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Department of Geography

 

Annual Report 2001: Publications and Research Interests 2001

Academic Staff

W M Adams, MA, MSc, PhD, Reader in the Geography of Conservation and Development, Fellow of Downing College

Bill Adams works on the relationships between society and environment, particularly on conservation, resources and development in Africa, and on wildlife conservation in the UK.

  • Adams, W M (2001) Green development: environment and sustainability in the Third World, second edition London: Routledge, 445pp
  • Adams, W M (2001) ‘Integrated river basin planning in sub-Saharan Africa’ in: A K Biswas & C Tortajada (eds) Integrated river basin management: the Latin American experience Delhi: Oxford University Press, 31-51
  • Adams, W M (2001) ‘Joined-up conservation’ Ecos: a Review of Conservation 22(1): 22-27
  • Adams, W M and Hulme, D (2001) ‘Conservation and communities: changing narratives, policies and practices in African conservation’ in: D Hulme & M Murphree (eds) African wildlife and livelihoods: the promise and performance of community conservation London: James Currey, 9-23
  • Adams, W M and Hulme, D (2001) ‘If community conservation is the answer, what is the question?’ Oryx: The International Journal of Conservation 35 (3): 193-200
  • Adams, W M and Infield, M (2001) ‘Park outreach and gorilla conservation, Mgahinga Gorilla National Park, Uganda’ in: D Hulme & M Murphree (eds) African wildlife and livelihoods: the promise and performance of community conservation London: James Currey, 131-147
  • Hughes, F M R, Adams, W M, Muller, E, Nilsson, C, Richards, K S, Barsoum, N, Decamps, H, Foussadier, R, Girel, J, Guilloy, H, Hayes, A, Johansson, M, Lambs, L, Pautou, G, Peiry, J-L, Perrow, M, Vautier, F and Winfield, M (2001) ‘The importance of different scale processes for the restoration of floodplain woodlands’ Regulated Rivers: Research and Management 17: 325-345
  • Mortimore, M J and Adams, W M (2001) ‘Farmer adaptation, change and ‘crisis’ in the Sahel’ Global Environmental Change 11: 49-57

H D Allen, MA, MSc, PhD, University Lecturer, Homerton College

Harriet Allen is a physical geographer with a special interest in biogeography, the Quaternary and environmental change.

  • Allen, H D (2001) Mediterranean ecogeography Harlow: Pearson Education, 263p

N S Arnold, MA, PhD, Unversity Assistant Lecturer (in association with the Scott Polar Research Institute), Fellow of St John’s College

Neil Arnold has research interests in glaciological modelling, at the scales of both the growth and decay of Quaternary ice sheets, and the hydrological coupling of daily and seasonal melt production and runoff in valley glaciers.

T P Bayliss-Smith, MA, PhD, University Senior Lecturer, Fellow of St John’s College

Tim Bayliss-Smith’s interests range from biogeography to development studies, with a focus on indigenous resource management practices, past and present, in tropical rain forests, coastal environments, islands and mountains with a regional specialisation in Melanesia and northern Scandinavia.

  • Mulk, I M and Bayliss-Smith, T (2001) ‘Anthropomorphic images at the Padgelanta site, northern Sweden: rock engravings in the context of Sami myth and ritual’ Current Swedish Archaeology 9: 1-30

R J Bennett, MA, PhD, FBA, Professor of Geography, Fellow of St Catharine’s College

Robert Bennett is an analytical economic geographer with interests in business management and public policy, with a particular focus on SMEs and the agencies involved in regional and local economic development.

  • (with P J A Robson) Exploring the market potential and bundling of business association services, Journal of Services Marketing 15(3), 222-239
  • (with P J A Robson and W J A Bratton) The influence of location on the use by SMEs of external advice and collaboration Urban Studies, 38(9), 1531-1557
  • (with P J Robson and W J Bratton) Government advice networks to SMEs: an assessment of the influence of local context on Business Link use, impact and satisfaction Applied Economics, 33, 871-885 (Longer version as University of Cambridge ESRC Centre for Business Research WP 182).
  • Prospects for employee and vocational training from government initiatives, in A. Jolly (ed.) Skills and Training Handbook, Institute of Management, London, pp 21-23

J Brasington, BSc, PhD, University Assistant Lecturer, Fellow of Sidney Sussex College

James Brasington is a hydrologist and fluvial geomorphologist with interests in numerical modelling and environmental monitoring.

