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GENDER IN GEOGRAPHY BIBLIOGRAPHY
D

Dalby, S. 1990. Creating the Second Cold War. London: Pinter.

Dalby, S. 1993. The ‘Kiwi disease’: Geopolitical discourse in Aotearoa/New Zealand and the South Pacific. Political Geography 12:437-56.

Daly, Brenda O. and Reddy, Maureen T. 1991. Narrating Mothers: Theorizing Maternal Subjectivities. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press.

Daniels, Cynthia R. 1997. Between fathers and fetuses: The social construction of male reproduction and the politics of fetal harm. Signs 22(3) Spring.

Datta, Kavita and Cathy Mcllwaine. 2000. 'Empowered leaders?' Perspectives on women heading households in Latin America and Southern Africa. Gender and Development 8(3): 40-49.

David, Dieirdre. 1995. Rule Britannia: Women, Empire, and Victorian Writing. Ithaca and London: Cornell University Press.

David, Dierdre. 1987. Intellectual Women and Victorian Patriarchy. London: Macmillan.

Davidson, Joyce. 2001. Pregnant pauses: agoraphobic embodiment and the limits of (im)pregnability. Gender, Place and Culture 8(3): 283-97.

Davidson, Joyce and Liz Bondi. 2004. Spatialising affect, affecting space: Introducing emotional geographies. Gender Place and Culture 11: 373-374.

Davidson, Joyce, Liz Bondi and Mick Smith, eds. 2005. Emotional Geographies.  Aldershot, Hampshire: Ashgate Press.

Davies, B. 1991. The concept of agency: A feminist post-structuralist analysis. Social Analysis 30: 42-53.

Davis, D.L. 1993. When men become ‘women’: Gender antagonism and the changing sexual geography of work in Newfoundland. Sex Roles 29(7-8): 457-.

Davis, Malia. 1998. Philosophy meets practice: A critique of ecofeminism through the voices of three Chicana activists. In Devon Peña, ed., Chicano Culture, Ecology, Politics. Tucson: University of Arizona Press.

Davis, N., ed. 1993. Prostitution: An International Handbook on Trends, Problems, and Policies. Westport, CT: Greenwood.

Dawson, W. and J. Turner. 1989. When she goes to work she stays at home: Women, new technology and home-based work. Women’s Research and Employment Initiatives Program, Department of Employment, Education and Training, Australian Government Publishing Service, Canberra.

Day, K. 2001. Constructing masculinity and women's fear in public space in Irvine, California. Gender, Place and Culture 8(2): 109-128.

Day, K. 2000. The ethic of care and women’s experiences of public space. Journal of Environmental Psychology 20:103-124.

Day, K. 2000. Strangers in the night? Women’s fear of sexual assault on urban college campuses. Journal of Architectural and Planning Research 16(4): 289-312.

Day, K. 1999. Introducing gender to the critique of privatized public space. Journal of Urban Design 4(2): 155-178.

Day, K. 1999. Embassies and sanctuaries: Race and women’s fear and welcome in privatized public space. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 17(3): 307-328.

Day, K. 1997. Better safe than sorry? Consequences of sexual assault prevention for women in public space. Perspectives on Social Problems 9: 83-101.

Day, K. 1995. Assault prevention as social control: Women and sexual assault prevention on urban college campuses. Journal of Environmental Psychology 15: 261-281.

Day, K. 1994. Conceptualizing women’s fear of sexual assault on campus: A review of causes and recommendations for change. Environment and Behavior 26(6): 742-765.

DeBruin, Anne and Dupuis, Ann. 1995. Women and housing. Paper presented to the 1995 Conference of the New Zealand Geographical Society, Christchurch.

Deckha, Nitin. 2003. Insurgent urbanism in a railway quarter: Scalar citizenship at King's Cross, London. ACME: An International E-Journal for Critical Geographies 2(1): 33-55.

Delaney, Patricia and Shrader, Elizabeth. 2000. Gender and Post-Disaster Reconstruction: The Case of Hurricane Mitch in Honduras and Nicaragua. New York: World Bank.

De Lauretis, T. 1988. Displacing hegemonic discourses: reflections on feminist theory in the 1980s. Inscriptions 2: 127-144.

De Lauretis, T. 1990. Eccentric subjects: Feminist theory and historical consciousness. Feminist Studies 16: 115-150.

Derrer, Felix and Marina Richter. 2001. Un viaje de ida y vuelta. Gallegos en Suiza. Tiempo y Tierra. Autumn/Winter 2000/01 (11): 19-28.

Desbiens, Caroline. 1999. Feminist in Geography: Elsewhere, beyond and the politics of paradoxical space. Gender, Place and Culture 6(2): 179-185.

