Journal article

What shape is your neighbourhood? Investigating the micro geographies of physical activity

VC Ivory, M Russell, K Witten, CM Hooper, J Pearce, T Blakely

Social Science and Medicine | PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD | Published : 2015

Abstract

Being physically active has demonstrated health benefits, and more walkable neighbourhoods can potentially increase physical activity. Yet not all neighbourhoods provide opportunities for active lifestyles. This paper examines the social context of being active in local and non-local places. We use a social practice theoretical framework to examine how residents talk about and make sense of physical activity and places, contrasting individual and neighbourhood factors. In 2010, fourteen focus groups were held in four neighbourhoods varying by walkability and area-level deprivation (two Auckland and two Wellington, New Zealand), and with participants grouped by gender, ethnicity, and employme..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by European Commission


Funding Acknowledgements

The authors gratefully acknowledge the participants who contributed to the study, and research assistants who assisted with data collection and preparation. Financial support for this study was provided through The Health Research Council of New Zealand who funded the URBAN Study (HRC 07/356) and the Neighbourhood and Health Study (part of the Health Inequalities Research Programme - HRC 08/48). JP is supported by the European Research Council (grant number ERC-2010-StG Grant 263501).