The interconnections and interdependence of race with other categories. The originator of this term, Crenshaw (1991) Stanford Law Rev. 43, 6, considers the various ways in which race and gender interact to shape the multiple dimensions of Black women’s employment experiences.
Wills (2008) Antipode 40, 1 believes that geography has real strength as a discipline for the study of intersectionality: ‘to understand the ways in which class intersects with other social cleavages, with very different e/affects.’ Understanding such intersectionality at the local level can help in mapping larger-scale trends in the geography of class and employment; see A. Ong (2006). See also Brown (2012) PHG 36, 4, 541.