A professor of human geography, Felix Driver is a scholar whose interests include imperialism, the cultural geography of the European imperial city, and moral geographies of social policies in Britain. In addition to publishing articles in journals, Driver has . Felix Driver is currently PI of the Plant Humanities project, a development initiative funded by AHRC, in collaboration with Kew Gardens. He has led many other humanities research projects on the cultural history of collections and collecting, the visual culture of exploration, geography and empire, and imperial www.doorway.rug: moral geographies. This paper examines a theme in the history of geographical thought: the role played by conceptions of the urban environment in nineteenth-century social science. Nineteenth-century social inquiry was committed to social action and moral improvement, and this commitment was shaped by contemporary attitudes towards the environment. The concept of 'social science' Missing: felix driver.
Moral geographies: social science and the urban environment in mid-nineteenth century England. / Driver, Felix. In: Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, Vol. 13, , p. Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review. Nineteenth-century social inquiry was committed to social action and moral improvement, and this commitment was shaped by contemporary attitudes towards the environment. The concept of 'social science' emerged at the confluence of several streams of thought, including sanitary science, moral statistics and medical geography. The majority of work claiming the title of 'moral geography' focuses on codes of conduct and the regulation of human behaviour through spatial relations. 13 While earlier work had considered the moral ordering of cities and the theories about those cities, the field owes much to Felix Driver's paper on social science and the urban environment. 14 His examination of social and moral organisation in ethnology, medical geography, sanitary science and moral statistics, in reaction to the.
Moral geographies: social science and the urban environment in mid-nineteenth century England. FELIX DRIVER. Lecturer in Geography, Department of Geography. Some of these issues were evident in the concern in of Felix Driver and Raphael Samuel (geographer and historian respectively) to rethink the. Professor of Human Geography, Royal Holloway, University of London - อ้างอิงโดย Moral geographies: social science and the urban environment in.
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