American Association of Geographers American Association of Geographers
2008 Annual Meeting, Boston, Massachusetts Online Program
Paper Session:

1407 Exploring "New" Geographies of Mobility and Accessibility: Theory, Modelling, and Policy Implications I

is scheduled on Tuesday, 4/15/08, from 12:00 PM - 1:40 PM in Brandeis Room, Marriott, 3rd Floor

Sponsorship(s):
Transportation Geography Specialty Group
Spatial Analysis and Modeling Specialty Group

Organizer(s):
Ron N Buliung - Department of Geography, University of Toronto at Mississauga
Joe Weber - University Of Alabama

Chair(s):
Ron N Buliung - Department of Geography, University of Toronto at Mississauga

Abstract(s):
 
12:00 PM   Author(s): *Antonio Paez - McMaster University
Catherine Morency - École Polytechnique de Montréal
Matthew Roorda - University of Toronto

 Abstract Title: New mobilities of the old. A study of the evolution of elderly mobility in the Greater Montreal Area

12:20 PM   Author(s): *KALINA SOLTYS - University of Toronto at Mississauga
Ron Buliung, Assistant Professor - University of Toronto at Mississauga

 Abstract Title: Gender-based complexities of carpooling

12:40 PM   Author(s): *Christa Hubers, MSc - Utrecht University
Martin Dijst, Prof. Dr. - Utrecht University
Tim Schwanen, Dr. - Utrecht University

 Abstract Title: Coping strategies and the temporal and spatial fragmentation of paid labor

1:00 PM   Author(s): *Taede Tillema - Utrecht University, Geosciences, Human Geography
Martin Dijst - Utrecht University, Geosciences, Human Geography
Tim Schwanen - Utrecht University, Geosciences, Human Geography

 Abstract Title: Discussing something confidential while travelling by train: the use of a phone conversation versus silent modes

1:20 PM   Author(s): *Fang Ren - University of Redlands
Mei-Po Kwan - The Ohio State University

 Abstract Title: The Internet, Mobility, and Everyday Life




Session Description: During the 1950s, Ullman and Mayer prepared an initial sketch of the areas of knowledge specialization emerging from the intersection of geography and transportation. Their work provided a framework for the development of Transportation Geography. Among the various themes they identified, there was an emphasis on the study of systems, flows, and interactions. Mobility, flows, and the production of capital were physical processes involving place-based production of goods and services, and the physical movement of commodities and people through time and space. Accessibility was a product of location among origins and destinations of those commodities and people. Today our conceptualization continues to evolve in the face of wireless and wired technologies. We are at times both the producers and consumers of our own wares (Toffler, 1980), and increasingly engage in the use of information and communication technology (ICT) to perform obligatory and discretionary activities, and to consolidate and extend our social networks. In the face of the sort of spatial deconstruction offered by what Sheller and Urry (2006) and others have called, "the new mobility", Transportation Geographers and those in many other disciplines face new challenges and research opportunities as they attempt to come to grips with the relationship between mobility, accessibility, space, and place in the information age. This session will explore recent theoretical, qualitative, empirical, and policy-based discourse and practice surrounding emerging geographical perspectives regarding relationships between technology, mobility, accessibility and daily life.
  

(53) 2008 Annual Meeting, Boston, Massachusetts