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  1. Nov 30, 2010 · David Conradson and Alan Latham are Lecturers in the School of Geography at the University of Southampton. ‘Sally’ and the other respondent names employed in the paper are pseudonyms. To be clear, we are not arguing that no work has been undertaken on such individuals.

  2. Jun 15, 2021 · Alan Latham Department of Geography, University College London, London, UK Correspondence alan.latham@ucl.ac.uk View further author information Pages 755-776 | Received 05 Jun 2020 , Accepted 17 May 2021 , Published online: 15 Jun 2021

  3. Jul 1, 2022 · These are the kinds of spaces that make up the infrastructures of social life; the spaces and places that support social connection and sociality are a city’s social infrastructure (Klinenberg, Citation 2018; Latham & Layton, Citation 2019). How to support the social life of cities, is a question critical to contemporary urban life.

  4. Dec 19, 2008 · Alan Latham, Derek McCormack, Kim McNamara, Donald McNeill SAGE , Dec 19, 2008 - Science - 240 pages "This extraordinary collage of sophisticated essays on key terms in urban geography both provides a conventional basis to and recasts innovatively a burgeoning field in the discipline."

  5. Jul 5, 2007 · Alan Latham Department of Geography, University College London, London, UK. Pages 231-254 | Published online: 05 Jul 2007. Cite this article

  6. <p>Allen Gardner, a partner in the Washington, D.C. office and former Co-Chair of the Washington, D.C. Litigation &amp; Trial Department, focuses his practice on&nbsp;complex litigation.</p> <p>Mr. Gardner has represented diverse clients in a variety of litigation matters at both the trial and appellate level. He has practiced extensively in healthcare, product liability, and commercial and ...

  7. Feb 6, 2020 · In doing so, we have introduced figures such as the ‘invisible interviewer’ (Hitchings and Latham, 2019a) whose disappearance was connected to how, for those using our most popular method, certain aspects of the experience of conducting research are now infrequently discussed, and the ‘elusive ethnographer’ (Hitchings and Latham, 2019b ...