P
Pamela Moss
Researcher at University of Victoria
Publications - 59
Citations - 1481
Pamela Moss is an academic researcher from University of Victoria. The author has contributed to research in topics: Feminist geography & Human geography. The author has an hindex of 20, co-authored 59 publications receiving 1411 citations.
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Book
Feminist geography in practice : research and methods
TL;DR: Taking on, thinking about, and doing Feminist Research in Geography: Taking on, Thinking about and Doing Feminist Research as discussed by the authors The Difference Feminism Makes: Researching Unemployed Women in an Australian Region.
Book
Placing Autobiography in Geography
TL;DR: A collection of autobiographical essays dealing with questions geographers at various stages of their careers are asking themselves at the turn of the century is presented in this article, which is a collection of essays written by the same authors.
Journal ArticleDOI
Negotiating spaces in home environments: older women living with arthritis.
TL;DR: This paper lays the basis for a contextualized socio-spatial understanding of the ways older women with chronic illness negotiate the spaces in home environments because it accounts for the disadvantaged positionings of access to power and resources as well as the uneven distributions of income based on gender, age, and (dis)ability.
Journal ArticleDOI
Embeddedness in Practice, Numbers in Context: The Politics of Knowing and Doing∗
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that feminist geographers need to scrutinize the claims being made by the three identifiable epistemological orientations in feminist geography regarding the use of numbers, for each offers a different view of objectivity and a different way to count.
Journal ArticleDOI
Inquiry into Environment and Body: Women, Work, and Chronic Illness:
Pamela Moss,Isabel Dyck +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors propose a feminist political economic analysis of environment and body as an addition to the critical frameworks emerging in medical geography, and discuss how material and discursive bodies combine to create identities for women with chronic illness around issues of gender and (dis)ability within the context of wider social political economy.