
Mobile historian – my visit to CeMoRe in Spring, 2015
I have recently returned from a wonderful month in Lancaster and surrounds. I embraced my mobility, visiting the Lakes District, Glasgow, London, Manchester, Keele University near Crewe, and of course, the local worlds of Lancaster.

Sensory Walks
During the Captured in Motion workshop last Friday two of us attempted to capture sensory information that is difficult to record with technology, things that are tactile or kinaesthetic, or smells that we pass through as we walk down a street.

Captured in Motion
Trying to capture sensory information. What does it feel like to shake hands? Captured with a wrist mounted GoPro.

Thank you, CeMoRe!
Rachel Aldred (Westminster University) writes about her experience as Cemore Visiting Research Fellow.

Transport in the Media
This interdisciplinary symposium explores relationships between transport policy and practice, academic research, and the media. It includes presentations, workshops, and roundtable discussions with academics and practitioners.

CeMoRe Annual Research Event
Date: 10 June 2014 Time: 1.30pm to 7.00pm Venue: Lancaster University Conference Centre The Annual CeMoRe Research event will follow on from Rachel Aldred's workshop. Programme (8 May2014) Free lunch - for speakers and audience - you MUST register with Pennie Drinkall...

Mobilities & Design
In this workshop we bring a selection of practitioners and scholars from mobilities research and design together to explore the analytical and creative leverage enabled by mobilising design.

Mobilities Research
Mobilities is a new interdisciplinary field partly initiated at Lancaster and established by CeMoRe in 2003. It encompasses the analysis of the global, national and local movements of people, objects, capital, information and material things combining together...

Mobility Futures Exhibition
The Mobility Futures Exhibition (2013) explored a future of tracking, connecting, observing and spatialising technologies. The works make visible flows of data and people within and across borders through the use of Twitter, surveillance camera footage, movement data,...