  • Brasington, J (2001) ‘Discussion of ‘Monitoring Gravel-Bed River Environments’, by S N Lane Gravel-Bed Rivers V, New Zealand Hydrological Society, pp 389-390
  • Brasington, J and Frostick, L E (2001) ‘Discussion of ‘Particle-Flow Interactions’ by P Wilcock Gravel-Bed Rivers V, New Zealand Hydrological Society, pp 256-257
  • Brasington, J, Langham, J A and Rumsby, B T (2001) ‘Sensitivity of morphometric estimates of sediment transport in large gravel-bed rivers’ Remote Sensing for Environmental Monitoring 4545: 43-55
  • Brasington, J, Langham, J A and Rumsby, B (2001) ‘Sensitivity of morphometric estimates of sediment transport’ Paper presented to the 8th International Symposium on Remote Sensing, Toulouse, September, 2001
  • Brasington, J and Smart, R (2001) ‘Three-dimensional morphometric analysis of small channel evolution’ Paper presented to the Photogrammetric Society and BGRG Conference on Topographic Data Acquisition, University of Leeds, January 2001
  • Rumsby, B T, Brasington, J and McVey, R (2001) ‘High resolution fluvial archives in braided rivers’ in: D Maddy, M G Macklin & J Woodward (eds) River basin sediment systems: archives of environmental change Rotterdam: Balkema, 245-267
  • Rumsby, B, Langham, J A and Brasington, J (2001) ‘Monitoring channel change from airborne photogrammetry’ Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the AAG, New York, February 2001

M T Bravo, BEng, MPhil, PhD, University Lecturer (in association with the Scott Polar Research Institute), Fellow of Downing College

Michael Bravo is a cultural geographer. His research interests include history and philosophy of the field sciences, ethnographic studies of science and technology, science and religion, history of scientific travel, collaborative research, and environmental ethics.

  • Bravo, M (2001) ‘Naming the reverse journey: reflections on the images of Jorma Puranen’ in: J-E Lundström & J Sjöström (eds) The politics of place Umeå: BildMuseet, Umeå University PP

A D Cliff, MA, PhD, DSc, FBA, Professor of Theoretical Geogaphy, Fellow of Christ’s College, Head of Department

Andrew Cliff’s interests focus upon statistical and mathematical modelling of spatial processes and their application to problems in location theory and spatial diffusion, particularly epidemiology.

  • Cliff, A D and Smallman-Raynor, M R (2001) ‘Epidemic diffusion processes in a system of military camps: a geographical analysis of typhoid fever in US volunteer regiments during the Spanish-American War, 1898’ Annals of the Association of American Geographers 91: 71-91
  • Cliff, A D and Smallman-Raynor, M R (2001) ‘Epidemiological spaces: the use of multidimensional scaling to identify cholera diffusion processes in the wake of the Philippines Insurrection, 1899-1902‘ Transactions, Institute of British Geographers 26: 288-305

B J Devereux, MA, PhD, Computer Officer, Member of Sidney Sussex College

Bernard Devereux is interested in the application of Geographical Information Systems (GIS) and Remote Sensing (RS) to environmental problems, with special reference to computational methods.

  • With Gitas I and Radoglou, K, (2001), An examination of a fire-altered Pinus nigra ecosystem on the Mediterranean island of Thassos Forest Research: A challenge for an integrated approach, 351,358
  • With Gitas, I, Radoglou, K, and Spanos, I, (2001) Comparative study of post fire ecosystem recovery using experimental plots and GIS in Tsihrintsis, G, Korfiatis, K, Katsifarakis, A, Demetracopoulos, A, (eds) Proceedings of an International Conference on Protection and Restoration of the Environment, 652-68

J A Dowdeswell, BA, MA, PhD, Professor of Physical Geography, Fellow of Jesus College

Julian Dowdeswell is a glaciologist, working on the form and flow of glaciers and ice caps and their response to climate change, and the links between former ice sheets and the marine geological record, using a variety of satellite, airborne and shipborne geophysical tools.

