Retired
Robin Doughty

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Professor Emeritus - Ph.D., University of California at Berkeley
Interests
Cultural Geography; Environmental Resource Management; Landscape Ecology and Biogeography
Biography
Robin Doughty attended colleges in Italy, England, and the United States. He received a doctorate in Geography from the University of California at Berkeley, and has been a faculty member in the Department of Geography and the Environment at the University of Texas since 1971.
Robin has published ten books and scores of articles on a range of environmentally-related topics, including the nineteenth century feather trade; the recovery of the endangered whooping crane that state nests only in North America; the mockingbird as the State bird, and the armadillo, a relatively newcomer for the US South.
Robin has written about man-induced changes in landscapes from the US to Australia, and has recently turned his attention to the oceans. In 2011, Robin authored his tenth book. Published by the University of Texas Press and with a Forward by HRH Charles, Prince of Wales, The Albatross and the Fish, examines international efforts to save these very special seabirds threatened by predatory animals in their nest colonies and by industrial fishers while feeding at sea.
Robin has traveled extensively to conduct his research on man-made changes in the landscape and efforts to conserve and manage wild animal resources, in such places as China (Yangtze Valley), South America (Chile, Uruguay, Brazil), Central America (Panama, Costa Rica, and Honduras), the Caribbean (Trinidad and Tobago) and, Mexico. Originally from the United Kingdom, he has also traveled widely in Western Europe, and has made extended visits to Africa (Kenya, Egypt and Morocco). Importantly, Robin is a popular lecturer, and has discussed his research among university audiences (US and Egypt), at meetings of regional specialists (Canada, Australia and New Zealand), and for annual conventions of colleagues and the interested public.
Robin founded and directed for twenty years an annual summer school to Jesus College, Oxford, England, where he introduced American undergraduates to the British landscape. The University of Texas at Austin facilitated this summer program, which has provided a wealth of teaching and administrative experience and touched the lives of more than 400 students. He has also drawn upon his fluency in Italian to teach the Semester Program in Tuscany, where he lectured on the Geography of Italy and Religion in the Landscape.
In January 2012, Robin was an invited to join the Semester at Sea Program, sponsored by the University of Virginia. He taught shipboard courses in World Regional Geography and the Geography of Endangered Species. Robin taught again in Semester at Sea Program in Fall 2014.
In July 2013, Robin lectured on the physical geography and cultural history of Scotland, and Seabirds of the Atlantic Ocean, including puffins and albatrosses, while aboard “The World,” a privately owned vessel that constantly circles the globe. His presentations on his 17-day voyage were designed for the route taken from Bergen, Norway, around Scotland’s Orkneys, Inner and Outer Hebrides, and then to the Republic of Ireland. Robin also guided bird watching excursions in several ports.
He is frequently invited to draw upon his research and travels in talks to Audubon Society groups, Master Naturalists, and Bird Festivals (Hummingbirds, Purple Martins and Whooping Cranes). Robin is also interested in how we have idealized as well as used birds, and has made presentations about birds as icons to the Blanton Museum in Austin. In January 2016, Robin presented 6 lectures about the role of “birds in art and literature,” with the Austin Museum of Modern Art. Laguna Gloria. In March 2016, he gave a talk about urban birds in the Elizabeth Ney Museum, Austin.
He also writes and published poetry about the landscape and its wildlife. Robin Doughty is teaching seminars on wild animal-related topics in both the Sage and Quest programs for Senior Citizens at the University of Texas in Austin. In fall 2015, he co-sponsored and lectured about current research trends in the discipline of Geography for the Quest program.
Currently, Robin is revising the earlier book on the Purple Martin, and is working with Matt Turner on a forthcoming book about Invasive Species.
