fbpx
Wikipedia

Torsten Hägerstrand

Torsten Hägerstrand (October 11, 1916, in Moheda – May 3, 2004, in Lund) was a Swedish geographer. He is known for his work on migration, cultural diffusion and time geography.

Torsten Hägerstrand
Hägerstrand in 1991
Born(1916-10-11)October 11, 1916
Moheda, Sweden
DiedMay 4, 2004(2004-05-04) (aged 87)
Lund, Sweden
NationalitySwedish
CitizenshipSweden
Alma materLund University
Known forTime geography
Human migration
Cultural diffusion
AwardsLauréat Prix International de Géographie Vautrin Lud
Outstanding Achievement Award from the Association of American Geographers
Victoria Medal (1979)
Scientific career
FieldsGeography
InstitutionsLund University

A native and resident of Sweden, Hägerstrand was a professor (later professor emeritus) of geography at Lund University, where he received his doctorate in 1953. His doctoral research was on cultural diffusion. His research has helped to make Sweden, and particularly Lund, a major center of innovative work in cultural geography.[1] He also influenced the practice of spatial planning in Sweden through his students.[2]

Early life edit

Hägerstrand's father was a teacher at a remote elementary school and the family lived at the school. Hägerstrand recalled that his early education was based on the pedagogical ideas of Swiss educator Johann Pestalozzi. Several of Hägerstrand's students speculated that his holistic and visionary thinking was rooted in his early education:[3]

He was taught local geography, history and folklore at home in the Pestalozzi tradition which was being introduced at that time. Cartography, geology, botany and agronomy were all interrelated parts of a more holistic understanding of processes within a spatial area. To start with, children learned about their immediate environment (e.g., the school room and the farm), then about the village, and gradually the whole district. As a pupil of Hägerstrand, it is easy for me to recognize parts of this tradition which later became what we today would refer to as an 'integrative perspective'.[4]

Academic career edit

Hägerstrand entered Lund University in 1937. His 1953 doctoral thesis Innovation Diffusion as a Spatial Process gained fame for its innovative use of Monte Carlo simulation of demographic development.[5] It showed how dynamic, incremental simulation of spatial processes could be used at the spatial scale of the individual as well as large spatial aggregates. Forty years later, geographer Andrew Cliff remarked on the foresight of Hägerstrand's methodology: "Bearing in mind that much of the research upon which the book is based dates from a time when computers were almost nonexistent, let alone used by geographers, it is remarkable that the simulation methodology which is so critically dependent upon computing power should have been contemplated."[6]

Hägerstrand's research was aided by developments at Lund University, notably the establishment of the Siffermaskinen i Lund (SMIL), one of Sweden's first computers.[7] Hägerstrand noted that the Swedish computer scientist Carl-Erik Fröberg, who had been Hägerstrand's "school-mate since secondary school",[7] had introduced him to the Monte Carlo method that would define his doctoral thesis, following a trip by Fröberg and other young Swedish scientists to the United States, a trip that was financed by the Swedish government's project to build its own computer.[7]

In 1969, he presented a paper titled "What about People in Regional Science?" to the European Congress of the Regional Science Association in Copenhagen, Denmark.[8] This paper, published in 1970, developed two concepts:

  • The need to study the individual in order to understand social and group practices. Modern cultural geographers commonly now study everyday practices on an individualistic basis, in order to understand larger scale patterns. The study of just groups creates a homogenization of reality and hides the truth.
  • A link between space and time that had previously been poorly developed. Historically, social scientists had treated time as a relevant but external factor to spatial features. Hägerstrand's early work on innovation diffusion (studying the geographical spread of new technologies) made him realise that the two, though separate, were not independent of each other; they have what French theorist Henri Lefebvre would call a dialectical relationship.

Legacy edit

Hägerstrand's initial work was primarily quantitative, which is important as the discipline of geography was, when he published his first paper in 1942, a highly descriptive subject.[9] In the 1950s he was a pioneer of geocoding statistical primary data.[10] He developed models and statistical techniques, such as the time–space cube and time–space prism, which later became important in the development of geographic information systems that process and visualize movement data.[11] His work informed the likes of Allan Pred and Nigel Thrift, who helped take it to the English speaking world.[12]

Hägerstrand's work contributed to the introduction of humanistic thought into geography, which led to the development of critical geography.[13] While his early work was largely quantitative, Hägerstrand's later work paid closer attention to notions of embodiment and emotion.[14] Still, his methods were critiqued by feminist geographer Gillian Rose, who claimed that his models showed a masculine and falsely-ordered view of the world.[15] More recent geographers have tried to combine time geography with the qualitative research and affective phenomenology of feminist geography.[16]

Development of Hägerstrand's work has continued to form part of the basis for non-representational theory, and a reappraisal of his work by new generations of social scientists[17] and biologists[18] means that he remains an influential thinker today. In 2005, Nigel Thrift summarized five benefits of Hägerstrand's time geography for contemporary social science:

First, it provides a sense of concreteness, of the power of 'thereness', and it does so in a way—visually—that is still the preserve of too few social theorists. All those intricate diagrams were, in part, an attempt to describe the pragmatics of events, a theme which has now, in the work of writers like Deleuze, become fashionable in the social sciences and humanities but, at the time at which Hägerstrand was working, tended to be restricted to the field of philosophy, except for the work of social interactionists and ethnomethodologists which was often very imperfectly understood by other than a relatively small coterie of enthusiasts. Secondly, Hägerstrand's work was an attack on the Durkheimian idea that space and time were social categories, collective representations which both derived from society and also dictated to society. [...] Time-geography makes it possible to go beyond social constructionism by emphasizing the physical constraints on human action and the wider networks of competing opportunities that they set up which act to steer situations. [...] Thirdly, and as a directly related point, those time-geographic diagrams did something else too. They radically lessened the distinction between humans and other objects. They provided a kind of neutrality of representation, even a democracy of description, of the world. [...] Fourthly, Hägerstrand's work espoused a geographical ethics, centred on the wise use of space and time. Although Hägerstrand would often use economic metaphors to describe that wisdom in the use of space and time, I am sure that he meant something broader and more encompassing which it seems to me to be well worth keeping hold of, a kind of democratic ethos of the cardinal dimensions, a conviviality in the use of space and time. Fifthly, Hägerstrand provided a language which could register the world in different ways. Perhaps one way of looking at Hägerstrand's work is as a means of saying 'hello' in a language many can understand: drawing as a kind of visual Esperanto.[19]

Honors edit

He received honorary doctorates from University of Bergen, Norwegian school of economics and business administration, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, University of Bristol, University of Edinburgh, University of Glasgow and Ohio State University. The commendation accompanying the honorary degree at Ohio State University noted that "his work on innovation diffusion, carried out in the 1950s and 1960s, continues to be cited as a standard against which current research is measured" and that "this distinguished individual...inspired a generation of scholars around the world."

