Time geography or time-space geography traces its roots back to the Swedish geographer Torsten Hägerstrand who stressed the temporal factor in spatial human activities. The time-space path, devised by Hägerstrand, shows the movement of an individual in the spatial-temporal environment with the constraints placed on the individual by these two factors. Three categories of constraints were identified by Hägerstrand:
Time geography is that branch of human science which deals with the study of temporal factor on spatial human activities with constraints like authority, capability and coupling.
The methods associated with time geography have been criticized by a number of postmodern and feminist geographers .
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