Return to Index
GENDER IN GEOGRAPHY BIBLIOGRAPHY
N-O

Nagar, Richa. 2002. Footloose researchers, 'traveling' theories, and the politics of transnational feminist praxis. Gender, Place and Culture 9(2): 179-186.

Nagar, R. 2002. Viewpoint: Footloose researchers, ‘traveling' theories and the politics of transnational feminist practice. Gender, Place and Culture 9(2): 179-86.

Nagar, R. 2002. Women's theater and the redefinition of public, private, and politics in north India, ACME. An E-Journal for Critical Geographies 1: 55-72. (http:////www.acme-journal.org)

Nagar, Richa. 2000. 'I'd rather be rude than ruled': gender, place and communal politics among South Asian communities in Dar es Salaam. Women's Studies International Forum 23(5): 571-86.

Nagar, Richa. 2000. Mujhe Jawah Do! (Answer me!): women's grass-roots activism and social spaces in Chitrakoot (India). Gender, Place and Culture 7(4): 341-62.

Nagar, Richa. 2000. Religion, race and the debate over Mut'a in Dar es Salaam. Feminist Studies 26(3).

Nagar, Richa. 1998. Communal discourses, marriage, and the politics of gendered social boundaries among South Asian immigrants in Tanzania. Gender, Place and Culture 5(2): 117-139.

Nagar, Richa. 1997. Exploring methodological borderlands through oral narratives. In John Paul Jones III, Heidi Nast, and Susan Roberts, eds., Thresholds in Feminist Geography, pp. 203-224. Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield.

Nagar, Richa. 1997. The making of Hindu communal organizations, places and identities in postcolonial Dar es Salaam. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 15: 707-730.

Nagar, Richa. 1997. Communal places and the politics of multiple identities: The case of Tanzanian Asians. Ecumene: A Journal of Environment, Culture, Meaning 4(1): 3-26.

Nagar, Richa and Saraswati Raju. 2003. Women, NGOs and the contradictions of empowerment and disempowerment: A conversation. Anitpode 35(1): 1-13.

Nagar, Richa, Victoria Lawson, Linda McDowell and Susan Hanson. 2002. Locating globalization: feminist (re)readings of the subjects and spaces of globalization. Economic Geography 78(3): 257-284.

Nairn, Kaern. 2003. What has the geography of sleeping arrangements got to do with the geography of our teaching spaces. Gender, Place and Culture 10(1) 67-82.

Nairn, Karen. 1997. Hearing from Quiet Students: The Politics of Silence and of Voice in Geography Classrooms. In John Paul Jones III, Heidi J. Nast, Susan M. Roberts, eds., Thresholds in Feminist Geography: Difference, Methodology, Representation. Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield.

Nairn, Karen. 1995. Constructing identities: Gender, geography, and the culture of field trips. Paper presented to the 1995 Conference of the New Zealand Geographical Society, Christchurch.

Nakayama, Thomas. 1994. Show/down time: ‘Race’, gender, sexuality, and popular culture. Critical Studies in Mass Communication 11(2): 162-180.

Naples, Nancy and Karen Bojar. 2002. Teaching Feminist Activism:  Strategies from the Field. New York: Routledge.

Nash, Catherine Jean (in press) Queer conversations: Old-time lesbians, transmen and the politics of research. In Kath Browne and Catherine Jean Nash, eds., Queer Methodologies and methods. Ashgate Publishing: London.

Nash, Catherine J. (in press) Gendered and sexed geographies of/in a graduate classroom, Documents d'Analisi Geografia (Fall, 2009).

Nash, Catherine Jean. 2006. Toronto's gay village (1969 to 1982), Plotting the politics of gay identity. Canadian Geographer (March) 50(1): 1-16.

Nash, Catherine Jean. 2005. Gay politics and ethnic minorities: The struggle for gay identity in Toronto in the late 1970s. Gender, Place and Culture 12(1): 113-135.

Nash, C. 2002. The law and discipline of geography: a parallel universe. Great Lakes Geographer 9(1).

Nash, Catherine Jean. 2002. Equity issues in law and geography: a comparative analysis. Great Lakes Geographer vol. 9(1): 29-36.

