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Geographies of social networks: meetings, travel and communications

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Geographies of social networks: meetings, travel and communications. / Urry, John; Larsen, J.; Axhausen, K.
In: Mobilities, Vol. 1, No. 2, 2006, p. 261-283.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Urry J, Larsen J, Axhausen K. Geographies of social networks: meetings, travel and communications. Mobilities. 2006;1(2):261-283. doi: 10.1080/17450100600726654

Author

Urry, John ; Larsen, J. ; Axhausen, K. / Geographies of social networks: meetings, travel and communications. In: Mobilities. 2006 ; Vol. 1, No. 2. pp. 261-283.

Bibtex

@article{e62680e529134ad9b42d6799a9a955c1,
title = "Geographies of social networks: meetings, travel and communications",
abstract = "The past decade has seen striking increases in travel and in communications at-a-distance through mobile phone calls, text messaging and emailing. People in prosperous societies are both travelling and communicating more to connect with absent others. People can travel, relocate and migrate and yet still be connected with friends and family members 'back home'. So, increasingly, people who are near emotionally may be geographically very far away; yet they are only a journey, email or a phone call away. In this article we attempt to examine how such strong ties are spatially distributed and sustained through specific geographies of travel, meetings and communications. How often do strong ties meet, talk at-at-distance and write, and to what degree does distance determine regularity? To what extent are communications enhancing and/or substituting for physical travel? We examine in particular to what degree far-flung ties and emotional networking at-a-distance are characteristic of many people other than the transnational 'elites' and 'underprivileged' migrants. We consider the notion of 'network capital'.",
keywords = "social networks, strong ties, travel, communication technologies, mobile methods",
author = "John Urry and J. Larsen and K. Axhausen",
year = "2006",
doi = "10.1080/17450100600726654",
language = "English",
volume = "1",
pages = "261--283",
journal = "Mobilities",
issn = "1745-0101",
publisher = "Routledge",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Geographies of social networks: meetings, travel and communications

AU - Urry, John

AU - Larsen, J.

AU - Axhausen, K.

PY - 2006

Y1 - 2006

N2 - The past decade has seen striking increases in travel and in communications at-a-distance through mobile phone calls, text messaging and emailing. People in prosperous societies are both travelling and communicating more to connect with absent others. People can travel, relocate and migrate and yet still be connected with friends and family members 'back home'. So, increasingly, people who are near emotionally may be geographically very far away; yet they are only a journey, email or a phone call away. In this article we attempt to examine how such strong ties are spatially distributed and sustained through specific geographies of travel, meetings and communications. How often do strong ties meet, talk at-at-distance and write, and to what degree does distance determine regularity? To what extent are communications enhancing and/or substituting for physical travel? We examine in particular to what degree far-flung ties and emotional networking at-a-distance are characteristic of many people other than the transnational 'elites' and 'underprivileged' migrants. We consider the notion of 'network capital'.

AB - The past decade has seen striking increases in travel and in communications at-a-distance through mobile phone calls, text messaging and emailing. People in prosperous societies are both travelling and communicating more to connect with absent others. People can travel, relocate and migrate and yet still be connected with friends and family members 'back home'. So, increasingly, people who are near emotionally may be geographically very far away; yet they are only a journey, email or a phone call away. In this article we attempt to examine how such strong ties are spatially distributed and sustained through specific geographies of travel, meetings and communications. How often do strong ties meet, talk at-at-distance and write, and to what degree does distance determine regularity? To what extent are communications enhancing and/or substituting for physical travel? We examine in particular to what degree far-flung ties and emotional networking at-a-distance are characteristic of many people other than the transnational 'elites' and 'underprivileged' migrants. We consider the notion of 'network capital'.

KW - social networks

KW - strong ties

KW - travel

KW - communication technologies

KW - mobile methods

U2 - 10.1080/17450100600726654

DO - 10.1080/17450100600726654

M3 - Journal article

VL - 1

SP - 261

EP - 283

JO - Mobilities

JF - Mobilities

SN - 1745-0101

IS - 2

ER -