Selected Publications
(With Rob Fergus) The Purple Martin. Austin: University of Texas Press, 2002, 93 p. Find it on WorldCat
The Eucalyptus: A Natural and Commercial History of the Gum Tree. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 2000, 237 p. Find it on WorldCat
(With Barbara M. Parmenter) Endangered Species: Disappearing Animals and Plants in the Lone Star State: Austin: Texas Monthly Press, 1989, 155 p. Find it on WorldCat
The Return of the Whooping Crane. Austin: University of Texas Press, 1989. 182 p. Find it on WorldCat
The Mockingbird. Austin: University of Texas Press, 1988, 80 p. Find it on WorldCat
At Home in Texas: Early Views of the Land. College Station: Texas A&M University Press, 1987, 164 p. (Texas State Historical Association, Coral H. Tullis Award for best book in Texas history published in 1987/1988; and Summerfield G. Roberts Award for 1988). Find it on WorldCat
(With Larry L. Smith), The Amazing Armadillo: Geography of a Folk Critter. Austin: University of Texas Press, 1984, 134 p. Find it on WorldCat
Wildlife and Man in Texas: Environmental Change and Conservation. College Station: Texas A&M University Press, 1983, 246 p. Find it on WorldCat
Feather Fashions and Bird Preservation: A Study in Nature Protection. Berkeley, Los Angeles, and London: University of California Press, 1975, 184 p. Find it on WorldCat
Gregory W. Knapp
Associate Professor Emeritus - Ph.D., University of Wisconsin at Madison
Interests
Cultural and Political Ecology; Historical Geography; Mountain Geography; Latin America
Websites
Biography
Gregory Knapp received his BA from the University of California, Berkeley, in Mathematics and Economics with Distinction in General Scholarship, and his PhD in Geography (minor in Anthropology) from the University of Wisconsin. He taught at the University of Minnesota - Twin Cities before joining the University of Texas faculty in 1984.Knapp’s research has focused on four themes in cultural and regional geography: adaptive dynamics of agriculture; ethnic territoriality and mapping; modernization contextualized in historical cultural ecology; and the history of geographic ideas and researchers. These themes have been explored in Latin America, with special attention to Andean South America and Ecuador.
The adaptive dynamics approach in cultural and political ecology emphasizes local decision making, while also recognizing the salience of particular environmental, cultural, social, economic, and political contexts as they change over time. This approach is consistent with attention to cultural landscapes in the tradition of Carl Sauer. In addition to publishing on reconstructing prehistoric landscapes and demography in the Andes, Knapp was involved in the first major international study of the impacts of climate change on Andean agriculture, where he argued for policies prioritizing empowerment of local actors, maximizing local adaptive flexibility. Supervised student research has included the persistence of smallholder farming (with Katia Raquel Avilés-Vázquez and Sophie Fuchs) and discourses on water management practices (with Cyrus Reed and Patricia Mothes). This theme has continued to be included in his recent research on agricultural modernization in the Andes.
A second major research theme has been the critical study of regional identities, ethnic territoriality and mapping. Knapp has organized conferences at UT on the ethnic geography of Latin America and regional identities in Texas and Mexico since the 1980s. He co-authored a standard textbook on the geography of South America, published one of the first studies of the ethnogeography of Ecuador and co-edited a pioneering special issue of a refereed journal devoted to the topic of participatory mapping. Supervised student research on this theme has included ethnohistory and territoriality in Nicaragua (with Karl Offen and Ruth Matamoros), culture, place and primary education in Ecuador (with Jodi Vender) and cultural identities and tourism in Peru (with Shayna Friday). Knapp’s current research concerns language persistence and salience for identity.
A third theme has been the contextualization of modernization (both neoliberalism and social democracy) in historical cultural ecology, as the latest phase of humanity’s progressive achievement of greater efficiencies through collaboration, and in feminist political ecology and post-development theory. Modernization has both advantages and disadvantages, as recently addressed in discourses about sustainability. Supervised student research on this theme includes the role of NGOs in creating distinctive landscapes (with Juanita Sundberg and Thomas Perreault), the importance of food and foodways (with Naya Jones) including the role of female empowerment in creating distinctive Kitchenspace (with Maria Elisa Christie), and the empowerment of indigenous communities and women in the face of larger scale modernization processes (with Mary Brook, David Salisbury, Gregory Schwartz, Maria Belén Noroña Salcedo, Sophie Fuchs, Jesús Nazario, and Ruth Matamoros). His current work on this theme involves greenhouse floriculture in Ecuador.
