Qualitative Research Bibliography

 

Abu-Lughod, L. 1993. Writing Women’s Worlds: Bedouin Stories. Berkeley: University of California Press.

 

Appadurai, A. 1997. “Discussion Fieldwork in the Era of Globalization,” Anthropology and Humanism 22(1) 115.

 

Articles appearing under the special Viewpoints section. 2002. “Feminists Talking Across Worlds,” Gender, Place and Culture 9(2).

 

Bailey, C., C. White and R. Pain. 1999. “Evaluating Qualitative Research: Dealing with the Tension Between ‘Science’ and ‘Creativity,’” Area 31(2): 169-178.

 

Bailey, C., C. White and R. Pain. 1999. “Response,” Area 31(2): 182-183.

 

Bakker, K., L.D. Berg, C. Katz, K. Morin, B. Page, G. Pratt, K. Simonsen, E. Swyngedouw and G. Uribe. 1998. “Lost and Found in the Posts: Addressing Critical Human Geography,” Environment and Planning D: Society & Space 16(3): 257-278.

 

Bammer, A., G. Minrose, C. Katz, and  E. Meese. 1998. “The Place of the Letter: An Epistolary Exchange” in Making Worlds: Gender, Metaphor, Materiality, S. H. Aiken, A. Brigham, S. A. Marston, and P. Waterstone, eds., Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 161-202.

 

Barbour, R. S. and J. Kitzinger, eds. 1998. Developing Focus Group Research: Politics, Theory and Practice. University of Hull, The Glasgow University Media Research Unit: Sage.

 

Barone, T. E. 1992. “Beyond Theory and Method: A Case of Critical Storytelling,” Theory into Practice 31: 142-146.

 

Baxter, J. and J. Eyles. 1997. “Evaluating Qualitative Research in Social Geography Establishing ‘Rigour’ in Interview Analysis,” Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 22: 505-525.

 

Baxter, J. and J. Eyles. 1999. “Prescription for Research Practice? Grounded Theory in
Qualitative Evaluation,” Area 31(2): 179-181.

 

Baxter, J. and J. Eyles. 1999. “The Utility of In-depth Interviews for Studying the Meaning of Environmental Risk,.Professional Geographer 51(2): 307-320.

 

Behar, R. and D. Gordon, eds. 1995. Women Writing Culture. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.

 

Behar, R.. 1996. The Vulnerable Observer: Anthropology that Breaks Your Heart. Boston, MA: Beacon.

 

 

Berg, L. D. 1994. “Masculinity, Place, and a Binary Discourse of Theory and Empirical Investigation in the Human Geography of Aotearoa/New Zealand,” Gender, Place and Culture 1(2): 245-260.

 

Berg, L. D. 1994. “Masculinism, Power and Discourses of Exclusion in Brian Berry’s ‘Scientific’ Geography,” Urban Geography 15(3): 279-287.

 

Berg, L. D. 1998. “Reading (Post)Colonial History: Masculinity, ‘Race,’ and Rebellious Natives in the Waikato, New Zealand – 1863,” Historical Geography 26: 101-127.

 

Berg, L. D. 1999. “Cultural Politics and the Local(e),” Nordisk Samhällsgeografisk Tidskrift 28: 3-22.

 

Berg, L. D. 1999. “A (White) Man of His Times? Sir George Grey and the Narration of Hegemonic Masculinity in Victorian New Zealand,” Refereed chapter in Masculinities in New Zealand, R. Law, H. Campbell and J. Dolan, eds. Palmerston North: The Dunmore Press, 67 - 83.

 

Berg, L. D. 2001. “Masculinism, Emplacement and Positionality in Peer Review,” The Professional Geographer 53(4): 511-521.

 

 

Berg, L. D. 2002. “(Some) Spaces of Critical Geography,” in The Student's Guide to Geography, 2nd ed. A. Rodgers and H. Viles, eds. Oxford UK and Malden USA: Blackwell. (forthcoming).

