One of the most important attempts to reduce the environmental impacts of the built environment is through the construction of green buildings. This article examines the geography of the emerging green building industry through a study of the spatial distribution of two different elements of that industry. The first element is the location and diffusion of green buildings themselves as certified by the U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC) through their Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) standards. There is a clear shift from an original concentration in major coastal cities to a more even distribution across the country, with broad representation across commercial, public, and nonprofit owners. The second area of study is the spatial distribution of LEED-accredited professionals, who are accredited by the USGBC to oversee the certification process. The distribution of these professionals matches existing concentrations of population, suggesting two different geographies of building green.
tagged buildings cityblocks fireinsurance geography hist history historyofcities infrastructure landuse maps neighborhoods pennsylvania philadelphia structures urban urbanstudies wards by cobine ...on 26-MAR-09
tagged architecture buildings census cityplanning fireinsurance geography hist historicpreservation history maps neighborhoods philadelphia philly sanborn socialhistory urban urbanstudies wards by cobine ...on 26-MAR-09
tagged census data demography geography housing income maps neighborhoods population poverty social statistics by cobine ...on 26-MAR-09
tagged database environment geography gis policy publicpolicy by cobine ...on 25-MAR-09
The pathological environment /
Anita Guerrini
1990
Essay review of James Riley, "The 18th-century campaign to avoid disease" (1987).
Ecology, epidemics and empires : J R McNeill
environmental change and the geopolitics of tropical America, 1600-1825 /
Therapeutic landscapes : W M Gesler
medical issues in light of the new cultural geography /
| Title: | Medical geography in historical perspective / |
| Author(s): | Rupke, Nicolaas A., ; ed. |
| Corp Author(s): | Wellcome Trust Centre for the History of Medicine at University College, London. |
| Publication: | London : Wellcome Trust Centre for the History of Medicine at UCL, |
| Year: | 2000. |
| Description: | 227 p., [1] leaf of plates : maps (1 col.) ; 26 cm. |
'Fit localities for an asylum': The historical geography of the 19th-century 'mad-business' in England as viewed through the pages of the "Asylum Journal" /
Chris Philo
From miasma to asthma : Gregg Mitman; Ronald L Numbers
the changing fortunes of medical geography in America /
Medicine and magnificence : Christine Stevenson
British hospital and asylum architecture, 1660-1815 /
Call#: Van Pelt Library HM136 .P5433 1998
Call#: Van Pelt Library G71.5 .T8 1977
Call#: Fine Arts Library Fine Arts G71.5 .T8 1977
Call#: Van Pelt Library G71.5 .T8 1977
Call#: Fine Arts Library Fine Arts G71.5 .T8 1977
Call#: Van Pelt Library G71.5 .T8 1977
Call#: Fine Arts Library Fine Arts G71.5 .T8 1977
Call#: Van Pelt Library GF41 .T82 1974
Call#: Fine Arts Library Fine Arts GF41 .T82 1974
Call#: Van Pelt Library GF41 .T82 1974
Call#: Fine Arts Library Fine Arts GF41 .T82 1974
Call#: Van Pelt Library GF41 .T82 1974
Call#: Fine Arts Library Fine Arts GF41 .T82 1974
Call#: Van Pelt Library HD8081.A5 P365 2005
Immigrants Turn to Farm Work Amid Building Bust
Growers Regain A Source of Labor; Wage Gap Narrows
By MIRIAM JORDAN
June 13, 2008; Page A4
The building bust is turning out to be an unexpected boon for another industry, agriculture, as many Hispanic immigrants who lost construction jobs return to the fields in search of work.
In recent years, the ranks of farm workers had been thinned by a crackdown on illegal immigration coupled with the lure of better-paying construction jobs. That left farmers scrambling to find workers to harvest labor-intensive crops. Now, growers and labor contractors from Florida to California are reporting that former carpenters, dry wallers and painters are returning.
"We had seen the labor supply dwindling year after year," said Richard Quandt, president of the Grower-Shipper Association of Santa Barbara and San Luis Obispo Counties. This year, "we are surprised to have a lot of workers." The area grows strawberries, greens, broccoli, grapes and other vegetables and fruits.
D P Dixon, J P Jones III
Received 6 February 1997; in revised form 20 June 1997
Abstract. This paper extends our previous efforts to (de)lineate contemporarydivisions between poststructuralist and spatial analytic, or scientific, approaches in geography. We adopt the format of a dialogue between a hypothetical spatial analyst (SA) and a poststructuralist (PS). Their exchange covers, among other items, the differing stances of these approaches to epistemology, ontology, research questions and methods, and the concept of 'context'. We also further develop the concept of the 'epistemology of the grid', which we define as the spatialization of categorical thought. We link this epistemology to two others, Cartesian perspectivalism and ocularcentrism, arguing that their realization in social practice is generative of social order.
