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Your Human Geography Dissertation: Designing, Doing, Delivering

Student resources, graduate guidance, from start to finish: reflecting on the dissertation process from designing, to doing, to delivering, olivia birch.

Olivia Birch

Let me begin by saying designing a research project from scratch is complex for academics let alone undergraduates and is a process that does not happen overnight! This is something I learned during the designing stage. I assumed that after a day of thinking about the dissertation my approach and topic would fall into place, and from then on it would be action stations go! 

I couldn’t have been more wrong.  Instead I grappled with ideas varying from rural studies, to U.K development inequalities to humanly induced climate change behaviours. Although these ideas were of great importance and of interest to me; they did not resonate with me on a personal level. This would be my greatest piece of advice; find something that you have a personal interest in, that passes the walls of the lecture theatre.

For me, this interest was veganism. I had taken an interest in a module on social and cultural geographies, which had placed a strong focus on the spatialities of identity. It was also an identity that I always wanted to learn more about but never had the opportunity to do so in such depth. Now you might be thinking, how on earth is veganism linked to geography? This is a question I have (en)countered (many a time). My answer is that almost any idea, interest or passion of yours can be situated geographically and into a dissertation . If you crack this, then you almost certainly have a dissertation topic. I had an interest in veganism and knew that I wanted to collect my data over the summer of second year. I knew I would be home for the summer and therefore knew I had to design a project closely accessible to my home.

Only 15 miles from central London, I decided it would be wise to position the idea of veganism in the context of London. Not only did this geographically concentrate my topic and narrow my research area, but it enabled me to think about concepts and theories that also manifest in cities. When you have discovered a topic and situated it within a context, my advice would be to think about how you can apply ideas you have read about, to your topic. This helps you gain an element of originality: taking both well-versed and cutting-edge academic debates and reading them anew in respect of your project.  For example, I began applying theories of urbanism, cosmopolitanism and encounter upon the context of London, whilst applying theories of animal geographies and identity upon veganism.  Drawing these readings and theories together and applying them upon the context of London and identity of veganism; I decided to conduct research upon a vegan social group in the city of London.

Central to the designing stage of your human geography dissertation is ensuring the feasibility of your project. Ask yourself when and where you want to collect your data. You might be volunteering abroad or completing a summer internship over your summer break; could you design a research project around these commitments, or could you design your dissertation based on these experiences? When you have answered these questions regarding project feasibility you may now begin doing your dissertation.

The doing stage of your human geography dissertation is all about how you transform your research design into a reality through data collection. After designing your dissertation, you should have some idea of what methods will help you answer your research question or investigate your topic best.

For example, I wanted to explore a London based vegan social group; it became obvious that in order to do this effectively ethnographic methods would help me best carry out my research. Your research design should naturally allow you to choose suitable methods; for example, a geologist wouldn’t use a focus group to study a rock profile! It is also important to play to your strengths and interests. I find qualitative methods such as interviews, focus groups and participant observation sessions far more interesting and engaging to conduct than quantitative research because of my skill set. If you know you enjoy and are not phased by conducting participant observation sessions or focus groups with strangers, or know you are tech-savy or familiar with programs such as SPSS or QGIS then play to these strengths. At the end of the day, if you are confident in carrying out the data collection methods you have chosen, you are already ahead of the game!

Before starting my dissertation, I didn’t realise the enormity of research methods that were out there, so again I shall stress the importance of reading! Simply searching ‘qualitative research methods’ on Google Scholar will generate millions (yes millions!) of related articles for you to sort through. The number of methods you decide to utilise is totally dependent on the nature of your research project. You could design your whole dissertation around one method if that is what interested you. For example, you could undertake a comprehensive textual analysis of a book or a film if you relate it geographically. There really are no barriers or limits to your selection of methods if they help you successfully answer your research question. Personally, I decided to triangulate my methods as I believed the combination of interviews, a focus group and participant observation sessions would help me best conduct my research; however, if you think you can answer your research question using only one method then that too is great.

Once you have confirmed your methods of research, my next word of advice would be to create a research timetable to help you manage your time efficiently and visualise your ‘doing’ stage . Whether this be on a device, diary or planner; create a window of time in which you want to conduct your research and then accordingly fill in dates, times and locations of when specific methods will be conducted. For me, this technique instantly relieved my stresses about collecting a vast amount of data in a short period of time. Knowing that each fortnight I could tick off an interview or participant observation session made the task of data collection less overwhelming. No longer was I thinking that I had to carry out 20 interviews, a focus group and five participant observation sessions over the course of 12 weeks; but instead I switched my thinking to conducting one or two interviews in a week and conducting some participant observation every three weeks.

By focusing on completing smaller tasks rather than looking at the entire data collection, I stayed focused and this relieved my anxiety. The very idea of setting weekly goals and slowly reaching your goal over a select period makes the data collection period incredibly rewarding not only during data collection but also after its completion .

Once you have finished the ‘doing’ stage of your dissertation it’s time to deliver your research, in other words you must now write your dissertation! For many (including myself) this might seem like the most daunting part of the process. Whether you are concerned about having too much or too little data to analyse or having a word count that you think you will surpass or not attain; I can guarantee you that if you use your time wisely anyone can successfully complete the final stage.

After collecting your data, the first thing you should do is arrange a meeting with your supervisor; it is their job to guide you through your dissertation, so make sure you work alongside their recommendations. Before I began delivering my dissertation, myself and my supervisor met to discuss structuring my dissertation, data analysis and many technicalities involved with delivering a 10,000-research paper.

The quality of your data analysis is central to the success of your dissertation, it is essential that you select the most suitable methods of analysis for types of data you have collected. The variety of modes of analysis remains akin to the variety of data collection methods that are available. Whatever type of data you have collected, I can assure you that there will be an analytical method to synthesis it. The same approach can be taken to structuring your dissertation, my supervisor reminded me that there is not a ‘one-size-fits all’ structure for the dissertation ; just the same as there is not one human geography dissertation that is the same. For this reason, think about what makes sense for you , are there any themes that run through your dissertation that you have identified in the data analysis stage that could be stand alone analysis chapters? For example, I had two thematic data analysis chapters based upon two themes that were central to my dissertation. Equally, it might make more sense to have a stand-alone discussion and data analysis chapter. There are so many options, and your supervisor will guide you to ensure you chose the best way to deliver your dissertation. 

Ironically, the greatest piece of advice I can give you when delivering your dissertation is to change the way you think about your dissertation. I found that looking at my dissertation as a 10,000-word essay was not only overwhelming but made it seem harder than it actually was. Instead I started looking at my dissertation as a series of five essays or chapters each varying in length. What people forget is that your dissertation is not just about what you found, but rather a large proportion of the project is about how you found your answers in relation to existing literature and modes of collection and analysis. Instead of sitting down and writing my dissertation from beginning to end, I decided to focus on writing a chapter in whatever order made sense to me. Thinking back to the ‘doing’ stage, and how I said breaking up data collection gives you goals to work towards and focuses your work the same is true during the delivering stage.

For example, it made sense for me to begin by writing my literature review chapter, followed by my methodology chapter, analysis chapters, conclusion and finishing off with my introduction. By effectively splitting my dissertation into five chapters and thinking of my overall paper as based upon five 2,000-word essays made the task seem a lot more manageable. Set yourself deadlines as to how long you need to spend on each chapter; not only will this will keep you motivated but will ensure you are spending enough time on each section of your dissertation.

Final thoughts

One of the hardest things I found when delivering my dissertation was letting go of it. Of course you have to proof read your dissertation (meticulously!) to ensure its written to the highest of standards, however, there comes to a point where there is only so much you can scan over the same words before submitting it. One of the most challenging parts of the delivering stage was submitting my dissertation, for I knew that there would be no going back to it after the deadline and I wouldn’t be able to make any edits or changes to my word. However, the feeling of pride and relief when you finally submit a research paper that is well and truly yours is what makes the dissertation such a rewarding module to undertake.

Olivia Birch studied BA Geography at Liverpool, where she took an interest specifically in social geographies and geographies of encounter and postcolonialism. She shared her passion for the subject as a Senior Open Day Ambassador, partaking in public lectures and demonstrations to show what you can learn from studying Geography. Upon graduating, Olivia plans to transfer her skills borne from her geography degree into a career in consulting.

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human geography dissertation

A selection of dissertations from recent undergraduate students, and MPhil Conservation Leadership placement reports*, are now available for reading access online.

We regret to announce that paper copies of dissertations submitted prior to 2020 are not included in this service.

Paper copies of dissertations between 2015-2019 can only be viewed upon request in the Geography Library itself – please ask staff for access. Dissertations earlier than 2015 may be available to view in the Manuscripts Reading Room at the UL (again you need to request access in advance to view these). To find out about the availability of paper copies of earlier dissertations, you will need to search on iDiscover by searching using the words ‘Geography’, ‘Tripos’ and ‘Dissertation’. Check the holdings information to see whether they have a note to say ‘Transferred to UL’.

Please note down the file number (in the first column) before you proceed to the online request form , where you can request access to two dissertations per application. It is best to use this form from the Geography intranet.

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Your Human Geography Dissertation

Your Human Geography Dissertation Designing, Doing, Delivering

  • Kimberley Peters - Helmholtz Institute for Functional Marine Biodiversity at University of Oldenburg
  • Description
  • Designing: Deciding on your approach, your topic, and your research question, while also ensuring your project is feasible
  • Doing: Situating your research and selecting the best methods for your dissertation project
  • Delivering: Dealing with data and writing up your findings

Should you need additional information or have questions regarding the HEOA information provided for this title, including what is new to this edition, please email  [email protected] . Please include your name, contact information, and the name of the title for which you would like more information. For information on the HEOA, please go to  http://ed.gov/policy/highered/leg/hea08/index.html .

We hope you'll consider this SAGE text. Email us at  [email protected] , or click here to find your  SAGE rep .

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This excellent new text guides students carefully, intelligently and sympathetically through the process of doing a human geography dissertation. It offers grounded advice - from the question of what a dissertation is, to the mechanics of data analysis - which will be indispensable for students researching the full diversity of topics covered by contemporary human geography. The insights, advice and reflections from both previous students and academic staff who currently teach human geography add valuable insights that will both reassure students and help them avoid making common mistakes.

This book will be an invaluable read for all Human Geography dissertation students. It conveys the excitement and possibilities of Human Geography research, whilst also alerting the reader to its challenges and pitfalls. This is certainly not a generic ‘how to do your dissertation’ textbook; instead it engages with Human Geography as a discipline and the role of the dissertation student as a producer of geographic knowledge. The book’s clear sections on designing, doing and delivering your dissertation, have useful examples, include input from the author’s students themselves, making this an accessible and comprehensive text. 

Kim Peters has written a much needed book that will be of great value to Geography students undertaking what is often the most challenging part of their degree, the dissertation.  As a Geography lecturer I have often wished that a book such as this existed.  Your Human Geography Dissertation goes way beyond a standard examination of the pros and cons of different research methods, covering a range of topics from the identification of dissertation subjects and the development of research questions through gathering data and writing up.  It is a readable and highly accessible text full of helpful detail, practical advice and useful examples.  Thank you Kim!  

This book is fantastic! It is recommended reading for our second-year research design course, and I have used some of the ‘dissertation tips’ videos in lectures on this course during 2018/9.  For my own dissertation students in supervision meetings, this book is my core recommendation of a text that will help students with their whole human geography dissertation journey. 

Of all the books that I recommend to my dissertation students, this book is always the first. Writing a dissertation is a daunting task, certainly the most demanding and challenging part of a degree, and Kim Peters, with her accessible style and useful and highly relevant advice, makes it a bit less intimidating. Your Human Geography Dissertation guides students through all the stages of their dissertation, helping them to think geographically, refine their research question and choose the appropriate research methods. This book is so recent but already feels like a classic. 

This volume is a well-written and well-organised volume to recommend to both my dissertation research students and to use on my section (human geography research methods) of our research methods in geography module. I will be using it as a recommended reading.

With this book as their guide your students will be able to achieve what it promises: design, do and deliver.

  • This is a great step-by-step guide for final year human geography undergraduates, packed with engaging case study examples and useful testimonies for previous students
  • The book takes students all the way from developing a research question through to presenting the final results. It deals with methods and data in an accessible and practical way
  • The companion website will feature sound bites from lecturers and previous students, as well as links and materials mentioned throughout the book

Preview this book

Sample materials & chapters.

Starting out: Identifying your approach

For instructors

Select a purchasing option, related products.

Fieldwork for Human Geography

This title is also available on SAGE Knowledge , the ultimate social sciences online library. If your library doesn’t have access, ask your librarian to start a trial .

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Home > SGIS > Geography > Dissertations, Theses, and Student Research

Department of Geography: Dissertations, Theses, and Student Research

The Spatial Organization of Pre-Colonial African Kingdoms: The Empires of Ethiopia & Mali , Victoria O. Alapo

Commemorating the Past: Nebraska Museum Practices in Interpreting, Memorializing, and Mythologizing History , Carissa Dowden

Film and the Making of a Modern Nebraska (1895-1920): A Historical Geography , William Helmer

Reexamining the Desert: A Study of Place-Based Food Insecurity , Morgan Ryan

Votes and Voters in Time and Space: The Changing Landscape of Political Party Support in Kentucky, 1974-2020 , Glenn Humphress

Federal Land-Use Policy and Resettlement in the Great Plains: An Experiment in Community Development During the New Deal Years, 1933-1941 , Theresa Glanz

Population Sustainability in Rural Nebraska Towns , Andrew Husa

Timing and Formation of Linear Dunes South of the Niobrara River Valley, North-Central Nebraska Sand Hills , Ashley K. Larsen

ASSESSING LANDSLIDE SUSCEPTIBILITY WITH GIS USING QUALITATIVE & QUANTITATIVE METHODS IN KNOX COUNTY, NEBRASKA , Christian J. Cruz

A Historical Geography of Six and Eight-Man Football in Nebraska , Andrew Husa

Utilizing a Consumer-Grade Camera System to Quantify Surface Reflectance , Joseph J. Lehnert

Modeling Gross Primary Production of Midwest Maize and Soybean Croplands with Satellite and Gridded Weather Data , Gunnar Malek-Madani

Spatial Analysis of Ethnic and Racial Segregation in the Chicago Metropolitan Area, 2000 - 2014 , Roy Yao

Dating Late Quaternary Alluvial Fills in the Platte River Valley using Optically Stimulated Luminescence Dating , Jacob C. Bruihler

A Research Framework for the Geographic Study of Exotic Pet Mammals in the USA , Gabrielle C. Tegeder

Using GIS to Assess Firearm Thefts, Recoveries and Crimes in Lincoln, Nebraska , David A. Grosso

A STUDY OF SOCIAL CAPITAL AND ITS RELATIONSHIP WITH DWELLING STRUCTURE AND ENVIRONMENT BASED ON AN EMPIRICAL ANALYSIS OF LINCOLN, NEBRASKA , Jeehoon Kim

Geographic Variation of Health Care Spending on Heart Failure in Metropolitan Areas , Kevin McMillan

"We Shall Meet Beyond the River": An Analysis of the Deathscape of Brownville, Nebraska , Ashley J. Barnett

Building a GIS Model to Assess Agritourism Potential , Brian G. Baskerville

Exploring the Nature of Space for Human Behavior in Ordinary Structured Environments , Molly Boeka Cannon

A Historical Geography of Sand Island 1870 - 1944 , Lucas P. Johnson

Proximal Sensing as a Means of Characterizing Phragmites australis , Travis Yeik

Multi-Temporal Analysis of Crop Biomass Using Selected Environmental Variables and Remote Sensing Derived Indices , Nwakaku M. Ajaere

Evaluating Vegetation Response to Water Stress Using Close-Range and Satellite Remote Sensing , Sharmistha Swain

ASSESSING SEASONAL FEATURES OF TROPICAL FORESTS USING REMOTE SENSING , Roberto Bonifaz-Alfonzo

USING A GEOGRAPHIC INFORMATION SYSTEM TO DEFINE REGIONS OF GRAPE-CULTIVAR SUITABILITY IN NEBRASKA , Ting Chen

Spatio-Temporal Analysis of Malaria in Paraguay , Nicole M. Wayant

Levels of Response In Experiential Conceptualizations of Neighborhood: The Potential For Multiple Versions of This Place Construct , Cynthia M. Williams

PRESERVATION ETHICS IN THE CASE OF NEBRASKA’S NATIONALLY REGISTERED HISTORIC PROPERTIES , Darren Michael Adams

Intersections of Place, Time, and Entertainment in Rural Nebraska in the Late 19th and Early 20th Centuries , Rebecca A. Buller

The Changing Landscape of a Rural Region: The effect of the Harry S. Truman Dam and Reservoir in the Osage River Basin of Missouri , Melvin Arthur Johnson

Detection and Measurement of Water Stress in Vegetation Using Visible Spectrum Reflectance , Arthur Zygielbaum

Patterns and Consequences of Segregation: An Analysis of Ethnic Residential Patterns at Two Geographic Scales , Kenneth N. French

Geographies of Indigenous-based Team Name and Mascot Use in American Secondary Schools , Ezra J. Zeitler

A WATERSHED-BASED CLASSIFICATION SYSTEM FOR LAKES IN AGRICULTURALLY-DOMINATED ECOSYSTEMS: A CASE STUDY OF NEBRASKA RESERVOIRS , Henry N. N. Bulley

MODELING BIGHORN SHEEP HABITAT IN NORTHWEST NEBRASKA , Kyle M. Forbes

CLOSE-RANGE AND SATELLITE REMOTE SENSING OF ALGAL BIOMASS IN THE IOWA GREAT LAKES , Eric A. Wilson

EFFECTS OF SPATIAL RESOLUTION AND LANDSCAPE STRUCTURE ON LAND COVER CHARACTERIZATION , Wenli Yang

Spatial Structure and Decision-Making Aspects of Pedestrian Route Selection through an Urban Environment , Michael R. Hill

VACANCY CHAINS AND INTRA-URBAN MIGRATION , Donald Rundquist

Water Power Development on the Lower Loup River: A Study in Economic Geography , Ralph Eugene Olson

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Theses & Dissertations Archive

On This Page:

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All Geography Theses & Dissertations from UW Libraries .

