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         Ohio Cities & Communities Geography:     more detail
  1. Urban land use for transport systems and city shapes.: An article from: Geographical Analysis by Francesca Medda, Peter Nijkamp, et all 2003-01-01
  2. Beyond Edge Cities (Garland Reference Library of Social Science) by Richard Bingham, 1997-10-01

21. Sustainable Communities - Centre For Sustainable Community Development
he is conducting research in the area of sustainable cities and communities . Greg Halseth is an Associate Professor in the geography Program at the
http://www.sfu.ca/cscd/who_we_are.htm

CSCD Home

What We Do
Who We Are Towards Sustainable Communities ...
Innovation

Who We Are
Centre Director Mark Roseland, PhD MCIP Centre Director Brief Bio
Centre Associates, Researchers, and Program Director Stephen Ameyaw , PhD Reseach Associate Brief Bio Melanie Conn, MSW Program Director, Certificate for CED Professionals Brief Bio Sean Connelly, MA Researcher Brief Bio Greg Halseth, PhD Research Associate Brief Bio David Hendrickson, M.A. Researcher Brief Bio Chris Lindberg Researcher Brief Bio Sean Markey, PhD Adjunct Professor Jane Martin, MBA Project Coordinator , Project in Mexico Brief Bio Research Associate Brief Bio Christina Meiwald, PhD

22. 1998
Urban Cultural geography Country Cousin Comes to the City. James O. Wheeler Metropolitan Change Elasticity, Housing, and Policy in ohio cities
http://www.bellpub.com/ug/1998/d98tc.htm

Home
Contact Us Price List Get Acrobat ...
Online Sample Issue

Volume 19, 1998 Issue:
No. 1, January 1-February 14, 1998
Editorial Mapphobia in Geography? 1980-1996 James O. Wheeler
Vol. 19, No. 1: 1-5 Legal Geographies Series Anti-Homeless Laws and Public Space: I. Begging and the First Amendment Don Mitchell
Vol. 19, No. 1: 6-11 Articles Job Linkages in Inner-City Phoenix Elizabeth K. Burns and Patricia Gober
Vol. 19, No. 1: 12-23 Geographical Patterns of Interstate Banking: A Snapshot of the U.S. Metropolitan System in the Early 1990s Bin Zhou
Vol. 19, No. 1: 24-48 Diffusion of Urban Models: A Case Study Chauncy D. Harris
Vol. 19, No. 1: 49-67 Research Note Understanding the Civic Activities of the Residents of Inner-City Neighborhoods: Two Case Studies Michael Greenberg Vol. 19, No. 1: 68-76 Measuring Multiethnic Spatial Segregation David W. S. Wong Vol. 19, No. 1: 77-87 Book Reviews Geography and Social Justice (David M. Smith) Gordon L. Clark

23. Celebration 2005 History & Geography Department
Abstract The ohio river has a history of flooding spanning hundreds of years.The impact of these floods are devastating to the surrounding cities and
http://celebration.nku.edu/2005/history2005.html
Nunn Drive ~ Highland Heights, KY
Tel: (859) 572 - 5136 ~ Fax: (859) 572 - 6188 ~ E-mail: celebration@nku.edu 2005 Celebration Registration Schedule ... NKU Home
Alphabetical by first Faculty Sponsor's Last Name Oral
Timothy Trenkamp
Prelude to War: President McKinley and the Cuban Crisis
April 20, 2005, 3:15pm - 5:00pm, LA 406
Abstract: When McKinley was inaugurated on March 4, 1897 the issue of Spain's treatment of its Cuban colony was unresolved. The occupation of Cuba by the Spanish and treatment of the Cubans had been a concern of the United States since the Grant administration. This paper examines the events leading up to the declaration of war during the first year of the McKinley's administration. These include the Woodford Mission to Madrid, the diplomacy of Secretary Sherman, publication of the de Lome letter, and the explosion of the USS Maine in Havana Harbor that sent the Congress into a frenzy and the nation to war. The Spanish-American War resulted in the removal of the last European power with a major foothold in the Western Hemisphere and the expansion into the Pacific Ocean by the United States. Honors, Oral