He was a member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, the Royal Swedish Academy of Letters, the Royal Swedish Academy of Engineering Sciences, the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters, the Finnish Academy of Sciences, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, a Corresponding Fellow of the British Academy, and a member of Société de Géographie in France. He was also one of the founding members of Academia Europaea.

In 1968 Professor Hägerstrand was awarded the Charles P. Daly Medal of the American Geographical Society and in 1968 received an Outstanding Achievement Award from the Association of American Geographers. In 1979 he received the Victoria Medal from the Royal Geographical Society.

In 1992 Torsten Hägerstrand was awarded Lauréat Prix International de Géographie Vautrin Lud, the highest award in the geography research field.

Key publications edit

  • Hägerstrand, Torsten (1952). The propagation of innovation waves. Lund studies in geography: Series B, Human geography, 4. Lund: Royal University of Lund, Dept. of Geography. OCLC 254752.
  • Hägerstrand, Torsten (1955). "Statistiska primäruppgifter, flygkartering och "data processing"-maskiner: ett kombineringsprojekt". Svensk Geografisk Årsbok (in Swedish) (31): 233–255.
  • Hannerberg, David; Hägerstrand, Torsten, eds. (1957). Migration in Sweden: a symposium. Lund studies in geography: Series B, Human geography, 13. Lund: CWK Gleerup. OCLC 170619.
  • Hägerstrand, Torsten (1967a) [1953]. Innovation diffusion as a spatial process [Innovationsförloppet ur korologisk synpunkt]. Translated by Allan Pred; Greta Haag. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. OCLC 536383.
  • Hägerstrand, Torsten (1967b). "The computer and the geographer". Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers (42): 1–19. doi:10.2307/621369. JSTOR 621369. S2CID 147121939.
  • Hägerstrand, Torsten (1970). "What about people in regional science?". Papers of the Regional Science Association. 24 (1): 6–21. Bibcode:1970PRegS..24....6H. doi:10.1007/BF01936872. S2CID 198174673.
  • Hägerstrand, Torsten (1973). On the definition of migration. Rapporter och notiser, 9. Lund: Lunds universitets kulturgeografiska institution. OCLC 185647319.
  • Hägerstrand, Torsten (1973). "The domain of human geography". In Chorley, Richard J (ed.). Directions in geography. London: Methuen. pp. 67–87. ISBN 978-0-416-60830-4. OCLC 789168.
  • Hägerstrand, Torsten (1974). "Ecology under one perspective". In Bylund, Erik; Linderholm, Håkan; Rune, Olof (eds.). Ecological problems of the circumpolar area: papers from the international symposium at Luleå, Sweden, June 28–29, 1971. Luleå: Norrbottens Museum. pp. 271–276. OCLC 3035384.
  • Hägerstrand, Torsten (1974). The impact of transport on the quality of life. Rapporter och notiser, 13. Lund: Lunds universitets kulturgeografiska institution. OCLC 185647393.
  • Hägerstrand, Torsten (1975). "Space, time and human conditions". In Karlqvist, Anders; Lundqvist, Lars; Snickars, Folke (eds.). Dynamic allocation of urban space. Lexington, MA: Lexington Books. pp. 3–14. ISBN 978-0-347-01052-8. OCLC 1364735.
  • Hägerstrand, Torsten (1976). "Geography and the study of interaction between nature and society". Geoforum. 7 (5–6): 329–334. doi:10.1016/0016-7185(76)90063-4.
  • Hägerstrand, Torsten (1978). "Survival and arena: on the life-history of individuals in relation to their geographical environment". In Carlstein, Tommy; Parkes, Don; Thrift, Nigel J (eds.). Human activity and time geography. Timing space and spacing time. Vol. 2. New York: Wiley. pp. 122–143. ISBN 978-0-7131-5989-9. OCLC 4935024.
  • Buttimer, Anne; Hägerstrand, Torsten (1980). Invitation to dialogue: a progress report. DIA paper, 1. Lund: University of Lund. OCLC 8534714.
  • Hägerstrand, Torsten (1982). "Diorama, path and project". Tijdschrift voor economische en sociale geografie. 73 (6): 323–339. doi:10.1111/j.1467-9663.1982.tb01647.x.
  • Hägerstrand, Torsten (1983). "In search for the sources of concepts". In Buttimer, Anne (ed.). The practice of geography. London; New York: Longman. pp. 238–256. ISBN 978-0-582-30087-3. OCLC 8629687.
  • Hägerstrand, Torsten, ed. (1985). The identification of progress in learning. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-30087-2. OCLC 10924966.
  • Hägerstrand, Torsten (1985). "Time geography: focus on the corporeality of man, society and environment". In Aida, Shūhei (ed.). The science and praxis of complexity: contributions to the symposium held at Montpellier, France, 9–11 May, 1984. Tokyo: United Nations University Press. pp. 193–216. ISBN 978-92-808-0560-4. OCLC 13025296.
  • Hägerstrand, Torsten (1991). Gösta Carlestam; Barbro Sollbe (eds.). Om tidens vidd och tingens ordning (in Swedish). Stockholm: Byggforskningsrådet. ISBN 978-91-540-5363-6. OCLC 29548202.
  • Hägerstrand, Torsten (1992). "The global and the local". In Svedin, Uno; Aniansson, Britt Hägerhäll (eds.). Society and the environment: a Swedish research perspective. Ecology, economy & environment, 2. Dordrecht; Boston: Kluwer Academic Publishers. pp. 13–21. ISBN 978-0-7923-1796-8. OCLC 25788428.
  • Hägerstrand, Torsten (1995). "Action in the physical everyday world". In Haggett, Peter; Cliff, Andrew (eds.). Diffusing geography: essays for Peter Haggett. The Institute of British Geographers special publications series, 31. Oxford; Cambridge, MA: Blackwell. pp. 35–45. ISBN 978-0-631-19534-4. OCLC 30895028.
  • Hägerstrand, Torsten (2001) [1995]. "A look at the political geography of environmental management". In Buttimer, Anne (ed.). Sustainable landscapes and lifeways: scale and appropriateness. Sterling, VA: Cork University Press. pp. 35–58. ISBN 978-1-85918-300-7. OCLC 45879916.
  • Hägerstrand, Torsten; Carlstein, Tommy (December 2004). "The two vistas". Geografiska Annaler: Series B, Human Geography. 86 (4): 315–323. doi:10.1111/j.0435-3684.2004.00170.x. S2CID 218589178.
  • Hägerstrand, Torsten (2009). Kajsa Ellegård; Uno Svedin; Bo Lenntorp (eds.). Tillvaroväven (in Swedish). Stockholm: Forskningsrådet Formas. ISBN 978-91-540-6033-7. OCLC 456875435.