Abstract. Representations of quantitative geography, both by practitioners and by others, have tended to associate quantification with empiricism, positivism, and the social and academic status quo. Qualitative geography, by contrast is represented as nonempiricist or postempiricist, sensitive to complexity, contextual, and capable of empowering nonmainstream academic approaches and social groups. Attempts to engage in debate between these positions rarely challenge this dualism, reproducing the representation of quantitative geography as logical positivism, and a dualism separating quantitative and qualitative geography. I argue that this dualism can be broken down, by deconstructing the underlying representation. I discuss why this representation came into existence and how it was stabilized; how close attention to the practices of quantitative geographers, and particularly to the evolution of these practices, reveals its inadequacies; and what new possibilities for quantitative practices emerge from this deconstruction. GIS, one of the recent manifestations around which representations of quantitative geography polarize, is used as a case study to illustrate these arguments. I pay particular attention to the question of the relevance of quantitative practices for an emancipatory human geography.
Abstract
The derived nature of transportation demand implies that enhancement of mobility per se is not a reasonable goal for transportation policy; instead, improved mobility is desired to the extent that it furthers accessibility—a goal that can be achieved through a variety of measures. The paper uses the mobility–accessibility distinction to distinguish different implementations of congestion pricing. A mobility-based congestion pricing promises to alleviate congestion but threatens to deteriorate from overall regional accessibility as it accelerates metropolitan deconcentration. In contrast, accessibility-based congestion pricing avoids acceleration of sprawl by incorporating policies to ensure that drivers tolled off roads are replaced with residents and travelers arriving at previously congested areas by other means.
| Article title | Job/Housing Imbalance and Commuting Time in the Atlanta Metropolitan Area: Exploration of Causes of Longer Commuting Time | ||
| Author | Sultana, S. | ||
| Journal title | URBAN GEOGRAPHY | ||
| Bibliographic details | 2002, VOL 23; PART 8, pages 728-749 | ||
Call#: HT101 .U683
Special Issue on Transportation GIS
Volume 8, Issues 1-6
pp. 1-444 (February - December 2000)
Title: The geography of transport systems / Jean-Paul Rodrigue, Claude Comtois, and Brian Slack.
Physical Description: ix, 284 p. : ill., maps ; 26 cm.
Publisher/ Date: London ; New York : Routledge, 2006.
Urban Geography, 2001, 22, 1, pp. 78–90.
PROGRESS REPORT
DEFINING ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE AND ENVIRONMENTAL RACISM
Ryan Holifield
Department of Geography
University of Georgia
Call#: Van Pelt Library Rosengarten Reserve HM216 .H26 1996
Call#: Fine Arts Library HE305 .G46 2004
DOI: 10.1177/0096144205284400
© 2006 SAGE Publications
Neither Fight Nor Flight
Urban Synagogues in Postwar Philadelphia
Jordan Stanger-Ross
University of Victoria
This article uses case studies of two Philadelphia synagogues to argue that postwar cities remained places of opportunity for creative local institutions and that the geographic flexibility of synagogues did not necessarily entail flight from declining urban areas. After their North Philadelphia Jewish residential enclave dissipated, Mikveh Israel and Rodeph Shalom recast the meaning of community and membership to accommodate their dispersed congregations. Rather than remaining neighborhood synagogues, Mikveh Israel and Rodeph Shalom connected members dispersed across the metropolitan area who were committed to preserving their religious institutions at the center of the city. Postwar Jewish community at these two synagogues developed metropolitan contours.
Key Words: Jewish • synagogues • North Philadelphia • urban decline • geography
from wiki on - Psychogeography is "the study of specific effects of the geographical environment, consciously organised or not, on the emotions and behaviour of individuals," according to Guy Debord's Introduction to a Critique of Urban Geography.
tagged Center_for_International_Development_at_Harvard_University business_area_studies empirical_growth_models geography population transportation_costs tropical_agriculture tropical_disease urbanization by croninkc ...on 12-JUN-06
tagged Center_for_International_Development_at_Harvard_University business_area_studies compensatin_differentials economic_growth factor_mobility geography local_government migration by croninkc ...on 08-JUN-06
tagged Center_for_International_Development_at_Harvard_University Economic_Development Financial_Integration Geography Institutions Trade business_area_studies by croninkc ...on 31-MAY-06
Call#: Van Pelt Library Reference Stacks E154 .H45 2005