 

Berg, L. D. 2002. “Gender Equity as ‘Boundary Object’Š Or, the Same Old ‘Sex and Power in Geography’ All Over Again?" The Canadian Geographer/ Le Géographe canadien. (forthcoming).

 

Berg, L. D. and R. A. Kearns. 1997. “Constructing Cultural Geographies of Aotearoa,” New Zealand Geographer 53(2): 1-2.

 

Berg, L. D. and R. A. Kearns. 1996. “Naming as Norming: ‘Race,’ Gender and the Identity Politics of Naming Places in Aotearoa,” Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 14 (1): 99-122.

 

Berg, L. D. and R. A. Kearns. 1998. “America Unlimited,” Environment and Planning D: Society & Space 16: 128-132.

 

Berg , L. D. and J. R. Mansvelt. 2000. “Writing In, Speaking Out: Communicating Qualitative Research Findings,” in Qualitative Research Methods in Human Geography, I. Hay, ed., Melbourne: Oxford University Press, 161-182.

 

Berg, L. D. and M. M. Roche. 1997. “Market Metaphors, Neo-liberalism and the Construction of Academic Landscapes in Aotearoa/New Zealand,” Journal of Geography in Higher Education 21(2): 147-161.

 

Billson, J. M. 1991. “The Progressive Verification Method: Toward a Feminist Methodology for Studying Women Cross-Culturally,” Women’s Studies International Forum 14: 201-215.

 

Bogdan R. and M. Ksander. 1980. “Policy Data as a Social Process: a Qualitative Approach to Quantitative Data,” Human Organization 39(4): 302-308.

 

Bogdan, R. and S. K. Biklen. 1998. Chapter 2, Qualitative Research for Education 3rd edition, New York: Allyn and Bacon.

 

Bogdewic, S. 1999. “Participant Observation,” in Doing Qualitative Research, B. Crabtree and W. Miller eds., Newbury Park: Sage Publications, 47-69.

 

Bondi, L. 1993. “Locating Identity Politics,” in Place and the Politics of Identity, M. Keith and S. Pile, eds., London: Routledge, 84-103.

 

Bondi, L. 1997. “In Whose Words? On Gender Identities, Knowledge and Writing Practices,” Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers NS 22: 245-258.

 

Boyle, J. S. 1994. “Styles of Ethnography,” in Critical Issues in Qualitative Research Methods, J.M. Morse, ed., Thousand Oaks, London, and New Delhi: Sage, 159-185.

Bradshaw, M. and E. Stratford. 2000. “Qualitative Design and Rigour,” in Qualitative Research Methods in Human Geography, I. Hay, ed., Melbourne: Oxford University Press.

 

Brown, E. B. 1992. “’What Has Happened Here’: The Politics of Difference in Women’s History and Feminist Politics,” Feminist Studies 18: 295-311.

 

Burgess, R. G. 1993. “Methods of Field Research 1: Participant Observation,” in In the Field: An Introduction to Field Research. London: Routledge.

 

Butz, D. and L. D. Berg. 2002. “Paradoxical Space: Geography, Men and Duppy Feminism,” in Feminist Geography in Practice: Research and Methods, P. Moss, ed., Oxford: Blackwell, 87-102.

Cameron, J. 2000. “Focussing in the Focus Group,” in Qualitative Research Methods in Human Geography, I. Hay, ed., Melbourne: Oxford University Press.

 

Cancian, F. M. 1993. “Conflicts Between Activist Research and Academic Success: Participatory Research and Alternative Strategies,” American Sociologist 24(1): 92-106.

 

Ceglowski, D. 1997. “That’s a Good Story, But Is It Really Research?” Qualitative Inquiry 3(2): 188-199.

 

 

 

Cheng, S. A. 2001. “Weaving Intimacy and Reflexivity: The Locational Politics of Power, Knowledge, and Identities,” in Feminist (Re)visions of the Subject: Landscapes, Ethnoscapes, and Theoryscapes, G. Currie and C. Rothenberg, eds., Lanham and Boulder: Lexington Books, 181-200.