Masters Theses, 1928-Present

  • Hubert Anton BAUER  Tides of the Puget Sound and Adjacent Island Waters [1928]
  • Wallace Thomas BUCKLEY  The Geography of Spokane [1930]
  • Carl Herbert MAPES  The History and Function of the Map in Relation to the Science of Geography [1931]
  • William Bungay MERRIAM  Geonomics of the Rogue River Valley [1933]
  • James Allan TOWER  The Oasis of Damascus [1933]
  • Vera C. CASS [Sawyer]  The Port of Stockton [1934]
  • William Haskell PIERSON  A Regional Study of Texas [1934]
  • Leonard Clarence EKMAN  The Geography of Occupance in the Skykomish Valley [1937]
  • Harold Ellsworth TENNANT  The Columbia Basin Project [1937]
  • Margaret TAYLOR [Carlstairs]  Intensification of Agriculture in Sub-tropical Japan [1939]
  • Russel SHEE MCCLURE  The Hudson Bay Wheat Road [1939]
  • Burton W. ATKINSON  The Historical Geography of the Snohomish River Valley [1940]
  • Elmer ANDERSEN  The Eden-Farson Reclamation Project of Wyoming [1940]
  • Woodrow Rexford CLEVINGER  The Southern Appalachian Highlanders in Western Washington [1940]
  • Tim Kenneth KELLEY  The Geography of the Wenatchee River Basin [1940]
  • Gertrude Louise MCKEAN [Reith]  Industrial Tacoma [1940]
  • Chester Frederick COLE  Land Utilization on Vashon Island [1941]
  • Violet Elisabeth RYBERG  Oasis Agriculture in Tacoma, Argentina [1942]
  • Ernestine Annamae HAMBURG [Gavin]  Geography of Pen Oreille County Washington [1943]
  • Enid Lorine MILLER [Stevens]  A Geographic Study of Jefferson and Clallam Counties Washington [1943]
  • Marion E. MARTS  Geography of the Snoqualmie River Valley [1944]
  • William Ross PENCE  The White River Valley of Washington [1946]
  • Willert RHYNSBURGER  A Critical Bibliography of African Topographic Maps [1946]
  • Richard M. HIGHSMITH, Jr.  Irrigation Agriculture in the Yakima Valley [1946]
  • Herman Walter BURKLAND  The Yokohama Waterfront: A Study in Port Morphology [1947]
  • Michael Perry MCINTYRE  Geography of the New Hebrides [1947]
  • Elbert Ernest MILLER  Geography of Grant County, Washington [1947]
  • Frederick William BUERSTATTE  The Geography of Whidbey Island [1947]
  • Howard John CRITCHFIELD  The Geography of Boundary County, Idaho [1947]
  • Oliver Harry HEINTZELMAN  The Urban Geography of Longview Washington [1948]
  • Stanley Alan ARBINGAST  The Industrial Geography of Duluth, Minnesota [1948]
  • Douglas Broadmore CARTER  The Sequim-Dungeness Lowland. A Natural Dairy Community [1948]
  • Robert Nelson YOUNG  Geography of the Okanogan Valley [1948]
  • John Olney DART  The Geography of the Roslyn-Cle Elum Coal Field [1948]
  • Harold Ray IMUS  Land Utilization in the Sumas Lake District, British Columbia [1948]
  • Donald Otto BUSHMAN  The Geography of Orcas Island [1949]
  • Constance Demange CROSS  The Geography of Clackamas County, Oregon [1949]
  • Roger Edward ERVIN  The Economy of Central Costa Rica [1949]
  • Edward Clarence WHITLEY  Agriculture Geography of the Kittitas Valley [1949]
  • Brian Henry FARRELL  The Study of an Evolving Habitat: Ahuriri Lagoon, New Zealand [1949]
  • Keith Westherad THOMSON  The Manawatu Lowland of New Zealand [1949]
  • Will F. THOMPSON, Jr.  Resources of the Western Aleutians [1950]
  • Dale Elliot COURTNEY  Bellingham: An Urban Analysis [1950]
  • Donald William MEINIG  Environment and Settlement in the Palouse, 1868-1910 [1950]
  • Forrest Lester MCELHOE, Jr.  Physical Modifications of Site Necessitated by the Urban Growth of Seattle [1950]
  • Clarke Harding BROOKE, Jr.  The Razor Clam Siliqua Patula of the Washington Coast and Its Place in the Local Economy [1950]
  • Herbert Lee COMBS, Jr.  The Historical Geography of Port Townsend, Washington [1950]
  • Wilfred Gervais MYATT  Urban Geography of Saskatoon, Saskatchewan [1950]
  • Elaine May BJORKLUND  Changing Occupance in Davis County, Utah [1951]
  • Francis William ANDERSON  The Urban Geography of Everett, Washington [1951]
  • John Albert CROSBY  The Problem of Relief Representation on Maps [1951]
  • Theodore HERMAN  The Manufacture of Aluminum Products in the State of Washington, as of June 30, 1950 [1951]
  • Elizabeth SCHREIBER OXFORD  Phoenix: An Oasis in the Great American Desert [1951]
  • Anthony SAS  The Coal Mining Industry in South Limburg, Netherlands [1951]
  • Eva Kathleen DEKRAAY  Geography of Routt County, Washington [1951]
  • John Richard HOWARD  Wichita – An Urban Analysis [1951]
  • James Eugene BROOKS  Wahkiakum County, Washington: A Case Study in the Geography of the Coast Range Portion of the Lower Columbia River Valley [1952]
  • Hazel Loraine LAUGHLIN  The La Connor Flats of Western Washington [1952]
  • Gene Ellis MARTIN  Population and Food Production in the Philippine Province of Antique [1952]
  • Dave Victoria GRAVES  A Geographical Study of Olympia, Washington [1952]
  • William Reed HEAD  A Quantitative and Qualitative Evaluation of the Areal Arrangement of Retail Business in Communities and Neighborhoods in Portland, Oregon [1952]
  • Harold Earl BABCOCK  The Historical Geography of Devils Lake, North Dakota [1952]
  • Jack Allen HARRISON  An Evaluation of Mackinder’s Heartland Theory in Light of Selected Pre-War Economic Developments in the Soviet Union [1952]
  • Joseph LOTZKAR  The Boundary Country of Southern British Columbia. A Study of Resources and Human Occupance [1952]
  • Thomas Edward STEPHENS  Temperatures in the State of Washington as Influenced by the Westward Spread of Polar Air Over the Rocky and Cascade Mountain Barriers [1952]
  • Charles Dennis DURDEN  The Road System of San Juan County [1953]
  • Harold Glenn LUNTEY  An Analysis of the Economic Benefits of Irrigation to Twin City Falls County, Idaho [1953]
  • Francis E. SHAFER  Tourist Flow to the San Juan Islands [1953]
  • Neil Collard FIELD  The Amu-Darya: Problems and Implications of Soviet Plans for Water Resource Development. An Application of Systematic Geographic Principles to Regional Research in the Soviet Field [1954]
  • Burton Francis KELSO  Flow Pattern Changes in the Canadian Petroleum Industry. A Case Study in the Impact of Increased Oil Production Upon Petroleum Transportation in Canada [1954]
  • Raymond Success MATHIESON  The Industrial Geography of Seattle, Washington [1954]
  • Rodney STEINER  An Investigation of Selected Phases of Sampling to Determine Quantities of Land and Land-Use Types [1954]
  • Fred Patrick MILETICH  The Historical and Economic Geography of Port Angeles, Washington [1954]
  • William Angus ERWIN, Jr.  Medford as an Urban Economic Unit [1954]
  • Willis Robertson HEATH  Limitations on Settlement in a Baja California Village – San Jose de Comodu [1955]
  • Howard K. ALBANO  An Analysis of the Crop Production Potential of the Mongolian People’s Republic [1956]
  • Ralph Edward BLACK  Maps and Mapping Agencies in Washington State – A Selective and Analytical Bibliography [1956]
  • Howard Edward VOGEL  Maps and Maping Agencies in Washington State – A Selective and Analytical Bibliography [1956]
  • William Robert Derrick SEWELL  The Conflict of Fish and Power: A Problem in the Water Resource Development of the Pacific Northwest [1956]
  • Duane Francis MARBLE  The Spatial Structure of the Farm Business [1956]
  • William Richard SIDDALL  I. Seattle and the Hierarchy of Central Places in Alaska; II. Wholesale-Retail Trade Ratios as Indices of Urban Centrality; III. A Historical Study of the Yukon Waterway in the Development of Interior Alaska [1956]
  • Brian Joe Lobley BERRY  Geographic Aspects of the Size and Arrangement of Urban Centers: An Examination of Central Place Theory with an Empirical Test of Hypothesis of Classes of Central Places [1956]
  • Rajanikant Nilkanthrao JOSHI  The Cotton Textile Industry of Bombay City. A Locational Analysis [1956]
  • Chen WANG  I. The Role of Irrigation Ponds in the Agricultural Development of the Taoyuan Tableland, Taiwan; II. Irrigated Agriculture in Imperial Valley, California; III. Ch’ientao: An Irrigation Region of Northwestern China [1956]
  • Robert Martin BONE  The Development and Significance of Tea Cultivation in the Soviet Union [1957]
  • Carlos B. HAGEN  The Azimuthal Equidistant Projection [1957]
  • Richard Leland MORRILL  An Experimental Study of Trade in Wheat and Flour in the Flour Milling Industry [1957]
  • John David NYSTUEN  Locational Theory and the Movement of Fresh Produce to Urban Centers [1957]
  • Richard Ellis PRESTON  I. Wenatchee, Washington: A Study in Community-Industry Relations. II. Java: A Study in Population and Settlement Geography [1957]
  • Waldo Rudolph TOBLER  An Empirical Evaluation of Some Aspects of Hypsometric Colors [1957]
  • William Frank KOHLER  An Investigation of the Feasibility of Making a Preliminary Classification of Soils from Aerial Photos and An Exploratory Field Investigation of the Soils, Vegetation and Terrain of the Copper River Martin-Bering Glacier Lowland of Alaska [1957]
  • Ruth Ellen Marken KROMANN  Rural Settlements: Form and Function, with Southern Jutland, Denmark as an Example [1957]
  • Nancy Houts NEWTON  The Evolution of Manufacturing in the Central Industrial Region of the U.S.S.R. [1957]
  • Arthur Jacob DIENO  The Geography of the Southern Okanogan Valley of ritish Columbia [1957]
  • Michael Francis DACEY  The Minimum Expectation Method for Computation of the Service Component of the Urban Economic Base [1958]
  • Roger E. PEDERSON  The Procurement of Fruits. An Empirical Evaluation of the Factors of Fruit Procurement [1958]
  • John Francis KOLARS  The Development and Use of Coal in Relation to the Turkish Energy Base [1958]
  • Ernest LUCERO  Suggested Examination of Acculturation Aspects of Milpa Agriculture as Related to Resistance to Change [1958]
  • Jeremy Herrick ANDERSON  The Agricultural Development of Yakutia [1959]
  • John Graham RICE  Ideological Theory Underlying the Distribution of Industry in the U.S.S.R. [1959]
  • Richard Louis EDWARDS  A Survey of Cotton Production on the Irrigated Lands of Soviet Central Asia [1959]
  • Julian Vincent MINGHI  The Conflict of Salmon Fishing Policies in the North Pacific [1959]
  • Charles Buckley PETERSON III  The Evolution of the Politico-Territorial System of the Ukraine Since January 1917 [1960]
  • Richard William KEPPEL  Attitude Measurement as a Function of Map User Requirements Analysis [1960]
  • John James SOUTHWORTH  Alternative Routes for the Great Slave Railroad: Some Geographical Considerations [1960]
  • Visvaldis SMITS  Impact of Collectivization on Latvian Agriculture [1960]
  • Eugene Thomas WEILER  I. Cost Determinants of River Basin Development: The Columbia River Power System Case; II. An Illustration of the Use of the Basic-Service Ratio in Seattle, Washington [1961]
  • William James SHAW II  The Classification and Graphic Representation of Railroad Data [1961]
  • George Kazuo SAITO  An Investigation of Some Visual Problems of Cartographic Lettering [1962]
  • Robert G. JENSEN  Competition for Land in the Humid Subtropics of Soviet Georgia [1962]
  • Ronald Everett SHOEMAKER  Screen Gray Value Uses for Cartographic Representation [1962]
  • Donald Wesley PATTEN  The Air Traffic Patterns of the Seattle-Tacoma Hub [1962]
  • Dexter Alden ARMSTRONG, Jr.  Loss of Detail in Halftone Reproduction of Aerial Photographs: An Investigation [1962]
  • George Harold HAGEVIK  Locational Tendencies and Space Requirements of Retail Business in Suburban King County [1963]
  • Richard Waldo WILKIE  Cartography as an Effective Tool in the Study of Social Change [1963]
  • John Edward George BOYMAN  Alaska’s External Trade 1951-58: Some Characteristics and Developments [1963]
  • Yun CHA  Political-Geographical Appraisal of Divided Korea [1963]
  • Michael Iwan ANDERSON  Rangoon: A Study of Changing Functions of a Southeast Asian City [1963]
  • Ladd JOHNSON.  The Cowlitz River Development: History, Effects, and Implications [1963]
  • Keith Way MUCKLESTON  The Function of the Volga as Route of Transportation [1963]
  • Robert Philip WRIGHT  The Russian Empire and the U.S.S.R.: A Cartographic and Tabular Presentation of Population: 1897-1959 [1964]
  • Harris Henry HAERTEL  Irrigation, Mosquitoes, and Encephalitis: A Problem of Water Resource Development [1964]
  • Paul Daniel MCDERMOTT  A Preliminary Investigation of the Suitability of Aerial Photographs for Developing Visualization and Comprehension of Map Symbols in the First, Second, and Third Grades [1964]
  • James Robert HENDERSON  Depressed Areas and Location Theory Case Study: Cambridge, Ohio [1964]
  • Frederick Joseph NAMMACHER  The Nineteenth Century Basic Ferrous Metallurgical Industry of South Russia: A Geographical Appraisal [1964]
  • Roger Lee THIEDE  The Nineteenth Century Basic Ferrous Metallurgical Industry of South Russia: A Geographical Appraisal [1964]
  • Marvin Alan STELLWAGEN  Housing Expenditure Patterns in Seattle 1950-1960 [1964]
  • Per Sur HENRIKSEN  The Faroe lslands: A Political Geographic Case Study [1965]
  • Kerry Josef PATAKI  Shifting Population and Environment Among the Auyana: Some Considerations and Phenomena and Schema [1965]
  • Khalida Nuzhat QURESHI [Nasir]  The Political-Geographical Implications of “Pukhtoonistan” [1965]
  • Evan DENNEY  Economic Development, A Case Study of the Caroni River Region, Venezuela [1965]
  • Frederick Abraham HIRSH  Spatial Distribution of the Electronic Industry in the United States [1965]
  • Richard Owen MERRITT  Land Use Allocation for Military Purposes: The U.S. Marine Corps at Pickel Meadows, California [1965]
  • Stephen Keith NEWSOM  A Computer Program Which Constructs Interrupted Cylindric Map Projections [1965]
  • Frank James QUINN  National Involvement in a Small International River Valley: The Okanogan, British Columbia and Washington [1965]
  • Huibert VERWEY  The Problem in the Development of the Kulunda Steppe [1965]
  • Kenji Kenneth OSHIRO  Jiwari Seido in the Central and Southern Ryukyus [1965]
  • Harry Holman MOORE  Standardization of Geographic Names [1965]
  • Philip Rust PRYDE  A Locational Analysis of the Cotton Textile Industry of the U.S.S.R. [1965]
  • Philip Patrick MICKLIN  Electric Power Development in the Angaro-Yenisey Region of the U.S.S.R. [1966]
  • Elisabeth Warriner PUTNAM  An Analysis of the Spatial Variation in Selected Agricultural Practices in the Georgia Piedmont [1966]
  • Jack Francis WILLIAMS  China in Maps, 1890-1960. A Selective and Annotated Cartobibliography [1966]
  • Allen Ralph SOMMARSTROM  The Impact of Human Use on Recreational Quality: The Example of the Olympic National Park Backcountry User [1966]
  • David Lloyd STALLINGS  Automated Map Reference Retrieval [1966]
  • Ernest Harold WOHLENBERG  Some Spatial Aspects of the Wood Pulp Industry in the United States and Canada [1966]
  • Alan Anthony DELUCIA  SEMSID: An Automated System for Graphic Display of Series Map Status Information [1966]
  • Daniel Benjamin Scott PRATHER  The Cities of the Soviet Second Metallurgical Base: A Study of the Origin and Distribution [1967]
  • Barbara Mary BRERETON [Haney]  Viticulture and Viniculture in the U.S.S.R. [1967]
  • Geoffrey John Dennis HEWINGS  Persistence of Precipitation and No Precipitation Described by a Markov Chain Probability Model: Case Studies from Selected Stations in Washington State [1967]
  • Everett Arvin WINGERT  Tonal Enhancement and Isolation in Aerial Photographic Interpretation [1967]
  • Donald Allen OLMSTEAD  Trend-Surface Analysis of Geographical Data Surfaces [1968] [Sherman]
  • Alice Bent THIEDE  An Examination of the Map as a Conveyor of Propaganda [1967] [Sherman]
  • Kenneth Joseph LANGRAN  The Political and Administrative Control of Water Pollution in International River Basins [1968] [Cooley]
  • Joshua David LEHMAN  The Problem of Freeway Noise in Urban Areas [1968] [Ullman]
