“…Yet, as discussed below, both quantitative and qualitative GIS offer considerable potential for such policy making and analysis, examples of which are highlighted in the next section As with any methodological field, GIS techniques, thinking and capabilities continue to evolve, opening up new opportunities for rich spatial insights into social policy issues. Increasingly, for example, more traditional quantitative GIS representations of containerised Cartesian spaces are being challenged through attempts to characterise the relationship between places by mapping flows of data -trade, people, finance, information and so on -rather than displaying static representations of place (Orford and Webb, 2017). Most commonly, flow maps are utilised to map commuting patterns of workers, showing how many people travel from home to work (Rae, 2016) in order to understand the functional geographies of cities and regions -Figure 9.1.…”