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The University of North Carolina Press
Southeastern Geographer: Innovations in Southern Studies, Winter 2011
Southeastern Geographer: Innovations in Southern Studies, Winter 2011
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Table of Contents for Volume 51, Number 4 (Winter 2011)
Introduction: With Thanks
Graham A. Tobin and Robert Brinkmann
Innovations in Southern Studies within Geography
Derek H. Alderman and William Graves
The Bible Belt in a Changing South: Shrinking, Relocating, and Multiple Buckles
Stanley D. Brunn, Gerald R. Webster, and J. Clark Archer
Emerging Patterns of Growth and Change in the Southeast
Benjamin J. Shultz
Geographies of Race in the American South: The Continuing Legacies of Jim Crow Segregation
Joshua F. J. Inwood
Jim Crow, Civil Defense, and the Hydrogen Bomb: Race, Evacuation Planning, and the Geopolitics of Fear in 1950s Savannah, Georgia
Jonathan Leib and Thomas Chapman
Representing the Immigrant: Social Movements, Political Discourse, and Immigration in the U.S. South
Jamie Winders
Water, Water, Everywhere? Toward a Critical Water Geography of the South
Christopher F. Meindl
The Politics of Mobility in the South: A Commentary on Sprawl,Automobility, and the Gulf Oil Spill
Jason Henderson
Southeastern Geographer is published by UNC Press for the Southeastern Division of the Association of American Geographers (www.sedaag.org). The quarterly journal publishes the academic work of geographers and other social and physical scientists, and features peer-reviewed articles and essays that reflect sound scholarship and contain significant contributions to geographical understanding, with a special interest in work that focuses on the southeastern United States.
Introduction: With Thanks
Graham A. Tobin and Robert Brinkmann
Innovations in Southern Studies within Geography
Derek H. Alderman and William Graves
The Bible Belt in a Changing South: Shrinking, Relocating, and Multiple Buckles
Stanley D. Brunn, Gerald R. Webster, and J. Clark Archer
Emerging Patterns of Growth and Change in the Southeast
Benjamin J. Shultz
Geographies of Race in the American South: The Continuing Legacies of Jim Crow Segregation
Joshua F. J. Inwood
Jim Crow, Civil Defense, and the Hydrogen Bomb: Race, Evacuation Planning, and the Geopolitics of Fear in 1950s Savannah, Georgia
Jonathan Leib and Thomas Chapman
Representing the Immigrant: Social Movements, Political Discourse, and Immigration in the U.S. South
Jamie Winders
Water, Water, Everywhere? Toward a Critical Water Geography of the South
Christopher F. Meindl
The Politics of Mobility in the South: A Commentary on Sprawl,Automobility, and the Gulf Oil Spill
Jason Henderson
Southeastern Geographer is published by UNC Press for the Southeastern Division of the Association of American Geographers (www.sedaag.org). The quarterly journal publishes the academic work of geographers and other social and physical scientists, and features peer-reviewed articles and essays that reflect sound scholarship and contain significant contributions to geographical understanding, with a special interest in work that focuses on the southeastern United States.
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