Georgia,
I don't know of any published work on the integration of theory and practice relating
to archaeology and geography (although the geographers and archaeologists do
work (and teach?) together a bit here at QUB). However, there is quite a large
literature documenting the links in the late 1960s and the subsequent drifting
between geography and psychology (see Steve Pile's book, The Body and the City
(1996, Routledge) and my own article in Progress in Human Geography 20(1):
54-86). My article also discusses integrating theory and practice at general level,
and draws much of its emphasis from a series of papers in Geographical Analysis
in 1982/83 concerning theory in the social sciences and Evans and Garling's
chapter `Environment, cognition and action: the need for integration' in the book of
the same name.
Best wishes,
Rob
-----------------------
Dr Rob Kitchin,
Socio-Spatial Analysis Research Unit,
School of GeoSciences,
Queen's University of Belfast,
Belfast, Northern Ireland,
UK, BT7 1NN.
Tel: +44 1232 273345
Fax: +44 1232 321280
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