Massey’s “A Global Sense of Place” offers one of the most influential redefinitions of place under conditions of global movement. Its iconic idea is that place need not be defensive, bounded or reactionary; it can be understood as an open constellation of social relations stretched across multiple scales. The theoretical contribution lies in rejecting the opposition between rooted local identity and abstract global flow. Place is not a stable container of community but a provisional articulation of trajectories, inequalities, histories and connections. Methodologically, Massey proceeds through conceptual critique, showing how time-space compression is experienced unevenly according to power, mobility and position. Its conceptual operation is relational place-making: locality becomes a meeting point of global relations rather than a refuge from them. The bridge to the wider field connects feminist geography, political economy, globalisation studies, migration, urban theory and cultural studies, making place both situated and outward-looking, materially grounded and politically open.