A fourth theme has been the history of geographic thought, both in terms of institutions and in terms of regions. Knapp is an editor for the Library of Congress relating to bibliographies of Western South America and has also authored departmental and biographical histories in the discipline of geography.
Knapp has received three separate Fulbright Fellowships, as well as other grants. He has been elected to national offices in the Association of American Geographers and Conference of Latin American Geographers; the latter honored him with both its Outstanding Service Award and its Lifetime Acheivement Award. He was elected President of the Phi Beta Kappa Society, Alpha chapter at the University of Texas.Knapp served for two four-year terms as Department Chair (1996-2004), crafting the Urban Studies major, initiating UT’s partnership with the Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center, changing the department’s name to “Geography and the Environment,” and co-sponsoring the creation of the Institute of Environmental Science. After his chairmanship he served for five years as Chair of the Graduate Studies Committee and Graduate Advisor (2007-2012). Most recently, as co-chair of the the University’s BA in Sustainability Studies committee he was active in helping bring this new major to fruition in the 2016-2018 undergraduate catalog. He served as the first Director of the Sustainability Studies major until his retirement.
Knapp’s teaching at the undergraduate level included a Large Format Signature Course in Latin American Environmental History and Sustainability (recipient of a Grand Prize, Sustainability and Ethics Course Development Award competition), a large course in Geography of Latin America which met one of the University’s core requirements, an upper division course on Nature, Society and Adaptation, and a faculty-led study abroad course on Nature, Society and Sustainability which was conducted in Argentina and Ecuador. He was the recipient of a President's Associates Teaching Excellence Award for 2019-2020.
Knapp’s graduate level teaching at Texas included a seminar, Latin America: Culture, Environment and Development. He supervised over 40 graduate dissertations and theses; former students include faculty at such institutions as the University of British Columbia, Oberlin, Virginia Tech, and the University of Richmond, among others, as well as leaders in government, non-governmental organizations, journalism, education, and business.
After retirement in August, 2021, Knapp has continued to pursue his research interests from a new home base near Davis, California.
Selected Publications by Research Theme
Adaptive Dynamics and Cultural Landscapes
1988 (co authored) The Effects of Climatic Variation on Agriculture in the Central Sierra of Ecuador, in The Impact of Climatic Variations on Agriculture. Volume 2: Assessments in Semi-Arid Regions., M. L. Parry, T. R. Carter and N. R. Konijn, eds., pp. 383-493. Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers.
1988 (co-edited with N. Allan and C. Stadel), Human Impact on Mountains. Totowa, New Jersey: Rowman and Littlefield.
1991 Andean Ecology: Adaptive Dynamics in Ecuador. Boulder, Colorado: Westview Press.
1999. (with P. Mothes) Quilotoa Ash and Human Settlements in the Equatorial Andes, pp. 139-155 in Actividad Volcánica y Pueblos Precolombinos en el Ecuador, Patricia Mothes, Coordinator. Quito: Ediciones Abya Yala.
2007. The Legacy of European Colonialism, in The Physical Geography of South America, edited by T. Veblen, K. Young, and A. Orme, pp 279-288, Oxford University Press.
2010. The Andes: Personal Reflections on Cultural Change, 1977-2010, Journal of Cultural Geography 27:307-316.
2019. Strategically Relevant Andean Environments, Chapter 1 in Linda J. Seligmann and Kathleen S. Fine-Dare, eds., The Andean World, Routledge Worlds Series, Routledge, pp. 17-28.
Ethnogeography and Regional Geography, Mapping
1995 (with C. Caviedes) South America. Englewood Cliffs: Prentice-Hall.
1987 Geografia Quichua de la Sierra del Ecuador. Quito: Ediciones Abya Yala. (First Edition; third edition 1991)
2003 (with P. Herlihy, guest eds.) Participatory Mapping of Indigenous Lands in Latin America, special issue of Human Organization. Volume 62, number 4.
