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Social distance

 
Geography Dictionary: social distance

The perceived distance between social strata, as in different socio-economic, racial, or ethnic groups. This is usually measured by the amount of contact between groups, such as through friendship and marriage. This distance may have arisen spontaneously, as certain groups prefer to ‘keep themselves apart’ but is often imposed on one group by a dominant group; the charter group, for example, may keep a distance between it and a minority group, through discriminatory practices.

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Wikipedia: Social distance
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Social distance describes the distance between different groups of society and is opposed to locational distance. The notion includes all differences such as social class, race/ethnicity or sexuality, but also the fact that the different groups do not mix. The term is often applied in cities, but its use is not limited to that.

Social distancing is the public health practice of encouraging people to keep their physical distance from each other during disease outbreaks in order to slow the spread of infection.

Social periphery is a term often used in conjunction with social distance. It refers to people distant with regard to social relations. It is often implied that it is measured from the dominant city élite. The social periphery of a city is often located in the centre.

Locational periphery in contrast is used to describe places physically distant from the heart of the city. These places often include suburbs and are socially close to the core of the city. In some cases the locational periphery overlaps with the social periphery, such as in Paris' banlieues.

In 1991 Mulgan stated that "The centres of two cities are often for practical purposes closer to each other than to their own peripheries."[1] This reference to social distance is especially true for global cities.

See also

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References

  1. ^ Mulgan G (1991) Communications and Control: Networks and the New Economics of Communication (Polity, Cambridge)

 
 

 

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Geography Dictionary. A Dictionary of Geography. Copyright © Susan Mayhew 1992, 1997, 2004. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Social distance" Read more