  • Dennis Gene ASMUSSEN  I. Railway Timber Flows in the Soviet Union; II. The Conservation Commission: An Alternative Beginning for the Creation of Effective Environmental Policy; III. Wild and Scenic Rivers: Private Rights and Public Goods [1969] [Jackson]
  • Thomas Pierce BOUCHARD  Politics and Environment: The Struggle for Wild and Scenic Rivers [1969] [Cooley]
  • Lawrence E. GOSS Jr.  The Rise and Fall of Downtown Tacoma: Its Causes and Consequences [1969] [Boyce]
  • Charles Edwin GREER  Chinghai Province: The Transformation of a Cultural Frontier [1969] [Chang]
  • Dean R. LOUDER  Non-Urban Stagnation in a Regional Setting: The Case of the Pacific Northwest [1969] [Morrill]
  • Victor Lee MOTE  Some Factors in Siberian Development: With Emphasis Upon the Western Siberian Butter Industry [1969] [Jackson]
  • George Franklin SHERWIN Jr.  Automobile Ownership Patterns: A Study of Variables Affecting Automobile Ownership in Seattle [1969] [Boyce]
  • Richard Robert SLOMON  The Hohsi Region Within the Han Frontier System : An Historical Geographic Approach [1969] [Chang]
  • Dona Shirlene STROMBOM  The Kirkland Business District: A Case Study of the Discrepancy Between Potential Trade Area and Retail Responses [1969] [Boyce]
  • Daniel Perry BEARD  Expansion of Outdoor Recreation Facilities: Two Case Studies Financed Under the Land and Water Conservation Fund Act in Washington State [1969] [Cooley]
  • Philip Stephen KELLEY  Control of the Ocean Floor: A Conflict Between Reality and Idealism [1969] [Sherman]
  • Cristine Jenner CANNON  Mapping Western North America and Puget Sound [1969] [Sherman]
  • Robert James BARNES.  The Structural-Functional Approach to Socio-Spatial Organization [1970] [Cooley]
  • Edward Fisher BERGMAN  Politics and the Geography of Transportation [1970] [Jackson]
  • James Jefferson KYLE  The Nisqually Delta Controversy [1970] [Cooley]
  • Paul J. MCCRAW  I. Determinism and Possibilism in the Case of China’s Economic Development; II. China’s Industrial Process and Reorientation in Foreign Trade [1970] [Chang]
  • Barbara Ann WEIGHTMAN  Commercial Fertilizer Manufacturing in Communist China: An Analysis of the Development Process and Growth Pattern of a Newly Emerged Industry [1970 ][Chang]
  • Larry Martin SVART  Field Burning in the Willamette Valley: A Case Study of Environmental Quality Control [1971] [Cooley]
  • David A. MUNGER  A Survey of the Western Red Cedar Shake Industry of the Pacific Northwest [1970] [Marts]
  • John Robert BRADEN  An Analysis of Models of Investments in Urban Outdoor Recreation Facilities [1971] [Beyers]
  • Gerald Ray PETERSEN  A Survey of the Growth and Nature of Medical Geography with Special Emphasis on Its Content, Methods and Relationships to the Health Sciences [1971] [Sherman]
  • Eugene James TURNER  The Functional Role of Animation in Cartography [1971] [Sherman]
  • Randolph James SORENSEN  Indian-American Land Tenure Conflict: A Case Study of the Shoshone- Bannock Fort Hall Indian Reservation, Fort Hall, Idaho [1971] [Jackson]
  • Olen Paul MATTHEWS  American Indian Cultural Change and Government Policy [1971] [Velikonja]
  • Marilyn L. CAYFORD  Transportation in Micronesia [1971] [Fleming]
  • Werner Johann LINDEMAIER  A Basic Study of an Endangered Natural Resource: The Ocean Shoreline of Washington State [1971] [Marts]
  • Arnold Lee TESSMER  Transport Development in Thailand; Strategic Requirements and Economic Growth [1971] [Ullman]
  • Kenneth Allan POPP  Gaming and the Evaluation of Population Forecasts. [1972] [Morrill]
  • Saud H. RAAD  Towards an Assessment of Environmental Impact of Urban Mass Transit and Political Integration in Lebanon [1972] [Jackson]
  • David William BAYLOR  Silver, Lead, and Zinc in the Economic Development of Shoshone County, Idaho [1972] [Thomas]
  • Michael Lee TALBOTT  Movements of Soviet Oil and Gas Since World War II [1972] [Jackson]
  • Philip ANDRUS  At Home in Tuwanasavi: The Perceived Integrity of the Hopi Environment [1972]
  • Roger Earl DOBRATZ  A Special Theory of General Systems in Geography [1972] [Ullman]
  • Lawrence Laird NYLAND  The Scandinavian Experiment: An Analysis of Various Aspects of Scandinavian Social Space Within the Confines of Western Europe [1972] [Fleming]
  • Art CHIN  The Economic Regionalization of Hainan Island South China (1950-1965) [1973] [Chang]
  • Leon C. JOHNSON  Black Migration, Spatial Organization and Perception in Philadelphia’s Urban Environment, 1638-1930 [1973] [Boyce]
  • Fedva DIKMEN  Patterns of Turkish Migration [1972] [Morrill]
  • Diane Lynn MANNINEN  The Role of Compactness in the Process of Redistricting [1973] [Morrill]
  • Charles Everett OGROSKY  New Approaches to the Preparation and Reproduction of Tactual and Enhanced Image Graphics for the Visually Handicapped [1973] [Sherman]
  • Gerald Ray JEWETT  Changing Social Objectives and the Columbia Basin Project: Past, Present, Future [1973] [Marts]
  • James Robert BUCKNELL  The Impact of Avalanches in Three Selected Areas of the Cascades: A Study of Avalanches as Natural Hazards [1974] [Marts]
  • William Redford ALVES  Three Papers on the Spatial Dynamics of Development: I. Critique of an Urban System Diffusion Model: Hudson’s (1969) Diffusion in a Central Place System. II. Decentralization of Manufacturing Location Theory of the Firm III. The Commuting Field and Its Spread Effects: Seattle, 1960-1970 [1974] [Beyers]
  • John Philip KING  The Global Pattern of Wide-Body Jet Routes: A Study of Network Determination [1974] [Fleming]
  • Moses Pui-Chuen LAI  Coal Industry in Mainland China: An Analysis of Its Changing Pattern of Growth and Distribution [1974] [Chang]
  • Kathleen Elizabeth O’BRIEN [Braden]  The Petroleum Resource of West Siberia [1974] [Jackson]
  • James Albert BUSS  Grouping, Regionalizing, Classifying: An Introduction [1974] [Morrill]
  • John Timothy GRIFFIN  Uncertainty and the Strategy of Flexibility in the Space-Economy [1975] [Beyers]
  • George Herbert HARMEYER  Rhine River Basin Water Pollution Problem [1975] [Fleming]
  • Robert Graham MITTELSTADT  Landscape Realization in the Cinema: The Geography of the Western Film [1976] [Fleming]
  • Jerome R. BROTHERS  The Subway Network in the Evolution of the Tokyo Mass Transit System [1976] [Velikonja]
  • Kathryn Lynn ERICKSON  Land Settlement in Tropical Africa for Population Pressure and Agricultural Development [1976] [Velikonja]
  • Thomas Randall REVIS  Geographic-Economic Problems and Development of a Soviet Population Policy [1976] [Jackson]
  • Lawrence Alvin WOODWARD  International Influence Fields: A Study in Political Geography [1976] [Jackson]
  • Hazel Lynn SINGER [Griffith]  The Spatial Distribution of Federal Funds for Research and Development [1976] [Thomas]
  • Joseph P. CHURCHILL  Skid Row in Transition [1976] [Boyce]
  • Diana DENHAM  Gypsies in Social Space [1976] [Velikonja]
  • Jean CULJAK SHAFFER  An Evaluation of Fare-Free Transit in Downtown Seattle [1976] [Boyce]
  • Lawrence Leonard MANSBACH  An Investigation of Locational Behavior as Viewed Through the Processes of Firm Growth [1976] [Krumme]
  • David Alan FANSLER  Downtown Retailing: A Quarter-Century of Decline [1977] [Hodge]
  • Sallie Ann MILLER [MacGregor]  Nonmetropolitan Growth as an Expression of Residential Preference [1977] [Morrill]
  • George D. COOK  The Presentation of Two Algorithms for the Construction of Value-By-Area Cartograms [1977] [Youngman]
  • David Paul BEDDOE  An Alternative Cartographic Method to Portray Origin-Destination Data [1978] [Sherman]
  • John Henry BANNICK Jr.  Unbalanced Product Specialization and the Location of Branch Plants [1978] [Morrill]
  • Donna Lee KLEMKA  Pacific Northwest Electrical Energy Planning. Problems of Institutional Redesign [1978] [Marts]
  • Michael Kay MELTON  A Study of the Visual Perception of Analytical Hill-Shading Technique [1978] [Youngman]
  • Paula Noel TWELKER  Ethnic Communities in Western Settlement [1978] [Velikonja]
  • Masami HASEGAWA  Depopulation: Recent Trends in Rural-Urban Migration in Japan [1978] [Kakiuchi]
  • Valerie Jeanette LEACH [HODGE]  Upfiltering and Neighborhood Change in the Madrona Area of Seattle, Washington [1978] [Hodge]
  • Lawrence John KIMMEL  Siberian Development and Its Implications for the U.S.S.R. [1978] [Jackson]
  • Wendy Terra PRODAN  Wilderness Review Procedures: Evaluating Alaska’s Wildlands [1979] [ZumBrunnen]
  • Philip George HIRTES  Orienteering and Orienteering-Mapping: Implications for Geography and Cartography [1979] [Sherman]
  • Francis Eugene SHERIDAN  The Gentrification of the Capitol Hill Community of Seattle in the 1970’s [1979] [Morrill]
  • Lynn Phyllis WEINER [Anderson].  A Spatial Analysis of Regional Economic Change in the United States Between 1967 and 1975 [1979] [Beyers]
  • Tamer KIRAC  Formulating Regional Input-Output Models. A Case Study of Turkey [1979] [Beyers]
  • Chris Edward LAWSON  Hardrock Mineral Development Policy for National Forest Land [1979] [Beyers]
  • Bridget TRUPIANO [Diekema]  Spatial Variation in Soviet Living Standard: 1959-1975 [1979] [ZumBrunnen]
  • Jody Hamaka Matsubu YAMANAKA  The Geography of the U.S. Air Cargo Industry [1979] [Fleming]
  • Nangisai Nason Kudzirozwa GWARADA  Historical Development and Future Aspects of Agriculture in Zimbabwe [1979] [Hodge]
  • Elizabeth Carol HOLLENBECK  Open Space at the Urban Periphery [1979] [Mayer]
  • Della Geneva O’CONNOR  Port Development in the People’s Republic of China: A Geographical Perspective [1979] [Chang]
  • Craig Smith CALHOON  Population Redistribution and Regional Economic Structure in the System of U.S. Metropolitan Regions, 1965-1975 [1980] [Beyers]
  • Kent Hughes BUTTS  Alberta’s Energy Resources: Their Impact on Canada [1980] [Jackson]
  • James William HARRINGTON  Tan-Zam: Economic, Technological, and Political Perspectives on a New Transport Route [1980] [Thomas]
  • Peter Haynes MESERVE  Convergence: The Unsummoned Response [1980] [Jackson]
  • Claudia Ann SWEENY  The Effects of Equity Policies on Agricultural Mechanization in the People’s Republic of China [1980] [Chang]
  • Paul WOZNIAK  Zoning in Urban Expansion and Its Urban Form Implications [1980] [Hodge]
  • Christopher L. DOUM  Maps for Promotional Purposes: The Map in Travel [1980] [Sherman]
  • Holly Jeanne MYERS-JONES  A Geographical Analysis of Political Opposition to Busing in Seattle [1980] [Morrill]
  • Howard John TIERSCH  Network and Schedules: A Look at Airline Strategies. [1980] [Mayer]
  • Sheila Jo MOSS  Stress, Change and A Sense of Place: Some Thoughts on Providing Care for Cancer Patients [1980] [Mayer]
  • Jacob Henry SCHNUR  The Geographic Implications of Federally Established Fair Market Rents: Case of Seattle, Washington [1980] [Hodge]
  • James Scott MACCREADY  Technological Processes and Geographical Dimensions of the Product Life Cycle [1981] [Thomas]
  • Michael Robert SCUDERI  An Examination of the Spatial Behavior of Wilderness Uses, With Special Reference to Campsite Selection – A Case Study in Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks [1981] [Beyers]
  • Mary Elizabeth MONSCHEIN  Color in Cartography and Landsat Image Comparison for Land Use Change Detection: A Feasibility Study [1981] [Youngman]
  • Mary Ann CIUFFINI  The Discriminability of Textures as Area Symbols on Tactual Maps and Graphics for the Visually Handicapped [1981] [Sherman]
  • Laura Lee MCCANDLESS  Two Studies in Cartography: A Review of Color Perception Research and the Design of Maps in Travel Advertising [1981] [Sherman]
  • Terry Lynn STORMS  The Crossed-Slit Anamorphoser: An Analysis of Its Characteristics and Utility in Cartography [1981] Sherman]
  • John Michael MACGREGOR  Spatial Equity of Mass Transit Service: The Seattle METRO [1981] [Hodge]
  • John Brady RICHARDS  Technology Transfer from Japan to the Transportation Sector of the Soviet Far East, 1970-1980 [1981] [Jackson]
  • Richard Terry CAMPBELL  Industrial Growth and Regional Development in Japan: The Case of the Electric Power Industry [1981] [Kakiuchi]
  • David WOO  Maps as Expression: A Study of Traditional Chinese Cartographic Style [1981] [Sherman]
  • Patrick Henry BUCKLEY  A Study of Migration in India: Regionalization of India Based Upon 1961, 1971 Migration Streams [1982] [ZumBrunnen]
  • Michael William CORR  The Lake Biwa Watershed: Problems of Agricultural and Industrial Pollution [1981] [Morrill]
  • Larry Allen DIEKEMA  Spatial Variations of Defense Contract Awards by DOD Contractors [1981] [Beyers]
  • Marjorie Beth PALMER  Residential Woodfuel Use in Western Washington, Estimated 1980 Consumption and Year 2000 Forecast [1981] [Beyers]
  • Richard Arthur SNYDER  Regional Variations in Air Passenger Variations [1981] [Mayer]
  • Matthew Okpani ALU  Cartography as an Essential Tool in Regional Planning and Development [1982] [Fleming]
  • John Arthur BOWER Jr.  The Pacific Northwest Power Supply System: the Present and Future Operation of a Power Pool [1982] [Beyers]
  • Lori Etta COHN  Residential Patterns of the Jewish Community of the Seattle Area, 1910-1980 [1982] [Mayer]
  • Marilee G. MARTIN  The Geographical Distribution of Federal Civilian Employment, 1967-1978 [1982] [Beyers]
  • Charles Robert ROSS, Jr.  Agricultural Land Conversion: A National Perspective and a Local Level Multiple Objective Planning Application [1982] [ZumBrunnen]]
  • Janet E. FULLERTON  Transit and Settlement in Seattle, 1871-1941 [1982] [Velikonja]
  • Elizabeth KOHLENBERG  Geography and the Demand for Mental Health Services [1982] [Mayer]
  • Karen Louise MCFAUL  Municipal Annexation: A Study of the Urban Political Geography of King County, Washington, 1970-1980 [1982] [Hodge]
  • Gene Edward PATTERSON  The Effects of Oil-Field Pollution on Residents in the Tulsa, Oklahoma, Area [1982] [ZumBrunnen]
  • Judith PEFFERMAN  The Evolution of Land Transportation in Pre-Modern Japan [1982] [Kakiuchi]
  • Stanley Winfield TOOPS  The Political Integration of Yunnan [1983] [Chang]
  • Dean Lee HANSEN  The Newly Industrialized Countries. Industrialization Strategies and Geographical Trade Dependence [1983] [Fleming]
  • Anjan BANERJEE  Structural Comparison of Three Regional Economies: A Case Study of Georgia, West Virginia and Washington [1983] [Beyers]
  • Garret Harold ROMAINE  Analysis of the Creation of the Mount St. Helens National Volcanic Monument [1983] [Beyers]
  • Ahmed Eid AL-HARBI  Maps and Mapping Activities in Saudi Arabia; Annotation and Cartobibliography [1983] [Sherman]
  • Mirko BOLANOVICH  I. Role of the Enterprise Zone in the Formation of Growth Poles in the Inner City. II. The Relationship of Race as an Identifiable Submarket to Housing Demand [1983] [Hodge]
  • Richard Taber HAND  On the Value of Estuaries as Public Goods [1983] [Beyers]
  • Jay Richard LUND  Living Aboard as an Element of an Urban Landscape [1983] [Mayer]
  • Suzette Lorraine CONNOLLY  Geography of the Northwest Wine Industry: Development and Outlook [1983] [Beyers]
  • Lydia M. HAGEN  Landscape Perceptions and Changes. A Case Study: The Journal of Susanna Moodie by Margaret Atwood [1984] [Jackson]
  • Elizabeth Starnes SELKE  The Geographical and Seasonal Characteristics of Suicide in Washington State, 1973-1977 [1984] [Mayer]
  • John Stewart SNOW  A Microcomputer Based Stereophotogrammetry System [1984] [Sherman]
  • Mary Ellen BURG  Habitat Change in the Nisqually River Delta and Estuary Since the Mid-1800’s [1984] [ZumBrunnen]
  • Michael Gerhard PARKS  Intra-Metropolitan Residential Mobility: A Simulation Approach [1984] [Hodge]
  • Andrew Campbell DANA  An Evaluation of the Yellowstone River Compact: A Solution to Interstate Water Conflict [1984] [Marts]
  • Peter N. V. SAMPLE  CHROMA: An Interactive Choropletic Mapping Package for Analysis in Geography [1984] [Hodge]
  • Glenn Eric SIEFERMAN  The Location of Veterinary Services in the United States; and: Health and Development [1985] [Mayer]
  • Frederick Ross TILGHAM  The Prospect for High-Speed Passenger Trains in the United States [1985] [Fleming]
