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Apologies for cross-posting:

New family population geographies

According to Jane Jacobs (1987) 'the family is the fabric of  
society'. Yet, with evidence of new and diverse family populations,  
this once familiar fabric appears increasingly as a patch-work. The  
new fluidity and diversity of family composition, transition and  
distribution is clearly at odds with traditional notions of ‘the  
family’ which feature at the core of the coalition government ‘Big  
Society’ agenda. While geographers are well placed to inform and  
critique this agenda we wish to acknowledge in this session the  
significant challenges to be met, conceptually and analytically,  
before we can understand the social and geographic dimensions of the  
new family populations.

As a conceptual term, 'the family' is widely used by human  
geographers often in taken-for-granted and diverse ways, such as a  
unit of analysis, in relation to social theory, or representing  
normative social constructions. Yet, limited attention is devoted to  
the shifting meanings and social underpinnings of the family, and how  
this is expressed in geographic ways. Arguably, contemporary  
processes of change are socio-spatially polarising particular types  
of family, and, in some instances, leading to the depopulation and  
disappearance of resident families from some neighbourhoods. Further  
unsettling what ‘the family’ means is evidence that the fastest  
growing demographics are one person and single parent households.  
With many people living alone, typically inhabiting homes designed to  
the idealised standards of the ‘single family dwelling’ there is  
growing concern in public health circles for the implications of a  
‘lonely society’. Again, these new (non-family) populations conflict  
with the static and entrenched way that ‘family’ is mobilised in  
policy discourse and in the popular imagination.

In this session we wish to acknowledge the fluidity and diversity of  
family forms and meanings while at the same time emphasising new  
methods and research directions which contribute the ‘ground truth’  
necessary to make sense of the changes taking place. We wish to  
explore how the changing political and economic conditions may  
influence the ways in which 'families' are socially represented and  
geographically distributed. For example, papers might follow up such  
questions as: how might changes to the housing benefit payments  
transform the family geographies of the UK?; how might changes to  
school education and performance indicators reconfigure linkages  
between the clustering social classes and family structures? Papers  
are welcomed on any theme which deepens our understanding of the  
geographic dimensions of the family and family populations.

Expressions of interest should be sent to either: Darren P. Smith  
([log in to unmask]) or Helen Jarvis ([log in to unmask]).  
Deadline for abstract submission (maximum 200 words) 17th February 2011.