Deutsch, S. 1998. Women, difference, and the public terrain. Historical Geography 26: 83-91.

DeVault, M.L. 1990. Talking and listening from women’s standpoint: Feminist strategies for interviewing and analysis. Social Problems 37: 80-89.

Dias, Nelia. 1994. Looking at objects: Memory, knowledge in nineteenth-century ethnographic displays. In George Robertson, ed., Travellers’ Tales: Narratives of Home and Displacement. New York and London: Routledge.

Di Bartolo, L. 2001. The geography of reported domestic violence in Brisbane: a social justice perspective. Australian Geographer 32(3): 321-41.

Dickerson-Putman, J. 1994. Women, development, and stratification in the Eastern Highlands Province of Papua, New Guinea. Urban Anthropology 23(1): 13-38.

Doan, P. forthcoming. Queers in the American city: Transgendered perceptions of urban spaces. Gender, Place, and Culture 14(1)

Doan, P. 2006. Special section on gender and violence: Violence against transgendered people. Progressive Planning 167: 28-30. Available at: http://www.plannersnetwork.org/publications/mag_2006_2_spring.html

Doan, P. 2004. Are the transgendered the mine shaft canaries of urban areas? In Tom Angotti and Ann Forsyth, eds., Progressive Planning Reader, pp. 39-41. 2004.

Documents d’Analisi Geografica. 1994. No 26. A special issue devoted to Women, Work and Daily Life, including 29 papers and reports.

Dodds, Dinah and Allen-Thompson, Pam, eds. 1995. The Wall in My Backyard: East German Women in Transition. Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press.

Doderer, Yvonne P. 2003. Urbane Praktiken. Strategien und Raumproduktionen feministischer Frauenöffentlichkeit. Munester: Monsenstein & Vannerdat.

Dodson, B. 2000. Porous boundaries: Gender and migration in southern Africa. South African Geographical Journal 82(1): 40-6.

Doel, M. 1994. Deconstruction on the move: From libidinal economy to liminal materialism. Environment and Planning A 26: 1041-1060.

Doel, M. 1994. Writing difference. Environment and Planning A 26:1015-1020.

Dolan, C., M. Opondo, and S. Smith. 2003. Gender rights and participation in the Kenya cut-flower industry. Natural Resources Institute Report No. 2768, SSR Project No. R8077 2002-4.

Dolev, D. 2004. Academia and spatial control: The case of Hebrew University campus on Mount Scopus, Jeusalem. In H. Yacobi, ed., Constructing a Sense of Place: Architecture and the Zionist Discourse. Aldershot: Ashgate.

Dolhinow, Rebecca. 2006. Mexican women's activism in New Mexico colonias. In D. Mattingly and E. Hansen, eds., Women and Change at the U.S.-Mexico Border: Mobility, labor, and Activism, pp. 125-141. Tucson, Ariz.: University of Arizona Press.

Dolhinow, Rebecca. 2005. Caught in the middle: The state, NGOs, and the limits to grassroots activism along the U.S.-Mexico border. Antipode 37(3): 558-580.

Domosh, D. 2003. Toward a more fully reciprocal feminist inquiry. ACME: An International E-Journal for Critical Geographies 2(1): 107.

Domosh, M. 2002.  A ‘civilised' commerce: gender, ‘race and empire at the 1893 Chicago Exposition. Cultural Geographies 9(2): 181-201.

Domosh, Mona. 2001. The 'Women on New York': a fashionable moral geography. Environment and Planning D 19(5): 573-92.

Domosh, Mona. 2000. Unintentional transgressions and other reflections on the job search process. The Professional Geographer 52(4): 703-08.

Domosh, Mona. 1998. Geography and gender: Home, again? Progress in Human Geography 22(2): 276-82.

Domosh, Mona. 1998. Those ‘gorgeous incongruities’: Polite politics and public space in the streets of nineteenth century New York City. Annals of the Association of American Geographers 88(2): 209-26.

Domosh, Mona. 1997. With ‘stout boots and a stout heart’: Historical methodology and feminist geography. In John Paul Jones III, Heidi Nast, and Susan Roberts, eds., Thresholds in Feminist Geography. Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield.

Domosh, Mona. 1996. Feminism and Human Geography. In C. Earle, K. Matthewson, and M.S. Kenzer, eds., Concepts in Human Geography, 411-428. Lanham MD: Rowman and Littlefield.

Domosh, M. and J. Seager. 2001. Putting women in place. New York: Guildford.

Donaldson, Laura. 1992. Decolonizing Feminism: Race, Gender and Empire-Building. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press.

Donaldson, M. 1993. What is hegemonic masculinity? Theory and Society 22: 643-658.

Dowler, L. 2002. Till death us do part: masculinity, friendship and nationalism in Belfast. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 20(1): 53-72.

