ABSTRACT

We have sympathized with ourselves while working on this review, given the volume and breadth of British social and cultural geography, but it has also crossed our minds that at least we can begin without the standard apology for Anglo-American bias (an issue we return to at the end of the paper). This is not to say that it is always easy to place work as British when researchers work co-nationally, across sub-disciplines and within a broader international and human geography context. Our focus is very selective, but none of the current interests we consider is solely British.