2019. The Changing Kichwa Language Map, in Stanley Brunn and Roland Kehrien, eds., Handbook of the Changing World Language Map. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-73400-2_51-1.
Modernization
2002 (editor) Latin America in the Twenty-First Century: Challenges and Solutions. Austin: University of Texas Press.
2015. Mapping Flower Plantations in the Equatorial High Andes, Journal of Latin American Geography 14(3): 229-244.
2017. Mountain Agriculture for Global Markets: The Case of Greenhouse Floriculture in Ecuador. Annals of the American Association of Geographers 107(2) , 511-519. DOI: 10.1080/24694452.2016.1203282.
History of Geographic Thought and Bibliographic Studies
1998. Geography at the University of Texas at Austin: A Departmental History, The Southwestern Geographer 2: 95-123.
2018. Human Ecology, International Encyclopedia of Geography, edited by D. Richardson, N. Castree, M. F. Goodchild, A. Kobayashi, W. Liu and R. A. Marston. Second revised edition (29 March 2018). One of thirty articles selected for updates in this edition. https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/9781118786352.wbieg0477.pub2 DOI:10.1002/9781118786352.wbieg0477.pub2
2019 Geography: Western South America, pp. 144-158 in Handbook of Latin American Studies: No. 73: Social Sciences, edited by Tracy North and Katherine D. McCann. Austin: University of Texas Press.
2020. Trajectories of Personal Archiving: Practical and Ethical Considerations. Geographical Review 110(1-2): 65-77. Special Issue: Fieldwork in Geography.
2020. Benchmarking and Beyond: CLAG’s Role in Evaluating Research Agendas 1970-2020, Journal of Latin American Geography 19(1): 38-45. Special Issue: 50 Years of the Conference of Latin American Geography.
Ian Manners
Professor Emeritus - Ph.D., Oxford University
Biography
Ian Manners was born and educated in England. He received a First Class Honors Degree in Geography from Oxford University in 1964, and received his D.Phil., also from Oxford University, in 1969. After four years in New York, as an Assistant Professor of Geography at Columbia University, Manners moved to Texas where he has been Assistant, Associate, and Professor of Geography and Middle Eastern Studies. He served two terms as Director of the Center for Middle Eastern Studies and also served as Chair of the Department of Middle Eastern Studies. He has lectured and conducted research in Egypt, Kuwait, Jordan, Saudi-Arabia, and Turkey, and spent a year in New Zealand as a Senior Research Fellow at Waikato University working with the New Zealand Commission for the Environment.
Manners regularly teaches the Frontiers in Geography course for undergraduate majors. He has also taught Geography of the Middle East; Mapping the Middle East; Conservation and Resource Management; and History and Philosophy of Geography as well as courses for the Middle East Studies program.
Manners research interests are conservation and resource management, urban cultural geography, and historical cartography. His most recent research explores the cartographic representation of the Middle East and the Mediterranean worlds from the Renaissance to modern times, and the ways in which maps have shaped both our geographical knowledge of the region and its particular spatial and political history. He is currently the curator for an exhibit on European Cartography and the Ottoman World for The Oriental Institute, The University of Chicago.
Selected Publications
Manners, I. R. 2007. European Cartography and the Ottoman World. Chicago: The Oriental Institute (forthcoming fall).
Manners, I. R. and Parmenter, B. 2005. The Middle East: A Geographical Preface. Understanding the Middle East, Edited by D. J. Gerner and J. Schwedler, Boulder and London: Lynne Reinner, 5-28.
Manners, I. R. 1997. Constructing the Image of a City: The Representation of Constantinople in Christopher Buondelmonti's Liber Insularum Archipelagi. Annals of the Association of American Geographers 87 (1), 72-102.
Manners, I. R. and A. Marcus, 1995. Istanbul: Portrait of a City. Austin, Texas: Texas Committee for the Humanities.
Manners, I. R. 1985. North Sea Oil and Environmental Planning: The United Kingdom Experience. Austin, Texas: The University of Texas Press.
