BalintE (1993) Before I Was I, London: Free Association Books.
2.
BereswillMMorgenrothCRedmanP (2010) Alfred Lorenzer and the depth-hemeneutic method. Psychoanalysis, Culture and Society15(3): 221–250.
3.
BroadhurstKMasonC (2014) Social work beyond the VDU: Foregrounding Co-Presence in situated practice—Why face-to-face practice matters. British Journal of Social Work44(3): 578–595.
4.
BroadhurstKWastellDWhiteS (2010) ‘Performing “initial assessment”: Identifying the latent conditions for error at the front-door of local authority children’s services’. British Journal of Social Work10(1): 1–9.
5.
BüscherMUrryM (2009) Mobile methods and the empirical. European Journal of Social Theory12(1): 99–116.
6.
FergusonH (2008) Liquid social work: Welfare interventions as mobile practices. British Journal of Social Work38: 561–579.
7.
FergusonH (2010a) Walks, home visits and atmospheres: Risk and everyday practice and mobilities of social work and child protection. British Journal of Social Work40: 1100–1117.
8.
FergusonH (2010b) Therapeutic journeys: The car as a vehicle for working with children and families and theorising practice. Journal of Social Work Practice: Psychotherapeutic Approaches in Health, Welfare and the Community24(2): 121–138.
FergusonH (2014) Researching social work practice close up: Using ethnographic and mobile methods to understand encounters between social workers, children and families. British Journal of Social Work. 1–16.
11.
FergusonH (2016) How children become invisible in child protection work: Findings from research into day-to-day social work practice. British Journal of Social Work. 1100–1117.
12.
FroggettLBriggsS (2012) Practice-near and practice-distant methods in human services. Journal of Research Practice12(2): 1–17.
13.
FroggettLHollwayW (2010) Psychosocia research analysis and scenic understanding. Psychoanalysis, Culture and Society15(3): 281–301.
14.
FroggettLConroyMManleyJ (2014) Between art and social science: Scenic composition as methodological device. Forum: Qualitative Social Research15(3): 1–29.
15.
GunaratnamY (2013) Death and the Migrant: Bodies, Borders and Belonging, London: Bloomsbury.
HallTSmithR (forthcoming) Seeing the need: Urban outreach as sensory walking. In: BatesCRhys-TaylorA (eds) Walking Through Social Research, London: Routledge.
19.
HannamKShellerMUrryJ (2006) Mobilities, immobilities and moorings. Mobilities1: 1–22.
20.
HollwayW (2011) Psycho-social writing from data. Journal of Psychosocial Studies5(1): 92–101.
IngoldT (2004) Culture on the ground: The world perceived through the feet’. Journal of Material Culture9(3): 315–340.
23.
IngoldT (2011) Being Alive: Essays on Movement, Knowledge and Description, London: Routledge.
24.
IngoldTKurtillaT (2000) Perceiving the environment in Finnish Lapland. Body and Society6(3/4): 183–196.
25.
JeyasinghamD (2014) The production of space in children’s social work: Insights from Henri Lefervre’s spatial dialectics. British Journal of Social Work. 1–16.
26.
LawJUrryJ (2004) Enacting the social. Economy and Society33(3): 390–410.
27.
LeighJ (2014) A tale of the unexpected: Managing an insider dilemma by adopting the role of outsider in another setting. Qualitative Research. 428–441. Epub ahead of print 5 April 2013.
RoyAHughesJFroggettL (2015) Using mobile methods to explore the lives of marginalised Young Men in Manchester. In: HardwickLSmithRWorsleyA (eds) Innovations in Social Work Research, London: Jessica Kingsley P.
31.
ShellerMUrryJ (2006) The new mobilities paradigm. Environment and Planning38: 207–226.
32.
SilvermanD (2007) A Very Short, Fairly Interesting and Reasonably Cheap Book About Qualitative Research, London: Sage.
33.
Skotte PS (2016) Colligation in child welfare work: Decision-making in the case on a tipping point. Qualitative Social Work, Epub ahead of print 14 June 2016. DOI: 10.1177/1473325016654558.
34.
StewartK (2007) Ordinary Affects, Durham: Duke University Press.