See also edit

Footnotes edit

References edit

  • Aase, Alørn (2004). "Obituaries – Nekrologer: Torsten Hägerstrand 1916–2004". Norwegian Journal of Geography. 58 (4): 216–217. Bibcode:2004NGTid..58..216A. doi:10.1080/00291950410002728. S2CID 129084919.
  • Baer, Leonard D; Butler, David R (April 2000). "Space–time modeling of grizzly bears". Geographical Review. 90 (2): 206–221. doi:10.1111/j.1931-0846.2000.tb00331.x. S2CID 162614564.
  • Brauer, René; Dymitrow, Mirek (June 2017). "Human geography and the hinterland: the case of Torsten Hägerstrand's 'belated' recognition". Moravian Geographical Reports. 25 (2): 74–84. doi:10.1515/mgr-2017-0007.
  • Buttimer, Anne; Mels, Tom (2006). By northern lights: on the making of geography in Sweden. Aldershot, England; Burlington, VT: Ashgate. ISBN 978-0-7546-4814-7. OCLC 63187516.
  • Cliff, Andrew; Pred, Allan; Hägerstrand, Torsten (October 1992). "Classics in human geography revisited: Innovation diffusion as a spatial process". Progress in Human Geography. 16 (4): 541–544. doi:10.1177/030913259201600403. S2CID 145756486.
  • Downs, Joni A; Horner, Mark W; Tucker, Anton D (September 2011). "Time-geographic density estimation for home range analysis". Annals of GIS. 17 (3): 163–171. Bibcode:2011AnGIS..17..163D. doi:10.1080/19475683.2011.602023. S2CID 7891668.
  • Ellegård, Kajsa; de Pater, Ben (July 1999). "The complex tapestry of everyday life". GeoJournal. 48 (3): 149–153. doi:10.1023/A:1007059105684. S2CID 147585214.
  • Ellegård, Kajsa; Palm, Jenny (May 2011). "Visualizing energy consumption activities as a tool for making everyday life more sustainable". Applied Energy. 88 (5): 1920–1926. Bibcode:2011ApEn...88.1920E. doi:10.1016/j.apenergy.2010.11.019.
  • Hubbard, Phil; Kitchin, Rob; Bartley, Brendan; Fuller, Duncan (2002). Thinking geographically: space, theory, and contemporary human geography. Continuum studies in geography education. London; New York: Continuum. ISBN 978-0-8264-5625-0. OCLC 290572149.
  • Huettmann, Falk; Cushman, Samuel A, eds. (2009). Spatial complexity, informatics, and wildlife conservation. Tokyo; New York: Springer. doi:10.1007/978-4-431-87771-4. ISBN 978-4-431-87770-7. OCLC 567359237.
  • Ingold, Tim (2011). "Drawing together: doing, observing, describing". Being alive: essays on movement, knowledge and description. London; New York: Routledge. pp. 220–228. ISBN 978-0-415-57683-3. OCLC 500783858.
  • Kenett, Dror Y; Portugali, Juval (July 2012). "Population movement under extreme events". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 102 (29): 11472–11473. Bibcode:2012PNAS..10911472K. doi:10.1073/pnas.1209306109. PMC 3406849. PMID 22778423.
  • Kraak, Menno-Jan (2008). "Geovisualization and time: new opportunities for the space-time cube". In Dodge, Martin; McDerby, Mary; Turner, Martin (eds.). Geographic visualization: concepts, tools and applications. Chichester, England; Hoboken, NJ: Wiley. pp. 293–306. doi:10.1002/9780470987643.ch15. ISBN 978-0-470-51511-2. OCLC 191847101.
  • Kwan, Mei-Po (2002). "Is GIS for women?: reflections on the critical discourse in the 1990s" (PDF). Gender, Place & Culture: A Journal of Feminist Geography. 9 (3): 271–279. doi:10.1080/0966369022000003888. S2CID 145232831.
  • Kwan, Mei-Po (December 2004). "GIS methods in time-geographic research: geocomputation and geovisualization of human activity patterns" (PDF). Geografiska Annaler: Series B, Human Geography. 86 (4): 267–280. doi:10.1111/j.0435-3684.2004.00167.x. S2CID 18126588.
  • Kwan, Mei-Po (2007). "Affecting geospatial technologies: toward a feminist politics of emotion" (PDF). The Professional Geographer. 59 (1): 22–34. Bibcode:2007ProfG..59...22K. doi:10.1111/j.1467-9272.2007.00588.x. S2CID 10120944.
  • Kwan, Mei-Po; Ding, Guoxiang (2008). "Geo-narrative: extending geographic information systems for narrative analysis in qualitative and mixed-method research" (PDF). The Professional Geographer. 60 (4): 443–465. doi:10.1080/00330120802211752. S2CID 13008935.
  • Latham, Allan (2003). "Research, performance, and doing human geography: some reflections on the diary-photograph, diary-interview method". Environment and Planning A. 35 (11): 1993–2017. Bibcode:2003EnPlA..35.1993L. doi:10.1068/a3587. S2CID 17764426.
  • Lenntorp, Bo (2008). "Innovation diffusion as spatial process (1953): Torsten Hägerstrand". In Hubbard, Phil; Kitchin, Rob; Valentine, Gill (eds.). Key texts in human geography. Los Angeles: Sage. pp. 1–8. ISBN 978-1-4129-2260-9. OCLC 230771032.
  • Long, Jed A; Nelson, Trisalyn A (July 2012). "A review of quantitative methods for movement data" (PDF). International Journal of Geographical Information Science. 27 (2): 292–318. doi:10.1080/13658816.2012.682578. hdl:10023/5417. S2CID 15358225.
  • May, Jon; Thrift, Nigel J, eds. (2001). TimeSpace: geographies of temporality. Critical geographies, 13. London; New York: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-18083-2. OCLC 52996864.
  • McQuoid, Julia; Dijst, Martin (July 2012). "Bringing emotions to time geography: the case of mobilities of poverty". Journal of Transport Geography. 23: 26–34. doi:10.1016/j.jtrangeo.2012.03.019.
  • Miller, Harvey J (1991). "Modelling accessibility using space-time prism concepts within geographical information systems". International Journal of Geographical Information Science. 5 (3): 287–301. doi:10.1080/02693799108927856.
  • Öberg, Sture (June 2005). "Hägerstrand and the remaking of Sweden". Progress in Human Geography. 29 (3): 340–349. doi:10.1177/030913250502900313. S2CID 128171396.
  • Pred, Allan (1977). "The choreography of existence: comments on Hägerstrand's time-geography and its usefulness". Economic Geography. 53 (2): 207–221. doi:10.2307/142726. JSTOR 142726.
  • Pred, Allan, ed. (1981). Space and time in geography: essays dedicated to Torsten Hägerstrand. Lund: CWK Gleerup. ISBN 978-91-40-30603-6. OCLC 10145474.
  • Rose, Gillian (1993). Feminism and geography: the limits of geographical knowledge. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. ISBN 978-0-8166-2417-1. OCLC 27935641.
  • Scholten, Christina; Friberg, Tora; Sandén, Annika (December 2012). "Re-reading time-geography from a gender perspective: examples from gendered mobility". Tijdschrift voor economische en sociale geografie. 103 (5): 584–600. doi:10.1111/j.1467-9663.2012.00717.x.
  • Schwanen, Tim; Kwan, Mei-Po (2009). "'Doing' critical geographies with numbers". The Professional Geographer. 61 (4): 459–464. doi:10.1080/00330120903103072. S2CID 144480962.
  • Thrift, Nigel J (1977). An introduction to time-geography. Concepts and techniques in modern geography, 13. Norwich: Geo Abstracts, University of East Anglia. ISBN 978-0-902246-67-6. OCLC 4464963. PDF:  13 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine.
  • Thrift, Nigel J (June 2005). "Torsten Hägerstrand and social theory". Progress in Human Geography. 29 (3): 337–340. doi:10.1177/030913250502900312. S2CID 141333604.
  • Wilson, Clarke (2008). "Activity patterns in space and time: calculating representative Hägerstrand trajectories". Transportation. 35 (4): 485–499. doi:10.1007/s11116-008-9162-z. S2CID 154300621.
  • Yu, Hongbo; Shaw, Shih-Lung (2008). "Exploring potential human activities in physical and virtual spaces: a spatio-temporal GIS approach". International Journal of Geographical Information Science. 22 (4): 409–430. Bibcode:2008IJGIS..22..409Y. doi:10.1080/13658810701427569. S2CID 5654567.