24. Population Estimates Geography
In one state (ohio), a multicounty place may be treated differently from county to Incorporated places include cities, towns (except in New England,
http://www.census.gov/popest/geographic/
population estimates Skip main navigation menu (ALT+9)
  • Estimates Data Analysis Skip breadcrumb menu (ALT+8)
    geographic terms and definitions
    For what geographic areas does the Census Bureau produce estimates?
    The Census Bureau produces population estimates for the Nation, the States, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, counties and equivalents, incorporated places, minor civil divisions, consolidated cities, census regions and divisions, and metropolitan areas. Census Regions and Divisions Counties (and equivalents) Minor Civil Divisions Legally defined county subdivisions are referred to as minor civil divisions (MCDs.) MCDs are the primary divisions of a county. They comprise both governmentally functioning entities that is, those with elected officials who provide services and raise revenues and nonfunctioning entities that exist primarily for administrative purposes, such as election districts. Twenty-eight states and Puerto Rico have MCDs. However, the MCDs function as general purpose governmental units in all or part of only twenty states. Within these twenty states, PEP produces estimates for all governmentally functioning MCDs and for nonfunctioning MCDs in counties that contain at least one functioning MCD.

25. UWEC Geography 111 Vogeler - Moscow Place Names
All are venerable cities of Europe. All have been used as placenames A Parisis in New York, Texas, and ohio. An Athens is in Georgia and in ohio.
http://www.uwec.edu/geography/Ivogeler/w111/moscow.htm
Moscow Place Names Here is an article which tries to explain why places in the US were called Moscow . You can see that it is a very complicated task. I don't expect you to provide this level of details in Project #2, but do try to make some sense of the data. Enjoy the place name assignment. U.S. Places Called Moscow
by
Irina Vasiliev, Department of Geography, Syracuse University This paper examines naming patterns for the Moscows in the United States . Since 1800, 49 populated places have been named Moscow in the United States. Many have disappeared or changed their names. Today, there are 27. Not all of the Moscows are connected to each other. Some belong to groups that relate to a central notion from which spokes radiate to each place. Others are linked by a form of place-name genealogy by which a linear structure describes the relationships among the Moscow points. For others, the links are unknown, but, even for these, the name Moscow summons the impression of a cultured, mature city, characteristics entirely lacking in the new Moscows of the l800s in the interior of the United States. Napoleon's Influence Moscows of American Origin When the village became large enough to have a post office, the name had to be changed because another Greenville, in Texas, already had a post office. So, in memory of David Green's home in Tennessee, the post office was named Moscow (Heritage 1978). The follow-the-dot pattern is fragmented for these transferred Moscows one or two-maybe three-places linked to each other at a time. Not a very cohesive group as a single unit but certainly a group of similar stories deserving of a classification category of their invoking the image of Moscow of the rest of the Moscows, a large group was named simply for the Russian city. Often in the l9th century, exotic names were popular as many new communities popped up across the country. Post office regulations required that there be only one of each place name in a state (Stewart 1970).

26. AllRefer.com - Cleveland, Cities, United States, United States (U.S. Political G
Related Category US Political geography. Cleveland. 1 City (1990 pop. ohio s second largest city and the center of the state s largest metropolitan
http://reference.allrefer.com/encyclopedia/C/ClevelanUS.html
AllRefer Channels :: Health Yellow Pages Reference Weather September 24, 2005 Medicine People Places History ... Maps Web AllRefer.com You are here : AllRefer.com Reference Encyclopedia U.S. Political Geography ... Cleveland, cities, United States
By Alphabet : Encyclopedia A-Z C
Cleveland, cities, United States, U.S. Political Geography
Related Category: U.S. Political Geography Cleveland. City (1990 pop. 505,616), seat of Cuyahoga co., NE Ohio, on Lake Erie at the mouth of the Cuyahoga River; laid out (1796) by Moses Cleaveland , chartered as a city 1836. Ohio's second largest city and the center of the state's largest metropolitan area, it is an ore port and a Great Lakes shipping point. In spite of a dramatic decline in manufacturing, Cleveland remains to some extent dependent on heavy industry, including steel milling and the manufacture of engines, guided missiles, and space vehicles. There are numerous research firms; the National Aeronautics and Space Administration has a large center here, and the laboratory headquarters of the General Electric Company is in nearby Nela Park. Cleveland also houses some of the nation's largest law firms. The health care industry is the fastest growing segment of Cleveland's economy, largely because of the presence of the Cleveland Clinic, a world-famous research and treatment facility and the city's largest employer. Cleveland is the seat of Case Western Reserve Univ., Cleveland State Univ., John Carroll Univ., Notre Dame College, the Cleveland Institute of Art, the Cleveland Institute of Music, and several other colleges and seminaries. Visitors are drawn to the Mall (civic center); the Terminal Tower; the Rock-and-Roll Hall of Fame; the Western Reserve Historical Society Museum; the museum of natural history, with a planetarium; Wade Park, with the Cleveland Museum of Art and the Fine Arts Garden; Rockefeller Park, enclosing the Shakespeare and Cultural Gardens; Severance Hall, where concerts of the internationally famous

