Social morphology


For social morphology, often also defined as Social Geography, is the study of the dynamics through which social phenomena are distributed territorially. Territorial distribution is analyzed from the forms of population settlement, understood as configurations and localizations in space. Configurations and localizations take into account not only the community's population, but also economic, political and cultural activities, social processes, institutions and associations that are part of a particular society or cultural area.

The objective is to highlight the specific form of the observed phenomena and how this is destined to be related to the natural and artificial nature of the environment and nevertheless with the composition, volume and density of the population present in the area.

Social Morphology is born from Émile Durkheim, in turn inspired by Auguste Comte's positivism. Voices correlateemodify wikitesto Links externalize the wikitesto

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