Geography Reference
In-Depth Information
6. For an introduction to the LS, see
L. Hatersley and R . Creeser, Longitudinal
Study 1971-1991: History, Organization and
Quality of Data, Longitudinal Study Series
no. 7 (London: HMSO, 1995).
7. D. P. Strachan, D. A. Leon, and
B. Dodgeon, “Mortality from Cardio-
vascular Disease among Interregional
Migrants in England and Wales,” British
Medical Journal 310 (1995): 423-27.
8. L. Simpson, “Geography Conver-
sion Tables: A Framework for Conversion
of Data between Geographical Units,”
International Journal of Population Geogra-
phy 8 (2002): 69-82.
9. S. Curtis, H. R . Southall, P. Con-
gdon, and B. Dodgeon, “Area Effects on
Health Variation over the Life-Course:
Analysis of the Longitudinal Study Sam-
ple in England Using New Data on Area
of Residence in Childhood,” Social Science
and Medicine 58 (2004): 57-74.
10. M. Wadsworth, D. Kuh, M. R ich-
ards, and R . Hardy, “Cohort Profile: The
1946 National Birth Cohort (MRC Nation-
al Survey of Health and Development),”
International Journal of Epidemiology 35
(2006): 49-54.
11. E. Garret, A. Reid, K. Schürer, and
S. Szreter, Changing Family Size in England
and Wales: Place, Class and Demography,
1891-1911 (New York: Cambridge Univer-
sity Press, 2001).
12. E. T. Murray, H. R . Southall,
P. Aucot, K. Tilling, D. Kuh, R . Hardy, and
Y. Ben-Shlomo, “Challenges in Examin-
ing Area Effects across the Life Course on
Physical Capability in Mid-life: Findings
from the 1946 British Birth Cohort,” Health
and Place 18 (2012): 366-74; E. T. Murray,
Y. Ben-Shlomo, K. Tilling, H. R . Southall,
P. Aucot, D. Kuh, and R . Hardy, “Area
Deprivation across the Life Course and
Physical Capability in Midlife: Findings
from the 1946 British Birth Cohort,”
American Journal of Epidemiology 177
(2013): 441-50.
13. For example, S. Szreter, “The
Importance of Social Intervention in
Britain's Mortality Decline c.1850-1914,”
Social History of Medicine 1 (1988): 1-38;
M. R . Haines, “Socio-economic Dif-
ferentials in Infant and Child Mortality
during Mortality Decline: England and
Wales, 1890-1911,” Population Studies 49
(1995): 297-315; I. N. Gregory, “Different
Places, Different Stories: Infant Mortality
Decline in England and Wales, 1851-1911,”
Annals of the Association of American Geog-
raphers 98 (2008): 773-94.
14. P. J. Aucot, A. von Lünen, and
H. R . Southall, “Exposing the History
of Europe: The Creation of a Structure
to Enable Time-Spatial Searching of
Historical Resources within a European
Framework,” OCLC Systems and Services 25
(2009): 270-86.
15. The author is a member of this
working group. Further details of the sur-
vey can be obtained from Patricia Mcguire
of King's College, Cambridge (archivist
@kings.cam.ac.uk).
16. Until 2002 this inspection function
was carried out by the National Register
of Archives, which then merged with the
Public Record Office to form the National
Archives. It was the NA whose support
was crucial to obtaining UK National Lot-
tery funding.
17. J. Stevenson, “Place Names: We
Would Be Lost without Them,” Archives
Hub Blog, 7 December 2009, htp://
archiveshub.ac.uk/blog/2009/12/place
-names-we-would-be-lost-without-them
(22 July 2012); H. R . Southall, “A lternative
Ways of Indexing by Geography,” ARC
Magazine 254 (2010): 17-19.
18. htp://www.nationalarchives.gov
.uk/documents/information-manage
ment/naming-rules.pdf. For Scotland we
used the SCAN gazeteer of Scotish plac-
es, which had been created since the NCA
report, but this was any way partly based
on the 1971 census listing.
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