  • Becky Johnston REININGER  POLYMAP: A Microcomputer Based Geographic Information Display System [1985] [ZumBrunnen]
  • Jon A. BOYCE.  Tsunami Hazard Mitigation: The Alaskan Experience Since 1964 [1985] [Marts]
  • Peter Reppert GALVIN  The Private Plot in Transition. Recent Development in Soviet Private Agriculture [1985] [Jackson]
  • Frank William LEONARD  A Study in Creating Multi-Level Tactile Maps and Graphics for the Blind Using Liquid Photopolymer [1985] [Sherman]
  • Thomas M. PERRY  A Cognitive Approach to Instructional Techniques and Color Selection in Mapping [1985] [Sherman]
  • Jana Claire HOLLINGSWORTH  Maps for the Fun of It: Tourist Maps and Map Use by Recreational Travelers [1986] [Sherman]
  • Nancy Lee HUTCHEON  Automation in Municipal Planning Agencies: A Case Study [1986] [Hodge]
  • Jonathan Kent VAN WYK  Spatial Variation in the Heavy Truck Market: A Study in Marketing Geography [1985] Krumme]
  • Ric VRANA.  Electronic Atlases: Expanding the Potential for Graphic Communication [1985] [Hodge]
  • Victoria B. ADAMS  The Effects of Recreational Development on Rural Landscapes and Communities [1986]
  • Susan C. DANVER  The Historical Geography of Misty Fiords National Monument and Wilderness and Its Relationship to the Economy of Ketchikan, Alaska [1986] [Marts]
  • Marcy A. FARRELL  Rural Alaskan Native Participation in Alaska’s Coastal Management Program [1986] [Sherman]
  • Marjorie Beth RISMAN  An Examination of Peak-Season, Single-Family Residential Water Consumption in Seattle, Washington [1986] [ZumBrunnen]
  • Elizabeth Leverett TAYLOR  Causation and Extent of Indian Tribal Influence on Environmental Protection in Washington State [1986] [Marts]
  • Edward J. DELANEY  A Geographic Perspective on Invention [1986] [Morrill]
  • R. Gordon KENNEDY  A Search for Definitions of Cartographic Accuracy [1986] [Sherman]
  • John J. GRUBER  Potential for Automobile Energy Conservation in the United States: A Simulation Approach [1986] [ZumBrunnen]
  • Robert Matthew RUDERMAN  The Role of Programming Languages and Cartographic Data Structure in Computer-Assisted Cartography [1987] [Hodge]
  • Corrin M. CRAWFORD  The Utility of Cartographic Devices in Market Research [1987] [Sherman]
  • Kathleen A. EVANS  Regional Administrative Centralization of Water Management Authority in the United States: Ideal or Impossibility? [1987]Morrill]
  • Kenneth Riley HERRELL  Natural Language Processing of Spatial References for Cadastral Cartography [1987] [Nyerges]
  • Jacqueline KROLLOP KIRN  The Skagit River – High Ross Dam Controversy: A Case Study of a Canadian-U.S. Transboundary Conflict and Negotiated Resolution [1987] [Marts]
  • Douglas O. STRANDBERG  Oil and Gas Transport System of the North Sea [1987] [Fleming]
  • Gardner PERRY III  Size as Related to Efficiency in United States Counties [1987] [Sherman]
  • Joan TENG  The Evolution of the Chinese Seaport System [1987] [Fleming]
  • Eileen ARGENTINA  Growth Management in King County: The King County Comprehensive Plan [1987] [Hodge]
  • Brooke U. KENT  Central City – Suburban Variation in Female and Male Earning in the United States [1988] [Hodge]
  • Andrew C. ROSS  A Spatial Analysis of the Residential Histories of Hodgkin’s Disease Cases [1988] [Mayer]
  • Daniel EWERT  Public Policy and Race Relations in Malaysia: Some Geographical Dimensions [1988] [Jackson]
  • Theodore HULL  The Filter-Down” Process of Nonmetropolitan Industrialization: A Case Study Approach [1988] [Krumme]
  • Anne FAULKNER  Development, Women’s Status, and the Nature of Work: The Incorporation and Marginalization of Women In the Ecuadorian Economy, 1974 to l982 [1988] [Lawson]
  • Steven W. LARSON  A Proposed Strategy for the Incremental Development of Geographic Information System Technology in King County, Washington [1988] [Chrisman]
  • Kathyrn Y. MAURICH  Private Land in Lake Chelan National Recreation Area: An Integrative Approach to Landscape Protection for Stehekin, Washington [1988] [Beyers]
  • Carlyn E. ORIANS  School Desegregation and Residential Segregation: The Seattle Metropolitan Experience [1988] [Morrill]
  • Thomas J. NOLAN  A Land Information System Network for the Puget Sound Region [1988] [Nyerges]
  • Charles P. RADER  A Functional Model of Color in Cartographic Design [1989] [Hodge]
  • Nancy Kopsco RADER  Determining Lateral Boundaries for River Conservation Areas: The Case of the Upper Delaware River [1989] [ZumBrunnen]
  • D. Timothy LEINBACH  Factors Affecting the Adoption of Transferred Technologies in Less Developed Countries: Some Theoretical Considerations [1989] [Thomas]
  • Dan WANCURA  A Transportation Cost Approach to Integrated Freight Transportation [1989] [Fleming]
  • Thomas W. CHOW  An Explanation of High-Tech Activities in Britain [1989] [Fleming]
  • Amanda WHELAN  Geographic Aspects of Obstetrical Care in Washington State [1989] [Mayer]
  • Sophia EBERHART  Assessing the Transfer of Technology to Developing Countries: Nigerian Palm Oil Industry Case Study [1989] [Thomas]
  • Michael T. WOLD  After the Boldt Decision: The Question of Inter-Tribal Allocation [1989] [ZumBrunnen]
  • Terri Lynne CARL  Residential Property Values In Seattle Neighborhoods [1990]
  • Patricia Ortiz CHALITA  Meditacion en el Umbral (Meditation on the Brink): The Woman-Headed Household in Urban Latin America as Possibility and Constraint [1990] [Lawson]
  • Julianna SISSON FORMAN  Is Money All That Matters? A Study of Recycling in Seattle [1990] [Morrill]
  • George Walker HORNING  Information Integration for Geographic Information Systems in a Local Government Context [1990] [Nyerges]
  • Frank W. MATULICH  Financial Transactions As Geographic information. [1990] [Nyerges]
  • James Ethan BELL  Ideology and the Built Environment: Evolving Socio-Spatial Structures in Tashkent [1990] [Jackson]
  • William Samuel ALBERT  The Use of Behavioral Data in a Geographical Information System for Transportation Planning [1990] [Nyerges]
  • Kevin Patrick McCOLLISTER  Two-paper option: 1. Disease Ecology and Human Landscape Alteration: The Case of Lyme Disease in the United States; 2. Ecological Scale and Conceptions of Disease Causation in Urban Areas: The Example of AIDS in the United States [1990] [Mayer]
  • Robert A. ROOSE  The Geographic Variables of Language Mobiliation: The Case of Belgium [1990] [Jackson]
  • Curt NEWSOME  Transboundary Marine Water Pollution in the Puget/Vancouver Basin [1990] [Jackson]
  • Teresa Anna KENNEDY  An Analysis of the Impact of Traffic Congestion on King County Employers and Possible Mitigation Measures [1990] [Hodge]
  • Alice Marie QUAINTANCE  People Without Places: The Response of Capitol Hill Churches to the Homeless [1991] [Hodge]
  • Marcus Kalani LESTER  Two paper option: 1. A Conceptual Model of Multidimensional Times for Geographic Information Systems; 2. A Comparison of Two Methods for Detecting Positional Error in Categorical Maps [1991] [Chrisman]
  • Samuel Gary SHAW  Infrastructure, Development and the Mexican Border: A New Synthesis [1991] [Lawson]
  • Thomas EDWARDS  Virtual Worlds Technology as an Interface To Geographical Information [1991] [Chrisman]
  • Joseph EMMI  Japanese Economic and Spatial Change In Theoretical Perspective: A Case Study in the Execution, Results and Implications of Neo-Schumperterian Development Policy [1991] [Thomas]
  • Timothy OAKES  The Spatial Constitution of Ethnicity and Tourism in Southwest China: An Appeal for a Theoretically Rejuventated Cultural Geography [1991] [Lawson]
  • Trudy SUCHAN  Useful Categories: A Cognitive Approach to Land Use Categorization Systems [1991] [Chrisman]
  • Meredith FORDYCE  Two-paper option: 1. Medical Geography: Its Practical and Philosophical Contexts; 2. The Utility of Small Area Analysis in Identifying Variations in Utilization of Hospital Services and the Implications of Those Variations [1991] [Mayer]
  • Laurie L. ASMAR  What Are We Doing? The Actions and Perceptions of Service Providers Assisting the Suburban Homeless [1991] [Hodge]
  • Joseph C. SPARR  Shaping Urban Growth: Urban Containment and Urban Concentration in Portland, Oregon [1991] [Hodge]
  • Carrie S. ANDERSON  A GIS Development Process: Preparing an Organization For The Introduction of GIS Technology [1991] [Nyerges]
  • Alan N. FORSBERG  The Cocaine Trade: Exploitation and Social Change Amongst the Bolivian Peasantry [1992] [Lawson]
  • Nedra J. CHANDLER  The Search for Community Vision: Between Collective Lying and Learning [1992] [Hodge]
  • Rose MESEC  A Gender and Space Analysis of Seattle’s Lesbian and Gay Communities [1992] [Hodge]
  • Jon Hofheimer NACHMAN  Sex, Race and Role in World Geography Textbooks: Representations of Africans South of the Sahara and Americans of the United States [1992] [Fleming]
  • Keeley S. WELFORD  The Construction of a Framework for Studying Home Based Work in Advanced Economies [1992] [Beyers]
  • Charles K. DODD  Siting Hazardous Facilities in the Soviet Union: The Case of the Nuclear Power Industry [1992] [ZumBrunnen]
  • Delia C. ROSENBLATT  Black Gold in Western Siberia: The Oil Industry and Regional Development [1992] [Jarosz]
  • Cedar C. WELLS  The Ranking of Puget Sound Watersheds for Nonpoint Pollution Control: A Policy Analysis [1992] [ZumBrunnen]
  • Brian D. LUDERMAN  A Geography of Financial Centers [1992] [Fleming]
  • Michael MOHRMAN  Primary Health Care In Seattle, 1950-1990 [1992] [Mayer]
  • Katherine HARRIS  Spatial Patterns of Helping Neighbor Networks for the Elderly: A Case Study [1992] [Mayer]
  • Charles VAVRUS  The Intersection of Class and Ethnicity: Land Tenure and Indian Community in Colonial Oaxaca, 1519-1821 [1992] [Lawson]
  • Gabriel GALLARGO  Urban-Spatial Behavior of Hispanic Immigrants [1992] [Hodge]
  • Christine ROBERTS  Asthma Mortality in Washington State, 1980-89 [1992] [Mayer]
  • Rachel SILVEY  Changing Migration Patterns of Women in Java: A Multiscale Analysis [1992] [Hodge]
  • Irina GUSHIN  Trihalomethanes in the California State Water Project: A Study of Their Geography, Chemistry and Public Policy Implications [1992] [ZumBrunnen]
  • Mary NEUBERGER  The Exodus To Oregon. The Emigration of Russo-Ukranian Pentecostals to the American West, 1988-93 [1993] [Velikonja]
  • Ivan GATCHIK  A Topological Data Model and Some Algorithms for Three Dimensional GIS [1993] [ZumBrunnen]
  • David BARBER  Understanding Jobs-Housing Balance: Implications On Affordable Housing Needs and Employment Accessibililty For the Urban Poor in King County, Washington [1993] [Hodge]
  • Robert HOIBY  Congestion Pricing: The Effects of the Toll Ring in Oslo, Norway [1993] [Hodge]
  • Craig DALBY  A Plan For the Implementation of GIS in the National Park Service, Pacific Northwest Region [1993] [Chrisman]
  • Dion MATHEWSON  The Impacts of Economic Restructuing on Woman-Headed Households, 1980-1990: Connections Between Employment and Housing [1993] [Lawson]
  • Nicole DEVINE  The Metropolis In Transition: Gender, Urban Restructuring and Residential Communities [1993] [Hodge]
  • Terrance L. ANTHONY  Approaching Development: The Necessity Of Multiscalar Analysis [Beyers]
  • Are BJORDAL  Hydrologic Modeling With Smallworld GIS. An object-oriented approach [1994] [Chrisman]
  • Peter Sterling HAYES  Value Out, Value In: The Bone River and Wilapa Watersheds, 1854-1994 [1994] [Beyers]
  • Rita ORDONEZ  Land Use Conflict and Sacred Space: Blackfeet Indians and the Badger-2 Medicine [1994] [Jackson]
  • Jonathan SMITH  Cultural Change and Depopulation in the Americas [1994] [Mayer]
  • Charles HENDRICKSEN  (two paper option). 1) A Model of the Migration Process; 2) Prescriptive Models in A Spatial Decision Support System: Intelligent Agents and Workflow Procedures [1994] [Nyerges]
  • Deborah OHMANN  Social and Economic Change in Rural Pacific Northwest Communities [1994] [Beyers]
  • Frederick ROWLEY  Urban Restructuring and the Spatial Redistribution of Men’s and Women’s Work Opportunities [1994] [Hodge]
  • Joshua SKOV  Retail Firm Behavior In Global Food Systems [1994] [Jarosz]
  • Brigit R. BAUR  Pronasol: Decentralization and Democratization of Development [1995] [Lawson]
  • Renee F. GARBER  (two-paper option). 1. A New Approach to Introductory Courses in Undergraduate Geography Education 2. The Israeli Health Care System and the Arab Minority [1995] [Mayer]
  • Lena Lynn HERON  Wandering the Wilderness Between Plan and Market: Contemporary Land Reform and Agricultural Restructuring in Russia [1995] [Jarosz]
  • Stacy Lyn BIRK-RISHEIM  Digital Data for the 1994 Central California Environmental Sensitivity Index [1995] [Nyerges]
  • Aaron Patrick GILL (two-paper option)A GIS data dictionary to support the site selection decision process & map displays to support the site selection decision process [1995] [Nyerges]
  • Jeffrey Brandt MILLER  Concepts for Group Spatial Decision Support Systems for Political Campaigns [1995] [Nyerges]
  • Sarah M. HILBERT  Revitalization of identity and place: The Zapatista Rebellion and the challenge to Mexican nationalism [1995] [Lawson]
  • Mary Katherine GOODWIN  A locational analysis of abortion in Washington State [1996] [Mayer]
  • Peter Alexander CLITHEROW  An analysis of factors affecting recent household travel behavior in the Puget Sound region [1996] [Morrill]
  • Richard Allen MOORE  World Wide Web tools for collaborative development of a geographic information system database for the Consortium for Risk Evaluation with Stakeholder Participation (CRESP) [1996] [Nyerges]
  • Lise Kirsten NELSON  Neoliberalism as contested ideological terrain: State practices and peasant agencies in Michoacan, Mexico [1996] [Lawson]
  • Peter Birger NELSON  The what and why behind the “West at War.” An empirical and theoretical analysis of migration to nonmetropolitan areas in the Pacific Northwest [1996] [Beyers]
  • Gregory Paul SEGAS  The evolution of a hydraulic state: The case of Uzbekistan [1996] [ZumBrunnen]
  • Douglas Grant MERCER  Rural Women founders of business service firms: New questions about old spaces [1996] [Beyers]
  • Robert Alfred NORHEIM  Is there an answer to mapping old growth? Examination of two projects conducted with remote sensing and GIS [1996] [Chrisman]
  • Terri L. SUZUKI  Towards a more complete understanding of poverty: examination of life stages, gender, and race from a geographic perspective [1996] [Morrill]
  • Monica Weiler VARSANYI  Proposition 187: Xenophobia, the feminized immigrant, and public spaces of reproduction in a transnational era [1996] [Mitchell]
  • Matthew James BARRY  Multiple Perspectives in Multimedia Maps [1996] [Nyerges]
  • Susan Elizabeth GRIGSBY  GIS Applications in a Coho Salmon Habitat Study of the Stillaguamish Watershed [1996] [Nyerges]
  • Martha Steinert COMPTON  Data models and the worlds they create: A comparison of remotely sensed riparian zones and GIS delineated riparian reserves in Canyon Creek watershed [1997] [Chrisman]
  • Lara Anne DETWEILER  Alaskan surimi, the `Other, Other White Meat’: Globalization, migration, fish production, and modernity on the last frontier [1997] [Morrill]
  • Caroline Archibald LANGE  Intermarriage on the medieval frontier: Undermining and defining the Anglo-Scottish border and technology, sexuality, and frontiers: Historical and geographic perspectives on Western pornography [1997] [Mayer]
  • Yuko MERA  International labor migration trends in Asia. [1997] [Chan]
  • Jessica Louise PETERS  Casinoization of native American cultures: Destruction or creation of the “authentic” Indian? [1997] [Jarosz]
  • Cheryl Lynn CRANE  Therapeutic landscapes: A cast study of feminist health care [1998] [Jarosz]
  • Brian David HAMMER  Circular migration in poverty countries in China [1998] [Chan]
  • Charles Rene TOVARES  Is everybody going to San Antone? A metropolitan scale analysis of Chicano and Anglo migration to Texas [1998] [Hodge]
