000 02639nam a2200205Ia 4500
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020 _a9780754641124
041 _aeng
082 _a304.2
_bCON
245 _aContested Worlds :
_ban introduction to human Geography /
_cedited by Martin Phillips
260 _aHampshire :
_bAshgate,
_c2005.
505 _aPart PART ONE: INTRODUCTION -- chapter 1 Contested Worlds: An Introduction -- chapter 2 Philosophical Arguments in Human Geography -- part PART TWO: GLOBAL WORLDS -- chapter 3 Unravelling the Web of Theory: Changing Geographical Perspectives on Development -- chapter 4 Global Crises? Issues in Population and the Environment -- chapter 5 Nation States and Super-States: The Geopolitics of the New World Order -- part PART THREE: REGIONAL WORLDS -- chapter 6 Inequalities at the Core: A Discussion of Regionality in the EU and UK -- chapter 7 Southeast Asian Development: Miracle or Mirage -- chapter 8 Post-Socialist East and Central Europe -- part PART FOUR: LOCAL WORLDS -- chapter 9 Places on the Margin: The Spatiality of Exclusion -- chapter 10 People in the Centre? The Contested Geographies of {u2018}Gentrification{u2019} -- chapter 11 People in a Marginal Periphery -- part PART FIVE: SOME CONCLUDING REMARKS -- chapter 12 Still Just Introducing the Contested Worlds of Human Geography.
520 _aContested Worlds provides an introduction both to a multitude of geographical worlds which are currently being actively constructed and contested, and to a range of different perspectives on these worlds being adopted and contested by geographers. It is unique in its focus on the role of contestation in both the construction of geographical studies and in the geographies these studies seek to address. These issues are explored through a combination of general theoretical discussion and detailed international case studies. The areas discussed range in scale from the global, through the regional and national to the local worlds of the inner city, the neighbourhood and the village, with connections drawn between these scales. The book concludes that geography is being made in quite different ways. It asserts that geography is intrinsically a contested enterprise, and that this should be embraced as part of geographers becoming more critically involved in the making, and studying, of new contemporary human geographies."--Provided by publisher.
650 _aGeographical worlds
_963490
650 _aHuman Geography.
650 _a Global Crises
_963604
700 _aPhillips, Martin
_4Editor
_92067
942 _cBK
999 _c3276
_d3276