27. DCHC Curriculum Units 3 - Right Frame
I am sure other communities have Sister cities and would like more information about communities and geography. Learning Goals State Goal 16 16 C, D
http://images.library.uiuc.edu/projects/dchc/units3-rightframe.htm
How we learn about Communities
Learning Goals

State Goal 14 - 14 A, C, D, E

State Goal 15 - 15 A, E, D

Unit 1: What Is A Community? (one - two weeks)
  • The students learn to describe some features of a community and to explain what different people in a community do. (Any speaker lists about current community jobs that make the community run would be a great resource - even just job titles so that teachers could make contact). List some ways that early settlers worked together. (Jobs of the early settlers would be helpful so that we could compare how they have changed today). The book wants students to describe how changes in transportation changed in Indianapolis. (It would be more helpful if they could learn about the transportation changes in their own community). Students learn some reasons that communities might form links to one another. They then compare the cultures of one community with the culture of another. (We have three sister cities in this area from Russia, England, and Japan - it would be nice to have a listing of things to compare. I am sure other communities have Sister Cities and would like more information about them also). The feature focus of this unit is to help students construct and illustrate ways to show knowledge of communities and to classify date in categories for map keys. (Any old maps of the area and keys so the children can compare with the progress of the communities today would be helpful)
  • 28. Cleveland.com: Everything Cleveland
    But anyone hoping to fathom ohio must examine a more complex geography. ohio is home to more major cities, four, than any state but Texas and California
    http://www.cleveland.com/fiveohios/plaindealer/index.ssf?/fiveohios/more/1088938

    29. Sustainable Communities Leadership Program
    In May 2001, Nate earned his Master s in geography and Urban Planning from theUniversity Project Title Gateway cities Sustainable communities Project,
    http://www.eco.org/sclp/alumni/2001fellows.html
    Alumni - 2001 Fellows
    ALI Ger
    Masters in Environmental Science and Management,
    University of California, Santa Barbara
    aligerger@hotmail.com
    Ali is driven by the interconnectedness throughout nature. He is interested in many aspects of environmental sustainability, especially wetland and coastal ecology. Ali is currently focused on the gap between science and effective policy; however, in the future, he would like to work in other equally important issues such as globalization and the environment. Project Title : San Francisco Bay
    Restoration Program,
    Audubon Society
    Project Description : The mission of Audubon's San Francisco Bay Restoration Program is to ensure thriving fish and widlife populations, clean water, and a high quality of life for this and future generations. Audubon is working on a three-pronged strategy of science, policy and place-based conservation education to achieve this goal. Ali worked on the first phase of the program focused on restoring 100,000 acres of Bay wetlands and associated habitats. ANGELA McGregor
    B.A. in Geography

    30. Three: What's Needed: The Policy Arena
    regardless of income or geography, public interest advocates must play an for establishment of 14 community computing centers in seven ohio cities
    http://www.benton.org/publibrary/losing-ground/three.html
    Contents
    Intro

    The Gap

    Barriers

    What's Needed
    What's Working

    Resources
    What's Needed: The Policy Arena Government policies will go a long way toward determining whether new information technologies widen or narrow social divisions. To ensure that the digital future brings opportunity for everybody, regardless of income or geography, public interest advocates must play an active role in the continuing debate over telecommunications policy. Universal Service The debate over universal service is far from over. The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) must periodically review what communications services should be covered by universal service policies. At the same time, states are free to establish their own definitions that go beyond federal conventions. Although the definition currently is drawn rather tightly, public interest advocates foresee a day when some services that currently aren't eligible for universal service support will be recognized as essential. For instance, Maxine Rockoff, a founder of the Information Technology Initiative at United Neighborhood Houses of New York, argues that our definition of universal service should be expanded to include at least three new components: access to a computer with a World Wide Web browser, a personal Internet email address, and the capability to make one's own information available via the Web. At the moment, public officials haven't been willing to go as far as Rockoff recommends. Even the states that have established the most expansive definitions have not required discounted rates for much beyond basic telephone service; they simply have defined basic services to include touch-tone dialing, access to long-distance carriers, and 911 services. Wisconsin has concluded that advanced services should be accessible in some form, though it doesn't require that they be provided to every home or be subsidized as substantially as basic services. California lawmakers recognize community organizations as eligible for universal service support, while Louisiana moved to include community networks as eligible for universal service discounts.

