Digital Geographies /
edited by James Ash, Rob Kitchin, Agnieszka Leszczynski
- 1st ed.
- Los Angeles : Sage, 2019
- x, 301 pages : color illustrations, color maps ; 25 cm.
"As digital technologies have become part of everyday life, mediating tasks such as work, travel, consumption, production, and leisure, they are having increasingly profound effects on phenomena that are of immediate concern to geographers. These include: the production of space, spatiality and mobilities; the processes, practices, and forms of mapping; the contours of spatial knowledge and imaginaries; and, the formation and enactment of spatial knowledge politics Similarly, there are distinct geographies of digital media such as those of the internet, games, and social media that have become indispensable to geographic practice and scholarship across sub-disciplines, regardless of conceptual approach."
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Introducing digital geographies Spatialities Urban Rural Mapping Mobilities Epistemologies Data and data infrastructures Qualitative methods and geohumanities Participatory methods and citizen science Cartography and geographic information systems Statistics, modelling, and data science Media and popular culture Subject Representation and mediation Labour Industries Sharing economy Traditional industrie Development Governance Civics Ethics Knowledge politics Geopolitics