University of California Publications in Geography
Author: University of California, Berkeley
Publisher:
Published: 1913
Total Pages: 163
ISBN-13: 9780520091498
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Author: University of California, Berkeley
Publisher:
Published: 1913
Total Pages: 163
ISBN-13: 9780520091498
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Carl Ortwin Sauer
Publisher: Univ of California Press
Published: 1969
Total Pages: 444
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Adam M. Romero
Publisher: Univ of California Press
Published: 2021-11-16
Total Pages: 270
ISBN-13: 0520381556
DOWNLOAD EBOOKArsenic and old waste -- Commercializing chemical warfare -- Manufacturing petrotoxicty -- Public-private partnerships -- From oil well to farm.
Author: Brian J. Godfrey
Publisher:
Published: 1988
Total Pages: 260
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKEthnic and nonconformist communities, despite their frequent proximity, seldom are analyzed as interlocking elements of the metropolitan core. In this comparative study of San Francisco neighborhoods, Brian Godfrey contrasts the formation of ethnic enclaves by European, Asian, Black, and Hispanic groups with the emergence of Bohemian, counter-cultural, and gay communities. He focuses especially closely on Latin American immigration into the Mission District and gentrification in the Haight-Ashbury. To explain the historical geography of such inner-city neighborhoods, the author proposes alternate sequences of community evolution, based on the interplay of social class and subcultural forces. He shows how both ethnic and nontraditional minority communities tend to form initially in declining central neighborhoods, with their divergent successional processes reflecting characteristic differences in social mobility and cultural cohesion.
Author: Kay Anderson
Publisher: SAGE
Published: 2003
Total Pages: 612
ISBN-13: 9780761969259
DOWNLOAD EBOOK"The editors of this genuinely brilliant book seem to dare the reader to argue with them from the first page... I would encourage everyone interested in cultural geography, or in the cultural turn within a whole set of human geogrphies, to do likewise." --ANNALS OF THE ASSOCIATION OF AMERICAN GEOGRAPHERS "A richly plural and impassioned re-presentation of cultural geography that eschews everything in the way of boundary drawing and fixity. A re-visioning of the field as "a set of engagements with the world," it contains a vibrant atlas of ever shifting possibilities. Throbbing with commitment, and un-disciplined in the most positive sense of that term, it is exactly what a handbook ought to be." --Professor Allan Pred Department of Geography, University of California at Berkeley Ten sections, with a detailed editorial introduction, the Handbook of Cultural Geography presents a comprehensive statement of the relation between the cultural imagination and the geographical imagination. Emphasising the intellectual diversity of the discipline, the Handbook is a textured overview that presents a state-of-the-art assessment of the key questions informing cultural geography, while also looking at resonances between cultural geography and other disciplines.
Author: Kristian Karlo Saguin
Publisher: Univ of California Press
Published: 2022-05-31
Total Pages: 215
ISBN-13: 0520382641
DOWNLOAD EBOOKLaguna Lake, the largest lake in the Philippines, supplies Manila's dense urban region with fish and water while operating as a sink for its stormflows and wastes. Transforming the lake to deliver these multiple urban ecological functions, however, has generated resource conflicts and contradictions that unfold unevenly across space. In Urban Ecologies on the Edge, Kristian Karlo Saguin tracks the politics of resource flows and unpacks the narratives of Laguna Lake as Manila's resource frontier. Provisioning the city and keeping it safe from floods are both frontier-making processes that bring together contested socioecological imaginaries, practices, and relations. Combining fieldwork and historical accounts, Saguin demonstrates how people—powerful and marginalized—interact with the state and the environment to produce the unequal landscapes of urbanization at and beyond the city's edge.
Author: University of California, Berkeley
Publisher:
Published: 1917
Total Pages: 666
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: John A Agnew
Publisher: SAGE Publications
Published: 2011-03-04
Total Pages: 657
ISBN-13: 1412910811
DOWNLOAD EBOOKBroad in scope and edited by two massive names in geography, this is a critical exploration of how the field has emerged and fared over the course of its modern institutionalization.
Author: Megan Ybarra
Publisher: Univ of California Press
Published: 2018
Total Pages: 216
ISBN-13: 0520295188
DOWNLOAD EBOOK"Green Wars challenges international conservation efforts, revealing through in-depth case studies how "saving" the Maya Forest facilitates racialized dispossession. Megan Ybarra brings Guatemala's 36-year civil war into the perspective of a longer history of 200 years of settler colonialism to show how conservation works to make Q'eqchi's into immigrants on their own territory. Even as the post-war state calls on them to claim rights as individual citizens, Q'eqchi's seek survival as a people. Her analysis reveals that Q'eqchi's both appeal to the nation-state and engage in relationships of mutual recognition with other Indigenous peoples -- and the land itself -- in their calls for a material decolonization."--Provided by publisher.
Author: Robert Ronald Reed
Publisher:
Published: 1978
Total Pages: 129
ISBN-13: 9780520095793
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