    31. ICH E-newsletter, October 20, 2004
    Maybe it s the history and geography that make a difference. IN THE COUNTIESAND cities NEW STARK COUNTY, ohio, INTERAGENCY COUNCIL ON HOMELESSNESS
    http://www.ich.gov/newsletter/archive/10-20-04_e-newsletter.htm
    The United States Interagency Council on Homelessness
    e-newsletter Reporting on Innovative Solutions to End Homelessness In this issue...
  • IN THE COUNTIES AND CITIES: "CAN DO" JURISDICTIONS OF DAYTON AND MONTGOMERY COUNTY, OHIO, UNVEIL 10-YEAR PLAN LEADERSHIP TEAM
  • IN THE COUNTIES AND CITIES: NEW STARK COUNTY, OHIO, INTERAGENCY COUNCIL ON HOMELESSNESS REFLECTS REGIONAL PARTNERSHIP TO END CHRONIC HOMELESSNESS
  • IN THE COUNTIES AND CITIES: ALLEGHENY COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA, COMMUNITIES THINK OUTSIDE THE BOX TO DEVELOP 10-YEAR PLAN
  • IN THE STATES: "NORTH TO THE FUTURE" STATE CONVENES FIRST INTERIOR SUMMIT ON HOMELESSNESS WITH INTERGOVERNMENTAL PARTNERS ...
  • FEDERAL SURPLUS PROPERTY: RESOURCES TO HELP COMMUNITIES END HOMELESSNESS
  • Partners In a Vision
    IN THE COUNTIES AND CITIES: "CAN DO" JURISDICTIONS OF DAYTON AND MONTGOMERY COUNTY, OHIO, UNVEIL 10-YEAR PLAN LEADERSHIP TEAM Maybe it's the history and geography that make a difference. Dayton, Ohio, is recognized as a home to innovation, with more patents per capita than any other city in the nation. Montgomery County, Ohio, the home of the Wright Brothers, is called the "Birthplace of Aviation." Last week jurisdictional leaders maintained their historic entrepreneurial and innovative spirit as they joined to kickoff the development of a 10-Year Plan to End Chronic Homelessness and name a Leadership Team to spearhead the regional initiative. Intergovernmental and regional partnership were on display, as Dayton Mayor Rhine McLin and Montgomery County Commission President Vicki Pegg were joined by United States Interagency Council on Homelessness Executive Director Philip Mangano, who was invited to keynote the event.

    32. Projects
    GIS is active in CUPA projects, working with local communities who are The OHRN is engaged in the analysis of dynamics that shape ohio cities and
    http://www.wright.edu/cupa/projects.htm
    HOME Mission History Projects ... People R E G I O N A L I S S U E S The State of Ohio Regions: Executive Report Crime Demographics Employment Change Health Land Use Ohio Urbanization: 1950 - 1990 C O M M U N I T Y B U I L D I N G Dayton Development Outreach Project (DCOP) Neighborhood Development Program (NEP) R E S O U R C E D E V E L O P M E N T Economic Development Business Retention and Expansion Reports Series
    City of Dayton Citizens Perception Survey

    City of Dayton Office of Cultural Affairs

    City of Springfield-Strategic Plan
    ...
    Welcome House
    Geographic Information System Neighborhood Development Corp
    St. Elizabeth Community Health Assessment

    The Technology Assistance Panel (TAP)

    Wellfield Protection Program
    ...
    Wright State School of Medicine
    Housing Ohio Housing Research Network
    Urban University Neighborhood Network
    Other CUPA Activities Applied Research Projects
    Information Sharing
    Training Internships
    Economic Development
    Business Retention and Expansion Reports Series
    To the top
    City of Dayton Citizens Perception Survey
    The City of Dayton contracted with the Center to design, implement, and analyze a telephone survey of City of Dayton residents. CUPA provided the City with an in-depth study design that included analysis at the Priority Board level. In addition, great emphasis was placed on the analysis of data in areas which the City has a deep interest. Rather than taking a scattergun approach to the analyses, more targeted, sophisticated analyses were provided. Over 1800 survey were completed using the CATI system and data analysis is being performed using SPSS. The final report is being produced in PageMaker and is a two-volume set.

