاتصال على البريد الإلكتروني : هنا أو من هنا