Further reading edit

  • Buttimer, Anne (2007). "Torsten Hägerstrand (1916–2004)". In Withers, Charles W J; Lorimer, Hayden (eds.). Geographers: biobibliographical studies. Vol. 26. London: Continuum. pp. 119–157. ISBN 978-0-8264-9913-4. OCLC 141381115.
  • Carlstein, Tommy (1982). Time resources, society, and ecology: on the capacity for human interaction in space and time. London; Boston: Allen & Unwin. doi:10.4324/9780429329036. ISBN 978-0-04-300082-3. OCLC 7946554. S2CID 199113937.
  • Carlstein, Tommy; Parkes, Don; Thrift, Nigel J, eds. (1978). Making sense of time. Timing space and spacing time. Vol. 1. New York: Wiley. ISBN 978-0-470-26511-6. OCLC 4935269.
  • Carlstein, Tommy; Parkes, Don; Thrift, Nigel J, eds. (1978). Time and regional dynamics. Timing space and spacing time. Vol. 3. New York: Wiley. ISBN 978-0-470-26512-3. OCLC 4935088.
  • Corbett, John (2001). . Center for Spatially Integrated Social Science. Archived from the original on 4 February 2012. Retrieved 5 January 2013.
  • Ellegård, Kajsa; Svedin, Uno (July 2012). "Torsten Hägerstrand's time-geography as the cradle of the activity approach in transport geography". Journal of Transport Geography. 23: 17–25. doi:10.1016/j.jtrangeo.2012.03.023.
  • Flowerdew, Robin (2011) [2004]. "Torsten Hägerstrand". In Hubbard, Phil; Kitchin, Rob (eds.). Key thinkers on space and place (2nd ed.). Los Angeles: Sage. pp. 199–204. ISBN 978-1-84920-101-8. OCLC 698373037.
  • Hägerstrand, Torsten (1984). "Presence and absence: a look at conceptual choices and bodily necessities". Regional Studies. 18 (5): 373–379. Bibcode:1984RegSt..18..373H. doi:10.1080/09595238400185361.
  • Hägerstrand, Torsten (2002) [1995]. "Virtual traces in space and time". In O'Hara, Morgan (ed.). Morgan O'Hara: live transmissions: attention and drawing as time-based performance. Vol. 2. Bergamo: Lubrina Editore. ISBN 978-88-7766-253-8. OCLC 270994775.
  • Hoppe, Göran; Langton, John (1986). "Time-geography and economic development: the changing structure of livelihood positions on arable farms in nineteenth century Sweden". Geografiska Annaler: Series B, Human Geography. 68 (2): 115–137. doi:10.2307/490892. JSTOR 490892.
  • Kuklinski, Antoni (1987). "Torsten Hägerstrand laudatio". GeoJournal. 14 (4): 503–510. doi:10.1007/BF02602724. S2CID 155401262.
  • Lenntorp, Bo (1976). Paths in space-time environments: a timegeographic study of movement possibilities of individuals. Lund studies in geography: Series B, Human geography, 44. Lund: Royal University of Lund, Dept. of Geography. ISBN 978-91-40-04376-4. OCLC 3063593.
  • Lenntorp, Bo (December 2004). "Publications by Torsten Hägerstrand 1938–2004". Geografiska Annaler: Series B, Human Geography. 86 (4): 327–334. doi:10.1111/j.0435-3684.2004.00172.x. S2CID 143541469.
  • Lenntorp, Bo (July 1999). "Time-geography—at the end of its beginning". GeoJournal. 48 (3): 155–158. doi:10.1023/A:1007067322523. S2CID 142500989.
  • Lenntorp, Bo; Törnqvist, Gunnar; Wärneryd, Olof; Öberg, Sture (December 2004). "Torsten Hägerstrand 1916–2004". Geografiska Annaler: Series B, Human Geography. 86 (4): 325–326. doi:10.1111/j.0435-3684.2004.00171.x. S2CID 144276349.
  • Morrill, Richard (June 2005). "Hägerstrand and the 'quantitative revolution': a personal appreciation". Progress in Human Geography. 29 (3): 333–336. doi:10.1177/030913250502900311. S2CID 141459068.
  • Persson, Olle; Ellegård, Kajsa (2012). "Torsten Hägerstrand in the citation time web". The Professional Geographer. 64 (2): 250–261. Bibcode:2012ProfG..64..250P. doi:10.1080/00330124.2011.601187. S2CID 129170618.
  • Pred, Allan (June 2005). "Hägerstrand matters: life(-path) and death matters—some touching remarks". Progress in Human Geography. 29 (3): 328–332. doi:10.1177/030913250502900310. S2CID 143094462.
  • Rose, Courtice G (February 1977). "Reflections on the notion of time incorporated in Hägerstrand's time-geographic model of society". Tijdschrift voor economische en sociale geografie. 68 (1): 43–50. doi:10.1111/j.1467-9663.1977.tb01465.x.
  • Sui, Daniel Z (July 2012). "Looking through Hägerstrand's dual vistas: towards a unifying framework for time geography". Journal of Transport Geography. 23: 5–16. doi:10.1016/j.jtrangeo.2012.03.020.