Nash, Catherine Jean. 2001. Siting lesbians: Sexuality, space and social organization. In Terry Goldie, ed.,  a Queer Country: Gay and lesbian studies in the  Canadian Context.  Arsenal Press: Vancouver.

Nash, C. 1993. Remapping and renaming: New cartographies of identity, gender and landscape in Ireland. Feminist Review 44:39-57.

Nash, Catherine Jean and Alison Bain. 2007. Pussies declawed: unpacking the politics of a queer women's bathhouse raid. In Kath Browne, Jason Lim and Gavin Brown, eds., Geographies of Sexualities: Theory, Practices and Politics, 159-168. Ashgate Publishing: London.

Nash, Catherine Jean and Alison Bain. 2007. Reclaiming raunch?: Spatializing queer identities at Toronto women's bathhouse events. Social and Cultural Geography 8(1): 16-42.

Nast, Heidi J. 2002. Crosscurrents: Editor's prologue, special issue. Queer patriarchies, queer racisms, international. Antipode 34(5): 835-44.

Nast, Heidi J. 2002. Queer patriarchies, queer racisms, international. Antipode 34(5): 874-909.

Nast, Heidi J. Forthcoming 2000. Resisting corporate multiculturalism. The Professional Geographer (November), special Focus section, Women in the 21st century.

Nast, Heidi J. 2000. Mapping the 'unconscious': Racism and the oedipal family. Annals of the Association of American Geographers 90(2):215-255.

Nast, Heidi J. 1999. 'Sex,' 'race' and multiculturalism: Critical consumption and the politics of course evaluations. Journal of Geography in Higher Education 23(1): 102-115.

Nast, Heidi J. 1998. Unsexy geographies. Gender, Place and Culture: An International Journal of Feminist Geography 5(2): 191-206.

Nast, Heidi J. 1996. Islam, gender, and slavery in West Africa c. 1500: A spatial archaeology of the Kano palace, northern Nigeria. Annals of the Association of American Geographers 86(1): 44-77.

Nast, Heidi J. 1994. Opening remarks on ‘Women in the Field’. Professional Geographer 46: 54-66.

Nast, Heidi J. 1994. The impact of British imperialism on the landscape of female slavery in the Kano palace, northern Nigeria.  Africa 64(1): 34-74.

Nast, Heidi J. 1993. Engendering ‘space’: State formation and the restructuring of the Kano Palace following the Islamic Holy War in northern Nigeria, 1807-1903. Historical Geography 23(1&2): 62-75.

Nast, Heidi J. and Blum, Virginia. 2000. Jacques Lacan's two-dimensional subjectivity. In Mike Crang and Nigel Thrift, eds., Thinking Space. London: Routledge.

Nast, Heidi J. and Blum, Virginia. 1996. Where's the difference? The heterosexualization of alterity in Henri Lefebvre and Jacques Lacan. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 14:559-580.

Nast, H.J. and Kobayashi, A. 1996. (Re)corporealizing vision. In Nancy Duncan, ed., Body Space: Destabilizing Geographies of Gender and Sexuality. New York and London: Routledge.

Nast, Heidi J. and Pile, Steve. 1998. Places Through the Body. London: Routledge.

Nast, Heidi and Pulido, Laura. 2000. Resisting corporate multiculturalism: mapping faculty initiatives and institutional-student harassment in the classroom. The Professional Geographer 52(4): 722-37.

Nast, H.J. and Wilson, M.O. 1994. Lawful transgressions: this is the house that Jackie built. Special issue of Assemblage (MIT Press) on House Rules v. 24, pp. 48-56.

National Network for Immigrant and Refugee Rights. 2000. Hands that shape the world: report on the conditions of immigrant women in the US five years after the Beijing Conference. San Francisco: NNIRR (http://www. nnirr.org).

Naved, R.T., M. Newby and S. Amin. 2001. The effects of migration and work on marraige of female garment workers in Bangladesh. INternational Journal of Population Geography 7(2): 61-104.

Nayak, Anoop. 2002. Last of the 'real Geordies'? Masculinity and the subcultural response to deindustrialization. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 21(1): 7-15.

Negrey, Cynthia and Rausch, Stephen D. 2009. Creativity gaps and gender gaps: Women, men and place in the United States. Gender, Place and Culture 16(5): 517 - 533.