Manners, I. R. and M. W. Mikesell (eds.). 1974. Perspectives on Environment. Washington D.C.: Association of American Geographers.
Francisco L. Pérez

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Professor Emeritus - Ph.D., University of California-Berkeley
Professor Emeritus, Soils Lab Director Emeritus
Interests
Mountain Geoecology, Geomorphology, Vegetation Ecology, Soils
Biography
Professor Francisco L. Pérez received his Ph.D. in 1985 from the University of California at Berkeley, and joined the UT faculty in 1986. His research interests include Mountain Geoecology, Vegetation Ecology, Soils, Alpine Geomorphology, and Biogeomorphology.
Pérez started hiking on mountains when he was 13 years old, and he still enjoys it more than any other field activity. He has worked extensively at high elevations (2500-4600 meters) throughout the South American Andes, the Western USA Sierra Nevada and Cascade Mountains, the Hawaiian volcanoes of Haleakala and Mauna Kea, Teide volcano in Tenerife (Canary Islands), the Pyrenees, and in various smaller mountains of Texas, Spain, Venezuela, and Italy. Specific recent research interests include the ecology and geomorphology of microbiotic soil crusts and of vagrant cryptogamic organisms, the biogeomorphology of tropical alpine rosette plants, the effects of stone pavements and boulders on soil ecology, the process of evaporation of soil moisture, and the evolution of microrelief and of gnamma soils on granitic domes.
Professor Pérez's research interests dovetail neatly with his classroom activities, and he regularly teaches courses in Physical Geography, Mountain Geoecology, Process Geomorphology, Vegetation Ecology, and Soils. Dr. Pérez has authored nearly 70 publications, which have appeared in various scientific journals of 20 countries of Europe, North America, and South America.
Selected Publications:
Pérez, F.L. 2009: Phytogeomorphic influence of stone covers and boulders on plant distribution and slope processes in high-mountain areas. Geography Compass 3 (2009): 1-30, 10.1111/j. 1749-8198.2009.00263.x.
Pérez, F.L. 2009: The role of tephra covers on soil moisture conservation at Haleakala’s crater (Maui, Hawai’i). Catena, 76: 191-205.
Pérez, F.L. 2008: Costras microbióticas en el volcán Haleakala. Investigación y Ciencia. [Spanish edition of Scientific American, Barcelona, Spain], 385 (October 2008): 10-11.
Pérez, F.L. 2007: Biogeomorphological influence of the Hawaiian Silversword (Argyroxiphium sandwicense DC.) on soil erosion in Haleakala (Maui, Hawai’i). Catena, 71 (1): 41-55.
Pérez, F.L. 2003: Influence of substrate on the distribution of the Hawaiian silversword (Argyroxiphium sandwicense DC.) in Haleakala (Maui, HI). Geomorphology 55: 173-202. (Also in: Butler, D.R., Walsh, S.J., Malanson, G.P. (eds.), Mountain Geomorphology. Integrating Earth Systems, pp. 173-202. Elsevier, Amsterdam.
Pérez, F.L. 2002: Geobotanical relationship of Draba chionophila (Brassicaceae) rosettes and miniature frost-sorted stripes in the high equatorial Andes. Flora: Morphology, Geobotany, Ecophysiology, 197: 24-36.
Pérez, F.L. 2001: Geoecological alteration of surface soils by the Hawaiian silversword (Argyroxiphium sandwicense) in Haleakala’s crater, Maui. Plant Ecology, 157 (2): 215-233.
Pérez, F.L. 2001: Matrix granulometry of catastrophic debris flows (December 1999) in central coastal Venezuela. Catena, 45: 163-183.
Pérez, F.L. 2000: The influence of surface volcaniclastic layers from Haleakala (Maui, Hawaii) on soil water conservation. Catena, 38: 301-332.
Pérez, F.L. 1998. Talus morphology, clast fabric, and botanical indicators of slope processes on the Chaos Crags (California Cascades). Géographie physique et Quaternaire, 52: 47-68.
Pérez, F.L. 1997. Microbiotic crusts in the high Equatorial Andes, and their influence on paramo soils. Catena, 31: 173-198.