Dowler, L. and Sharp, J. 2001. A feminist geopolitics? (editorial for special issue) Space and Polity 5(3): 165-176.

Dowling, R. 2000. Cultures of mothering and car use in suburban Sydney: A preliminary investigation. Geoforum 31(3): 345-54.

Dowling, R. 1993. Femininity, place, and commodities: A retail case study. Antipode 25(4): 295-319.

Dowling, R. 1993. Home truths: recent feminist constructions. Urban Geography 14(5): 464-75.

Dowling, Robyn and McGuirk, Pauline. Gendered geographies in Australia, Aotearoa/New Zealand and the Asia-Pacific. Australian Geographer 29(3): 279-92.

Dowsett, G.W. 1993. I’ll show you mine if you’ll show me yours: Gay men, masculinity research, men’s studies, and sex. Theory and Society 22(5): 697-710.

Dreeuws, Desiree A. 1998. Taking up space: Transgender lived experience and metaphors of space and place. Unpublished Master's Thesis, Claremont Graduate University. Claremont, CA.

Driver, F. 1993. Power and Pauperism: The Workhouse System, 1834-1884. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Droogleever, J.F. 2001. Emancipatie, Vrije Tijd en Zord in de Vijfde Nota  (Emancipation, Leisure, and Reproductive Work in the Fifth National Framework on Spatial Planning). Rooilijn 34(4): 167-71.

Dumayne-Peaty, Lisa and Williams, Jane. Gender and Physical Geography in the U.K. Area 30(3): 197-206.

Duncan, J.S. 2002. Embodying colonialism: domination and resistance in 19th century Ceylonese coffee plantations. Journal of Historical Geography 28(3): 317-38.

Duncan, J. and Ley, D., eds. 1993. Place/culture/representation. London and New York: Routledge.

Duncan, Nancy, ed. 1996. Body Space: Destabilizing Geographies of Gender and Sexuality. New York: Routledge.

Duncan, Nancy. 1996. Renegotiating gender and sexuality in public and private spaces. In Nancy Duncan, ed., Body Space: Destabilizing Geographies Of Gender And Sexuality. New York and London: Routledge.

Duncan, N. and Sharp, J.P. 1993. Confronting representation(s). Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 11:473-486.

Duncan, S., Guest Editor. 1994. Environment and Planning A, vols. 26(8) and 26(9). Special double issue on The Diverse Worlds of European Patriarchy.

Duncan, S. 1994. Women’s and men’s lives and work in Sweden. Gender, Place and Culture 1(2): 261-68.

Duncan, S. and Pfau-Effinger, B. 2001. Gender, economy and culture in the European Union. London: Routledge.

Dunn, K.M., McGuirk, P.M., and Winchester, H.P.M. 1995. Symbolic reconstructions of Newcastle. Australian Geographical Studies.

Dwyer, Claire. 2000. Negotiating diasporic identities: Young British South Asian Muslim women. Women's Studies International Forum 23(4): 475-86.

Dwyer, Claire and Varley, Ann. 1996. Giving women a voice? Current debates about feminist research methods in geography. Bloomsbury Geographer 23: 34-41.

Dyck, I. 2003. Feminism and health geography: twin tracks or divergent agendas? Gender, Place and Culture 10(4): 361-68.

Dyck, Isabel. Whose Body? Whose Voice?: Contradictory Cultural Constructions in the Politics of Research. Atlantis 21: 54-62.

Dyck, I. 1998. Women with Disabilities and Everyday Geographies: Home Space and the Contested Body. In R.A. Kearns and W.M. Gesler, eds., Putting Health into Place: Landscapes, Identity, and Well-Being. Syracuse: Syracuse University Press.

Dyck, Isabel. 1997. Dialogue with difference: A tale of two studies. In John Paul Jones III, Heidi J. Nast, Susan M. Roberts, eds., Thresholds in Feminist Geography: Difference, Methodology, Representation. Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield.

Dyck, I. 1995. Hidden geographies: The changing lifeworlds of women with Multiple Sclerosis. Social Science and Medicine 40: 307-320.

Dyck, I. 1993. Ethnography: A feminist method? The Canadian Geographer 7: 52-57.

Dyck, I. 1992. Health and health care experiences of immigrant women: Questions of culture, context, and gender. In M.V. Hayes, L.T. Foster and H.D. Foster, eds., Community, Environment and Health. Western Geographical Series, 27: 231-56.

Dyck, I. and Dossa, P. (2007) Place, health and home: Gender and migration in the constitution of healthy space. Health & Place 13:691-701

Dyck, Isabel, Nancy Davis Lewis, and Sara McLafferty. 2001. Geographies of Women's Health. London: Routledge

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