Abstract

AbstractWith John Clarke's death, population geography has lost a champion of the subdiscipline. His textbook Population Geography introduced the subject to a generation of human geographers around the world. His research advanced understanding of population and scale, whereas his lead role as Chair of the International Geographical Union Commission on Population Geography was used to promote pioneering research on population and the environment. He was well ahead of his time with research on geography and gender, reflected in his many publications on sex ratios and the gendered asymmetries of power.

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