Peter Ward
Professor Emeritus and C.B. Smith Sr. Centennial Chair # 1 in US-Mexico Relations, Department of Sociology - Ph.D., University of Liverpool
Interests
Academic: Housing and Governance in Mexico and Latin America. Non academic: Opera & Longhorn Football.
Biography
Peter M. Ward received his Ph.D. from the University of Liverpool in 1976 and subsequently has held senior teaching and research positions at University College London (1976-85), The University of Cambridge (1985-91), and at The University of Texas at Austin (1991-present) where he holds the C.B. Smith Sr. Centennial Chair in US-Mexico Relations, and is professor in the Department of Sociology (College of Liberal Arts), and in the Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs. Between 1993-7 and 2001-05, he was Director of the Mexican Center at the Lozano Long Institute of Latin American Studies. Between 2002-7 he was Editor-in-Chief of the Latin American Research Review. In 2006 he led the initiative to create the Latin American Housing Network which he coordinates at the University of Texas at Austin www.lahn.utexas.org
In addition to over 120 scholarly articles and book chapters on public policy in Mexico and Latin America, he has written fifteen books including: Housing, the State and the Poor: Policy and Practice in Latin American Cities (with Alan Gilbert), Welfare Politics in Mexico: Papering Over the Cracks, and Mexico City: The Production and Reproduction of an Urban Environment (all translated into Spanish); Self-Help Housing: A Critique, Corruption, Development and Inequality (editor), Methodology for Land and Housing Market Analysis (coeditor), Political Change in Baja California: Democracy in the Making? (with Victoria Rodriguez), and Opposition Governments in Mexico: Past Experiences and Future Opportunities(with Victoria Rodriguez). Mexico City (second edition), New Federalism and State Government in Mexico: Bringing the States Back In (with Victoria Rodriguez), Colonias and Public Policy in Texas: Urbanization by Stealth. His most recent books are Governance in the Americas: Decentralization Democracy and Subnational Government in the USA, Mexico, and Brazil (2008), Metropolitan Governance in the Federalist Americas (2012), and (2014) Housing Policies in Latin American Cities: A New Generation of Strategies and Approaches for 2016 UN-HABITAT III.
His principal research interests are Latin American urbanization, contemporary Mexican politics, housing policy and planning, Mexico City, and colonia-type housing in the United States. At various times he has served as adviser to the Mexican government and to a number of international development agencies.
Leo E. Zonn

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Professor - Ph.D., University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
Interests
Representation and Media, Especially Cinema, Geographies of Popular Culture
Biography
Leo Zonn holds a B.A. (1969, History) and M.A. (1972, Geography) from California State University, Northridge, and a PhD (1975, Geography) from the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee (Harold Rose, adviser).
He was on the faculty of Geography at Arizona State University (1975-1986), East Carolina University (1986-1997), the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (1997-2004), and the University of Texas at Austin (2004-2016). He served 19 years as department chair, with eleven at ECU, five at UNC, and three at UT. Zonn was a Visiting Scholar at the Flinders University of South Australia (1983-1984) and was a Fulbright Scholar at the University of Zagreb (Croatia, 2010-2011) and at A. I. Cuza University (Iași, Romania, 2017). He retired in 2016.
Zonn regularly taught social-cultural geography at UT, with his primary courses being Frontiers in Geography (the senior capstone course), Cinematic Geographies, Contemporary Cultural Geography, and a first-year seminar, “Re-presenting Los Angeles in the Media." He won two major teaching awards while at UT: the Silver Spurs Centennial Teaching Fellowship #2 and the Raymond Dickson Centennial Endowed Teaching Fellowship Award (2008-2009). He was adviser to three PhD and three masters degrees while at UT and served on over one hundred graduate committees in his career.