    33. Department Of Geography At The Ohio State University
    An Introduction to The Economic And Social geography of Columbus, ohio The American Pottery Industry And The City of East Liverpool A Study of A
    http://www.geography.ohio-state.edu/ALUMNI/ALUMNIMA.HTML
    Home People Class Resources About Us ... Site Map
    Geography M.A. Recipient List Jump to:
    Year Last Name First Name Degree Advisor Thesis/Dissertation Title Blanchard Forest Ira MA C.C. Huntington An Introduction to The Economic And Social Geography of Columbus, Ohio Reyer Karl D. MA C.C. Huntington Free Ports: The Importance of Geographical Factors in Determining Their Successful Operation, With Special Reference to The Establishment of Free Ports in The United States Sharrock Rolla Russell MA E. Van Cleef The Trade of The United States in The Pacific And The Geographic Factors Influencing It Treachey Esther G. MA E. Van Cleef Geographic Factors in Island Cultures Fischer Harold MA C.C. Huntington Some Aspects of the Industrial Geography of Pennsylvania Lemert Benjamin F. MA E. Van Cleef The Urban Geography of Zanesville Logsdon Clement S. MA C.C. Huntington The Geographical Distribution of The Foreign Born Population of The United States (Asiatics Excluded) Varvel (Russell) Carl Dudley MA E. Van Cleef

    34. Valley City, Ohio OH, Profile (Medina County) - Hotels, Festivals, Genealogy, Ne
    Valley City, ohio OH, community profile, with detailed info on demographics, Geocaching geography. Confluence of latitude longitude near Valley City
    http://www.epodunk.com/cgi-bin/genInfo.php?locIndex=17545

    35. DC United - Community - Sportinggeo
    DC United and Sporting geography have partnered to provide the DC United Soccer Travel with them by answering these questions about the cities DC United
    http://dcunited.mlsnet.com/MLS/dcu/load.jsp?section=community&content=sportingge

    36. Shaker Heights, Ohio - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
    Shaker Heights is a city located in Cuyahoga County, ohio. geography.Location of Shaker Heights, ohio. Shaker Heights is located at 41°28 35 North,
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shaker_Heights,_Ohio
    Shaker Heights, Ohio
    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
    Shaker Heights is a city located in Cuyahoga County, Ohio . As of the census, the city had a total population of 29,405.
    Contents
    edit
    Geography
    Shaker Heights is located at 41°28'35" North, 81°33'6" West (41.476502, -81.551620) According to the United States Census Bureau , the city has a total area of 16.4 km² mi² ). 16.3 km² (6.3 mi²) of it is land and 0.1 km² (0.04 mi²) of it is water. The total area is 0.63% water. edit
    Demographics
    As of the census of , there are 29,405 people, 12,220 households, and 8,040 families residing in the city. The population density is 1,807.9/km² (4,685.0/mi²). There are 12,982 housing units at an average density of 798.1/km² (2,068.4/mi²). The racial makeup of the city is 59.94% White African American Native American Asian ... Pacific Islander , 0.50% from other races , and 2.22% from two or more races. 1.15% of the population are Hispanic or Latino of any race. There are 12,220 households out of which 32.1% have children under the age of 18 living with them, 50.1% are

    37. Panoramic Maps Collections
    The Library of Congress, geography and Map Division holds panoramic maps done by After 1910, Fowler prepared panoramic maps of cities in Connecticut,
    http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/pmhtml/panart.html
    American Panoramic Artists and Publishers
    Albert Ruger Thadeus Mortimer Fowler Oakley H. Bailey Lucien R. Burleigh ... Publishers of Panoramic Maps Albert Ruger (1829-1899) By 1866, Ruger had settled in Battle Creek, Michigan, where he began his prolific panoramic mapping career by sketching Michigan cities. Full descriptions of many Ruger views of Michigan cities are contained in John Cumming's A Preliminary Checklist of 19th Century Lithographs of Michigan Cities and Towns . Urban communities in some twenty-two states and Canada, ranging from New Hampshire to Minnesota and south to Georgia and Alabama, were sketched by Ruger. He continued his activity into the 1890s, moving his business to Chicago, Madison, and St. Louis as he sought new markets. In the late 1860s, Ruger formed a partnership with J. J. Stoner of Madison, Wisconsin, and together they published numerous city panoramas. Ruger was particularly productive during the 1860s; in 1869 alone, he produced more than sixty panoramic maps. In addition to city plans, he drew views of university campuses, among them Notre Dame, Shurtleff College, and the University of Michigan. Albert Ruger died in Akron, Ohio, on November 12, 1899. Thaddeus Mortimer Fowler (1842-1922) The Boston Public Library has six views drawn and published by Fowler in the 1870s. During that decade, he was employed as an artist by J. J. Stoner. Fowler moved from Madison around 1880 to northern New Jersey, first to the Oranges and later to Asbury Park. A panoramic map of Stewart, Ohio, which appears in D. J. Lake's