External links edit

  • "Torsten Hägerstrand" Encyclopædia Britannica

torsten, hägerstrand, october, 1916, moheda, 2004, lund, swedish, geographer, known, work, migration, cultural, diffusion, time, geography, hägerstrand, 1991born, 1916, october, 1916moheda, swedendiedmay, 2004, 2004, aged, lund, swedennationalityswedishcitizen. Torsten Hagerstrand October 11 1916 in Moheda May 3 2004 in Lund was a Swedish geographer He is known for his work on migration cultural diffusion and time geography Torsten HagerstrandHagerstrand in 1991Born 1916 10 11 October 11 1916Moheda SwedenDiedMay 4 2004 2004 05 04 aged 87 Lund SwedenNationalitySwedishCitizenshipSwedenAlma materLund UniversityKnown forTime geographyHuman migrationCultural diffusionAwardsLaureat Prix International de Geographie Vautrin LudOutstanding Achievement Award from the Association of American GeographersVictoria Medal 1979 Scientific careerFieldsGeographyInstitutionsLund University A native and resident of Sweden Hagerstrand was a professor later professor emeritus of geography at Lund University where he received his doctorate in 1953 His doctoral research was on cultural diffusion His research has helped to make Sweden and particularly Lund a major center of innovative work in cultural geography 1 He also influenced the practice of spatial planning in Sweden through his students 2 Contents 1 Early life 2 Academic career 3 Legacy 4 Honors 5 Key publications 6 See also 7 Footnotes 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksEarly life editHagerstrand s father was a teacher at a remote elementary school and the family lived at the school Hagerstrand recalled that his early education was based on the pedagogical ideas of Swiss educator Johann Pestalozzi Several of Hagerstrand s students speculated that his holistic and visionary thinking was rooted in his early education 3 He was taught local geography history and folklore at home in the Pestalozzi tradition which was being introduced at that time Cartography geology botany and agronomy were all interrelated parts of a more holistic understanding of processes within a spatial area To start with children learned about their immediate environment e g the school room and the farm then about the village and gradually the whole district As a pupil of Hagerstrand it is easy for me to recognize parts of this tradition which later became what we today would refer to as an integrative perspective 4 Academic career editHagerstrand entered Lund University in 1937 His 1953 doctoral thesis Innovation Diffusion as a Spatial Process gained fame for its innovative use of Monte Carlo simulation of demographic development 5 It showed how dynamic incremental simulation of spatial processes could be used at the spatial scale of the individual as well as large spatial aggregates Forty years later geographer Andrew Cliff remarked on the foresight of Hagerstrand s methodology Bearing in mind that much of the research upon which the book is based dates from a time when computers were almost nonexistent let alone used by geographers it is remarkable that the simulation methodology which is so critically dependent upon computing power should have been contemplated 6 Hagerstrand s research was aided by developments at Lund University notably the establishment of the Siffermaskinen i Lund SMIL one of Sweden s first computers 7 Hagerstrand noted that the Swedish computer scientist Carl Erik Froberg who had been Hagerstrand s school mate since secondary school 7 had introduced him to the Monte Carlo method that would define his doctoral thesis following a trip by Froberg and other young Swedish scientists to the United States a trip that was financed by the Swedish government s project to build its own computer 7 In 1969 he presented a paper titled What about People in Regional Science to the European Congress of the Regional Science Association in Copenhagen Denmark 8 This paper published in 1970 developed two concepts The need to study the individual in order to understand social and group practices Modern cultural geographers commonly now study everyday practices on an individualistic basis in order to understand larger scale patterns The study of just groups creates a homogenization of reality and hides the truth A link between space and time that had previously been poorly developed Historically social scientists had treated time as a relevant but external factor to spatial features Hagerstrand s early work on innovation diffusion studying the geographical spread of new technologies made him realise that the two though separate were not independent of each other they have what French theorist Henri Lefebvre would call a dialectical relationship Legacy editHagerstrand s initial work was primarily quantitative which is important as the discipline of geography was when he published his first paper in 1942 a highly descriptive subject 9 In the 1950s he was a pioneer of geocoding statistical primary data 10 He developed models and statistical techniques such as the time space cube and time space prism which later became important in the development of geographic information systems that process and visualize movement data 11 His work informed the likes of Allan Pred and Nigel Thrift who helped take it to the English speaking world 12 Hagerstrand s work contributed to the introduction of humanistic thought into geography which led to the development of critical geography 13 While his early work was largely quantitative Hagerstrand s later work paid closer attention to notions of embodiment and emotion 14 Still his methods were critiqued by feminist geographer Gillian Rose who claimed that his models showed a masculine and falsely ordered view of the world 15 More recent geographers have tried to combine time geography with the qualitative research and affective phenomenology of feminist geography 16 Development of Hagerstrand s work has continued to form part of the basis for non representational theory and a reappraisal of his work by new generations of social scientists 17 and biologists 18 means that he remains an influential thinker today In 2005 Nigel Thrift summarized five benefits of Hagerstrand s time geography for contemporary social science First it provides a sense of concreteness of the power of thereness and it does so in a way visually that is still the preserve of too few social theorists All those intricate diagrams were in part an attempt to describe the pragmatics of events a theme which has now in the work of writers like