Zonn has two primary areas of interest. First, he studies geographic representation as it occurs within a variety of venues, from landscapes to popular media, notably cinema. Here he is concerned with the complex network that integrates technology, production, audience, text, the site of exposition, and the place-based filmic experience. Second, he is interested in the everyday ways in which small-scale places are physically and socially constructed. Emphasis is upon individual practice as it is associated with objects that collectively help to define these places, and with underlying issues of memory and nostalgia. His overall research agenda has drawn from a varied set of mostly social-theoretical views, while even humanist influences can be found blended into the mix.
Selected Publications:
2020. Zonn, L. A Place Belongs Forever: Telling Stories for the Personal Place Project. GeoHumanities, 6(1), 155-70. https://doi.org/10.1080/2373566X.2020.1735473
2017. Lah, J., and L. Zonn. Crossing to the Imaginary: Bildungsroman, Mobility, and Into the Wild. In The Errant Labor of the Humanities; Festschrift Presented to Stipe Grgas. Edited by Jelena Šesnić, et al. Zagreb, Croatia: FF Press, 65-78. https://doi.org/10.17234/9789531755962.05
2015. Zonn, L. Remember the Alamo: A Place of Cinematic Experience. In Mediated Geographies/Geographies of Media—International Handbooks of Human Geography Series, edited by J. Cupples, C. Lukinbeal, and S. Mains. Springer: Dordrecht, 141-155. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-017-9969-0_9
2012. Winchell, D., and L. Zonn. Urban Spaces of American Indians in The Exiles. Geographical Review, Vol. 102(2), 149-165. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1931-0846.2012.00140.x
2008. Dixon, D., L. Zonn, and J. Bascom. Post-ing the Cinema: Reassessing Analytical Stances Toward a Geography of Film. In The Geography of Cinema: A Cinematic World, edited by C. Lukinbeal and S. Zimmermann. Stuttgart: Franz Steiner Verlag, 25-47.
2007. Zonn, L. Going to the Movies: The Filmic Site as Geographic Endeavor. Aether: The Journal of Media Geography, 1, 63-67.
2007, 2005. Dixon, D., and L. Zonn. Confronting the Geopolitical Aesthetic: Fredric Jameson, The Perfumed Nightmare and the Perilous Place of Third Cinema. Geopolitics, 10, 290-315. Reprinted in Cinema and Popular Geopolitics, edited by M. Power and A. Crampton. 2007. New York: Routledge, 95-120. https://doi.org/10.1080/14650040590946593
2004. Holmes, G., L. Zonn, and A. Cravey. Placing Man in the West: Masculinities of The Last Picture Show. GeoJournal, 59, 277-288. https://doi.org/10.1023/b:gejo.0000026701.67516.b2
2004. Lukinbeal, C., and L. Zonn, Guest Editors. Cinematic Geographies, GeoJournal, 59.
2004. Dixon, D., and L. Zonn. Film Networks and the Place(s) of Technology. In Geography and Technology, edited by S. Brunn, S. Cutter, and J.W. Harrington. Dordrecht, Boston, London: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 243-266.
2002. Zonn, L., and D. Winchell. Smoke Signals: Locating Sherman Alexie's Narratives of American Indian Identity. In Engaging Film: Geographies of Mobility and Identity, edited by T. Cresswell and D. Dixon. Lanham, Maryland: Rowman and Littlefield, 140-158.
1994. Aitken, S., and L. Zonn. Editors. Place, Power, Situation and Spectacle: A Geography of Film. Savage, Maryland: Rowman and Littlefield, Publishers.
1994. Zonn, L., and S. Aitken. Of Pelicans and Men: Symbolic Landscapes, Gender, and Australia's Storm Boy. In Place, Power, Situation, and Spectacle: A Geography of Film (see edited volume above), 137-159.
1994, Aitken, S., and L. Zonn. Re-Presenting the Place Pastiche. In Place, Power, Situation, and Spectacle (see edited volume above), 3-25.
1993. Aitken, S., and L. Zonn. Weir(d) Sex: Representation of Gender- Environment Relations in Peter Weir's Picnic at Hanging Rock and Gallipoli. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, 11, 191-212.
1990. Zonn, L . Editor. Place Images in Media: Portrayal, Meaning, and Experience. Savage, Maryland: Rowman and Littlefield, Publishers.