    38. Delaware, Ohio Recreational Trails GIS Collaboration
    The City Of Delaware (ohio) Recreation Department, community members, faculty in the ohio Wesleyan University Department of Geology and geography have
    http://go.owu.edu/~jbkrygie/krygier_html/deltrails/deltrails_top.html
    Delaware Ohio Recreational Trails GIS Collaboration John Krygier
    Department of Geology and Geography

    Ohio Wesleyan University

    jbkrygie@owu.edu

    Krygier WWW Pages

      Article about the trails collaboration in the Delaware (Ohio) Gazette Friday November 22, 2002.

    Urban greenways and recreational paths have become a vital part of the development plans of many cities, offering an alternative means of transportation as well as recreational opportunities and the green, open spaces that many people want in their neighborhoods. The City Of Delaware (Ohio) Recreation Department, community members, and students and faculty in the Ohio Wesleyan University Department of Geology and Geography have collaborated to develop a detailed proposal for a recreational path system for the City of Delaware. The project involves researching, mapping, and analyzing (using Geographic Information Systems and GPS) a system of bicycle paths that connect neighborhoods, schools, commercial areas, and recreational facilities throughout the city. The City of Delaware Recreational Trails Project has benefited all involved: students are learning GIS and mapping technologies in a 'real-world' application, as well as learning about the trails and urban planning process in general. City residents have received technical and research assistance from OWU faculty and students, enabling them to complete their vision for a comprehensive system of Recreational Trails in the City of Delaware. Finally, the City of Delaware has gained a detailed plan for a project seen as having a very important and positive impact on the quality of life in the City of Delaware.

    39. GEOGRAPHY: Citizenship [Community]
    community. research. Michael Brown. 1999. Reconceptualizing public and geography 277 The geography of cities. geography 230 Urbanization in the
    http://depts.washington.edu/geog/citizen/community.html
    @import "../geog.css"; Your browser does not support script community research Michael Brown. 1999. "Reconceptualizing public and private in urban regime theory: the case of AIDS politics, International Journal of Urban and Regional Research Katharyne Mitchell. 1999. Hong Kong Immigrants and the Question of Democracy: Contemporary Struggles over Urban Politics in Vancouver, B.C. In Hong Kong and the Chinese Diaspora at the End of the 20th Century . Edited by G. Hamilton. Seattle: University of Washington Press. 25 manuscript pages. Nayna Jhaveri. 1999. "Reconfigurations of the commons: Equity, Property Regimes and Resources use in the Wiangshan mountains, China" Presented at the conference on Nature, Society and History: Long-Term Dynamics of social metabolism held in October in Vienna at the Institute for Interdisciplinary studies of Austrian Universities. Nick Chrisman, 1997-99. Member, Mapping Sciences Committee, National Research Council J.W. Harrington. 1998. "Becoming..." Keynote address, Early Identification Program spring conference, University of Washington, 20 May. Eleonore Kofman and Kim England (1997) "Citizenship and international migration: Taking account of gender, sexuality, and 'race',"

    40. GEOGRAPHY: People & Community Resources [Faculty]
    Ph.D., ohio State, 1988, Associate Professor geography of food and agriculture;environmental and landscape change; development theory; Africa
    http://depts.washington.edu/geog/community/faculty.html
    @import "../geog.css"; Your browser does not support script faculty
    staff

    graduate students

    geography faculty
    William B. Beyers
    Ph.D., Washington , 1967, Professor regional science; economic geography; geography of producer services; regional analysis; geography of the Pacific Northwest beyers@u.washington.edu Michael P. Brown
    Ph.D., British Columbia , 1994, Associate Professor local, political, and cultural geography; sexuality; health geography; history of geography thought; the home michaelb@u.washington.edu Kam Wing Chan
    Ph.D., Toronto , 1988, Professor urban and economic development; migration; China kwchan@u.washington.edu Mark Ellis
    (On Leave 2005-06) Ph.D., Indiana , 1988, Professor immigration, race and ethnicity, labor markets ellism@u.washington.edu

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