Nelson, B.J. and Chowdhury, N., eds. 1994. Women and Politics Worldwide. New Haven: Yale University Press.

Nelson, L. 2004. Topographies of citizenship: Purhépechan Mexican women claiming political subjectivities. Gender, Place and Culture 11(2): 163-87.

Nelson, Lise. 2003. De-centering the movement: Collective action, place and the sedimentationof radical political discourses. Environment and Planning D:  Society and Space 21: 559-581.

Nelson, Lise. 1999. Bodies (and spaces) do matter: the limits of performativity. Gender, Place and Culture 6(4): 331-354.

Nelson, Margaret K. 1994. Family day care providers: Dilemmas of daily practice. In Evelyn Nakano Glenn, Grace Chang, and Linda Rennie Forcey, eds., Mothering: Ideology, Experience and Agency. London: Routledge.

Neuhouser, K. 1995. ‘Worse than men’: Gendered mobilization in a Brazilian squatter settlement, 1971-91. Gender and Society 9:38-59.

Ng, R. 1991. Sexism, racism, and Canadian nationalism. In Jesse Vorst et al., eds., Race, Class, Gender: Bonds and Barriers (2nd edition), pp. 12-26. Society for Socialist Studies and Garamond. Reprinted in S. Gunew and A. Yeatman, Feminism and the Politics of Difference, pp. 197-211. Sydney: Allen and Unwin.

Ngo, M. and Thien, D. 2009. Interconnecting spaces: Truck drivers, diesel pollution, and networking in the ports of Long Beach and Los Angeles. Yearbook of the Association of Pacific Coast Geographers (71): 67-95.

Nicholson, L. 1994. Interpreting gender. Signs 20(1): 79-105.

Nicholson, L.J., ed. 1990. Feminism/Postmodernism. New York: Routledge.

Nieuwenhuys, O. 1994. Children’s Lifeworlds: Gender, Welfare and Labour in the Developing World. London and New York: Routledge.

Nightingale, A. 2010 (forthcoming). Ecofeminism. In Encyclopedia of Geography. Thousand Oaks, Calif.: Sage Publishers.

Nightingale, A. 2009 (forthcoming). A forest community or community forestry? Beliefs, meanings and nature in north-western Nepal. In A. Guneratne, ed., Under the Roof of the World: Critical Himalayan Environments. London: Routledge.

Nightingale, A. 2009. Methods: Triangulation. In R. Kitchen and N. Thrift, eds., International Encyclopedia of Human Geography. Oxford: Elsevier.

Nightingale, A. 2009. Methods: Oral history; ecological. In R. Kitchen and N. Thrift. eds., International Encyclopedia of Human Geography. Oxford: Elsevier.

Nightingale, A. 2009 (forthcoming). Beyond design principles: Subjectivity, emotion and the (ir)rational commons. Society and Natural Resources.

Nightingale, A. 2009 (forthcoming). Nepal’s green forests: A‘thick’ aesthetics of contested landscapes. Ethics, Place and Environment

Nightingale, A. 2009. Warming up the climate change debate: A challenge to policy based on adaptation. The Journal of Forestry and Livelihoods 8:1.

Nightingale, A. (2006) “The nature of gender: Work, gender and environment. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 24:2.

Nightingale, Andrea. 2003. A feminist in the forest: Situated knowledges and mixing methods in natural resource management. ACME: An International E-Journal for Critical Geographies 2(1): 77-90.

Ní Laoire, Caitriona. 2002. Young farmers, masculinities and change in rural Ireland. Irish Geography 35(1): 16-27.

Ní Laoire, Caitriona. 2001. A matter of life and deat?: Men, masculinities and staying 'behind' in rural Ireland. Sociologia Ruralis 41(2): 220-236.

Nilsson, K. 2001. Migration, gender and household structure: changes in earnings among youth adults in Sweden. Regional Studies 35(6): 499-511.

Nixon, Rob. 1994. Refugees and homecomings: Bessie Head and the end of exile. In George Robertson, et al., eds., Travellers’ Tales : Narratives of Home and Displacement. New York and London: Routledge.

Nolin Hanlon, Catherine L. 1999. Guatemalan refugees and returnees: Place and Maya identity. In Lisa North and Alan Simmons, eds., Journeys of Fear: Refugee Return and National Transformation in Guatemala, pp. 213-34. Montreal and Kingston: McGill-Queen's Press.