  • Margaret Dickinson HAWLEY  (two paper option) 1.Filipino World War Two Veterans and Social Theory: A Critique of Racial Formation in the US and Immigrant Acts (“Racial Formation in the US” and “Immigrant Acts” should both be italicized, since they are book titles); 2.’Would you like rice with that?”: Globalization, Cultural Heirarchies and Filipina American Food Service Workers [1998] [Jarosz]
  • Charles Malcolm O’DONNELL  Initiative 676. An attempt to reduce firearm violence in the State of Washington [1998] [Mayer]
  • Mary Katherine KAEHNY  Citizen representation in growth management: An evaluation of Seattle’s neighborhood planning process [1999] [Hodge]
  • Eugene W. MARTIN  Conservation geographic information systems in Ecuador: An actor-network analysis [1999] [Chrisman]
  • Samuel ADAMS  GIS on the Rez: A Case Study of GIS Implementation On the Colville Indian Reservation, WA, USA [1999] [Nyerges]
  • Chris DAVIS  Urban Stream Habitat Restoration: Thinking At A Landscape Scale [1999] [Beyers]
  • Desiree DESURRA  Women’s Labor Resistance and Transnational Organizing: New Frameworks for Resistance and Theory [1999] [Lawson]
  • Richard HEYMAN  Geographical Thought, Ideology, and the University: The Humboldt Brothers and Daniel Coit Gilman [1999] [Jarosz]
  • Joanna SURGEONER  The North: Dissociation, Intimacy, and Beyond [1999] [Jarosz]
  • Catherine VENINGA  The Political Economy of New Urban Space: A Case Study of Northwest Landing [1999] [Mitchell]
  • Lili Catherine HEIN  The Location of Foreign Direct Investment In China [2000] [Chan]
  • Xiaohong HOU  Experimenting with Migration Flow Representation Using GIS Software Components [2000] [Chrisman]
  • David A. JESCHKE  A Carbon Cycle Model of Forestry in the Russian Far East [2000] [ZumBrunnen]
  • Shawn Kenneth MCMULLIN  Trade Area Assessment and Customer Prospecting: A Case Study Utilizing Geographic Information Technologies [2000] [Harrington]
  • Brigg Bromley NOYES  Human/Nature: Exploring Individual Interactions with American Wilderness [2000] [Jarosz]
  • Daniel Alejandro REYES  Between County and State Data: Nuances of Archaeological Database Consolidation for GIS Modeling [2000] [Chrisman]
  • Carolina KATZ  Remapping Rights and Responsibilities: A Legal Geography of the 1996 Welfare and Immigration Reforms [2000] [Sparke]
  • Molly VOGT  Data Tiles in a Checkerboard Forest: Challenges of Data Integration with GIS [2000] [Chrisman]
  • Hilary Nagle MCQUIE  Boomtown & busts: Unlayering Seattle’s “drugscapes” [2000] [Jarosz]
  • Walter D. SVEKLA  Representation in GIS-based simulation model integration: A case study of earthquake loss estimation and mitigation [2002] [Nyerges]
  • Linda Bich-Kieu WASSON  Exploring discursive constructions of contemporary Vietnam in the context of tourism and economic development [2001] [Lawson]
  • Kristen Sedley SHUYLER  Telling salmon stories: A narative analysis of Nooksack struggles for treaty fishing rights in Washington State [2001] [Jarosz]
  • Colleen Moira DONOVAN  Negotiating protest and practice: Development, rural livelihoods, and the Brazilian Landless Movement (MST) [2001] [Lawson]
  • Maria E. FANNIN  Birth as a spatial process: Themes of control, safety, family and natural in “homelike” birthing rooms [2002] [England]
  • Maureen Helen HICKEY  On “The Beach”. Travelers’ dreams, Hollywood magic, and development dilemmas in Southern Thailand [2002] [Lawson]
  • Manija SAID  Cultivating the forbidden flower: War, vulnerability, and the geopolitics of opium in Afghanistan [2002] [Jarosz]
  • M arcia Rae ENGLAND  Who’s afraid of the dark? Not Buffy! A feminist examination of the paradoxical representations of public and private space in Buffy the Vampire Slayer [2002] [Brown]
  • Angela K. LEUNG  The role of technology and knowledge in foreign direct investment and regional economic development: a case study of Shenzhen in China [2002] [Chan]
  • Joseph A. MILLER  Scales of Quality: a multilevel approach to coronary artery bypass grafting in New York state [2002] [Mayer]
  • Dana MORAWITZ  All bare permanently or all bare fleetingly? Tracking land cover conversions and forestry practices through time by comparing spectrally unmixed remote sensing data with forest practice act data: a case study on the urban forestry [2002] [Chrisman]
  • Joseph  LLOBRERA  Nutrition and the infant formula controversy: A case study of maternal dietary diversity and infant feeding practices in the Philippines [2002] [Jarosz]
  • Joshua P. NEWELL  Land use and land cover on an urbanizing fringe: policy drivers and implications for conservation and forests of Russia’s far east: Rising threats of corruption and consumption [2002] [ZumBrunnen]
  • Nandini Narayani VALSAN  Conceptualization and perpetuation of identity among middle class Indian women in Washington state [2002] [Withers]
  • Christopher FOWLER  Missing the boat: The role of transportation networks in shaping global economic relations [2003] [Ellis]
  • Jonathan GLICK  Neighborhood catch-22? Considering the place(s) of revitalization in the gentrification of Washington, D.C. [2003] [Withers]
  • Andrew James WENZL  Consumption side up: The importance of non-earnings income as a new economic base in rural Washington state [2003] [Beyers]
  • Robert Ian DUNCAN  Beneath Transition: Dialogic Landscapes of Modernisms and the St. Petersburg Subway [2004] [Brown]
  • Chris CHAMBERLIN  Nationalism and development in the Indonesian census [2004] [Ellis]
  • Steven GARRETT  (2 paper option) (1) Coming back to the foodshed: Geographic imagination, pedagogy and social action. (2) Short, thin or obese? Comparing growth indexes of children from high- and low-poverty areas [2004] [Jarosz]
  • Caroline FARIA  Gendering roles and responsibilities: Privileging prevention in the Ghanaian fight against HIV/AIDS [2004] [Jarosz]
  • Joseph EGGER  A political ecological analysis of the emergence of epidemic dengue/dengue hemorrhagic fever in Trinidad [2004] Mayer]
  • Kevin RAMSEY  Stakeholder involvement and complex decision making: A case study into the design and implementation of a GIS for supporting local water resource management [2004] [Nyerges]
  • Antonia BENNETT  (two paper option) (1) A review of new evidence for the aging and the dying processes. (2) Floating migrants in Guangdong: The invisible numbers behind China’s economic growth [2004] [Chan]
  • Dominic CORVA  Localization, Globalization and the World Social Forum: Towards a Process Geography of Counterhegemonic Mobilization [2004] [Sparke]
  • Derik ANDREOLI  Fuzzy Concepts and Fuzzy Borders: An interactions-based approach to defining the geography of industrial clusters [2004] [Beyers]
  • Steve HYDE  Discursive strategies of displacement: a revisionist History of the anti-Chinese movement in the Puget Sound region of North America, 1885-1886 [2004] [Beyers]
  • Naheed Gina AAFTAAB  Developing educated Afghan women: a critical case study [2004] [Jarosz]
  • Anne WIBERG-ROZAKLIS  The educational gaze: the public classroom and competing national discourses post-September 11th [2005] [Mitchell]
  • Erin GAULDING  Locating the gap between academic and school geographies: a study of truth in middle and high school social studies textbooks [2005] [Brown]
  • Matthew W. WILSON  Implications for a public participation geographic information science: analyzing trends in research and practice [2005] [Nyerges]
  • Elise BOWDITCH  The significance of geography in the transition to adulthood: the significance of geography for adult outcomes in intergenerational mobility [2005] [Withers]
  • Ann BARTOS  Through a pink lens: the geographical imaginations of “Code Pink” [2005] [Brown]
  • Dawn COUCH  From public works to the projects: a regulationist perspective on public housing [2005] [Ellis]
  • Victoria BABBIT  Embodying borders: trafficking, prostitution and the moral (re)ordering of Sweden [2005] [Herbert]
  • Megan TONEY  Media representations of women and credit card debt: a context analysis of two Seattle newspapers [2005] [England]
  • Erica SIEBEN  Patterns of racial partnering of mixed-race individuals [2005] [Ellis]
  • Jeff MASSE . Pure is Elsewhere: Bottled Water and the Geography of  Lack  [2006] [Jarosz]
  • Sarah IVES  Contesting ‘National’ Space: Soap Operas in Post Apartheid South Africa [2006] [Jarosz]
  • Serin HOUSTON  Spatial Stories: The Racial Discourses of Mixed-Race Households in Tacoma, Washington [2006] [Ellis]
  • Rowan ELLIS  “Dravida Nadu for Dravidians”: Discourse on place and identity in early and mid-twentienth century Tamil Nadu [2006] [Mitchell]
  • Cale BERKEY. Neoconservative Ideology and Geospatial Homeland Security at the City of Seattle [2006] [Nyerges]
  • Doris OLIVERS. Neoliberal articulations: methodologies for the study of globalization and Counter-hegemonic dispersions: The World Social forum model [2006] [Sparke]
  • David JENSEN. Homeless1@ spl.org : taking the bus to the Internet [2007] [Beyers]
  • (Charles) Todd FAUBION. HIV/AIDS Care in South Africa: Examining Treatment Possibilities and the Context of Regressive Social & Health Policies Post-Apartheid [2007] [Mayer]
  • Michalis AVRAAM. Geographic foundations as an interdisciplinary framework [2007] [Nyerges]
  • Rebecca BURNETT. Relocating the welfare mother: Neoliberal discourses on women in the culture of poverty [2007] [Lawson]
  • Heather DAY. Competing visions for the hemisphere: the role of the Hemisphere Social Alliance in constructing alternatives to the FTAA [2007] [Lawson]
  • Juan GALVIS. The state and the construction of territorial marginality: The case of the 1961 land reform in Colombia [2007] [Jarosz]
  • David MOORE. Equity: Environmental justice and transportation decision-making processes [2007] [Withers]
  • Tricia RUIZ. Exploring the links between school segregation and residential segregation: A geographical analysis of school districts and neighborhoods in the United States, 2000 [2007] [Withers]
  • Charu VERMA. Spatial tactics and protest zones: The zoning of dissent since 9/11 [2007] [Herbert]
  • Anneliese STEUBEN. Segregated pedagogies in an era of standardization: Stories of progressive teaching in the Seattle metropolitan area [2007] [Mitchell]
  • Jesse AYERS. Valuing natural amenities in spatially variable contexts, an hedonic pricing study in King County, WA [2007] [Beyers]
  • Elizabeth UNDERWOOD-BULTMANN. Enforcing behavior: Transgression and spatial politics of zoning [2008] [Herbert]
  • Zhong WANG. On-line public participation: Formalization and implementation [2008] [Nyerges]
  • Michelle BILODEAU. Place-Based Suicide: The ‘Scene’ and the Unseen Meanings of the San Francisco Golden Gate Bridge [2008] [Mayer]
  • Anna MCCALL-TAYLOR. Care, Gender, and Households’ Pursuit of Employer-Based Health Insurance [2009] [Withers]
  • Jack NORTON. Rethinking First World Political Ecology: The Case of Mohawk Militancy [2009] [Jarosz]
  • TIM STILES. The Social Construction of Geospatial Technology and Sustainability in the Private Sector [2009] [Elwood]
  • MILISSA ORZOLEK. Understanding Recovery: Belonging and Responsibility in Post-Katrina New Orleans [2009] [Elwood]
  • Patricia LOPEZ. An Historically Situated Case For Children’s Right To Health: The Birth of the Model Cities Clinic of Odessa Brown Children’s Clinic [2009] [Mitchell]
  • Gary SIMONSON. Forgotten Stayers: The Impacts of Gentrification on Long-term Working-class Residents in Columbia City [2009] [Brown]
  • Mike BABB. Filling in the Blanks: Missing Data in the US Census and the Race Question [2009]  [Ellis]
  • Kathryn GILLESPIE . Killing with Kindness? Reconceptualizing Humane Slaughter [2010] [Jarosz & Lawson, co-chairs]
  • Josef ECKERT.  Tropes 2.0: Strategic Mobilizations of Geoweb Participation [2010] Herbert]
  • Cindy GORN . “A Place Like This”: Producing Psychiatric Disablement In Adult Homes [2010] [Brown]
  • Tiffany GROBELSKI . The Dynamics of Scale in EU Environmental Governance: A Case Study of Integrated Permitting in Poland [2010] [ZumBrunnen]
  • Amy PIEDALUE.  Solving Violence Through Development: India’s National Family Health Survey-3 and the Framing of Domestic Violence [2010] [England & Lawson, co-chairs]
  • Margaret RAMIREZ .  Food as an Engine: Race, Privilege and the Transformative Potential of Food Justice Work in Seattle [2011] [Lawson]
  • Allison SCHULTZ.  (Re)Placing ‘The Fattest Americans’: A Critical Geography of Obesity and Diabetes Among the Akimel O’otham [2011] [Jarosz]
  • Theron STEVENSON  . Balkan Ghosts in Heavenly Gardens: How Nature Parks and Tourism are Making a European Croatia [2011] [Sparke]
  • Christopher LIZOTTE . The Children of Choice: Public Education Reform and the Evolution of Neoliberal Governance [2011] [Mitchell]
  • Monica FARIAS.  Embodying Economic “Crisis”: Argentina’s Middle Classes and the Cultural Politics of Difference [2011] [Lawson]
  •   Stefano BETTANI .’Queering’ Straightness: Heterosexual Experiences of Homonormative Spaces in Seattle [2012] [Brown and England]
  • Elyse   GORDON . Cultivating Good Workers: Youth Gardening, Non-Profits and Neoliberalization  [2012] [Elwood]
  • Skye NASLUND . Portraits of Parasites: Geographic Imaginaries in the Production of Health Knowledge [2012] [Mayer]
  • Natalie WHITE.  Who is Transnational? Considering Ideologies of Return in Guatamalan Origin Communities  [2012] [Lawson]
  • Jason YOUNG.  Selecting a Conceptual Basemap: Critical GIS and Political Theory [2012] [Elwood]
  • Lynda TURET . Building Transformative Place-Making: Lessons From Washington Hall [2013] [Mitchell]
  • Yolanda VALENCIA.  Leyes Crueles – Lugares Violentos: Mexican Women’s Testimonios Along the Migration Journey’ [2014] [Lawson]
  • William MCKEITHEN .Governing Pet Love: ‘Crazy  Cat Ladies,’ Cultural Discourse, and the Spatial Logics of Inter-Species Intimacies [2014] [Brown]
  • Annie   CRANE.  Uncaring Systems and the Production of Trans* Subjectivities: Exploring Digital Spaces of Trans* Care [2014] [Brown]
  • Lila GARCIA.  The Revolution Might Be Tweeted: Digital Social Media, Contentious Politics and the Wendy Davis Filibuster [2014] [England]
  • Kidan ARAYA.  Examining Claims of Food Justice in the Oxfam International’s Agenda: A Case Study of the GROW Campaign  [2015] [Jarosz]
  • Meredith KRUEGER.  Care and Capitalist Crisis in Anglophone Digital landscapes: The Case of the Mompreneur [2015] [Lawson]
  • Key   MACFARLANE.  “Noisy Sphere”: Sonic Geographies in the Era of Globalization [2015] [Mitchell]
  • Margaret WILSON.   Ebola Exceptionalism: On the Intersecting Political and Health Geographies of the 2014-2015 Epidemic [2015] [Sparke]
  • Phillip NEEL. Logistics Cities: Poverty, Immigration and Employment in Seattle's Southern Suburbs [2016] [Bergmann]
  • Lee FIORIO. Neighborhoods Neighboring Neighborhoods: Adjacency, Sprawl and Tract-level Racial Change in the U.S., 1990 to 2010 [2016] [Ellis]
  • Robert ANDERSON. From Non-native "Weed" to Butterfly "Host": Knowledge, Place and Belonging in Ecological Restoration [2017] [Biermann]
  • Olivia HOLLENHORST. A Rights Based Approach to Humanitarian Data Protection Policies [2017] [Mayer]
  • Edgar Sandoval. "Being Undocumented and Gay, Just Like Death, Means Having to Navigate Two Worlds": Geographies of Disidentifications and UndocuQueer as World-Making [2017] [Ybarra]
  • Rebecca STUBBS. Place, Policy, and Parity: Examining Spatial and Socioeconomic Contributions to Hospital Charge Markup and MapSuite: An R Package for Thematic Maps [2017] [Ellis]
  • Rod PALMQUIST. Does the NGO Sector Undermine National Health Providers? How to Measure Migrations of Health Workers Between Public and NGO Care Providers on a Cross-Country Basis [2017] [Sparke]
  • Maeve DWYER. Urban Citizenship, Quality Domesticity, and the Queer Precarity of Rural Migrants in Beijing [2018] [Chan]