  • Bindschadler, R, Dowdeswell, J A, Hall, D and Winther, J-G (2001) ‘Glaciological applications with Landsat-7: early assessments’ Remote Sensing of Environment 78: 163-179
  • Dowdeswell, J A, O’Cofaigh, C, Andrews, J T and Scourse, J D (2001) ‘Debris transported by icebergs and paleoceanographic implications’ EOS, Transactions of the American Geophysical Union 82: 382, 386
  • Hambrey, M J, Davies, J R, Glasser, N F, Waters, R A, Dowdeswell, J A, Wilby, P R, Wilson, D and Etienne, J L (2001) ‘Devensian glacigenic sedimentation and landscape evolution in the Cardigan area of southwest Wales’ Journal of Quaternary Science 16: 455-482
  • O’Cofaigh, C and Dowdeswell, J A (2001) ‘Laminated sediments in glacimarine environments: diagnostic criteria for their interpretation’ Quaternary Science Reviews 20: 1411-1436
  • O’Cofaigh, C, Dowdeswell, J A and Grobe, H (2001) ‘Holocene glacimarine sedimentation, inner Scoresby Sund, East Greenland: the influence of fast-flowing ice sheet outlet glaciers’ Marine Geology 175: 103-129
  • O’Cofaigh, C, Dowdeswell, J A and Pudsey, C J (2001) ‘Late Quaternary iceberg-rafting along the Antarctic Peninsula continental rise and in the Weddell and Scotia seas’ Quaternary Research 56: 308-321
  • Siegert, M J, Dowdeswell, J A, Hald, M and Svendsen, J I (2001) ‘Modelling the Eurasian Ice Sheet through a full (Weichselian) glacial cycle’ Global and Planetary Change 31: 367-385
  • Williams, M and Dowdeswell, J A (2001) ‘Historical fluctuations of the Matusevich Ice Shelf, Severnaya Zemlya, Russian High Arctic’ Arctic, Antarctic and Alpine Research 33: 211-222

J S Duncan, MA, PhD, University Lecturer, Fellow of Emmanuel College

A cultural geographer, Jim Duncan’s interests are in India, Sri Lanka, Canada and the United States, exploring the role which landscapes play in the construction of social and political identities.

  • Duncan, J S (2001) ‘Notes on emancipatory collaborative historical research’ Historical Geography 29: 65-67
  • Duncan, J S and Duncan, N G (2001) ‘The aestheticization of the politics of landscape preservation’ Annals, Association of American Geographers 91: 387-409
  • Duncan, J S and Duncan, N G (2001) ‘(Re)lire le paysage’ in: J-F Staszak (ed) Géographies Anglo-Saxonnes tendances contemporaines Paris: Editions Belin 212- 225
  • Duncan, J S and Duncan, N G (2001) ‘Sense of place as a positional good: locating Bedford in time and space’ in: P Adams, S Hoelscher & K Till (eds) Textures of place, geographies of imagination, experience, and paradox Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press
  • Duncan, J S and Duncan, N G (2001) ‘Theory in the field’ Geographical Review 91 399-406

P L Gibbard, BSc, PhD, Dosent, Reader in Quaternary Palaeoenvironments, Member of Darwin College

Phil Gibbard is a Quaternary geologist whose interests include Pleistocene Neogene geology, sedimentation and stratigraphy, using multi-disciplinary methods to establish the changing palaeogeography of northern Europe and beyond.

  • Banham, P H, Gibbard, P L, Lunkka, J P, Parfitt, S A, Preece, R C and Turner, C (2001) ‘A critical assessment of a new glacial stratigraphy for eastern England’ Quaternary Newsletter 93: 5-14
  • Gibbard, P and Lewin, J (2001) ‘Patterns of interglacial fluvial sedimentation in lowland England’ Abstracts and Program 7th International Conference on Fluvial Sedimentology, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, 108
  • Huissteden, J van, Gibbard, P L and Briant, R M (2001) ‘Periglacial fluvial systems in northwest Europe during Marine Isotope Stages 4 and 3’ Quaternary International 79: 75-88

P M Gray, BA, MA, PhD, University Assistant Lecturer, Fellow of Girton College

Mia Gray is an economic geographer whose research focuses on high techology industries (particularly biotechnology and pharmaceuticals) and their role in regional economic performance, local labour markets and urban regeneration.

