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First published online December 10, 2013

Geography and the future of big data, big data and the future of geography

Abstract

As digital social data have become increasingly ubiquitous, many have turned their attention to harnessing these massive data sets in order to produce purportedly more accurate and complete understandings of social processes. This intervention addresses the relationships between geography and big data and their intertwined futures. We focus on the impacts of an age of big data on the discipline of geography and geographic thought and methodology, as well as how geography might provide a useful lens through which to understand big data as a social phenomenon in its own right. Ultimately, we see significant potential in big data, but remain skeptical of the prevalent discourses around it, as they tend to obscure, more than reveal, the complexity of social and spatial processes.

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Article first published online: December 10, 2013
Issue published: November 2013

Keywords

  1. big data
  2. geographic thought
  3. positivism

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Authors

Affiliations

Mark Graham
University of Oxford, UK
Taylor Shelton

Notes

Taylor Shelton, Graduate School of Geography, Clark University, 950 Main Street, Worcester, MA 01610, USA. Email: [email protected]

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