NON-THESIS M.A. (Special Projects)

  • Jonathan Ferns MOULTON  Boundary & Arcedit. [1985]
  • David Kenney BALTZ  Micro CENMAP: A Microcomputer Mapping Program for Census Data. [1986]
  • John Hall GRIFFITH III  “SAGIS” User’s Guide. [1987]
  • Jerome J. CORR  Proportional Symbols Program. [1988]
  • Philip Michael CONDIT  Quality Report For Three Components of Seattle’s Geographic Base File. [1990]
  • Ernest Moore  The Evolution of a GIS: Case of Thurston County, Washington. [1991]

Doctoral Dissertations, 1930-Present

  • Hubert Anton BAUER  The Tide as an Environmental Factor in Geography. [1930]
  • Albert Lloyd SEEMAN  The Port of Seattle. A Study in Urban Geography. [1930]
  • James Allen TOWER  Land Utilization in Mason County, Washington. [1936]
  • Carl Herbert MAPES  A Map Interpretation of Population Growth and Distribution in the Puget Sound Region.[1943]
  • Arch Clive GERLACH  Precipitation of Western Washington. [1943]
  • Willis Bungay MERRIAM  Thew Rogue River Valley and Associated Highlands.[1945]
  • Tim Kenneth KELLEY  The Commercial Fishery of Washington. [1946]
  • John Clinton SHERMAN  The Precipitation of Eastern Washington. [1947]
  • Lucile CARLSON  Human Energy, Physical and Emotional, Under Varying Weather Conditions. [1948]
  • John Henry THOMPSON  Geography of the Truckee and Carson River. [1949]
  • Edna Mae GUEFFREY  Historical Geography of New Zealand (850 A.D. – 1840 A.D.) [1950]
  • Richard Morgan HIGHSMITH, Jr.  Agricultural Geography of the Eugene Area. [1950]
  • Clark Irwin CROSS  Geography of the Big Horn Basin of Wyoming [1951]
  • Elbert Ernest MILLER  Agricultural Geography of Cache Valley, Utah-Idaho [1951]
  • Howard John CRITCHFIELD  The Agricultural Geography of Southland, New Zealand [1952]
  • Oliver Harry HEINTZELMAN ; The Dairy Economy of Tillamok County, Oregon. [1952]
  • Willert RHYNSBURGER  The Puget Sound Drift Plain: Land Resources of Human Occupance. [1952]
  • Albert William SMITH  The Development of the Kauri-Gum Industry and Its Role in the Economy of Northland, N.Z. [1952]
  • Manuel John LOEFFLER  Phases in the Development of the Land-Water Resource in an Irrigated River Valley, Colorado. [1953]
  • John Olney DART  The Renton-Sumner Lowland of Western Washington. [1953]
  • Donald William MEINIG  The Walla Walla Country: 1805-1910. A Century of Man and the Land. [1953]
  • Keith Westhead THOMSON  The Dairy Industry of England and Wales Since the Establishment of the Milk Marketing Board. [1953]
  • Theodore HERMAN  An Analysis of China’s Export Handicraft Industries to 1930 [1954]
  • William Rodney STEINER  An Investigation of Selected Phases of Sampling to Determine Quantities of Land and Land-Use Types.[1954]
  • Woodrow Rexford CLEVINGER  The Western Washington Cascades: A Study of Migration and Mountain Settlement. [1955]
  • Midori NISHI  Changing Occupance of the Japanese in Los Angeles County, 1940-1950.[1955]
  • Charles Dennis DURDEN  Some Geographic Aspects of Motor Travel in Rural Areas – Empirical Tests of Certain Geographical Concepts of Location and Interaction.  [1955]
  • Stanley Alan ARBINGAST A Geographic Study of the Pattern of Manufacturing in Texas.[1956]
  • Robert Martin TAYLOR  International Mail Flows: A Geographic Analysis Relating Volume of Mail to Certain Characteristics of Postal Countries. [1956]
  • Neil Collard FIELD  The Role of Irrigation in the South European U.S.S.R. in Soviet Agricultural Growth: An Appraisal of the Resource Base and Development Problem.& [1956]
  • Burton Lawrence ANDERSON  The Scandinavian and Dutch Rural Settlements in the Stillaguamish and Nooksack Valleys of Western Washington [1957]
  • James Eugene BROOKS  Settlement Problems Related to Farm Size in the Columbia Basin Project, Washington [1957]
  • Douglas Broadmore CARTER  The Relation of Irrigation Efficiency to the Potential Development of Irrigated Agriculture in the Pacific Northwest. [1957]
  • Francis William ANDERSON  Functional Interrelationship of Urban Centers[1958]
  • Brian Joe Lobley BERRY  Shopping Centers and the Geography of Urban Areas. A Theoretical and Empirical Study of the Spatial Structure of Intraurban Retail and Service Business. [1958]
  • Clyde Eugene BROWNING  The Structure of the Mexico City Central Business District: A Study in Comparative Urban Geography. [1958]
  • Willis Robertson HEATH ; Maps and Graphics for the Blind; Some Aspects of the Discriminability of Textural Surfaces for Use in Areal Differentiation. [1958]
  • John Doneric CHAPMAN  Land Classification in British Columbia. A Review and Appraisal of the Land Utilization Research and Survey Division. [1958]
  • Dale Elliot COURTNEY  Problems Associated with Predicting Land Use in Low Latitude Humid Regions: A Case Study of the San Sebastian-Rincon Area, Puerto Rico. [1959]
  • John Albert CROSBY  A Geographical Analysis of Seattle’s Wholesale Trade Territory. [1959]
  • Duane Francis MARBLE  Transport Inputs at Urban Residential Sites. A Study in the Transportation Geography of Urban Areas.  [1959]
  • Richard Leland MORRILL  A Normative Model of Trade Areas and Transportation: With Special Reference to Highways and Physicians’ Services.[1959]
  • William Richard SIDDALL  Idiographic and Nomothetic Geography: The Application of Some Ideas in the Philosophy of History and Science to Geographic Methodology. [1959]
  • Fleming Stanley MOORE  The Role of Floriculture in the Agriculture of Florida. [1959]
  • John David NYSTUEN  Geographical Analysis of Customer Movements and Retail Business Locations: (1) Theories; (2) Empirical Patterns in Cedar Rapids, Iowa; and (3) A Simulation Model of Movement [1959]
  • William Wheeler BUNGE Jr.  Theoretical Geography. [1960]
  • Michael Francis DACEY  Identification of Patterns on Maps with Special Reference to Data Reduction for Systems Analysis.  [1960]
  • Robert Charles MAYFIELD  An Analysis of Tertiary Activity and Consumer Movement: The Spatial Structure of Ludhiana and Jullundur Districts, Punjab, in Terms of Central Functions and the Range of a Central Good. [1961]
  • Ronald R. BOYCE  Comparative Central City Spatial Structure: Trends in the Location and Linkage of Selected Commercial Activities. [1961]
  • Waldo Rudolph TOBLER;  Map Transformations of Geographic Space.  [1961]
  • Sen Dou CHANG  The Chinese Hsien Capital: A Study in Historical Urban Geography.  [1961]
  • Arthur GETIS  A Theoretical and Empirical Inquiry into the Spatial Structure of Retail Activities.  [1961]
  • Julian Vincent MINGHI  Some Aspects of the Impact of an International Boundary on Spatial Patterns: An Analysis of the Pacific Coast Lowland Region of the Canada-United States Boundary.  [1962]
  • Robert D. PICKER  Industrial Development in Central Siberia and Northern Kazakhstan: A Study of a Third Metallurgical Base in the Soviet Union.  [1962]
  • Astvaldur EYDAL  Some Geographical Aspects of the Fisheries of Iceland.  [1963]
  • Louis HAMILL  A Preliminary Study of the Status and Use of the Forest Resources of Western Oregon in Relation to Some Objectives of Public Policy.  [1963]
  • Robert Allen LEWIS  Early Irrigation in West Turkestan.  [1964]
  • Andrew Lee MARCH  Landscape in the Thought of Su Shi (1036-1101).  [1964]
  • Robert Granville JENSEN  Soviet Agricultural Regionalization and Price Zonation.  [1964]
  • Deane Richard LYCAN  Defense-Space Research and Development Contraction Expenditures: Analysis and Some Implications of Their Areal Patterns.  [1964]
  • William Marvin ROBERTS, Jr.  Soviet Economic Regionalization in the Pre-Plan Period.  [1964]
  • Jeremy Herrick ANDERSON  The Soviet Corn Program: A Study in Crop Geography.  [1964]
  • Anne BUTTIMER  Some Contemporary Interpretations and Historical Precedents of Social Geography: With Particular Emphasis on the French Contributions to the Field.  [1964]
  • William Robert Derrick SEWELL  Economic and Institutional Aspects of Adjustment to Floods in the Lower Fraser Valley.  [1964]
  • Robert William MCCOLL  The Rise of Territorial Communism in China 1921-1934. The Geography Behind Politics.  [1964]
  • John Lynden KIRBY  A Geography of Han China (206 B.C. – A.D. 221) According to the  Shi Chi , the  Han Shu , and Related Texts.  [1964]
  • Bob Randolph O’BRIEN  The Yellowstone National Park Road System: Past, Present and Future.  [1965]
  • Douglas Knowles FLEMING  Coastal Steel Production in the European Coal and Steel Community 1953 to 1963.  [1965]
  • Elmer A. KEEN  Some Aspects of the Economic Geography of the Japanese Shipjack-Tuna Fishery.  [1965]
  • Calvin Gus WILLBERG  Problems in Establishing an Automated Mapping System.  [1965]
  • Gunter KRUMME  Theoretical and Empirical Analyses of Patterns of Industrial Change and Entrepreneurial Adjustments: The Munich Region.  [1966]
  • Harold BRODSKY  Location Rent and Journey-to-Work Patterns in Seattle.  [1966]
  • Guy Perry Frederick STEED  A Framework for the Study of Manufacturing Geography: With a Consideration of the Nature and Process of Manufacturing Changes in Northern Ireland 1950 to 1964.  [1966]
  • John Brian PARR  Regional Development and Public Policy: North-West England and the Post War Period.  [1967]
  • William Bjorn BEYERS  Technological Change and the Recent Growth of American Aluminum Reduction Industry.  [1967]
  • Marvin Alan STELLWAGEN  An Analysis of the Spatial Impact of Federal Revenue and Expenditures; 1950 to 1960.  [1967]
  • Ihor STEBELSKY  Land Tenure and Farm Holding in European Russia on the Eve of Collectivization.  [1967]
  • David Williams WILCOXSON, Jr.  The Economic Geography of the Contemporary Steel Industry in the American West.  [1967]
  • Robert Michael PEARCE  Land Tenure and Political Land Authority: The Process of Change and Land Relations and Land Attitudes in Vietnamese Villages of the Mekong Delta Since 1945.  [1968]
  • Warren Emil HULQUIST  The Geographic Structure of the Soviet Sugar Industry.  [1968]
  • David STRAUSZ  Specialty Crop Agriculture in Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union. Hops: A Case Study.  [1968]
  • Harvey Eric HEIGES  Intra-Urban Residential Movement in Seattle, 1962-1967.  [1968]
  • Gregory Lloyd SMITH  The Functional Basis of the ZIP code and Sectional Center System.  [1968] [Morill]
  • Robert EARICKSON  A Behavioral Approach to Spatial Interaction: The Case of Physician and Hospital Care. [1968] [Morrill]
  • Gerald Lee GREENBERG  Map Design for Partially Seeing Students: An Investigation of White Versus Black Line Symbology.  [1968] [Sherman]
  • Richard Waldo WILKIE  On the Theory of Process in Human Geography: A Case Study of Migration in Rural Argentina.  [1968] [Morrill]
  • Hans-Joachim MEIHOEFER  The Use of the Circle in Thematic Maps: A Study in Visual Perception of Cartographic Symbol.  [1968] [Sherman]
  • Frederick Abraham HIRSCH  Geographical Patterns of Inter-Metropolitan Migration in the United States 1955 to 1960.  [1968] [Morrill]
  • Geoffrey John Dennis HEWINGS  Regional Industry Models Using National Data: The Structure of the West Midlands Economy.  [1969] [Fleming]
  • Neil Robert Michael SEIFRIED  A Study of Changes in Manufacturing in Mid-Western Ontario 1951-1964.  [1969] [Thomas]
  • Philip Rust PRYDE  Natural Resource Management and Conservation in the Soviet Union.  [1969] [Jackson]
  • John CAMPBELL  The Relevance of Input-Output Analysis and Digraphg Concepts to Growth Pole Theory.  [1969] [Thomas]
  • James B. CANNON  An Analysis of Manufacturing as an Instrument of Public Policy In Regional Economic Development: Canadian Area Development Agency Program 1963-1968.  [1969] [Thomas]
  • Charles Buckley PETERSON III  Geographical Aspects of Foreign Colonization in Prerevolutionary New Russia.  [1969] [Jackson]
  • Roger James CRAWFORD, Jr.  Factors Affecting the Location of Bank Facilities.  [1969] [Boyce]
  • Jacek Ignacy ROMANOWSKI.  Factors of Location of Fresh Vegetable Production in Poland.  [1969][Jackson]
  • Robert Walter TESHERA  The Territorial Organization of American Internal Governmental Jurisdiction.  [1970] [Jackson]
  • Evan DENNEY  Urban Impact on Rural Environment: A Case Study of San Juan County, Washington.  [1970] [Cooley]
  • Allan Ralph SOMARSTROM  Wild Land Preservation Crisis: The North Cascades Controversy.  [1970] [Cooley]
  • Malcolm Algernon MICKLEWRIGHT  The Geography of Development in Northern Ireland.  [1970] [Thomas]
  • Nangisai Nason Kudzirozwa GWARADA  Historical Development and Future Aspects of Agriculture in Zimbabwe. [1979]
  • Ernest Harold WOHLENBERG  The Geography of Poverty in the United States: A Spatial Study of the Nations’s Poor.  [1970] [Morrill]
  • Frank James QUINN  Area-0f-Origin Protectionism in Western Water.  [1970] [Cooley]
  • Murray Thomas CHAPMAN  Population Movement in Tribal Society: The Case of Duidui and Pichahila, British Solomon Islands.  [1970] [Morrill]
  • Siim SOOT  Changes in the Socioeconomic Spatial Structure of Milwaukee and Journey-to-Work Patterns.  [1970] [Boyce]
  • Thomas Walter POHL  Seattle 1851-1861: A Frontier Community.  [1970] [Baron]
  • Roger Lee THIEDE  Town and Function in Tsarist Russia: A Geographical Analysis of Trade and Industry in Towns of New Russia, 1860-1910.  [1970] [Jackson]
  • Keith Way MUCKLESTON  The Problem of Implementing the Federal Water Project Recreation Act in Oregon.  [1970] [Marts]
  • Phillip Patrick MICKLIN  An Inquiry into the Caspian Sea Problem and Proposals for Its Alleviation.  [1971] [Jackson]
  • Jonathan Jung-Hui LU  The Demand in the United States Rice: An Economic-Geographic Analysis.  [1971][Morrill]
  • Barbara Mary HANEY  Western Reflections of Russia, 1517-1812.  [1971] [Jackson]
  • Paul Yvon VILLENEUVE  The Spatial Adjustment of Ethnic Minorities in the Urban Environment.  [1971] [Morrill]
  • Dennis Gene ASMUSSEN  Children’s Cognitive Organization of Space.  [1971] [Baron]
  • Edward Fisher BERGMAN  Metropolitan Political Geography.  [1971] [Jackson]
  • Joseph Alan BRUFFEY  The Impact of the Super-Carrier upon Ocean Cargo Flows, Routes and Port Activity.  [1971] [Fleming]
  • Ronald Richard SCHULTZ  The Locational Behavior of Physician Establishments: An Analysis of Growth and Change in Physician Supply in the Seattle Metropolitan Area, 1950-1970.  [1971] [Boyce]
  • Victor Lee MOTE  Air Pollution in the Case U.S.S.R.  [1971] [Jackson]
  • Marwyn Stevart SAMUELS  Science and Geography: An Existential Appraisal.  [1971] [Jackson]
  • Hyun Kil KIM  Land Use Policy in Korea: With Special Reference to the Oriental Development Company.  [1971] [Jackson]
  • Kenji Kenneth OSHIRO  Dairy Policies and the Development of Dairying in Tohoku, Japan.  [1972] [Kakiuchi]
  • Stephen Miles GOLANT  The Residential Location and Spatial Behavior of the Elderly: A Canadian Example.  [1972] [Morrill]
  • Clifford E. MAYS  The Dynamics of Retail Growth: An Investigation of the Long-Run and Short-Run Adjustments of Activities in the Growth and Decline of Retail Nucleations.  [1972] [Boyce]
  • William Michael ROSS  Oil Pollution as a Developing International Problem: A Study of the Puget Sound and Strait of Georgia Regions of Washington and British Columbia.  [1972] [Marts]
  • Kazuo Z. NINOMIYA  A View of the Outside World During Tokugawa Japan: An Analysis of Reports of Travel by Castaways, 1636 to 1856.  [1972] [Kakiuchi]
  • Barbara Ann WEIGHTMAN  Study of the Indian Social Milieu in an Urban Environment.  [1972] [Chang]
  • Dean R. LOUDER  A Distributional and Diffusionary Analysis of the Mormon Church 1850-1970.  [1972] [Morrill]
  • John Richard KILCOYNE  Pictography Symbols in Cartography: A Study of Efficiency in Map Reading.  [1972] [Sherman]
  • Rodney Allen ERICKSON  The “Lead Firm”; Concept and Economic Growth: An Analysis of Boeing Expansion, 1963-1968.  [1973] [Thomas]
  • Daniel Perry BEARD  Electric Power Plant Siting Legislation: A Review.  [1973] [Marts]
  • Peter HARRISON  The Land Water Interface in an Urban Region: A Spatial and Temporal Analysis of the Nature of Significances of Conflicts Between Coastal Uses.  [1973] [Thomas]
  • Richard LE HERON  Productivity Change and Regional Economic Development: The Role of Best-Practice Firms in the Pacific Northwest Plywood and Veneer Industry, 1960-1972.  [1973] [Thomas]
  • Glen VANSELOW  Spatial Imagery and Geographic Scale.  [1973] [Morrill]
  • Everett Arvin WINGERT  Potential Role of Optical Data Processing in Geo-Cartographic Spatial Analysis.  [1973] [Sherman]
  • John Griffith SYMONS, Jr.  An Inquiry into Efficiency, Spatial Equity, and Public Facility Location.  [1973] [Morrill]
  • Laurence E. GOSS, Jr.  Wholesale Trade in New England: A Study of a Central Place Function.  [1973] [Ullman]
  • Charles Gilbert SMITH  Spatial Structure of Industrial Linkages and Regional Economic Growth: An Analysis of Linkage Changes Among Pacific Northwest Steel Firms, 1963-1970.  [1973] [Thomas]
  • Larry Martin SVART  Natural Environment Preferences and Interregional Migration.  [1973] [Ullman]
  • Roger HAYTER  An Examination of Patterns of Geographical Growth and Locational Behavior of Multi-Plant Corporations in British Columbia.  [1973] [Krumme]
  • Kwawu Yao AGBEMENU  The Pattern of Growth in the Manufacturing Industry in Ghana, 1958-1969.  [1974] [Thomas]
  • Marjorie Nanette RUSH  The Precession Wave of Urban Occupance: Conversion of Rural Land to Urban Use.  [1974] [Boyce]
  • O. Fred DONALDSON  “To Keep Them in Their Place”: A Socio-Spatial Perspective on Race Relations in America.  [1974] [Morrill]
  • Virginia R. HETRICK  Factors Influencing Voting Behavior in Support of Rapid Transit in Seattle and Atlanta.  [1974] [Morrill]
  • Alan Anthony DELUCIA  The Map Interpretation Process: Its Observation and Analysis Through the Technique of Eye Movement Recording.  [1974] [Sherman]
  • William H. FREEMAN, Jr.  An Analysis of Military Land Use Policy and Practice in the Pacific Northwest: 1849-1940.  [1974] [Marts]
  • Richard Ivan TOWBER  The Locational Responses of Soviet Agriculture to Central Decision Making.  [1974] [Jackson]
  • Russell Nozomi HORIUCHI  Chiseigaku: Japanese Geopolitics.  [1975] [Kakiuchi]
  • David Lloyd STALLINGS  Environmental Cognition and Land Use Controversy: An Environmental Image Study of Seattle’s Pike Place Market.  [1975] [Morrill]
  • Nathaniel H. BRYANT  Urbanization and the Ecological Crisis: An Analysis of Environmental Pollution.  [1975] [Kakiuchi]
  • Charles E. GREER  Chinese Water Management Strategies in the Yellow River Basin.  [1975] Chang]
  • Thomas Edward STEPHENS  Selected Geographic and Economic Aspects of the United States Railroad Freight Forwarding Industry with Recommendations for Procedures to be Used in the Selection of an Optimum Terminal Site Location.  [1975] [Boyce]
  • Betsy Rose GIDWITZ  Political and Economic Implications of the International Routes of Aeroflot.  [1976] [Jackson]
  • David Charles JOHNSON  The Population Age Structure of an Urban Area: A Spatial and Temporal Analysis of Change.  [1977] [Boyce]
  • Eugene James TURNER  The Use of Shape as a Nominal Variable on Multipattern Dot Map.  [1977] [Sherman]
  • Steven Anthony CARLSON  Land-Use Planning: A Rural Focus.  [1977] [Beyers]
  • Philip Stephen KELLEY  Information and Generalization in Cartographic Communication.  [1977] [Sherman]
  • Charles Everett OGROSKY III  The Ordinal Scaling of Point and Linear Symbols for Tactual Maps.  [1978] [Sherman]
  • Yehuda HAYUTH  Containerization and the Load Center Concept.  [1978] [Fleming]
  • Thomas Pierce BOUCHARD  Environmental Decision Making. The Wisconsin Environmental Policy Act and the Department of Natural Resources.  [1978] [Marts]
  • Michael Lee TALBOTT;  Development of North Sea Oil and Gas.  [1978] [Jackson]
  • Richard Akira TAKETA  Structure and Meaning in Map Generalization.  [1979] [Youngman]
  • Gail Ann CHRISTENSEN KLEIN  The Expansion of Kentucky Fried Chicken and Wimpy in South Africa: A Study in the Diffusion of Innovation.  [1979] [Morrill]
  • Maureen MCCREA  Evaluation of Washington State’s Coastal Management Program Through Changes in Port Development.  [1980] [Marts]
  • Olen Paul MATTHEWS  Legal Elements in Mineral Development with Special Reference to Idaho.  [1980] [Velikonja]
  • Dianne Lynn MANNINEN  Labor Forces Migration Associated with Nuclear Power Plant Construction.  [1981] [Morrill]
  • Robert Houston ALEXANDER  Adaptation of Land Use to Surficial Geology in Metropolitan Washington, D.C.  [1981] [Marts]
  • Kathleen Elizabeth BRADEN  Technology Transfer to the USSR Forest Product Sector.  [1981] [Jackson]
  • Charlette Kay HIATT  The Function of Color Legibility of Linear Symbology on Maps for Partially Blind.  [1982] [Sherman]
  • Barbara Jeanne DOWNING  Nonmetropolitan Migration in the Context of Cultural Change and Social Structure.  [1983] [Morrill]
  • James William HARRINGTON  Locational Change in the US Semiconductor Industry.  [1983] [Thomas]
  • Lance Douglas WERNER  Socio-Economic Development and the Growth of Pre-School Services: A Geography of Socialist Construction in Peripheral Soviet Republics, 1959-1970.  [1983] [Jackson]
  • Barbara Lynn BRUGMAN  A Spatial Perspective on the Process of Technological Innovation in Technology-Intensive Industry.  [1983] [Thomas]
  • Godfrey Emmanuel CHISANGA  The Wood Products Industry of the Lower Columbia Region: Technological Change, Evolution and Its Role in Regional Economic Development.  [1983] [Thomas]
  • Godfrey Goliath MUYOBA  Labor Recruitment and Urban Migration: The Zambian Experience.  [1983] [Chang]
  • Barbara Pfeil BUTTENFIELD  Line Structure in Graphic and Geographic Space.  [1984] [Sherman]
  • Thomas James KIRN  Service Sector Growth and Regional Development in the United States: A Spatial Perspective.  [1974] [BEYERS]
  • Jois Catherine CHILD  Creating a World: The Poetics of Cartography.  [1984] [Sherman]
  • Arthur William LEON  Place Image Choice: The Central Place of Images in Migration Decision Making.  [1984] [Morrill]
  • Sherry Lynn MCNUTT  An Analysis of Remote Sensing Information for Ice Forecasting Models in the Eastern Bering Sea.  [1984] [Sherman]
  • Kent Huges BUTTS  Resources Geopolitics: U.S. Dependence on South African Chromium.  [1985] [Jackson]
  • Anne Jeanne OSTERRIETH  Space, Place, and Movement: The Quest for Self in the World.  [1985] [Morrill]
