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Process / pipelineBehavioural and movement geography

Time Geography Analysis

Time geography is a framework, introduced by Torsten Hägerstrand in 1970, that represents human activity as continuous trajectories through a joint space-time coordinate system rather than as static points on a map. Each individual traces a space-time path through the 'space-time aquarium', and the set of all locations that can be reached and returned from within a time budget forms a space-time prism, whose spatial footprint is the potential path area. The framework grounds accessibility and mobility in the inescapable fact that people can be in only one place at a time and that movement consumes both space and time.

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  1. Hägerstrand, T. (1970). What about people in regional science? Papers of the Regional Science Association, 24(1), 6–21. DOI: 10.1007/BF01936872

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ScholarGate. (2026, June 22). Time Geography Analysis (Hägerstrand's Space-Time Framework). ScholarGate. https://scholargate.app/da/human-geography/time-geography-analysis

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ScholarGateTime Geography Analysis (Time Geography Analysis (Hägerstrand's Space-Time Framework)). Hentet 2026-06-24 fra https://scholargate.app/da/human-geography/time-geography-analysis · Datasæt: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20539026