Abstract As we age, the ability to move is foundational to health. Life space is one measure of a person’s ability to move and engage in activity beyond the home. A separate but related concept is activity space, a measurement of a person’s spatial behaviors and visited locations that include social networks, neighborhoods, and institutions. In this article, we integrate the literature on life space and activity space, discussing how physical function is not only determined by individual capabilities, but also by the surrounding social and environmental factors, which may limit their agency. We show how structural racism contributes to inequities within this paradigm linking related concepts of movement, agency, belonging, and timing. We also explore implications for research and theory for mobility, social connection, and activity.
Life Space and Activity Space Measurement: Making “Room” for Structural Racism
Sarah L. Szanton,Kamila A. Alexander,Boeun Kim,Qiwei Li,Gilbert Gee,Karen Bandeen-Roche,Paris B. Adkins-Jackson,M. Hladek,Laura J. Samuel,Emily A. Haozous,S. Okoye,D. Crews,Roland J. Thorpe
Published 2023 in The gerontologist
ABSTRACT
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- Publication year
2023
- Venue
The gerontologist
- Publication date
2023-11-28
- Fields of study
Sociology, Medicine
- Identifiers
- External record
- Source metadata
Semantic Scholar, PubMed
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