000 01151nam a2200181 4500
005 20260409143933.0
008 260406b |||||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
020 _a9781119845508
037 _cTextual
040 _aRTL
_cRTL
084 _qRTL
_aU47 R4
100 _aYeung, Henry Wai-Chung
_91234093
245 _aTheory and explanation in geography
260 _aLondon
_bJohn Wiley & Sons Ltd.
_c2024
300 _axvi, 320 p.
_bIncludes bibliographical reference and index
520 _aTheory and Explanation in Geography Yeung presents us with a rare thing - an argument for geographical theory with forms of causal explanation at its heart. The book is both modest and ambitious. Modest in its insistence on mid-level theory without a call for some new "turn" or advocacy for any particular approach. Ambitious in its insistence that existing theoretical traditions are inadequate or incomplete insofar as they lack causal explanatory power. Geographers will be inspired and/or infuriated by Yeung's arguments in this provocative and cogently argued call to theoretical arms for many years to come.
942 _2CC
_n0
_cTEXL
_hU47 R4
999 _c1847971
_d1847971