Deleuze become fashionable in the social sciences and humanities but at the time at which Hagerstrand was working tended to be restricted to the field of philosophy except for the work of social interactionists and ethnomethodologists which was often very imperfectly understood by other than a relatively small coterie of enthusiasts Secondly Hagerstrand s work was an attack on the Durkheimian idea that space and time were social categories collective representations which both derived from society and also dictated to society Time geography makes it possible to go beyond social constructionism by emphasizing the physical constraints on human action and the wider networks of competing opportunities that they set up which act to steer situations Thirdly and as a directly related point those time geographic diagrams did something else too They radically lessened the distinction between humans and other objects They provided a kind of neutrality of representation even a democracy of description of the world Fourthly Hagerstrand s work espoused a geographical ethics centred on the wise use of space and time Although Hagerstrand would often use economic metaphors to describe that wisdom in the use of space and time I am sure that he meant something broader and more encompassing which it seems to me to be well worth keeping hold of a kind of democratic ethos of the cardinal dimensions a conviviality in the use of space and time Fifthly Hagerstrand provided a language which could register the world in different ways Perhaps one way of looking at Hagerstrand s work is as a means of saying hello in a language many can understand drawing as a kind of visual Esperanto 19 Honors editHe received honorary doctorates from University of Bergen Norwegian school of economics and business administration Norwegian University of Science and Technology University of Bristol University of Edinburgh University of Glasgow and Ohio State University The commendation accompanying the honorary degree at Ohio State University noted that his work on innovation diffusion carried out in the 1950s and 1960s continues to be cited as a standard against which current research is measured and that this distinguished individual inspired a generation of scholars around the world He was a member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences the Royal Swedish Academy of Letters the Royal Swedish Academy of Engineering Sciences the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters the Finnish Academy of Sciences the American Academy of Arts and Sciences a Corresponding Fellow of the British Academy and a member of Societe de Geographie in France He was also one of the founding members of Academia Europaea In 1968 Professor Hagerstrand was awarded the Charles P Daly Medal of the American Geographical Society and in 1968 received an Outstanding Achievement Award from the Association of American Geographers In 1979 he received the Victoria Medal from the Royal Geographical Society In 1992 Torsten Hagerstrand was awarded Laureat Prix International de Geographie Vautrin Lud the highest award in the geography research field Key publications editHagerstrand Torsten 1952 The propagation of innovation waves Lund studies in geography Series B Human geography 4 Lund Royal University of Lund Dept of Geography OCLC 254752 Hagerstrand Torsten 1955 Statistiska primaruppgifter flygkartering och data processing maskiner ett kombineringsprojekt Svensk Geografisk Arsbok in Swedish 31 233 255 Hannerberg David Hagerstrand Torsten eds 1957 Migration in Sweden a symposium Lund studies in geography Series B Human geography 13 Lund CWK Gleerup OCLC 170619 Hagerstrand Torsten 1967a 1953 Innovation diffusion as a spatial process Innovationsforloppet ur korologisk synpunkt Translated by Allan Pred Greta Haag Chicago University of Chicago Press OCLC 536383 Hagerstrand Torsten 1967b The computer and the geographer Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 42 1 19 doi 10 2307 621369 JSTOR 621369 S2CID 147121939 Hagerstrand Torsten 1970 What about people in regional science Papers of the Regional Science Association 24 1 6 21 Bibcode 1970PRegS 24 6H doi 10 1007 BF01936872 S2CID 198174673 Hagerstrand Torsten 1973 On the definition of migration Rapporter och notiser 9 Lund Lunds universitets kulturgeografiska institution OCLC 185647319 Hagerstrand Torsten 1973 The domain of human geography In Chorley Richard J ed Directions in geography London Methuen pp 67 87 ISBN 978 0 416 60830 4 OCLC 789168 Hagerstrand Torsten 1974 Ecology under one perspective In Bylund Erik Linderholm Hakan Rune Olof eds Ecological problems of the circumpolar area papers from the international symposium at Lulea Sweden June 28 29 1971 Lulea Norrbottens Museum pp 271 276 OCLC 3035384 Hagerstrand Torsten 1974 The impact of transport on the quality of life Rapporter och notiser 13 Lund Lunds universitets kulturgeografiska institution OCLC 185647393 Hagerstrand Torsten 1975 Space time and human conditions In Karlqvist Anders Lundqvist Lars Snickars Folke eds Dynamic allocation of urban space Lexington MA Lexington Books pp 3 14 ISBN 978 0 347 01052 8 OCLC 1364735 Hagerstrand Torsten 1976 Geography and the study of interaction between nature and society Geoforum 7 5 6 329 334 doi 10 1016 0016 7185 76 90063 4 Hagerstrand Torsten 1978 Survival and arena on the life history of individuals in relation to their geographical environment In Carlstein Tommy Parkes Don Thrift Nigel J eds Human activity and time geography Timing space and spacing time Vol 2 New York Wiley pp 122 143 ISBN 978 0 7131 5989 9 OCLC 4935024 Buttimer Anne Hagerstrand Torsten 1980 Invitation to dialogue a progress report DIA paper 1 Lund University of Lund OCLC 8534714 Hagerstrand Torsten 1982 Diorama path and project Tijdschrift voor economische en sociale geografie 73 6 323 339 doi 10 1111 j 1467 9663 1982 tb01647 x Hagerstrand Torsten 1983 In search for the sources of concepts In Buttimer Anne ed The practice of geography London New York Longman pp 238 256 ISBN 978 0 582 30087 3 OCLC 8629687 Hagerstrand Torsten ed 1985 The identification of progress in learning Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 30087 2 OCLC 10924966 Hagerstrand Torsten 1985 Time geography focus on the corporeality of man society and environment In Aida Shuhei ed The science and praxis of complexity contributions to the symposium held at Montpellier France 9 11 May 1984 Tokyo United Nations University Press pp 193 216 ISBN 978 92 808 0560 4 OCLC 13025296 