Social Geography: Concept and Scope: A Review

Authors

  • KUMAR N

Keywords:

structure, global, Community

Abstract

The term ‘social geography’ carries with it an inherent confusion. In the popular perception the distinction between social and cultural geography is not very clear. The idea which has gained popularity with the geographers is that social geography is an analysis of social phenomena expressed in space. When the term emerged within the Anglo-American tradition during the 1960s, it was basically applied as a synonym for the search for patterns in the distribution of social groups. Social geography is the branch of human geography that is most closely related to social theory in general and sociology in particular, dealing with the relation of social phenomena and its spatial components.

References

Freeman, W. – Geography and Planning.

Alonso and Friedman - Regional Development and Planning.

Mishra, R.P. - Regional Development Planning.

Issard, W. – Methods of Regional Analysis.

Singh, J. – Central Places and Spatial Organization in a Backward Economy.

Downloads

Published

2017-12-30

How to Cite

KUMAR, N. (2017). Social Geography: Concept and Scope: A Review. Innovative Research Thoughts, 3(10), 172–176. Retrieved from https://irt.shodhsagar.com/index.php/j/article/view/289