Search/ing for missing people: Families living with ambiguous absence
In: Emotion, space and society, Band 19, S. 66-75
ISSN: 1755-4586
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In: Emotion, space and society, Band 19, S. 66-75
ISSN: 1755-4586
In: Policing and society: an international journal of research and policy, Band 25, Heft 4, S. 409-425
ISSN: 1477-2728
In: Policing: a journal of policy and practice, Band 9, Heft 3, S. 275-283
ISSN: 1752-4520
In: Parr , H , Stevenson , O , Fyfe , N & Woolnough , P 2015 , ' Living absence : the strange geographies of missing people ' Environment and Planning D: Society and Space , vol 33 , no. 2 , pp. 191-208 . DOI:10.1068/d14080p
In this paper 'missing people' gain an unstable presence through their (restaged) testimonies recounting individual occupations of material urban public space during the lived practice of absence. We explore 'missing experience' with reference to homeless geographies, and as constituted by paradoxical spatialities in which people are both absent and present. We seek to understand such urban geographies of absence through diverse voices of missing people, who discuss their embodiment of unusual rhythmic occupations of the city. We conclude by considering how a new politics of missing people might take account of such voices in ways to think further about rights-to-be-absent in the city.
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In this paper 'missing people' gain an unstable presence through their (restaged) testimonies recounting individual occupations of material urban public space during the lived practice of absence. We explore 'missing experience' with reference to homeless geographies, and as constituted by paradoxical spatialities in which people are both absent and present. We seek to understand such urban geographies of absence through diverse voices of missing people, who discuss their embodiment of unusual rhythmic occupations of the city. We conclude by considering how a new politics of missing people might take account of such voices in ways to think further about rights-to-be-absent in the city.
BASE
In this paper 'missing people' gain an unstable presence through their (restaged) testimonies recounting individual occupations of material urban public space during the lived practice of absence. We explore 'missing experience' with reference to homeless geographies, and as constituted by paradoxical spatialities in which people are both absent and present. We seek to understand such urban geographies of absence through diverse voices of missing people, who discuss their embodiment of unusual rhythmic occupations of the city. We conclude by considering how a new politics of missing people might take account of such voices in ways to think further about rights-to-be-absent in the city.
BASE
In: Parr , H , Stevenson , O , Fyfe , N R & Woolnough , P 2015 , ' Living absence : the strange geographies of missing people ' , Environment and Planning D: Society and Space , vol. 33 , no. 2 , pp. 191-208 . https://doi.org/10.1068/d14080p
In this paper 'missing people' gain an unstable presence through their (restaged) testimonies recounting individual occupations of material urban public space during the lived practice of absence. We explore 'missing experience' with reference to homeless geographies, and as constituted by paradoxical spatialities in which people are both absent and present. We seek to understand such urban geographies of absence through diverse voices of missing people, who discuss their embodiment of unusual rhythmic occupations of the city. We conclude by considering how a new politics of missing people might take account of such voices in ways to think further about rights-to-be-absent in the city.
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Although research on missing persons has globally increased during the past few years, most of the studies conducted have focused on the description of socio-demographic and situational factors associated with this phenomenon. The aim of this study is to explore in-depth the relation between missing person's socio-demographic factors and missing person's typology and outcomes. A full 1-year sample of police recorded missing persons (n = 24,284) was extracted from the Spanish 'Missing Persons and Unidentified Human Remains (PDyRH)' system and a multivariate statistical approach was used. The findings of this research show that, although nationality and gender are mainly important from a descriptive level, age is the socio-demographic variable that better classifies the typology and outcome of missing person cases. These findings suggest that age is a modulating variable of this phenomenon. Thus, there is a need for the conduction of research for each specific age group focused on identifying psychosocial, criminological and geographical risk factors which could explain missing person case outcomes from a multifaceted approach. Considering previous research in the field, the findings of this research are mostly consistent with these previous studies and entail different implications, both at prevention level and in the scope of police investigations. ; Open Access funding provided thanks to the CRUE-CSIC agreement with Springer Nature. This study was partially supported by a grant provided by Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities (MCIU) of the Spanish Government, RTI2018-101167-B-I00 (MCIU/AEI/FEDER, UE): 'Risk factors and psychosocial adjustment in online child grooming: A longitudinal study'
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