  • Randolph SORENSEN  Waterways and the State in Imperial China. [1985] [Chang]
  • Lawrence Gary HART  Geographic Variations in Medical Resource Use During Office Encounters with Family Physicians.  [1985] [Morrill]
  • Barney Louis WARF  Regional Transformation and Everyday Life: Social Theory and Washington Lumber Production.  [1985] [Beyers]
  • Nasser Mohammed SALMA  The Selection, Allocation, and Arrangement of Arabic Typography on Maps.  [1986] [Sherman]
  • Nancy A. FISHER-ALLISON  Urban Path to Health: Spatial Organization, Everyday Life, and the Use of Primary Care Service.  [1986] [Mayer]
  • John Brady RICHARDS  Changing Patterns in Taiwan’s Aquaculture, 1957-1983.  [1986] [Fleming]
  • James Conrad EFLIN  Technology and Social Power: Social Action, Intentional Technology and the Social Basis of Space-Time Autonomy.  [1987] [Hodge]
  • Eric A. FRIEDLI  Competition Among Equals: A Study of Interstate Conflict, Public Policy Making, and Job-Growth Policy.  [1987] [Hodge]
  • James Edward RANDALL  Household Production in an Industrial Society.  [1987] Beyers]
  • Holly Jeanne MYERS-JONES  Power, Geography, and Black Americans: Patterns of Black Suburbanization in the U.S.  [1988] [Morrill]
  • Peter MESERVE  Boundary Water Issues Along the Forty-Ninth Parallel: State and Provincial Legislative Innovation.  [1988] [Jackson]
  • Patrick ALDWELL  Technological Rejuvenation and Competitiveness in the Washington State Woodpulp Industry, 1960-1985: A Global Perspective.  [1988] [Thomas]
  • Janos L. WIMPFENN  International Transport Regimes and Contiguous Countries: Goods Movement Between the United States and Canada.  [1988] [Morrill]
  • Marc-Andre L’HUILLIER  The Metropolitan Concentration of Minorities in the United States and Britain.  [1988] [Morrill]
  • Joseph NOWAKOWSKI  Itinerary Choice Among Korean Periodic Market Traders: A Cultural, Economic, Social and Time-Geographic Analysis.  [1989] [Krumme]
  • Gail LANGRAN  Time In Geographic Information Systems.  [1989] [Chrisman]
  • John COURTNEY  Canadian Grain Exports To the Soviet Union: A Case Study In Spatial Interaction.  [1989] [Jackson]
  • Lynn STAEHELI  Public Services and the Reproduction of Social Sedge-Baed Structured Modeling: An Application to Stream Water Quality Management.  [1989] [Hodge]
  • Erick J. HOWENSTINE  Misperception of Destination Encouraging Migration of Mexican Agricultural Labor to Yakima Valley, Washington.  [1989] [Morrill]
  • Iain M. HAY  Lo(o)sing Control: Money, Medicine and Malpractice in American Society.  [1989] [Mayer]
  • Robert PAVIA  Appropriate Technology for Community Control of Hazardout Chemical Accidents.  [1989] [ZumBrunnen]
  • Elizabeth KOHLENBERG  Friends in Places: Friendship in Country, Town and City [1989] [Mayer]
  • John A. BOWER  The Hydrogeography of Yakima Indian Nation Resource Use.  [1990] [Beyers]
  • Neil SORENSON  Airline Competitive Strategy: A Spatial Perspective.  [1990] [Fleming]
  • Stanley TOOPS.  The Tourism and Handicraft Industries in Xinkiang: Development and Ethnicity in a Minority Periphery.  [1990]Jackson]
  • Dean L. HANSEN  Acquiring High Technology: The Case of the Brazilian Computer Industry.  [1990] [Krumme]
  • Edward Joseph DELANEY  New Firms’ Innovative Search In A New-Technology Industry: Evaluation of Biotechnology Firms.  [1991] [Thomas]
  • Rowena AHERN  International Strategic Alliances: The Use of Cooperation by Canadian Firms.  [1991] [Krumme]
  • Raguraman KRISHNASAMY  Understanding International Air Travel Choice: A Case Study of the Singapore – Western U.S.A. Route.  [1991] [Fleming]
  • Eugene PATTERSON  Sense of Place In an Emerging Home Area: Investigations In the Bear Creek Area of King County, Washington.  [1992] [Jackson]
  • Susanne TELTSCHER  Informal Trading in Quito, Ecuador: Economic Integration, Internal Diversity, and Life Chances.  [1992] [Lawson]
  • Kurt ENGELMANN  The Introduction of Market Forces and Structural Changes In Command Economies: A Linear Programming Analysis of Irrigated Agriculture in Uzbekistan.  [1993] [Jackson]
  • Timothy Roger STRAUSS  Spatial Assessments of Infrastucture: The Importance of Space in Analyses of the Relationship Between Public Capital and Economic Activity.  [1994] [Hodge]
  • Frank NORRIS.  Spatial Diffusion of Intermodal Rail Technologies.  [1994] [Mayer]
  • Mike PIRANI  Understanding the Effects of Small Hospital Closures on Rural Communities.  [1994] [Mayer]
  • Ilya Naumovitch ZASLAVSKY  Logical Inference About Categorical Coverages in Multi-Layer GIS.  [1995] [Chrisman]
  • Jesse Harrison BROWNING  Regional Development, Technological Paradigms and Policies: A Framework for Conceptualizing Socioeconomic Processes.  [1995] [Thomas]
  • Eric Hugh LARSON  Geographic Variation in the Risk of Poor Birth Outcome in the Non-Metropolitan Population of the United States, 1985-1987.  [1995] [Mayer]
  • Daniel Bruce KARNES  A Dynamic Model of the Land Parcel Network.  [1995] [Chrisman]
  • Timothy Steven OAKES  Tourism in Guizhou, China: Place and the Paradox of Modernity.  [1995] [Chan]
  • Francis James HARVEY  Geographic Information Integration and GIS Overlay.  [1996] [Chrisman]
  • Delia Clare ROSENBLATT  A Political Economy of the Russian Oil Industry: Can Western Capital, Technology and Management Facilitate Change?  [1996] [Jarosz]
  • James Ethan BELL  A place for community? Urban social movements and the struggle over the space of the public in Moscow.  [1997] Lawson]
  • David James ALLEN  The effects of language and economic restructuring and electoral support for sovereignty in Qeubec, 1976-1995.  [1997] [Morrill]
  • David Persson LINDAHL  New frontiers of capital. A geography of commercial real estate finance.  [1997] Beyers]
  • Edward Donald MCCORMACK  A chained-based exploration of work travel by residents of mixed land-use neighborhoods.  [1997] [Nyerges]
  • Patricia Lynn PRICE  Crafting meaning from economic chaos: Low-income urban women and neoliberal reform in Mexico.  [1997] [Lawson]
  • Christine ROBERTS  A process of community action: Vashon-Maury islanders and the local nursing home.  [1997] [Mayer]
  • Linda BECKER  Invisible Threads. Skill and the Discursive Marginalization of the Garment Industry’s Workforce.  [1997] [Lawson]
  • Mark HUYLER  Redefining Civic Responsibility: The Role of Homeowner Associations and Neighborhood Identity.  [1997] [Hodge]
  • Rachel SILVEY  Placing the migrant: Gender, Identity, and the Development in South Sulawesi, Indonesia.  [1997] [Lawson]
  • Ric VRANA.  Monitoring Urban Land Use Transition with Geographic Information Systems.  [1998] [Chrisman]
  • Joan Aileen QAZI  The hands behind the apple. Farm women and work in North Central Washington. [1998] [Jarosz]
  • Debra Ruth OHMAN  Understanding change on the Ocean Coast: Restructuring and the meaning of property, nature, and development. [1999] [Beyers]
  • Haihua YAN  The impact of rural industrialization on urbanization in China during the 1980’s [1999] [Chan]
  • Peter NELSON  Hegemony and the Rural: Economic and Cultural Perspectives on Restructuring in the Rural West. [1999] [Beyers]
  • Douglas Grant MERCER  The Nature of Fairness: What the Biggest Cleanup Effort in History Has to Say About the Culture of American Environmental Management. [1999] [Beyers & Mitchell, co-chairs]
  • Alexander Sergeievich PEREPECHKO  Spatial Change and Continuity in Russia’s Political Party System(s): Comparison of the Parliamentary Elections in 1917 and 1995. [1999] [Chrisman & ZumBrunnen, co-chairs]
  • David ABERNATHY  Bound to succeed: Science, territoriality and the emergence of disease eradication in the Panama Canal zone [2000] [Mayer]
  • Harold FOSSUM  Formation and function of industrial districts in the rural northwest: Two cases. [2000] [Beyers]
  • Gabriel GALLARDO  The socio-spatial dimensions of ethnic entrepreneurship: Business activities among African-American, Chinese, Korean and Mexican persons in the Seattle metropolitan area [2000] [Hodge]
  • Wonho LEE  Industrial reform, ownership structure and labor market segmentation: understanding a changing inequality in the post-reform China. [2000] [Lawson]
  • Lise Kirsten NELSON  Remaking gender and citizenship in a Mexican indigenous community. [2000] [Lawson]
  • Li ZHANG  The state and urbanization in China: A systemic perspective. [2000] [Chan]
  • Evelynes Kawango AGOT  Widow inheritance and HIV/AIDS interventions in sub-Saharan Africa: Contrasting conceptualizations of “risk” and “spaces of vulnerability”. [2001] [Jarosz]
  • Alana Bridget BOLAND  Transitional flows: State and market in China’s urban water supply.[2001] [Chan
  • So-Min CHEONG  Korean fishing communities in transition: Institutional change and coastal development.[2001] [Harrington]
  • Jackson Tyler ZIMMERMAN  Re-mapping transborder environmental governance: Sovereign territory and the Pacific Salmon Treaty. [2001] [Sparke]
  • Ta LIU Internal migration in socialist China: An institutional approach. [2002] [Chan
  • Christina Helen DREW . The decision mapping system: Promoting transparency of long-term environment decisions at Hanford. [2002] [Nyerges]
  • Kim D. VAN EYCK  Neoliberation and democracy? The gendered restructuring of work, unions and the Colombian public sphere. [2002] [Lawson
  • Charles S. HENDRICKSEN  The Research Web: Asynchronous collaboration in social scientific research [2002] [Nyerges]
  • Judith Marie BEZY  Driving behavior in a stratified sample of persons aged 65 years and older: Associations with geographic location, gender, age and functional status. [2003] [Morrill]
  • Nicholas HEDLEY  3D geographic visualization and spatial mental models. [2003] [Nyerges]
  • Karin Elena JOHNSON  Bordering on health: Origins and outcomes of the idea of global health. [2003] [Mayer]
  • James PEET  Measuring equity in terms of relative accessibility: An application to Seattle’s Duwamish Corridor seaport facilities.[2003] [Nyerges]
  • Pervin Banu GOKARIKSEL  Situated modernities: Geographies of identity, urban space and globalization. [2003] [Mitchell]
  • David Michael PASCHANE  A theoretical framework for the medical geography of health service politics. [2003] [Mayer]
  • Barbara Shepherd POORE  Blue lines: Water, information, and salmon in the Pacific Northwest. [2003] [Chrisman]
  • Charles TOVARES  Race and the Production of Public Space [2003] [Mitchell]
  • Clare NEWSTEAD  (Dis)entangling the politics of regional possibility in the post-colonial Caribbean. [2004] [Lawson]
  • Joanna SURGEONER  Books and worlds: A literary study of the Canadian North. [2004] [Jarosz]
  • Scott MILES  Participatory assessment of a comprehensive areal model of earthquake-induced landslides. [2004] [Nyerges]
  • Carolina KATZ-REID  Achieving the American dream: A longitudinal analysis of the homeownership experiences of low-Income families [2004] [Withers]
  • Meredith REITMAN  Race in the workplace: Questioning whiteness, merit and belonging.[2004] [Ellis]
  • Sarah WRIGHT  Harvesting knowledge: A study of the contested terrain of intellectual property rights in the Philippines. [2004] [Lawson]
  • Richard HEYMAN  Locating civil society: Knowledge, pedagogy and the production of public space. [2004] [Sparke]
  • Amy FREEMAN  Contingent Modernity: Moroccan women’s narratives in “post” colonial perspectives. [2004] [Lawson]
  • Hyung-Joo (Julie) KIM  IT goes to school: Interactions between higher education institutions and information technology companies in U.S. metropolitan areas. [2004] [Harrington]
  • Deron FERGUSON  An event-historic analysis of short-term U.S. regional employment adjustment, 1975-99. [2004] [Harrington]
  • Barbara TEMPALSKI.  The uneven geography of syringe exchange programs in the U.S.: need, politics and place.[2005] [Mayer]
  • Catherine VENINGA  The transgressive geographies of integration: school desegregation in Seattle. [2005] [Brown]
  • Enru WANG  Retail restructuring in post-reform urban China: the case of Beijing. [2005] [Chan]
  • Jamie GOODWIN-WHITE  Placing progress: contextual inequality, internal migration and immigrant incorporation. [2005] [Ellis]
  • Brian HAMMER  New Urban Spaces for a Twenty-First Century China [2005] [Mitchell]
  • Meredith FORDYCE  An evaluation of the Consistency of Selected County-Level Rural Typologies in Determining Rate and Risk: the Case of Inadequate Prenatal Care [2005] [Mayer]
  • Nathaniel TRUMBULL  The environmental impacts of transition: water resources planning in the urban environment. [2005] [ZumBrunnen]
  • Maria FANNIN  Birthing subjects: midwifery and the politics of self-determination [2006] [England]
  • Elizabeth BROWN. Crime, culture and the city: political geographies of juvenile justice [2006] [Herbert]
  • Matt SOTHERN. “the extraordinary body” and the limits of (neo)liberalism [2006] [Brown]
  • Jessica GRAYBILL. Contested space in the periphery: Perceptions of environment and resources on Sakhalin Island [2006] [ZumBrunnen]
  • Darrin MAGEE. New energy geographies: powershed politics and hydropower decision making in Yunnan, China [2006] [Chan]
  • Joseph HANNAH. Local Nongovernmental Organizations in Vietnam: Development, Civil Society and State-Society Relations [2007] [Jarosz]
  • Britt YAMAMOTO. A Quality Alternative?  Quality Conventions, Alternative Food and the Politics of Soybeans in Japan [2007] [Jarosz]
  • Chris FOWLER. From lived experience to economic models: a mixed methods analysis of competitive policies in Gioia Tauro and Genoa, Italy [2007] [Ellis]
  • Greg SIMON. Brokering development: Geographies of meddiation and energy sector reforms in Maharashtra, India [2007] [ZumBrunnen & Jeffrey, co-chairs]
  • Jie WU. Artifact management and behavioral discourse in the software development process for a large Public Participatory Geographic Information System [2007] Nyerges]
  • Joshua NEWELL. Studies in foreign direct investment in the Eastern Russia, urban water infrastructure in US Cities, and global buyer-driven furniture chains [2007] [ZumBrunnen]
  • Nicholas VELLUZZI. Fermenting Growth: Institutions, Agency and the Competitive Foundations of Localized Learning in the Walla Walla Wine industry [2007] [Harrington]
  • Andrew WENZL. Wealth, consumption, and regional economic development in the United States [2008] [Beyers]
  • Sunil AGGARWAL. The Medical Geography of Cannabinoid Botanicals in Washington State: Access, Delivery, and Distress [2008] [Mayer]
  • Mona ATIA. Building a House in Heaven: Islamic Charity in Neoliberal Egypt [2008] [Mitchell]
  • Anne BONDS. Placing the Prison: The politics of prisons, poverty, and neoliberal restructuring in the rural American Northwest [2008] [Lawson]
  • Astrid CERNY. In Search of Greener Pastures: Sustainable Development for Kazak Pastoralists in Xinjiang, China [2008] [Chan]
  • John CARR. The Political Grind: The Role of Youth Identities in the Municipalities of Public Space [2008] [Herbert]
  • Courtney DONOVAN. Ideology and Identitiy in France: An Examination of Prenatal Health Care Choices Among Immigrant Women [2008] [Brown]
  • Kris ERICKSON. Hacker Mentality: Risk, Security and Control in the Information Society [2008] [Herbert]
  • Sarah STARKWEATHER. Defining Extraterritorial Citizenship: the Case of Americans Living Abroad [2008] [England]
  • Guirong ZHOU. Ontology, Sensemaking and Architecture of an Online Participatory Geographic Information System [2008] [Nyerges]
  • Jonathan GLICK. Household Benefits From the Housing Boom: Expanding Gains and Reconcentrating Wealth in the United States 1995-2005 [2008] [Withers]
  • Tony SPARKS. As Much Like Home As Possible: Geographies of Homelessness and Citizenship in Seattle’sTent City 3 [2008] [Sparke]
  • Matthew WILSON. Coding Community [2009] [Nyerges]
  • Kevin RAMSEY. Adapting (to) the “Climate Crisis”: Urban Environmental Governance and the Politics of Mobility in Seattle [2009] [Nyerges]
  • Rowan ELLIS. Civil Society, Savage City: Urban Governance and the Liberalizing State in Chennai, India [2009] [Mitchell]
  • Amber PEARSON. Health and Vulnerability: Economic Development in Ugandan Pastoralist Communities [2009] [Mayer]
  • Caroline FARIA. Imagining a New Sudan: The Diasporic Politics of Body and Nation [2009] [Jarosz]
  • Jean CARMALT. Geographic Perspectives on International Law: Human Rights and Hurricane Katrina. [2010] [Herbert]
  • Maureen   HICKEY. Driving Globalization: Bangkok Taxi Drivers and the Restructuring of Work and Masculinity in Thailand [2010] [Lawson]
  • Sarah PAIGE. Social, Behavioral and Spatial Dimensions of Human Health and Primate Contact in Western Uganda [2010] [Mayer]
  • Stephen YOUNG. The Global Redline: Mapping Markets and Mobilities In the Financialization of India. [2010] [Sparke]
  • Dominic CORVA . The Geo-politics of Narco-Governance in the Americas: A Political Economy Approach [2010] [Lawson & Sparke)
  • Ann E. BARTOS. Remembering, Sensing and Caring for their Worlds: Children’s Environmental Politics in a RuralNew Zealand Town [2011] [Brown]
  • Jaime KELLY. Pilgrims of Modernity: Beijing Luxury Hotel Workers in Pursuit of an Urban Future [2011]  [Chan]
  • Kacy MCKINNEY. Seeding Whose future? Exploring Entanglements of Neoliberal Choice, Children’s Labor, and Mobility in Hybrid Bt Cotton Seed Production in Western India [2011] [Jarosz]
  • Todd FAUBION. Discourse, Power and Policy:  Constructing AIDS Treatment Access in South Africa [2011] [Jarosz]
  • Juan Pablo GALVIS.   Managing the Living City: Public Space and Development in Bogota [2011] [Lawson]
  • Michalis AVRAAM. Improving Designs of Online Participatory Decision Support Systems [2011] [Nyerges]
  • Tricia RUIZ. Separate and Unequal? Exploring the Racial Geographies of School Quality and Student Achievement [2011] [Ellis]
  • Ron SMITH. Occupation “from the river to the sea”: Subaltern Geopolitics of Graduated Incarceration in the 1967 Occupied Palestinian Territories”. [2011] [Sparke]
  • Arnisson Andre ORTEGA . Building the Filipino Dream:  Real Estate Boom,  Gated Communities and the Production of Urban Space [2011] [Withers]
  • Man WANG. Dynamics of Housing Attainment in Urban China: A Case Study of Wuhan [2011] [Chan]
  • Elise BOWDITCH.   Youth Rights, Truancy and Washington State’s Becca Bill [2012] [Withers]
  • Dena AUFSEESER. ‘” Managing” Poverty: Care and Control in the Everyday Lives of Peruvian Street Children [2012]  [Lawson]
  • Hong CHEN . “Villages-in-the-City” and Urbanization in Guangzhou, China. [2012] [Chan]
  • Leonie NEWHOUSE . South Sudan Oyee! : A Political Economy of Refugee Return Migration to Chukudum, South Sudan [2012] [Mitchell]
  • Agnieszka LESZCZYNSKI.  Thinking the Geoweb: Political Economies, ‘neo’geographies, and Spatial Media[2012 ] [Elwood]
  • Muthatha RAMANATHAN.  Repoliticizing Development: Tracing Spatial Technology in the Rural Development Landscape of South India [2013] [Jarosz]
  • Rebecca BURNETT . From Safety Net to Tightrope: New Landscapes of Welfare in the US [2013] [Lawson]
  • Robert Ian DUNCAN . Therapeutic Landscapes and the Public Health Conceptualization of Alcohol-Related Illness in Moscow, Russia [2013] [ZumBrunnen]
  • Guilan WENG.  Moving Towards Neoliberal(izing) Urban Space? Housing and Residential Segregation in Beijing [2014] [Chan]
  • Kathryn GILLESPIE.   Reproducing Dairy: Embodied Animals and the Institution of Animal Agriculture [2014] [Brown]
  • Patricia LOPEZ .  Disease and Aid: 100 Years of US (de)Construction of Health Citizenship in Haiti [2014] [Mitchell and Sparke]
  • William BUCKINGHAM.  Assembling the Chinese City: Production of Space and the Articulation of New Urban Spaces in Wuhan, China [2014] [Chan]
  • Wilawan THANATEMANEERAT . Geodesign for Water Quality Management [2015] [Nyerges]
  • Srinivas CHOKKAKULA.  Politics of Interstate Water Disputes in India    [2015] [Sparke]
  • Brandon DERMAN.  Making Climate Justice: Social Natures and Political Spaces of the Anthropocene [2015] [Herbert]
  • Ryan BURNS.  Digital Humanitarianism and the Geospatial Web: Emerging Modes of Mapping and the Transformation of Humanitarian Practices [2015] [Elwood]
  • Michelle DAIGLE. Embodying Self-determination: Re-placing Food Sovereignty Through Everyday Geographies of Indigeous Resurgence [2015] [Sparke]
  • Spencer COHEN. Geography of Local Political Economy and Land in China [2015] [Chan]
  • Amy PIEDALUE. Geographies of Peace & Violence: Plural Resistance to Gender Violence and Structural Inequalities in Hyderabad and Seattle [2015] [Lawson]
  • Stefano BETTANI. Religion and Religious Places: Rethinking Hybridity [2016] [Brown]
  • Yanning WEI. Under Chinese Rural-Urban Dual System: The Crisis of Rural-Hukou Children [2016] [Chan]
  • Eloho BASIKORO. Pathologies of Patriarchy: Death, Suffering, Care and Coping in the Gendered Gaps of HIV/AIDS Interventions in Nigeria [2016] [Sparke]
  • Monica FARIAS. Transformative Political Spaces? Asambleas Populares, Identity, Alliances, and Belonging in Buenos Aires [2016] [Lawson]
  • Tiffany GROBELSKI. Becoming a Side: Legal Mobilization and Environmental Protection in Poland [2016] [Herbert]
  • Chris LIZOTTE. French Secularism, Educational Policy and the Spatial Management of Difference [2017] [Mitchell]
  • Magie RAMIREZ. Decolonial Ruptures of the City: Art-Activism Amid Racialized Dispossession in Oakland [2017] [Lawson]
  • Andrew CHILDS. Bound But Determined: Reproduction and Subversion in Seattle's, Folsom's, and IML's Gay Leather Communities [2017] [Brown]
  • Elyse GORDON. Social Justice Philanthropy as Poverty Politics: A Relational Poverty Analysis of Alternative Philanthropic Practices [2017] [Elwood]
  • Jason YOUNG. Encounters Across Difference: The Digital Geographies of Inuit, the Arctic, and Environmental Management [2017] [Elwood]
  • Megan BROWN. The Geographies of $15 Wage Movement: New Union Campaigns, Mobility Politics, and Local Minimum Wage Policies [2017] [England]
  • Arianna MUIROW . Exploring the Online Farmers' Market: Neoliberal Venture Capital Meets the Alternative Food Movement [2017] [Jarosz]
  • Jesse MCCLELLAND . Planners and the Work of Renewal in Addis Ababa: Developmental State, Urbanizing Society [2018] [Herbert]
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human geography dissertation

