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OverviewDrawing from work on mobilities and geographies of the lifecourse, this collection is concerned with the ways in which age, as a relational concept, is constructed and played out in mobile urban space. With studies of ageing and mobility often focusing on discrete age groups, most notably children and older people, this study seeks to fill a gap in existing literature by exploring mobility in relation to the lifecourse and generation, looking not only at the margins. Whilst some generations are increasingly mobile, others are less so and this disparity in mobility opportunity is relational as age is relational. This book addresses gaps in knowledge in relational geographies of ageing, whilst contributing to literature on mobility and transport, in particular the burgeoning field of mobility (in)justice. Here mobility is considered in its broadest sense, for example in relation to the movement or lack of movement of bodies and to computer-mediated intergenerational communications. Through focusing on urban mobile spaces, from very local spaces of medical care to global spaces of migration that are the context for intergenerational mobilities, this collection explores these interdependencies and considers ways in which intergenerational mobilities are conceptualised and researched. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Lesley Murray , Susan RobertsonPublisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Weight: 0.430kg ISBN: 9781472458766ISBN 10: 1472458761 Pages: 208 Publication Date: 13 October 2016 Audience: College/higher education , General/trade , Tertiary & Higher Education , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of Contents1. Introduction: conceptualising intergenerational mobilities Lesley Murray 2. Journey to the ‘undiscovered country’ – considering the geographies, mobilities, and rhythms of growing up, growing old, and moving on Elaine Stratford 3. Moving between generations? The role of familial inter-generational relations in older people’s mobility Rose Gilroy, Katia Attuyer, Mark Bevan, Karen Croucher, Rebecca Tunstall 4. Breaking intergenerational transmissions of poverty and spaces for rehabilitation from the perspectives of street-connected girls in Nairobi Vicky Johnson 5. Tales of the Map of My Mobile Life: Intergenerational Computer-Mediated Communication between Older People and Fieldworkers in their Early Adulthood Sergio Sayago, Valeria Righi, Susan M. Ferreira, Andrea Rosales and Josep Blat 6. Digital Inclusion and Public Space: The Effect of Mobile Phones on Intergenerational Awareness and Connection Dave Harley 7. Talking about my Generation: Emigration and ‘Sense of Generation’ among Highly Skilled Young Italians in Paris. Hadrien Dubucs, Thomas Pfirsch, Camille Schmoll 8. Sharing mobile space across the lifecourse Lesley Murray and Susan Robertson 9. Residential relocation between contrasting mobility cultures as key events during the lifecourse Thomas Klinger 10. Young people’s representations and experiences of mobile urban spaces: the case of Lawrence Weston in Bristol Miriam Ricci 11. Reliance Mobilities Christian E. Fisker 12. The global urban space: Older age and Filipinos as global workers Karel Kalaw 13. Conclusion Susan RobertsonReviewsAuthor InformationLesley Murray is Principal Lecturer in Social Science in the School of Applied Social Science, University of Brighton, UK. Susan Robertson is Senior Lecturer in the School of Art, Design and Media at the University of Brighton, UK. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |