2015
DOI: 10.1068/d14080p
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Living Absence: The Strange Geographies of Missing People

Abstract: Abstract. 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 rhythm… Show more

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Cited by 15 publications
(26 citation statements)
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“…There is a large discourse worldwide on missing people (including children) (Best, , , ; Boss, , , 2008; Gair & Moloney, ; Gattas, Figaro‐Garcia, Landini, & Estes, ; Fritz & Altheide, ; Holmes, ; Min & Feaster, ; Parr & Fyfe, ; Parr & Stevenson, ; Parr, Stevenson, Fyfe, & Woolnough, ; Parr, Stevenson, & Woolnough, ). Gair and Moloney (, p. 90) define a missing person as “someone whose whereabouts are unknown and fears exist for the safety and welfare of that person” (Parr & Fyfe, ; Parr & Stevenson, , ; Parr, Stevenson, Fyfe et al., ; Parr, Stevenson, & Woolnough, ). In the Anglo‐American context, the phrase “missing children” denotes:
…three familiar phenomena: runaways (children—most often adolescents—who chose to leave home and usually returned within a few days); child‐snatching (non‐custodial parents who illegally took their own children without the custodial parent's permission); and abductions by strangers (who might keep, sell, ransom, molest or kill the child) (Best, ; p. 103; Best, , ; Min & Feaster, ).
…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There is a large discourse worldwide on missing people (including children) (Best, , , ; Boss, , , 2008; Gair & Moloney, ; Gattas, Figaro‐Garcia, Landini, & Estes, ; Fritz & Altheide, ; Holmes, ; Min & Feaster, ; Parr & Fyfe, ; Parr & Stevenson, ; Parr, Stevenson, Fyfe, & Woolnough, ; Parr, Stevenson, & Woolnough, ). Gair and Moloney (, p. 90) define a missing person as “someone whose whereabouts are unknown and fears exist for the safety and welfare of that person” (Parr & Fyfe, ; Parr & Stevenson, , ; Parr, Stevenson, Fyfe et al., ; Parr, Stevenson, & Woolnough, ). In the Anglo‐American context, the phrase “missing children” denotes:
…three familiar phenomena: runaways (children—most often adolescents—who chose to leave home and usually returned within a few days); child‐snatching (non‐custodial parents who illegally took their own children without the custodial parent's permission); and abductions by strangers (who might keep, sell, ransom, molest or kill the child) (Best, ; p. 103; Best, , ; Min & Feaster, ).
…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The National Alliance to End Homelessness recognizes differences in homelessness in different geographies, as outlined in their Geography of Homelessness report (2009) and researchers have concluded that attention to differential geographies is essential to understanding subpopulations of homelessness (Cloke et al, 2001; DeVerteuil, May, & Mahs, 2009; Lawrence, 1995; Parr, Stevenson, Fyfe, & Woolnough, 2015). Accordingly, researchers have recently applied a human geographical approach to begin to add to the homelessness literature in the areas of risk assessment (Reilly, 1994), social networks (Rowe & Wolch, 1990), perceptions of time and space (Van Doorn, 2010), and an integrated multidisciplinary model to further research in this special area (Williams & Sheehan, 2015).…”
Section: Theoretical Frameworkmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We have written elsewhere about the characteristic features of missing journeys and their discordant emotional logics and rhythms (Parr et al . ), but by paying particular attention to the women's narratives, we can see that they correctly anticipate and are conscious of the intensity of concern about their absence:
You don't want people worrying, but how do you make people sure or convinced that even if you have disappeared that you're safe, that you can look after yourself … I knew I had to stay away from authority, and I had to stay away from people I knew because they were already looking for me. (Wilma, missing 16–48 hours, repeatedly)
…”
Section: Women's Narratives Of Being Missingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Megan feels that she has the right to go without prior explanation (and see Parr et al . on ‘rights‐to‐be‐missing’), and Rhona (missing repeatedly) talks about her alternative cartographies of city public space:
Sometimes it can be really comforting. I mean waking up in a new city, it feels like home.
…”
Section: Women's Narratives Of Being Missingmentioning
confidence: 99%
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