Hagerstrand Torsten 1991 Gosta Carlestam Barbro Sollbe eds Om tidens vidd och tingens ordning in Swedish Stockholm Byggforskningsradet ISBN 978 91 540 5363 6 OCLC 29548202 Hagerstrand Torsten 1992 The global and the local In Svedin Uno Aniansson Britt Hagerhall eds Society and the environment a Swedish research perspective Ecology economy amp environment 2 Dordrecht Boston Kluwer Academic Publishers pp 13 21 ISBN 978 0 7923 1796 8 OCLC 25788428 Hagerstrand Torsten 1995 Action in the physical everyday world In Haggett Peter Cliff Andrew eds Diffusing geography essays for Peter Haggett The Institute of British Geographers special publications series 31 Oxford Cambridge MA Blackwell pp 35 45 ISBN 978 0 631 19534 4 OCLC 30895028 Hagerstrand Torsten 2001 1995 A look at the political geography of environmental management In Buttimer Anne ed Sustainable landscapes and lifeways scale and appropriateness Sterling VA Cork University Press pp 35 58 ISBN 978 1 85918 300 7 OCLC 45879916 Hagerstrand Torsten Carlstein Tommy December 2004 The two vistas Geografiska Annaler Series B Human Geography 86 4 315 323 doi 10 1111 j 0435 3684 2004 00170 x S2CID 218589178 Hagerstrand Torsten 2009 Kajsa Ellegard Uno Svedin Bo Lenntorp eds Tillvarovaven in Swedish Stockholm Forskningsradet Formas ISBN 978 91 540 6033 7 OCLC 456875435 See also editTime geographyFootnotes edit Buttimer amp Mels 2006 Oberg 2005 Oberg 2005 Pred 2005 Oberg 2005 p 341 Hagerstrand 1967a Morrill 2005 Lenntorp 2008 Cliff Pred amp Hagerstrand 1992 p 541 a b c Brauer amp Dymitrow 2017 p 79 Hagerstrand 1970 Hubbard et al 2002 pp 22 56 Aase 2004 For example Miller 1991 Kwan 2004 Kraak 2008 Yu amp Shaw 2008 Wilson 2008 Kenett amp Portugali 2012 Long amp Nelson 2012 Thrift 1977 Pred 1977 Pred 1981 Christiaan van Paassen The philosophy of geography from Vidal to Hagerstrand in Pred 1981 pp 17 29 Hagerstrand 1983 Hubbard et al 2002 pp 101 104 Rose 1993 For example Kwan 2002 Kwan 2007 Kwan amp Ding 2008 McQuoid amp Dijst 2012 Scholten Friberg amp Sanden 2012 For example Ellegard amp de Pater 1999 May amp Thrift 2001 Latham 2003 Schwanen amp Kwan 2009 Ellegard amp Palm 2011 Ingold 2011 For example Baer amp Butler 2000 Huettmann amp Cushman 2009 Downs Horner amp Tucker 2011 Thrift 2005 pp 337 338References editAase Alorn 2004 Obituaries Nekrologer Torsten Hagerstrand 1916 2004 Norwegian Journal of Geography 58 4 216 217 Bibcode 2004NGTid 58 216A doi 10 1080 00291950410002728 S2CID 129084919 Baer Leonard D Butler David R April 2000 Space time modeling of grizzly bears Geographical Review 90 2 206 221 doi 10 1111 j 1931 0846 2000 tb00331 x S2CID 162614564 Brauer Rene Dymitrow Mirek June 2017 Human geography and the hinterland the case of Torsten Hagerstrand s belated recognition Moravian Geographical Reports 25 2 74 84 doi 10 1515 mgr 2017 0007 Buttimer Anne Mels Tom 2006 By northern lights on the making of geography in Sweden Aldershot England Burlington VT Ashgate ISBN 978 0 7546 4814 7 OCLC 63187516 Cliff Andrew Pred Allan Hagerstrand Torsten October 1992 Classics in human geography revisited Innovation diffusion as a spatial process Progress in Human Geography 16 4 541 544 doi 10 1177 030913259201600403 S2CID 145756486 Downs Joni A Horner Mark W Tucker Anton D September 2011 Time geographic density estimation for home range analysis Annals of GIS 17 3 163 171 Bibcode 2011AnGIS 17 163D doi 10 1080 19475683 2011 602023 S2CID 7891668 Ellegard Kajsa de Pater Ben July 1999 The complex tapestry of everyday life GeoJournal 48 3 149 153 doi 10 1023 A 1007059105684 S2CID 147585214 Ellegard Kajsa Palm Jenny May 2011 Visualizing energy consumption activities as a tool for making everyday life more sustainable Applied Energy 88 5 1920 1926 Bibcode 2011ApEn 88 1920E doi 10 1016 j apenergy 2010 11 019 Hubbard Phil Kitchin Rob Bartley Brendan Fuller Duncan 2002 Thinking geographically space theory and contemporary human geography Continuum studies in geography education London New York Continuum ISBN 978 0 8264 5625 0 OCLC 290572149 Huettmann Falk Cushman Samuel A eds 2009 Spatial complexity informatics and wildlife conservation Tokyo New York Springer doi 10 1007 978 4 431 87771 4 ISBN 978 4 431 87770 7 OCLC 567359237 Ingold Tim 2011 Drawing together doing observing describing Being alive essays on movement knowledge and description London New York Routledge pp 220 228 ISBN 978 0 415 57683 3 OCLC 500783858 Kenett Dror Y Portugali Juval July 2012 Population movement under extreme events Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 102 29 11472 11473 Bibcode 2012PNAS 10911472K doi 10 1073 pnas 1209306109 PMC 3406849 PMID 22778423 Kraak Menno Jan 2008 Geovisualization and time new opportunities for the space time cube In Dodge Martin McDerby Mary Turner Martin eds Geographic visualization concepts tools and applications Chichester England Hoboken NJ Wiley pp 293 306 doi 10 1002 9780470987643 ch15 ISBN 978 0 470 51511 2 OCLC 191847101 Kwan Mei Po 2002 Is GIS for women reflections on the critical discourse in the 1990s PDF Gender Place amp Culture A Journal of Feminist Geography 9 3 271 279 doi 10 1080 0966369022000003888 S2CID 145232831 Kwan Mei Po December 2004 GIS methods in time geographic research geocomputation and geovisualization of human activity patterns PDF Geografiska Annaler Series B Human Geography 86 4 267 280 doi 10 1111 j 0435 3684 2004 00167 x S2CID 18126588 Kwan Mei Po 2007 Affecting geospatial technologies toward a feminist politics of emotion PDF The Professional Geographer 59 1 22 34 Bibcode 2007ProfG 59 22K doi 10 1111 j 1467 9272 2007 00588 x S2CID 10120944 Kwan Mei Po Ding Guoxiang 2008 Geo narrative extending geographic information systems for narrative analysis in qualitative and mixed method research PDF The Professional Geographer 60 4 443 465 doi 10 1080 00330120802211752 S2CID 13008935 Latham Allan 2003 Research performance and doing human geography some reflections on the diary photograph diary interview method Environment and Planning A 35 11 1993 2017 Bibcode 2003EnPlA 35 1993L doi 10 1068 a3587 S2CID 17764426 Lenntorp Bo 2008 Innovation diffusion as spatial process 1953 Torsten Hagerstrand In Hubbard Phil Kitchin Rob Valentine Gill eds Key texts in human geography Los Angeles Sage pp 1 8 ISBN 978 1 4129 2260 9 OCLC 230771032 Long Jed A Nelson Trisalyn A July 2012 A review of quantitative methods for movement data PDF International Journal of Geographical Information Science 27 2 292 318 doi 10 1080 13658816 2012 682578 hdl 10023 5417 S2CID 15358225 May Jon Thrift