Influence of The Social Sciences
Influence of The Social Sciences
Influence of The Social Sciences
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British geographer Doreen Massey. Furthermore, decision makers
learn from the consequences of previous decisions. There is a
continuous interplay between context and decision maker (or between
structure and agency). Realists can explain why events have
occurred—why a factory is located at a particular site—but not as
examples of general laws of location. For them, explanation means
accounting for specific events in context, relating how decision makers
react to circumstances in order to meet imperatives within the
constraints of their particular situations (what they know, what they
believe their competitors will do, and how they manipulate that
knowledge).
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ignored in geography, and feminists pointed out the gender divisions
and campaigned to remove bias against women. In spatial science, for
example, they showed how patterns of accessibility discriminated
against women in labour markets, demonstrating how space had been
manipulated to promote male interests and in the process had become
part of society’s definition of gender roles.
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media. They form contexts for developing political strategies and
determining tactics, to which the wider population’s attitudes are
molded. The world of politics is a world of mental maps and of
dominant views that underpin behaviour: we act in perceived worlds
that intersect with, but are often more powerful than, real worlds,
which are composed of physical phenomena.
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such place making involves not only creating an identity for one’s
home area but also separate identities for those of other areas.
Geographers have been stimulated by Edward
Said’s Orientalism (1979), which portrays how Western societies
created images of the East in opposition to themselves. These images,
portrayed in literature and other media, are the basis for attitudes
toward many non-Western cultures, presenting “the other” as not only
different but also inferior and thus not deserving equal treatment and
respect—as was exemplified in Derek Gregory’s seminal The Colonial
Present: Afghanistan, Palestine, Iraq (2004).
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