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Your Human Geography Dissertation: Designing, Doing, Delivering

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Your Human Geography Dissertation: Designing, Doing, Delivering First Edition

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  • Designing: Deciding on your approach, your topic, and your research question, while also ensuring your project is feasible
  • Doing: Situating your research and selecting the best methods for your dissertation project
  • Delivering: Dealing with data and writing up your findings
  • ISBN-10 1446295206
  • ISBN-13 978-1446295205
  • Edition First Edition
  • Publisher SAGE Publications Ltd
  • Publication date March 21, 2017
  • Language English
  • Dimensions 6.69 x 0.6 x 9.53 inches
  • Print length 264 pages
  • See all details

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Editorial Reviews

This book will be an invaluable read for all Human Geography dissertation students. It conveys the excitement and possibilities of Human Geography research, whilst also alerting the reader to its challenges and pitfalls. This is certainly not a generic ‘how to do your dissertation’ textbook; instead it engages with Human Geography as a discipline and the role of the dissertation student as a producer of geographic knowledge. The book’s clear sections on designing, doing and delivering your dissertation, have useful examples, include input from the author’s students themselves, making this an accessible and comprehensive text.

Kim Peters has written a much needed book that will be of great value to Geography students undertaking what is often the most challenging part of their degree, the dissertation. As a Geography lecturer I have often wished that a book such as this existed. Your Human Geography Dissertation goes way beyond a standard examination of the pros and cons of different research methods, covering a range of topics from the identification of dissertation subjects and the development of research questions through gathering data and writing up. It is a readable and highly accessible text full of helpful detail, practical advice and useful examples. Thank you Kim!

Of all the books that I recommend to my dissertation students, this book is always the first. Writing a dissertation is a daunting task, certainly the most demanding and challenging part of a degree, and Kim Peters, with her accessible style and useful and highly relevant advice, makes it a bit less intimidating. Your Human Geography Dissertation guides students through all the stages of their dissertation, helping them to think geographically, refine their research question and choose the appropriate research methods. This book is so recent but already feels like a classic.

About the Author

Kim is a Lecturer in Human Geography at the University of Liverpool. She has previously held lecturing posts at Aberystwyth University and the University of Sheffield, following the completion of a PhD at Royal Holloway, University of London in 2012. Before becoming an academic Kim worked as a transport planner, civil servant and as a sales advisor in a London bike store. In her spare time she enjoys road cycling and visiting the coast. Kim′s research focuses on the social, cultural and political organisation and use of maritime space. She has published widely in this area, including the co-edited books, Waterworlds: Human Geographies of the Ocean (Ashgate, 2014) and The Mobilities of Ships (Routledge, 2015). She teaches in this area as well as more broadly on research methods and dissertation training. This is Kim′s first textbook.

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ SAGE Publications Ltd; First Edition (March 21, 2017)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Paperback ‏ : ‎ 264 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1446295206
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1446295205
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 15.9 ounces
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 6.69 x 0.6 x 9.53 inches
  • #1,554 in Geography (Books)
  • #1,885 in Regional Geography
  • #4,639 in Earth Sciences (Books)

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Your Human Geography Dissertation

Your Human Geography Dissertation Designing, Doing, Delivering

  • Kimberley Peters - Helmholtz Institute for Functional Marine Biodiversity at University of Oldenburg
  • Description

An undergraduate dissertation is your opportunity to engage with geographical research, first-hand. But completing a student project can be a stressful and complex process.  Your Human Geography Dissertation breaks the task down into three helpful stages:

  • Designing: Deciding on your approach, your topic and your research question, and ensuring your project is feasible
  • Doing: Situating your research and selecting the best methods for your dissertation project
  • Delivering: Dealing with data and writing up your findings

With information and task boxes, soundbites offering student insight and guidance, and links to online materials, this book offers a complete and accessible overview of the key skills needed to prepare, research, and write a successful human geography dissertation.

Supplements

This excellent new text guides students carefully, intelligently and sympathetically through the process of doing a human geography dissertation. It offers grounded advice - from the question of what a dissertation is, to the mechanics of data analysis - which will be indispensable for students researching the full diversity of topics covered by contemporary human geography. The insights, advice and reflections from both previous students and academic staff who currently teach human geography add valuable insights that will both reassure students and help them avoid making common mistakes.

This book will be an invaluable read for all Human Geography dissertation students. It conveys the excitement and possibilities of Human Geography research, whilst also alerting the reader to its challenges and pitfalls. This is certainly not a generic ‘how to do your dissertation’ textbook; instead it engages with Human Geography as a discipline and the role of the dissertation student as a producer of geographic knowledge. The book’s clear sections on designing, doing and delivering your dissertation, have useful examples, include input from the author’s students themselves, making this an accessible and comprehensive text. 

Kim Peters has written a much needed book that will be of great value to Geography students undertaking what is often the most challenging part of their degree, the dissertation.  As a Geography lecturer I have often wished that a book such as this existed.  Your Human Geography Dissertation goes way beyond a standard examination of the pros and cons of different research methods, covering a range of topics from the identification of dissertation subjects and the development of research questions through gathering data and writing up.  It is a readable and highly accessible text full of helpful detail, practical advice and useful examples.  Thank you Kim!  

This book is fantastic! It is recommended reading for our second-year research design course, and I have used some of the ‘dissertation tips’ videos in lectures on this course during 2018/9.  For my own dissertation students in supervision meetings, this book is my core recommendation of a text that will help students with their whole human geography dissertation journey. 

Of all the books that I recommend to my dissertation students, this book is always the first. Writing a dissertation is a daunting task, certainly the most demanding and challenging part of a degree, and Kim Peters, with her accessible style and useful and highly relevant advice, makes it a bit less intimidating. Your Human Geography Dissertation guides students through all the stages of their dissertation, helping them to think geographically, refine their research question and choose the appropriate research methods. This book is so recent but already feels like a classic. 

This volume is a well-written and well-organised volume to recommend to both my dissertation research students and to use on my section (human geography research methods) of our research methods in geography module. I will be using it as a recommended reading.

With this book as their guide your students will be able to achieve what it promises: design, do and deliver.

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Starting out: Identifying your approach

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Previous Dissertation Prize Winners

Below you can find the winners of our Dissertation Prize awards since 2010, and links to their respective dissertations. Please use these research projects as examples of good practice when writing up a dissertation or other academic article.

The winner receives £100 for the best Undergraduate dissertation while the runner-up and winner both receive a year’s personal subscription to the journal Social and Cultural Geography, published by Taylor & Francis.

Winner: Sara Flower, University of Manchester

Mind the Gap: A more than representational analysis of lineside green space in Hadley Wood: https://acrobat.adobe.com/link/review?uri=urn:aaid:scds:US:a02920bd-44ef-3e02-a525-577005d741d4

Runner-up: Steven Farquhar, Queens University Belfast

The Future of Biodiversity Conservation: Synthesising Anarchism and More-Than-Human Theory in the Edgelands of Belfast

Winner: Roisín Gilloch Boyle, University of Edinburgh

Memories, Absences and Affects: Art and Geography in Dialogue with Narbi Price’s Ashington Paintings

Runner-up: Lukas Lyko, University of Oxford

“I don’t have the luxury of being able to do nothing”: Exploring Temporalities and Navigations of Everyday Mobility Through the Experiences of People with Multiple Sclerosis

Winner: Eleanor Pendle, Oxford University

The Poblenou Superblock: Rights, Responsibilities and Exclusions

Runner Up: Bethan Jones, University of Edinburgh

Walking Utopia: How is Harlow New Town remembered through public sculpture walks? A case for transcorporeal geographies of memory

Winner: Charles Couve, University of Manchester

More-than-human Manchester: Recombinance, Auras, and Dialectics in the Edges of Modernity

Runner Up: William Silver, Durham University

Gordon Matta-Clark’s slices through space: artwork towards a critical understanding of the spatial

Winner: Zainab Ravat, Queen Mary University of London

Photojournalism: Explorations into the Geographical Witness, Activist and Traveller

Runner Up: Kieran Green, University of Plymouth

In the Balance: Unsettled Space and Sofa-surfing

Winner:  Anna Knowles-Smith, University College London

Refugees and theatre: an exploration of the basis of self-representation

Runner Up:  Thomas Paulsen, University of Exeter

In Search of Danish Atmospheres

Winner: Imogen Fox, University of Brighton

Meltdowns in the mud: A spatial, emotional and relational approach to the experience of ‘care’ in the micro-spatialities of Glastonbury Festival

Runner-up: Megan O’Kane, Queens University Belfast

Geographies of Suicide and the Representation of Self-Sacrifice in Japanese Popular Culture and Media

Winner: Emma-Mai Eshelby, University of Leicester

Gown and town: the unfolding presence of studentification in Clarendon Park, Leicester

Runner-up: Grace Burchell, University of Nottingham

Breeding Frankenstein’s Bulldog: reimagining the Pedigree in Nineteenth Century England

Runner-up: Amelia Davy, Oxford University

Temporal worldings: an exploration of how time was implicated in the experiences of American Soldiers during the Vietnam War

We decided to have two runners-up this year, due to the high standard of entries.

Winner: Jennifer Durrant, University of Cambridge

Fallen on hard times: Re-examining the homeless hostel

Runner-up: Helen Spooner, University of Oxford

A kinaesthetic spirituality: An autophenomenographic account of running 250km of the Camino Portugués

Winner: Helen Trimm, University of Nottingham

Reconstructing home as a site of care: an exploration into the changing meaning of home for elderly women

Runner-up: Simon Cook, University of Plymouth 

Jography: Exploring the Mobilities of Road-Running

Winner: Chris Goodman, University of Oxford 

Walking with Lions: reconfiguring ‘wild(er)ness’, ‘domestication’ and ‘captivity’ through ALERT’s lion rewilding project

Runner up: Nicholas Speechley, Loughborough University

‘Keeping them together’, University Accommodation and the ‘International’ Student: A Case Study of Loughborough University, UK  

Winner: Jessica Potts, Durham University

“We are not here, we are not there”: Young Refugees’ and Asylum Seeker’s Negotiations of Identity and Belonging

Runner up: Mary McLaren, University of Exeter 

Constructing distant geographies of care: the example of Fairtrade in Horsham

Winner: Kaleigh Jones, University of Oxford,

Embodying Mobile Cultures: a case study of Capoeira

Runner up: Emma Bonny, University of Nottingham

The landscape and culture of allotments: a study in Hornchurch, Essex

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Geography Dissertation Topics

Published by Carmen Troy at January 6th, 2023 , Revised On August 16, 2023

Introduction

Geography is the study of the physical features of the earth and its atmosphere, and of human activity as it affects and is affected by these, including the distribution of populations and resources and political and economic activities.

Geography is related to the climate changes and ecological value of a region that helps determine the environmental situation of that region. Therefore, it is important to explore the different geographical ideas and theories. Geography is an interesting field and there is a range of issues that you could choose from for your dissertation.

This article lists several geography dissertation topics and research ideas so you can base your dissertation on a manageable and intriguing issue.

Here is our selection of geography dissertation topics that we think will definitely interest you and your supervisor.

Topic 1: Impact of Natural Catastrophes on Economic Growth and Human Development- A Case of 2011 Fukushima Crisis in Japan

  • Topic 2: How Do Natural Disasters Affect the Geosphere? Calculating the Effects of Earthquakes, Floods, and Volcanic Eruptions on Geosphere in Asia

Topic 3: Geography a Natural Friend or Enemy? The Role of Geography in Promoting/Demoting Climate Change Disasters in Sub-Saharan Africa

Topic 4: geo-mapping and land reforms: a study to find the role of geo-mapping, sensor data, and big data analytics in bringing land reforms to developing countries, topic 5: predictive analytics and natural disaster: a study to find the role of artificial intelligence (ai) in predicting natural disasters and epidemics.

Also, read Ecology dissertation topics and sustainability dissertation topics .

Let our experts help you get started with your dissertation.

2022 Geography Research Topics

Research Aim: This research aims to analyze the impact of natural catastrophes on economic growth and human development. It will assess the socioeconomic effects of the 2011 Fukushima Crisis in Japan. It will show how it affected Japan’s economic growth by affecting the population, production levels, employment, investments, etc.? Moreover, how did it affect the Human Development Index (HDI)? Lastly, it will show how Japan managed to recover from this catastrophe? And what lessons can other countries learn from Japan to mitigate the socioeconomic effects of natural disasters?

Topic 2: How Does Natural Disasters Affect the Geosphere? Calculating the Effects of Earthquakes, Floods, and Volcanic Eruptions on Geosphere in Asia

Research Aim: This study intends to calculate the effects of earthquakes, floods, and volcanic eruptions on the geosphere in Asia. It will find whether there is an empirical relationship between geosphere disturbance and natural disasters? Or changes in the geosphere cause natural disasters in Asia? It will primarily test a causal relationship between natural disasters and geosphere disruption. Moreover, it will show whether there are ways to protect the geosphere or not?

Research Aim: This research assesses the role of geography in promoting/demoting climate change disasters in Sub-Saharan Africa. It will find ways through which geography saves or further exacerbate the climate change situation. It will analyze various natural disasters in Sub-Saharan Africa and see what geography’s role is in protecting or further hurting the population. Lastly, it will see the government’s efforts such as investment in eco-friendly projects, cutting down 〖CO〗_2 and increase in the number of trees to maintain their natural geography.

Research Aim: This study analyzes the role of geo-mapping, sensor data, and big data analytics in bringing land reforms to developing countries. It will review geo-mapping concepts and how sensor data gathered through geo-mapping can be used in big data analytics? Further, it will show how developing countries use geo-mapping and big data analytics to reform their rotten real estate sector. Moreover, comparing their efforts with advanced countries will recommend improving their geo-mapping and land reforms.

Research Aim: This research finds the role of Artificial Intelligence (AI) in predicting natural disasters and epidemics. It will assess various machine learning (ML) and deep learning (DL) models and big data tools to show how they are used to predict natural catastrophes such as earthquakes, floods, storms, etc. It will test the reliability and efficacy of these model to recommend best models to predict further catastrophes in the future.

Geography Dissertation Research Topics

Topic 1: studying the fertility of soil after the volcanic eruption..

Research Aim: The research paper aims to find out the study of the soil’s fertility caused by a volcanic eruption. The consequences of volcanic eruptions affect the soil, which makes the soil difficult to cultivate.

Topic 2: Understanding Global Warming through Geography

Research Aim: The research paper has the purpose of understanding global warming through Geography. Global warming has severe impacts on the climates and people’s health because it is caused due to harmful UV rays.

Topic 3: Geography: Determining the Effects caused by Natural Calamities on a Region

Research Aim: The research paper aims to determine the effects that are caused due to natural calamities on a region. Natural calamities impact the region because of the destruction that occurs to life and property. Therefore, the study will understand the adverse effects of natural disasters on an area.

Topic 4: Evaluating the Ecological Value of the Forests

Research Aim: The research paper aims to evaluate the ecological value of the forests. Forests help build the region’s environmental conditions and provide a home to a massive amount of wildlife. So, the paper understands the value of ecology in forests.

Topic 5: Comprehending the Security of Nutrition and Food in Geography

Research Aim: The research paper aims to investigate the security of nutrition and food in geography. There is a big challenge related to the sustainability of the atmosphere growing food and the arrangements of the society so that the poor people can have an adequate amount of food and nutrition.

Topic 6: Geography Empathizes with Environmental Protection.

Research Aim: The research paper aims to understand the emphasis that geography puts on environmental protection. I maintain the ecological balance and provide people with a safe and healthy environment, and it is essential to protect the environment. Therefore, the research paper will discuss the importance of environmental protection through geography.

Topic 7: Importance of Water Conservation

Research Aim: The research paper aims to understand the significance of water conservation. Water preservation is essential because it will help the farmers cultivate when fresh water is scarce. Therefore, the paper will discuss the importance of water conservation.

Topic 8: The impact of drought on farmers: Geography

Research Aim: The research paper will discuss the impact of drought on farmers. Drought is the main reason why farmers suffer from severe economic pressure, which also affects the region’s food supply. Hence, the paper studies the critical aspects of drought and its impact on farmers.

Topic 9: Effect of Ocean Currents on the Weather of an Area

Research Aim: The research paper excavates the effect of ocean currents on the weather of an area. The ocean currents are the conveyer belt that transports warm water along with precipitation. Therefore, ocean currents do regulate global climatic changes.

Topic 10: Geography: To Understand the Transforming Thermal Regime of the Polythermal Glaciers

Research Aim: The research paper aims to comprehend the transforming thermal regime of the polythermal glaciers. The thermal regime of any glacier has significant ramifications depending on how it moves; it can be both temperate and polar depending on the temperature.

Topic 11: Analysing the usage of Greenfield in an Area

Research Aim: The research paper aims to analyze the usage of greenfields in an area. Companies’ greenfield analysis is done to understand the optimal location and number of all the distribution centres, and geography helps to understand this vastly.

Topic 12: Geography: An in-depth study about the Destinations of the Sources of Rivers

Research Aim: The research paper states the in-depth study about the destinations of rivers’ sources in geography. From the perspective of geography, the river sources’ destination will be studied where the flow and destination of rivers tend to change because of the absorption of sediments in their sizes and shapes.

Topic 13: Aspects Contributing to the Creation of a Sustainable Environment

Research Aim: The research paper aims to study the aspects contributing to creating a sustainable environment. To evaluate the sustainable environment, it is imperative to excavate the factors contributing to its formation.

Topic 14: Evaluating the Impacts of Acid Rain

Research Aim: The research paper aims to evaluate the impacts of acid rain. In geography, acid rain is taken as an adverse effect that leads to a big downfall both for the environment and in harming the crops. Hence, the paper states the adverse impacts caused to the life and cultivation of people due to acid rain.

Topic 15: Geography: Construction of Buildings Affecting the Soil

Research Aim: The research paper aims to view geography’s perspective in evaluating the effects caused to soil due to the construction of buildings. The soil fertility is almost lost because of building construction, and therefore the paper will be evaluating all the effects that building construction causes on the soil.

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  • Select a topic aligning with passion and academic relevance.

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