All Stories

  1. Introduction: Sex, consumption and commerce in the contemporary city
  2. Prostitution policy, morality and the precautionary principle
  3. Law, sex and the city: regulating sexual entertainment venues in England and Wales
  4. Remaking London: Decline and Regeneration in Urban Culture
  5. Welcoming the World? Hospitality, Homonationalism, and the London 2012 Olympics
  6. The segregation of educated youth and dynamic geographies of studentification
  7. Sex and the Postindustrial City
  8. Kissing is not a universal right: Sexuality, law and the scales of citizenship
  9. Planning, Law, and Sexuality: Hiding Immorality in Plain View
  10. Sex Worker Victimization, Modes of Working, and Location in New South Wales, Australia: A Geography of Victimization
  11. Carnage! Coming to a town near you? Nightlife, uncivilised behaviour and the carnivalesque body
  12. Response – Phil Hubbard
  13. Noxious Neighbours? Interrogating the Impacts of Sex Premises in Residential Areas
  14. The Diverse Geographies of Studentification: Living Alongside PeopleNotLike Us
  15. Afterword: exiting Amsterdam's red light district
  16. The Rapidity of Studentification and Population Change: There Goes the (Student)hood
  17. Redundant? Resurgent? Relevant? Social Geography inSocial & Cultural Geography
  18. Gender, power & sex in the world city network
  19. Worlding a city: Twinning and urban theory
  20. Geographies of Regulation: Policing prostitution in nineteenth-century Britain and the Empire - By Philip Howell
  21. Walking, sensing, belonging: ethno-mimesis as performative praxis
  22. Walking across disciplines: from ethnography to arts practice
  23. Consuming Sex: Socio-legal Shifts in the Space and Place of Sex Shops
  24. De-centring White ruralities: Ethnic diversity, racialisation and Indigenous countrysides
  25. What's anti-social about sex work? Governance through the changing representation of prostitution's incivility
  26. Geographies of Studentification and Purpose-Built Student Accommodation: Leading Separate Lives?
  27. City.Phil Hubbard
  28. Legal Geographies—Controlling Sexually Oriented Businesses: Law, Licensing, and the Geographies of a Controversial Land Use
  29. Doreen Massey (2007)World city
  30. Worlds in one city
  31. Revisiting the red light district: Still neglected, immoral and marginal?
  32. Book Reviews
  33. Regulating sex work in the EU: prostitute women and the new spaces of exclusion
  34. Here, There, Everywhere: The Ubiquitous Geographies of Heteronormativity
  35. Bar Wars. By Phil Hadfield (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2007, 326pp)
  36. Editor's introduction
  37. Regulating the Social Impacts of Studentification: A Loughborough Case Study
  38. Women Outdoors: Destabilizing the Public/Private Dichotomy
  39. Book Reviews
  40. Book Review: City PHIL HUBBARD, 2006 London: Routledge 298pp. £18.50 paperback ISBN 0 415 33100 5 paperback
  41. Prostitution, gentrification, and the limits of neighbourhood space
  42. Battleground geographies and conspiracy theories: a response to
  43. What's anti‐social about sex work? The changing representation of prostitution's incivility
  44. NIMBY by another name? A reply to Wolsink
  45. Accommodating Otherness: anti-asylum centre protest and the maintenance of white privilege
  46. ‘Inappropriate and incongruous’: opposition to asylum centres in the English countryside
  47. Commentary—Lost in Translation?
  48. Revenge and Injustice in the Neoliberal City: Uncovering Masculinist Agendas
  49. Cleansing the Metropolis: Sex Work and the Politics of Zero Tolerance
  50. Therapy by design: evaluating the UK hospital building program
  51. Pacemaking the Modern City: The Urban Politics of Speed and Slowness
  52. Memorials to Modernity? Public art in the 'city of the future'
  53. Making space for sex work: female street prostitution and the production of urban space
  54. A good night out? Multiplex cinemas as sites of embodied leisure
  55. cultural geographies in practice
  56. Contesting the modern city: reconstruction and everyday life in post-war coventry
  57. Maintaining family values? Cleansing the streets of sex advertising
  58. Sexing the Self: Geographies of engagement and encounter
  59. Taking world cities literally: Marketing the city in a global space of flows
  60. Screen-Shifting: Consumption, ‘Riskless Risks’ and the Changing Geographies of Cinema
  61. Producing Web Pages for Assessment
  62. Who is disadvantaged? Retail change and social exclusion
  63. Who is disadvantaged? Retail change and social exclusion
  64. Consumption, exclusion and emotion: the social geographies of shopping
  65. Who is disadvantaged? Retail change and social exclusion
  66. Consumption, exclusion and emotion: The social geographies of shopping
  67. Researching female sex work: reflections on geographical exclusion, critical methodologies and 'useful' knowledge
  68. Tim Hall and Phil Hubbard (eds.), The Entrepreneurial City: Geographies of Politics, Regime and Representation Chichester: John Wiley, 1998, £45.00, vi+370 pp. (ISBN 0-471-97707-1).
  69. Community action and the displacement of street prostitution: Evidence from british cities
  70. Sexuality, Immorality and the City: Red-light districts and the marginalisation of female street prostitutes
  71. Book Reviews
  72. Red-light districts and Toleration Zones: geographies of female street prostitution in England and Wales
  73. Urban Design and City Regeneration: Social Representations of Entrepreneurial Landscapes
  74. CONFLICTING INTERPRETATIONS OF ARCHITECTURE: AN EMPIRICAL INVESTIGATION
  75. Urban design and local economic development
  76. Geography of Sexuality
  77. The City
  78. Sex Industry
  79. World Cities of Sex
  80. Geographies of Exclusion (1995): David Sibley
  81. Introduction
  82. Chapter 7 Diverse community responses to controversial urban issues: The contribution of qualitative research to policy development