‘This innovative “field guide” offers a wonderful invitation to pay attention to and analyse our social worlds by engaging the peripatetic senses, the sensory affordances and creative understandings of the messy intersections of bodies, space, place, landscape, rhythms, sound, time and the more than human through a critical sociological lens by walking with contemporary sociologists! A book to read, share and savour! The power of sociological storytelling at its very best!’—Maggie O’Neill, University College Cork‘This collection of walks tackles big social issues in a lyrical and reflective manner showcasing the creativity of movement as methodology. Read this book and be inspired to get walking and understand spaces and places differently.’—Ruth Penfold-Mounce, University of York'Engaging and illuminating at once, Walking holds the social, historical, political, and emancipatory possibilities of a stroll close. These are walks beyond the trope of the Romantic figure – in the city, down back alleys, through questions of access and activism. A much-needed contribution to our literatures of place.'—Jessica J. Lee, author and environmental historian'Written as a sociological field guide, each contribution takes the reader on a walk, opening up attentiveness to embodied, situated spaces and connections between the local and global, pasts, presents and futures. This wonderful book will be invaluable to those researching, teaching and thinking with space, movement and everyday lives.'—Rebecca Coleman, University of Bristol‘Richly textured, insightful and fascinating. Contributors share walks crossing both time and space, illuminating issues that resonate far beyond each writer’s path. We travel along supply chains, rivers and disused railway lines, accompanied by dogs, songbirds, comedians and key social theorists. Subjects explored include complex histories and potential futures, regeneration, inequality, technology, racism, environmental injustices and more, alongside networks of care, community solidarity and everyday resistance. Power is revealed, disrupted and questioned with each footstep. Expertly crafted, each essay balances expertise with accessibility and is deeply engaging. Thoughtful prompts encourage the reader to embark on their own mobile research project. An essential guide for curious scholars across many fields—and for anyone who wants to understand the value of walking as, with, and in social research.’—Morag Rose, author of The Feminist Art of Walking‘A consistently unusual, thoughtful and original set of essays, full of gimlet-eyed observations and rich sociological insights. Taken together, they offer a compellingly diverse yet surprisingly unified account of walking – not walking as mere traversal of space but as a form of knowing, encountering, testing, clarifying, probing and above all listening to the complexity of places. Deeply informed, sociologically grounded, and politically astute, the essays also offer a glimpse of what walking, at its best, might be – a deeply intimate yet non-possessive mode of being in the world.’—Michael Malay, author of Late Light