 

Clifford, J. 1990 “Notes on (Field)notes,” in Fieldnotes. The Makings of Anthropology, R. Sanjek, ed., Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.

 

Clifford, J. and G. E. Marcus, eds. 1986. Writing Culture: The Poetics and Politics of Ethnography. Berkeley: University of California Press.

 

Cope, M. 2005. “Coding Qualitative Data,” In Qualitative Research Methods for Human Geographers, 2nd Edition, Iain Hay, ed., Oxford University Press, 310-324.

 

Cope, M. 2003. “Coding Qualitative Data,” In Key Methods in Human and Physical Geography, N. Clifford and G. Valentine, eds., Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications, 445-459.

 

Cope, M. 2002. “Feminist Epistemology in Geography,” In Feminist Geography in Practice: Research and Methods, P. Moss, ed., Cambridge, MA: Blackwell Publishers, 43-56.

 

Cormode L. and A. Hughes. 1999. “The Economic Geographer as a Situated Researcher of Elites,” Geoforum 30(4): 299-300.

 

Cornelius, W. A. 1981. “Interviewing Undocumented Immigrants: Methodological Reflections Based on Fieldwork in Mexico and the United States,” Working Papers in U.S.-Mexican Studies No. 2. University of California, San Diego: Program in US-Mexican Studies.

 

Couto, R. A. 1987. “Participatory Research: Methodology and Critique,” Clinical Sociology Review 5: 83-90.

 

Creswell, J. W. 1998. “Designing a Qualitative Study,” in Qualitative Inquiry and Research Design. Choosing Among the Five Traditions, J. W. Creswell, Thousand Oaks, CA : Sage Publications.  

 

Creswell, J.W. 1998. Qualitative Inquiry and Research Design. Choosing Among the Five Traditions. Thousand Oaks, CA : Sage Publications.  

 

Curtis, K. A. 1989. “Help from Within: Participatory Research in a Low-Income Neighborhood,” Urban Anthropology 18(2): 203-217.

 

Cupples, J. and S. Kindon. 2002. “Offstage Miracles: Returning to University and Writing ‘the Field,’” in Development Studies and Fieldwork: A Rough Guide, R. Scheyvans and D. Storey, eds., London: Sage.

 

De Soto, H. and N. Dudwick, eds. 2000. Fieldwork Dilemmas: Anthropologists in Postsocialists States. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press.

 

Del Casino, V., Jr., A. J. Grimes, Andrews, S.P. Hanna, and J. P. Jones, III. 2000. “Methodological Frameworks for the Geography of Organizations,” Geoforum 31: 523-538.

 

Delgado-Gaitan, C. 1993. “Researcher Change and Changing the Researcher,” Harvard Educational Review 63(4): 389-411.

 

DeLyser, Dydia. 1999. “Authenticity on the Ground: Engaging the Past in a California Ghost Town,” Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 89(4): 602-632.

 

DeLyser, D. 2001. “‘Do You Really Live Here? Thoughts on Insider Research,” Geographical Review, 91(1-2): 441-453.

 

DeLyser, D. and P. Starrs, eds. 2001. Special Issue on “Doing Fieldwork,” The Geographical Review 91(1-2).

 

Denzin, N. K. and Y. S. Lincoln, Eds. 2000. Handbook of Qualitative Research 2nd ed. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.

 

Derrida, J. 1996. Archive Fever: A Freudian Impression. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

 

DeVault, M. 1999. Liberating Method: Feminism and Social Research. Philadelphia, PA: Temple University Press.

 

Dowler, L. 2001. “The Four Square Laundry: Participant Observation in a War Zone,” The Geographical Review 91(1-2): 414-422.

 

Dowling, R. 2000. “Power, Subjectivity and Ethics in Qualitative Research,” in Qualitative Research Methods in Human Geography, I. Hay, ed., Melbourne: Oxford University Press.