Nolin Hanlon, Catherine L. and W. George Lovell. 2000. Flight, exile, repatriation, and return: Guatemalan refugee scenarios, 1981-1998. In James Loucky and Marilyn Moors, eds., The Maya Diaspora: Guatemalan Roots, New American Lives, chapter 3, pp. 54-69. Philadelphia: Temple University Press. In press.

Nolin Hanlon, Catherine and Shankar, Finola. 2000. Gendered spaces of terror and assault: The testiminio of REMHI and the Commission for Historical Clarification in Guatemala. Gender, Place and Culture 7(3): 265-86.

Norwood, Vera. 1993. Made From this Earth: American Women and Nature. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press.

Norwood, Vera and Monk, Janice, eds. 1987. The Desert is No Lady: Southwestern Landscapes in Women’s Writing and Art. New Haven: Yale University Press.

Novitz, R. 1989. Women: weaving an identity. In D. Novitz and B. Willmott, eds., Culture and Identity in New Zealand, pp. 53-76. Wellington: GP Books.

O Tuathail, G. and Agnew, J. 1992. Geopolitics and discourse: Practical geopolitical reasoning in American foreign policy. Political Geography 11: 190-204.

Oberhauser, A.M. 2002. Examining gender and community through critical pedagogy. Journal of Geography in Higher Education 26(1): 19-31.

Oberhauser, A.M. 2002. Relocating gender and rural economic strategies. Environment and Planning A 34(7): 1221-37.

Oberhauser, A.M. 2000. Feminism and economic geography: Gendering work and working gender. In E. Sheppard and T. J. Barnes, eds., A Companion to Economic Geography, pp. 60-76. Oxford: Blackwell Publishers.

Oberhauser, A. M. 1999. Households, violence and women's economic rights: A case study of women and work in Appalachia. In T. Fenster, ed., Gender, Planning and Human Rights, pp. 93-110. New York: Routledge.

Oberhauser, Ann. 1997. The home as ‘field’: Researching households and homework in rural Appalachia. In John Paul Jones III, Heidi J. Nast, Susan M. Roberts, eds., Thresholds in Feminist Geography: Difference, Methodology, Representation. Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield.

Oberhauser, A. 1995. Towards a gendered regional geography: Women and work in rural Appalachia. Growth and Change 26(2): 217-244.

Oberhauser, A. 1995. Gender and household economic strategies in rural Appalachia. Gender, Place and Culture 2(1): 51-70.

Oberhauser, A.M. 1993. Industrial restructuring and women’s homework in Appalachia: Lessons from West Virginia. Southeastern Geographer 33(1): 23-43.

Oberhauser, A.M. and A. Pratt. 2004. Women’s collective economic strategies and political transformation in rural South Africa. Gender, Place and Culture 11(2) 209-28.

Oberhauser, A.M., A. Pratt, and A.M. Turnage. 2001. Unraveling Appalachia's rural economy: The case of a flexible manufacturing network. Journal of Appalachian Studies 7(1): 19-45.

Oberhauser, A.M., D. Rubinoff, K. DeBres, S. Mains, and C. Pope. 2004. Geographic perspectives on women. In Cort Willmott and Gary Gaile, eds., Geography in America at the Dawn of the 21st Century, pp. 738-760. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Oberhauser, A.M. and A.M. Turnage. 1999. Weaving the socio-economic fabric of women's lives. In B.E. Smith, eds., Neither Separate Nor Equal: Women, Race and Class in the U.S. South, pp. 109-122. Philadelphia: Temple University Press.

Oberhauser, A.M., J.L. Mandel, and H.M. Hapke. 2004. Gendered livelihoods in diverse global contexts: an introduction. Gender, Place and Culture 11(2): 205-08.

Odland J., and Ellis M. 1998. Variations in the labour force experience of women across large metropolitan areas in the United States. Regional Studies 32(4): 333-347

Odzer, Cleo. 1994. Patpong Sisters: An American Woman’s View of the Bangkok Sex World. New York: Blue Moon/Arcade.

Ogden, P.E. and R. Hall. 2004. The second demographic transition, New household forms and the urban population of France during the 1990s. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, 29(1): 88-105.

