The California Geographer Vol. 41 (2001)Journal of California Geographical Societyhttp://hdl.handle.net/10211.3/2153902024-03-28T19:46:27Z2024-03-28T19:46:27ZProfessor Reg Golledge and the Millenniuim Project interviewSumner, Rayhttp://hdl.handle.net/10211.2/27422020-06-23T00:38:31Z2001-01-01T00:00:00ZProfessor Reg Golledge and the Millenniuim Project interview
Sumner, Ray
In Volume XXXVIII, 1998, we published an account of the Millennium
Project on Australian Geography and Geographers. This project was
developed and led by Elain Stratford, University of Tasmania.
As part of the Project, prominent geographers were interviewed on audiotape,
following a standard set of questions, which are printed in
italics in the Colledge interview. Australian English spelling has also
been retained.
2001-01-01T00:00:00ZCalifornia women at workZorn, Jennyhttp://hdl.handle.net/10211.2/27412020-06-22T23:15:08Z2001-01-01T00:00:00ZCalifornia women at work
Zorn, Jenny
This research examines the patterns of paid labor force participation,
educational attainment, and income differentials in California in 1990.
The historical trends since 1950 give the ba kground for the tudy. The
regional patterns of these factors are investigated and the resulting
spatial impacts ar revealed.
2001-01-01T00:00:00ZWatershed management and enhancement for the Morro Bay national estuary: a geographic appraisalKeese, James R.http://hdl.handle.net/10211.2/27402020-06-23T01:12:07Z2001-01-01T00:00:00ZWatershed management and enhancement for the Morro Bay national estuary: a geographic appraisal
Keese, James R.
Watershed management and water quality are central concerns in the
area of natural resource management. Geographers' concern with
regions and complex human and environmental interactions means
that the profession has much to contribute to the study of watershed
function, management, and change. This paper discusses the geographic
implications of watershed management for water quality within the
context of the Morro Bay National Estuary on the central coast of California.
A discussion of the geographic and organizational issues related
to watersheds leads to a regional overview of Morro Bay and its watershed,
followed by a description of the locally led effort to organize a
watershed management initiative and identify the problems affecting
water quality. Enhancement projects implemented so far are outlined
before an examination of the challenges that must be overcome in the
watershed management process, based on experience in the Morro Bay
area.
2001-01-01T00:00:00ZThe fifth province: Seamus Heaney and the reinterpretation of the cultural morphology of Border County IrelandTravis IV, Charles B.http://hdl.handle.net/10211.2/27392020-06-23T18:49:13Z2001-01-01T00:00:00ZThe fifth province: Seamus Heaney and the reinterpretation of the cultural morphology of Border County Ireland
Travis IV, Charles B.
The prolific Irish literary tradition is well known and Seamus Heaney,
the 1995 Nobel Prize winner for poetry, is emblematic of this tradition.
Heaney is a native of County Derry, Northern Ireland. This County is
located in Ulster, the northern most province of the Irish island, which
is bisected by a border dividing Northern Ireland from the Republic of
Ireland. There is a disputed heritage located in this region which is
characterized by the Troubles'- the sectarian strife between Irish Catholic nationalists and British unionists over the identity and perception of
this landscape. However recently a peace process has bloomed in this
region and its intelle tual foundation lies in a methodology that is postnational
and post-modern in character. The seeds of this methodology
are found in the artistic and literary community of Northern Ireland, of
which Heaney is representative. The methodology contained in this paper
consits of a poetical hermeneutic approach to the study of the cultural
morphology of this landscape. And through Heaney's texts, the human
geographer is afforded a multidimensional, home insider perspective to
perceive and reinterpret the cultural phenomenology occurring within
the morphology of this landscape.
2001-01-01T00:00:00Z