1.7(top 10%)
Impact Factor
1.9(top 10%)
extended IF
83(top 4%)
H-Index
538
authors
3.4K
papers
41.7K
citations
4.3K
citing journals
15K
citing authors

Most Cited Articles of Professional Geographer

TitleYearCitations
Getting Personal: Reflexivity, Positionality, and Feminist Research∗ ∗I want to thank Mike Bradshaw, Rosemary Coombe, Mireya Folch-Serra, Ted Relph, Sue Ruddick, the reviewers, and the editor for their comments on an earlier draft of this paper. Thanks also go to Muriel and Stan England for their patience and understanding, and to Heidi Nast for organizing the session on which this paper is based and for her encouragement to write about a “failed project.” The support of a Connaught New Staff Grant and a gr1994820
Theorizing and Researching Intersectionality: A Challenge for Feminist Geography* *I wish to thank Karen Dias and Jennifer Blecha in the strongest possible terms for inviting me to participate in the Department of Geography, University of Minnesota Fall 2004 speaker series, Feminism and Social Theory in Geography. Their hospitality was second to none and I was inspired by the conversations shared with them, and their colleagues, in both formal and informal settings during my visit. I am also very grateful t2007616
Fatal Couplings of Power and Difference: Notes on Racism and Geography2002370
Playing the Field: Questions of Fieldwork in Geography1994346
Gender and Individual Access to Urban Opportunities: A Study Using Space–Time Measures1999342
Women in the Field: Critical Feminist Methodologies and Theoretical Perspectives∗ ∗Earlier versions of the papers in this collection were presented in a GPOW session at the 1993 Association of American Geographers meeting in Atlanta, GA. The session was organized by Heidi Nast.1994300
Place and Health: Towards a Reformed Medical Geography∗ ∗The author acknowledges the helpful comments of Isabel Dyck, Wil Gesler, and two anonymous referees. An earlier version of the paper was presented in the special session “New Directions in Medical Geography” at the inaugural joint conference of the New Zealand Geographical Society and the Institute of Australian Geographers, University of Auckland, 27–31 January 1992.1993287
MONTHLY PRECIPITATION DISTRIBUTION: A COMPARATIVE INDEX1980286
Coloring the Field: Gender, “Race,” and the Politics of Fieldwork1994268
On the Issues of Scale, Resolution, and Fractal Analysis in the Mapping Sciences* *We thank Gregory Carter, Lee De Cola, the anonymous reviewers, and the editor for improving this paper; Clifford Duplechin and Mary Lee Eggart, and the LSU graduate students for preparing the graphics; and the NASA, John C. Stennis Space Center, Director's Discretionary Fund for supporting in part the development of this paper.1992261
THE CORPORATE INTERVIEW AS A RESEARCH METHOD IN ECONOMIC GEOGRAPHY∗ ∗The author gratefully acknowledges the advice and comments of Amy Glasmeier, Robert Kargon, Ann Markusen, AnnaLee Saxenian, and Katherine Verdery. They are, of course, relieved of any responsibility for the outcome. This paper draws on research conducted under grant number SES-85-11051 from the National Science Foundation, which is also gratefully acknowledged.1991261
Interpolating U.S. Decennial Census Tract Data from as Early as 1970 to 2010: A Longtitudinal Tract Database2014229
“Placing” Interviews: Location and Scales of Power in Qualitative Research2000229
Geo-Narrative: Extending Geographic Information Systems for Narrative Analysis in Qualitative and Mixed-Method Research∗View all notes2008226
“If They Only Knew”: Color Blindness and Universalism in California Alternative Food Institutions2008219
Head/Tail Breaks: A New Classification Scheme for Data with a Heavy-Tailed Distribution2013195
Spatial Scale Problems and Geostatistical Solutions: A Review2000182
ON THE HISTORY AND PRESENT CONDITION OF GEOGRAPHY: AN HISTORICAL MATERIALIST MANIFESTO1984174
Affecting Geospatial Technologies: Toward a Feminist Politics of Emotion* *Earlier versions of this article were presented in the University of Minnesota Department of Geography's speaker series “Feminism and Social Theory in Geography,” 15 October 2004, and at the Annual Meeting of the Association of American Geographers, Denver, 5–9 April 2005. I thank the audiences of these presentations, and Karen Dias, Jennifer Blecha, and the anonymous reviewers for their helpful comments. View all notes2007166
Monitoring Growth in Rapidly Urbanizing Areas Using Remotely Sensed Data2000165
Interprovincial Migration, Population Redistribution, and Regional Development in China: 1990 and 2000 Census Comparisons2005164
The Space That Race Makes2002160
A Nationwide Comparison of Driving Distance Versus Straight-Line Distance to Hospitals2012159
The Best of Times and the Worst of Times: Structural Adjustment Programs and Uneven Development in Africa: The Case Of Ghana2000158
Reflections on a White Discipline2002156