 

Dunaway, D. K. and W.K. Baum, eds. 1984. Oral History: An Interdisciplinary Anthology. Nashville: American Assocation for State and Local History.

 

Duncan, J. 1999. “Complicity and Resistance in the Colonial Archive: Some Issues of Method and Theory in Historical Geography,” Historical Geography 27: 119-128.

 

Dunn, K. 2000. “Interviewing,” in Qualitative Research Methods in Human Geography, I. Hay, ed., Melbourne: Oxford University Press.

 

Dyck, I. 1993 “Ethnography: A feminist Method?” The Canadian Geographer 37: 52-57.

 

Dyck, I. 1996. “Whose Body? Whose Voice?: Contradictory Cultural Constructions in the Research,” Atlantis 21(2): 54-62.

 

Eisner, E. W. and A. Peshkin, eds. 1990. Qualitative Inquiry in Education: The Continuing Debate. New York: Teachers College Press.

 

Elliott, S. J. 1999. “And the Question Shall Determine the Method,” The Professional Geographer (Focus: Qualitative Approaches in Health Geography) 51: 240-243.

 

Elwood, S. and D. Martin. 2000. “'Placing' Interviews: Location and Scales of Power in Qualitative Research,” Professional Geographer 52(4): 649-657.

 

Emerson, R. M. 1988. "Introduction: Relational and Personal Processes in Fieldwork," in Contemporary Field Research: A Collection of Readings, R. M. Emerson, ed., 175-89.

 

Emerson, R. M., R. I. Fretz, and L. L. Shaw. 1995. Writing Ethnographic Fieldnotes. Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press.

 

England, K. 1994. “Getting Personal: Reflexivity, Positionality, and Feminist Research,” Professional Geographer 46(1): 80-89.

 
Ettlinger, N. 2004. "Towards a Critical Theory of Untidy Geographies: The Spatiality of Emotions in Consumption and Production", Feminist Economics 10(3): 21-54.

 

Eyles, J, ed. 1988. Research in Human Geography: Introductions and Investigations. Oxford: Basil Blackwell.

 

Eyles, J. 1993. “Feminist and Interpretive Method: How Different?” The Canadian Geographer 37(1): 50-52.

 

Eyles, J. 1993. “Life History as Method,” The Canadian Geographer 37: 104-119.

 

Eyles, J. and S. Smith. 1988. Qualitative Methods in Human Geography. Cambridge: Polity Press.

 

Fals-Borda, O. 1987. “The Application of Participatory Action Research in Latin America,” International Journal of Sociology 2(4): 329-347.

 

Farrow, H.; Moss, P. and B. Shaw. 1995. “Symposium on Feminist Participatory Research,” Antipode 27: 71-74.

 

Feagin, J., A. Orum, et al. 1991. A Case for the Case Study. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press.

 

Findlay, A. M. and F. L. N. Li. 1997. “An Auto-Biographical Approach to Understanding Migration: The Case of Hong Kong Emigrants,” Area 29(1): 34-44.

 

Flowerdew, R. and D. Martin, eds. 1997. Methods in Human Geography: A Guide for Students Doing Research Projects. Essex: Addison Wesley Longman.

 

Fonow, M. M. and J.A. Cook, eds. 1991. Beyond Methodology: Feminist Scholarship as Lived Research. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.

 

Forbes, D. 2000. “Reading Texts and Writing Geography,” in Qualitative Research Methods in Human Geography, I. Hay, ed., Melbourne: Oxford University Press.

 

Gade, D. 2001. “Intercultural Communication and Reflexive Consciousness in Geographic Fieldwork.,The Geographical Review 91(1-2): 370-379.

 

Garvin, T. and K. Wilson. 1999. “The Use of Storytelling for Understanding Women's Desires to Tan: Lessons from the Field,” The Professional Geographer 51(2): 296-306.

 

Geertz, C. 1973. The Interpretation of Cultures. New York: Basic Books.