Nigel J eds 2001 TimeSpace geographies of temporality Critical geographies 13 London New York Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 18083 2 OCLC 52996864 McQuoid Julia Dijst Martin July 2012 Bringing emotions to time geography the case of mobilities of poverty Journal of Transport Geography 23 26 34 doi 10 1016 j jtrangeo 2012 03 019 Miller Harvey J 1991 Modelling accessibility using space time prism concepts within geographical information systems International Journal of Geographical Information Science 5 3 287 301 doi 10 1080 02693799108927856 Oberg Sture June 2005 Hagerstrand and the remaking of Sweden Progress in Human Geography 29 3 340 349 doi 10 1177 030913250502900313 S2CID 128171396 Pred Allan 1977 The choreography of existence comments on Hagerstrand s time geography and its usefulness Economic Geography 53 2 207 221 doi 10 2307 142726 JSTOR 142726 Pred Allan ed 1981 Space and time in geography essays dedicated to Torsten Hagerstrand Lund CWK Gleerup ISBN 978 91 40 30603 6 OCLC 10145474 Rose Gillian 1993 Feminism and geography the limits of geographical knowledge Minneapolis University of Minnesota Press ISBN 978 0 8166 2417 1 OCLC 27935641 Scholten Christina Friberg Tora Sanden Annika December 2012 Re reading time geography from a gender perspective examples from gendered mobility Tijdschrift voor economische en sociale geografie 103 5 584 600 doi 10 1111 j 1467 9663 2012 00717 x Schwanen Tim Kwan Mei Po 2009 Doing critical geographies with numbers The Professional Geographer 61 4 459 464 doi 10 1080 00330120903103072 S2CID 144480962 Thrift Nigel J 1977 An introduction to time geography Concepts and techniques in modern geography 13 Norwich Geo Abstracts University of East Anglia ISBN 978 0 902246 67 6 OCLC 4464963 PDF Archived 13 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine Thrift Nigel J June 2005 Torsten Hagerstrand and social theory Progress in Human Geography 29 3 337 340 doi 10 1177 030913250502900312 S2CID 141333604 Wilson Clarke 2008 Activity patterns in space and time calculating representative Hagerstrand trajectories Transportation 35 4 485 499 doi 10 1007 s11116 008 9162 z S2CID 154300621 Yu Hongbo Shaw Shih Lung 2008 Exploring potential human activities in physical and virtual spaces a spatio temporal GIS approach International Journal of Geographical Information Science 22 4 409 430 Bibcode 2008IJGIS 22 409Y doi 10 1080 13658810701427569 S2CID 5654567 Further reading editButtimer Anne 2007 Torsten Hagerstrand 1916 2004 In Withers Charles W J Lorimer Hayden eds Geographers biobibliographical studies Vol 26 London Continuum pp 119 157 ISBN 978 0 8264 9913 4 OCLC 141381115 Carlstein Tommy 1982 Time resources society and ecology on the capacity for human interaction in space and time London Boston Allen amp Unwin doi 10 4324 9780429329036 ISBN 978 0 04 300082 3 OCLC 7946554 S2CID 199113937 Carlstein Tommy Parkes Don Thrift Nigel J eds 1978 Making sense of time Timing space and spacing time Vol 1 New York Wiley ISBN 978 0 470 26511 6 OCLC 4935269 Carlstein Tommy Parkes Don Thrift Nigel J eds 1978 Time and regional dynamics Timing space and spacing time Vol 3 New York Wiley ISBN 978 0 470 26512 3 OCLC 4935088 Corbett John 2001 Torsten Hagerstrand time geography Center for Spatially Integrated Social Science Archived from the original on 4 February 2012 Retrieved 5 January 2013 Ellegard Kajsa Svedin Uno July 2012 Torsten Hagerstrand s time geography as the cradle of the activity approach in transport geography Journal of Transport Geography 23 17 25 doi 10 1016 j jtrangeo 2012 03 023 Flowerdew Robin 2011 2004 Torsten Hagerstrand In Hubbard Phil Kitchin Rob eds Key thinkers on space and place 2nd ed Los Angeles Sage pp 199 204 ISBN 978 1 84920 101 8 OCLC 698373037 Hagerstrand Torsten 1984 Presence and absence a look at conceptual choices and bodily necessities Regional Studies 18 5 373 379 Bibcode 1984RegSt 18 373H doi 10 1080 09595238400185361 Hagerstrand Torsten 2002 1995 Virtual traces in space and time In O Hara Morgan ed Morgan O Hara live transmissions attention and drawing as time based performance Vol 2 Bergamo Lubrina Editore ISBN 978 88 7766 253 8 OCLC 270994775 Hoppe Goran Langton John 1986 Time geography and economic development the changing structure of livelihood positions on arable farms in nineteenth century Sweden Geografiska Annaler Series B Human Geography 68 2 115 137 doi 10 2307 490892 JSTOR 490892 Kuklinski Antoni 1987 Torsten Hagerstrand laudatio GeoJournal 14 4 503 510 doi 10 1007 BF02602724 S2CID 155401262 Lenntorp Bo 1976 Paths in space time environments a timegeographic study of movement possibilities of individuals Lund studies in geography Series B Human geography 44 Lund Royal University of Lund Dept of Geography ISBN 978 91 40 04376 4 OCLC 3063593 Lenntorp Bo December 2004 Publications by Torsten Hagerstrand 1938 2004 Geografiska Annaler Series B Human Geography 86 4 327 334 doi 10 1111 j 0435 3684 2004 00172 x S2CID 143541469 Lenntorp Bo July 1999 Time geography at the end of its beginning GeoJournal 48 3 155 158 doi 10 1023 A 1007067322523 S2CID 142500989 Lenntorp Bo Tornqvist Gunnar Warneryd Olof Oberg Sture December 2004 Torsten Hagerstrand 1916 2004 Geografiska Annaler Series B Human Geography 86 4 325 326 doi 10 1111 j 0435 3684 2004 00171 x S2CID 144276349 Morrill Richard June 2005 Hagerstrand and the quantitative revolution a personal appreciation Progress in Human Geography 29 3 333 336 doi 10 1177 030913250502900311 S2CID 141459068 Persson Olle Ellegard Kajsa 2012 Torsten Hagerstrand in the citation time web The Professional Geographer 64 2 250 261 Bibcode 2012ProfG 64 250P doi 10 1080 00330124 2011 601187 S2CID 129170618 Pred Allan June 2005 Hagerstrand matters life path and death matters some touching remarks Progress in Human Geography 29 3 328 332 doi 10 1177 030913250502900310 S2CID 143094462 Rose Courtice G February 1977 Reflections on the notion of time incorporated in Hagerstrand s time geographic model of society Tijdschrift voor economische en sociale geografie 68 1 43 50 doi 10 1111 j 1467 9663 1977 tb01465 x Sui Daniel Z July 2012 Looking through Hagerstrand s dual vistas towards a unifying framework for time geography Journal of Transport Geography 23 5 16 doi 10 1016 j jtrangeo 2012 03 020 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Torsten Hagerstrand Torsten Hagerstrand Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Torsten Hagerstrand amp oldid 1219569362, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.