What would happen if you applied the data visualisation techniques of
2012 to data from the 1980s?
Danny Dorling explores this in his latest book: The
Visualisation of Spatial Social Structure.
Published by Wiley, The
Visualisation of Spatial Social Structure introduces new ways of
visualizing people in places. Using examples from 1980s Britain, Dorling
is able to visualise the society inherited by Margaret Thatcher’s
government in 1979 and show how that society had been changed by 1990,
the year of her forced resignation.
While the case study is 1980s Britain, the application of techniques
demonstrated in the book are far wider. The author presents a unique
combination of statistical focus and understanding of social structures
and innovations in visualization, describing the rationale for, and
development of, a new way of visualizing information in geographical
research. Today’s software can be so flexible that these techniques can
now be emulated without coding.
Lavishly illustrated with full colour graphics throughout, Dorling's
unique approach shows how statistical data visualization techniques can
enhance social science data.
An online companion site can be found at: http://sasi.group.shef.ac.uk/visualisation/Homepage.html