 

Gibson-Graham, J.-K. 1994. “’Stuffed if I Know!’: Reflections on Post-Modern Feminist Social Research,” Gender, Place and Culture 1: 205-224.

 

Gluck, S. B. and D. Patai, eds. 1991. Women's Words: The Feminist Practice of Oral History. New York: Routledge.

 

Gordon, D. A. 1993. “The Unhappy Relationship of Feminism and Postmodernism in Anthropology,” Anthropological Quarterly 3: 109-118.

 

Gorelick, S. 1991. “Contradictions of Feminist Methodology,” Gender and Society 5: 459-477.

 

Goss, J. D. and T. R. Leinbach. 1996. “Focus Groups as Alternative Research Practice: Experience with Transmigrants in Indonesia,” Area 28: 115-123.

 

Graham, E. 1999. “Breaking Out: The Opportunities and Challenges of Multi-Method Research in Population Geography,” Professional Geographer 51: 76-89.

 

Guba, E. G. and Y. S. Lincoln. 1994. “Competing Paradigms in Qualitative Research.,” in Handbook of Qualititative Research. D. A. Lincoln, ed. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications, 105-117.

 

Gupta, A. and J. Ferguson. 1997. “Discipline and Practice: ‘The Field’ as Site, Method, and Location in Anthropology,” in Anthropological Locations: Boundaries and Grounds in a Field Science. A. Gupta and J. Ferguson, eds. Berkeley, Los Angeles, and London: University of California Press, 1-46.

 

Hall, B. L. 1992. “From Margins to Center? The Development and Purpose of Participatory Research,” American Sociologist 23(4): 15-28.

 

Harding, S., ed. 1987. Feminism and Methodology. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.

 

Hartfield, M. and S. Kindon. “Participatory Heritage Assessment: an Example from Wellington, Aotearoa/New Zealand,” submitted to PLA Notes, (under review).

 

Hay, I., ed. 2000. Qualitative Rsearch Methods in Human Geography. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press.

 

Herbert, S. 2000. “For Ethnography,” Progress in Human Geography 24(4): 550-568.

 

Herod, A. 1993. “Gender Issues in the Use of Interviewing as a Research Method,” Professional Geographer 45(3): 305-317.

 

Herod, A. 1999. “Reflections on Interviewing Foreign Elites: Praxis, Positionality, Validity and the Cult of the Insider,” Geoforum 30(4): 313-327.

 

Hertz, R. 1997. Reflexivity and Voice. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.

 

Hodgson, D. 1999. “Critical Interventions: Dilemmas of Accountability in Contemporary Ethnographic Research,” Identities 6(2-3): 201-224.

 

Hondagneu-Sotelo, P. 1988. “Gender and Fieldwork,” Women’s Studies International Forum 11: 611-618.

 

Hudson, A. (1998). “Placing Trust, Trusting Place: On the Social Construction of Offshore Financial Centers,” Political Geography 17(8): 915-937.

 

Hyams, M. 2000. " 'Pay attention in class...[and] don't get pregnant': a discourse of academic success among adolescent Latinas." Environment & Planning  A, 32(4): 635-654.  
 
Hyams, M. 2002. " 'Over there' and 'back then': an odyssey in national subjectivity." Environment & Planning D: Society and Space.  20(4): 459-476. 

 

Hyams, M. 2003. "Adolescent Latina bodyspaces: making homegirls, homebodies and homeplaces." Antipode. 35(3): 536-558.  

 

Hyams, M. 2004. "Hearing girls' silences: thoughts on the politics and practices of a feminist method of group discussion."  Gender, Place and Culture. 11 (1):105-119.  

 

Hyams, M. 2004. "Adolescent Latina bodyspaces: making homegirls, homebodies and homeplaces." In C. Katz, S. Marston and K. Mitchell (eds.) Life's Work: Geographies of Social Production, Oxford: Blackwell.

