sub-groups (Coombes et al. 1988). However, perhaps foremost in the trend
towards more detailed disaggregation has been the increasing attention focused
on gender as exemplified by the seminal work of Hanson and Pratt (1991, 1995),
which explored how differences between men’s and women’s experiences of work
are grounded, and constituted in and through space.
The role of geography and geographers
Study of labour market geographies is not
the unique preserve of geographers. Economists, sociologists and anthropologists,
amongst others, have always had an interest in the role of space, and one senses
a trend towards rediscovery of the importance of geography amongst other disci-
plines, at a time when, arguably, for geographers space has moved from centre
stage to supporting role. Indeed, it is often not possible to identify easily the
disciplinary background of those contributing to the analyses of local and
regional labour markets. Often, the richest environments for research are at the
boundaries of disciplines: hence, a vogue for multi- and inter-disciplinary studies
of labour markets. For geographers such environments have proved tempting,
and for some such forays have meant ‘weighing anchor’ from geography. As a
result, it would seem that some ‘geographers’ are losing their identity – at least
in the eyes of non-geographers with a traditional view of geographers being
centrally concerned with space (and with maps – as exemplified by Dorling and
Thomas 2004). Whether, if true, this matters for economic geography and geogra-
phy more generally is another question.
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