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Page content: Complementing the Faculty’s research theme of ‘ wellbeing, innovation and spatial transformation ’ and the University’s foci on ‘healthy ageing’ and ‘energy’, the Department of Cultural Geography has a research focus on issues of place, identity and wellbeing. In particular, we explore the relations between people and place, and the social experience of transformations in rural and regional communities. We seek to undertake theoretically-informed, applied social research that contributes to policy and practice, and that makes a theoretical contribution. Our research is integrative, interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary spanning social and cultural geography, landscape studies, rural studies, social impact assessment, tourism studies and connects with kindred disciplines such as rural sociology, environmental psychology, gender studies and those of our fellow departments in the Faculty of Spatial Sciences: demography, economic geography and planning. We use qualitative and quantitative methodologies, with a particular interest in innovative methods including visual methodologies and location-based applications (social GIS). We study the lived experiences of local peoples all over the world. We approach our focus on issues of place, identity and wellbeing from different angles, including: community engagement; ageing and wellbeing; innovation and rural transformation; heritage; historical landscape change; death and burial; entrepreneurship; employment opportunities, housing and living environments for various groups; social impact assessment; social aspects of new technology; governance; social aspects of agriculture and farming; social aspects of natural resource management; and visitor and host experiences of tourism. Our research embraces the social relations between people and places, and the experience of spatial transformation. We believe that knowing our place is central to the formation and celebration of our human identity and our wellbeing. Forms of cultural expression such as art, architecture, ritual and language, and our understanding and appreciation of nature and landscape all interact with the physical environment in the creation of our individual and community life-stories. As such, the ways in which we construct and transform spaces and places manifest our imagination and self-awareness. In doing so, we make sense of, define, and celebrate our personal and collective identities, communities and localities.
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