 

International Institute for Qualitative Research, University of Alberta. Accessed at http://www.ualberta.ca/~iiqm/

 

International Journal of Qualitative Methods, University of Alberta. Accessed at: http://www.ualberta.ca/~ijqm/english/engframeset.html

 

Jackson, B. 1987. Fieldwork. Urbana and Chicago: University of Illinois Press.

 

Jackson, P. 1985. “Urban Ethnography,” Progress in Human Geography 9: 157-176.

 

Jackson, P. and B. Holbrook. 1995. “Multiple Meanings: Shopping and the Cultural Politics of Identity,” Environment and Planning A 27: 1913-1930.

 

Jackson, P. 1999. “Review Symposium - Postmodern Urbanism and the Ethnographic Void,” Urban Geography 20(5): 400-402.

 

Jacobs, J. M. 1993. “The City Unbound: Qualitative Approaches to the City,” Urban Studies 30(4-5): 827-848.

 

Järvinen, M. 2000. “The Biographical Illusion: Constructing Meaning in Qualitative Interviews,” Qualitative Inquiry 6(3): 370-391.

 

Jessor, R. Colby, A., and R.A. Shweder, eds. 1996. Ethnography and Human Development: Context and Meaning in Social Inquiry. The John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation Series on Mental Health and Development. Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press.

 

Jones III, J. P., H. J. Nast, and S. M. Roberts, eds. 1997. Thresholds in Feminist Geography: Difference, Methodology, Representation. Lanham, MD and Oxford: Rowman and Littlefield.

 

Katz, C. 1992. “All the World Is Staged: Intellectuals and the Projects of Ethnography,” Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 10.5: 495-510.

 

Kearns, R. 2000. “Being There: Research Through Observing and Participating,” in Qualitative Research Methods in Human Geography, I. Hay, ed., Melbourne: Oxford University Press.

 

Kearns, R. A. and L. D. Berg. 2002. “Proclaiming Place: Towards a Geography of Place Name Pronunciation,” Social & Cultural Geography. (accepted April 9/02).

 

Kearns, R. A. 1991. “Talking and Listening: Avenues to Geographical Understanding,” New Zealand Journal of Geography 92: 2-3.

 

Keith, M. 1992. “Angry Writing: (Re)presenting the Unethical World of the Ethnographer,” Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 10: 550-568.

 

Kesby, M., S. Kindon and R. Pain. 2003. “Participatory Approaches,” in Research Methods in Human Geography A Guide for Students Doing Research Projects, R. Flowerdew and D. Martin, eds., Harlow: Longman.

 

Kindon, S.L. 1995. “Dynamics of Difference: Exploring Empowerment Methodologies with Women and Men in Bali,” New Zealand Geographer 51(11): 10-12.

 

Kindon, S.L., and R. Slocum. 1995. “Gender Myths in Bali,” in Power, Process and Participation: Tools for Environmental and Social Change, D. Rocheleau, R. Slocum and B. Thomas-Slayter, eds., London: Intermediate Technology Publications, 105-109.

 

Kindon, S.L. 1998. “Of Mothers and Men: Questioning Gender and Community Myths in Bali.,” in The Myth of Community: Gender Issues in Participatory Development. I. Guijt and M. Shar, ed.,. London: Intermediate Technology Publications, 152-164.

 

Kindon, S.L. and G. Hume-Cook. 1998. “Deconstructive Geographic Fieldwork: Dimensions of Theoria and Praxis in ‘Place, Power and Identity,’ in Proceedings of the Geographic Education Conference 1997, E. Bliss, ed., Hamilton: University of Waikato, 22-26.

 

Kindon, S. 2000. “(Re)framing and (Re)presenting: Participatory Community Video in Geographic Research,” in Proceedings of Twentieth New Zealand Geography Conference, July 5-8, 1999, M. Roche, M. McKenna and P. Hesp, eds., Palmerston: Massey University, 175-178.

 

Kindon, S. and A. Latham. 2002. “From Mitigation to Negotiation: Ethics and the Geographic Imagination in Aotearoa New Zealand,” New Zealand Geographer, 58(1).