Okin, Susan Moller. 1994. Gender inequality and cultural differences. Political Theory 22(1): 5-25.

Ollengurger, J.C. and Tobin, Graham A. 1999. Women, aging, and post-disaster stress: Risk factors. International Journal of Mass Emergencies and Disasters 17(1): 65-79.

Olund, E.N.  2002. Public domesticity during the Indian reform era; or, Mrs. Jackson is induced to go to Washington. Gender, Place and Culture 9(2): 153-66.

Opondo, M.M. 2003. The gender implications of tobacco contract farming in Kenya. Report submitted to the Rockefeller Foundation.

O'Reilly, Kathleen, Halvorson, Sarah, Sultana, Farhana and Laurie, Nina, eds. 2009. Introduction: Global perspectives on gender-water geographies. Special issue on the gendered geographies of water: Gender, Place, and Culture 16(4): 381-385. The table of contents and articles are available at: http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~db=all~content=g912938620

O’Reilly, K. 2004. Developing contradictions: women’s participation as a site of struggle within an Indian NGO. The Professional Geographer 56(2): 174-84.

Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. The Future of Female-Dominated Occupations. Paris: OECD. Available in English and French. OECD Online: www.oecd.org.

Ortiz, A., M.D. García-Ramon, and M. Prats. 2004. Urban planning and women’s sense of place in a historical neighborhood of Barcelona. In G. Cortesi, F. Cristaldi, and J.D. Fortuijn, eds., Gendered Cities: Identities, Activities, Networks-A Life Course Approach. IGU Home of Geography Publications Series 6. Rome: Società Geografica Italiana.

Oruwari, Yomi., ed., 1996. Women, Development, and the Nigerian Environment. Ibadan: Vantage Publishers International.

Oswin, Natalie. (Forthcoming) Sexual tensions in modernizing Singapore: The postcolonial and the intimate. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 28(1).

Oswin, Natalie. 2008. Critical geographies and the uses of sexuality: Deconstructing queer space. Progress in Human Geography 32(1): 89-103.

Oswin, Natalie. 2007. Producing homonormativity in neoliberal South Africa: Recognition, redistribution and the Equality Project. Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society 32(3): 649-670.

Oswin, Natalie. 2007. The end of queer (as we knew it): Globalization and the making of a gay-friendly South Africa. Gender, Place and Culture 14(1): 93-110.

Oswin, Natalie. 2006. Decentering queer globalization: Diffusion and the ‘global gay’. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 24(5): 777-790.

Oswin, Natalie. 2005. Researching ‘gay Cape Town’, finding value-added queerness. Social and Cultural Geography 6(4): 567-586.

Oswin, Natalie. 2004. Towards radical geographies of complicit queer futures. Acme: An international E-journal for critical geographies 3(2): 79-86.

O'Toole, K. and A. Macgarvey. 2003. Rural women and local economic development in south-west Victoria. Journal of Rural Studies 19(2): 173-86.

Otswald, Madeline and Ranjan Baral. 2000. Local forest protection, gender, and caste. Dhani Hill, Orissa, India. Geografiska Annaler 82B(3): 115-28.

Oughton, E., J. Wheelock, & S.Baines. 2004. Micro-businesses and social inclusion in rural households. Sociologia Ruralis 43(4): 331-48.

Owusu, G. and R. Lund. 2004. Markets and women’s trade: exploring their roles in district development in Ghana. Norsk Geografisk Tidsskrift/Norwegian Journal of Geography 58(3):113-24.

Oza, Rupal. 2001. Showcasing India: Gender, geography, and globalization. Signs 26(4). (Special Issue on Gender and Globalization).

Ozguc, Nazmiye. Women geographers at the Turkish universities. In Necla Arat, ed., Aydinlanmanin Kadinlari (women of the Enlightment) (in Turkish).

Özgüc, Nazmiye. 1998. Kadinlarin Co rafyasi. Istanbul: Cantay Kitabevi (in Turkish). Geography of Women. This is the first publication on women in Turkish geography. Part I deals with the emergence of the field and theoretical and methodological approaches as well as the situation of women in geography in Turkey and elsewhere. Part II deals with thematic issues in geographical perspectives (women and work, women and environment, women in rural areas etc).

Return to top of page

Return to Index