Abstract
This article reviews how race, quantification, and raced quantification have been used and written about
in geography. Its two primary arguments are that race should be more central in the discipline and that a
reluctance to address ontological and epistemological issues has left quantitative geography methodologically
impoverished. These two issues merge in an examination of two cases where race is employed as a variable in
quantitative models. The critique of these cases is not meant as a condemnation of quantitative geography but
as an instructive example on which to construct a critical quantitative geography. The article ends by stressing
the importance of quantification in geography and by presenting exemplars of race-critical quantification.
Key Words: methodology, quantification, race.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 465-480 |
Journal | The Professional Geographer |
State | Published - Sep 2009 |