 

Kindon, S. and J. Cupples. 2002. “‘Anything to Declare?’: The Politics of Leaving ‘the Field,’” in Development Studies and Fieldwork: A Rough Guide, R. Scheyvans and D. Storey, eds., London: Sage.

 

Kindon, S. “Participatory Video in Geographic Research: A Feminist Practice of Looking?” submitted to Area, (under review).

 

Kirby, S. and K. McKenna. 1989. Experience, Research, Social Change: Methods From the Margins. Toronto: Garamond Press.

 

Kirsh, G. E. 1999. Ethical Dilemmas in Feminist Research. Albany: State University of New York Press.

 

Kitchin, R. and N. Tate. 1999. Conducting Research into Human Geography: Theory, Methodology, and Practice. London: Prentice Hall. http://www.may.ie/staff/rkitchin/books/research/resbook.htm

 

Kitchin, R. and N. Tate. 2000. Conducting Research in Human Geography: Theory, Methodology and Practice. Harlow: Prentice Hall.

 

Kobayashi, A. 1994. “Coloring the Field: Gender, ‘Race,’ and the Politics of Fieldwork,” Professional Geographer 46(1): 73-80.

 

Kobayashi, A. 2001. “Negotiating the Personal and the Political in Critical Qualitative Research,” in Qualitative Methodologies for Geographers: Issues and Debates, M. Limb and C. Dwyer, eds., London and New York: Arnold and Oxford University Press, 55-72.

 

Kurtz, M. 2001. “Situation Practices: The Archive and the File Cabinet.” Historical Geography 29: 26-37.

 

Kvale, S. 1996. InterViews: An Introduction to Qualitative Research Interviewing. Thousand Oaks, London, and New Delhi: Sage.

 

Lal, J. 1996. “Situating Locations: The Politics of Self, Identity, and ‘Other’ in Living and Writing the Text,” Feminist Dilemmas in Fieldwork. Diane Wolf, ed. Boulder: Westview Press, 185-214.

 

Lancaster, R. 1992. Life is Hard: Machismo, Danger, and the Intimacy of Power in Nicaragua. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.

 

Lawson, V. 1995. “The Politics of Difference: Examining the Quantitative/Qualitative Dualism in Post-Structuralist Feminist Research,” The Professional Geographer 47(4): 449-457.

 

Lazreg, M. 1988. “Feminism and Difference: The Perils of Writing as a Woman on Women in Algeria.” Feminist Studies 14(1): 81-107.

 

Lees, L. and L. D. Berg. 1995. “Ponga, Glass, and Concrete: A Vision for Urban Socio-Cultural Geography in Aotearoa/New Zealand,” New Zealand Geographer 51(2): 32-41.

 

Lewin, E. and W. Leap. 1996. Out in the Field: Reflections of Lesbian and Gay Anthropologists. Urbana, IL: University of Illinois Press.

 

Limb, M. and C. Dwyer, eds. 2001. Qualitative Methodologies for Geographers: Issues and Debates. London: Arnold Publishers.

 

Lofland, J. and L. Lofland. 1995. Writing Reports. Analyzing Social Settings. Belmont, CA: Wadsworth, 138-152.

 

Martin, B. and C. T. Mohanty. 1986. “Feminist Politics: What’s Home Got to Do with It?” Feminist Studies/Critical Studies. Teresa de Lauretis, ed. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, ???-???.

 

Mattingly, D. and K. Falconer-Al-Hindi. 1995. “Should Women Count? The Context of the Debate,” Professional Geographer 47(4): 427-335.

 

McClean, R., L. D. Berg and M. M. Roche. 1997. “Responsible Geographies: Co-creating Knowledges in Aotearoa,” New Zealand Geographer 53 (2): 9-15.

 

McDowell, L. 1992. “Multiple Voices,” Antipode 24(1): 56-72.

 

McDowell, L. 1992. “Doing Gender: Feminism, Feminists and Research Methods in Human Geography,” Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers N.S. 17(4): 399-416.