  • Gray, M (2001) ‘The micro-level matters: evidence from the bio-pharmaceutical industry’ Zeitschrift für Geographie 46(3-4):124-136

R P Haining, MA, MSc, PhD, Professor of Human Geography, Fellow of Fitzwilliam College

Bob Haining works principally in the area of methodologies for spatial data analysis with applications in health services research, environmental criminology and economic geography.

  • Craglia, M, Haining, R and Signoretta, P (2001) ‘Modelling high intensity crime areas in English cities’ Urban Studies 38: 1921-1941
  • Wise, S, Haining, R and Ma, J (2001) ‘Providing spatial statistical data analysis functionality for the GIS user: the SAGE project’ International Journal of Geographical Information Science 15: 239-254

P M R Howell, MA, PhD, University Lecturer, Fellow of Downing College

Philip Howell’s research interests are primarily in nineteenth century Britain and its empire, with particular reference to questions of gender and sexuality.

  • Howell, P M R (2001)’Prostitutional space in the nineteenth-century European city’ in: I S Black & R A Butlin (eds) Place, culture and identity: essays in historical geography in honour of Alan R H Baker Quebec: Les Presses de l’Universite Laval, 181-202
  • Howell, P M R (2001) ‘Sex and the city of bachelors: popular masculinity and public space in nineteenth-century England and America’ Ecumene 8(1): 20-50

G Kearns, MA, PhD, University Lecturer, Fellow of Jesus College

Gerry Kearns is an historical geographer with interests at the intersection amongst demography, medical geography and the historical geography of cities.

  • Kearns, G (2001) ‘Constructions of the social’ Journal of Urban History 28(1): 98-106
  • Kearns, G (2001) ‘”Educate that holy hatred”: place, trauma and identity in the Irish nationalism of John Mitchel’ Political Geography 20(7): 885-912
  • Laxton, P and Kearns, G (2001) ‘Power and salubrity: the politics of sanitary reform in Victorian Liverpool’ in: P Bourdelais (ed) Les hygiénistes: enjeux, modeles et pratiques Paris: Belin, 163-192

D E Keeble, MA, PhD, University Lecturer, Emeritus Fellow of St Catharine’s College, Research Associate, ESRC Centre for Business Research

An economic geographer, David Keeble’s research focuses on urban and regional variations in the growth of high-technology industries, SMEs (small and medium sized enterprises), and business and media services in the UK and European Union.

  • Keeble, D (2001) University and Technology: Science and Technology Parks in the Cambridge Region, ESRC Centre for Business Research, University of Cambridge, Working Paper 218, 30 pp
  • Keeble, D and Kattuman, P (2001) The Density of Small and Medium-Sized Local Units: A Key to EU Regional Development? Ch 4, pp 103-125 in European Commission, Enterprises in Europe, Sixth Report, Eurostat, Luxembourg
  • Keeble, D and Nachum, L (2001) Why do Business Service Firms Cluster? Small Consultancies, Clustering and Decentralisation in London and Southern England, ESRC Centre for Business Research, University of Cambridge, Working Paper 194, 50 pp
  • Nachum L and Keeble D (2001) External Networks and Geographic Clustering as Sources of MNE Advantages: Foreign and Indigenous Professional Service Firms in Central London, ESRC Centre for Business Research, University of Cambridge, Working Paper 195, 47 pp
  • Lawton Smith, H, Keeble, D, Lawson, C, Moore B and Wilkinson, F (2001) University-Business Interaction in the Oxford and Cambridge Regions, Tidjschrift voor Economische en Sociale Geografie 92, 1, 88-99

D Low-Beer, BA, MPhil, PhD, University Assistant Lecturer, Fellow of Sidney Sussex College

Dan Low-Beer is a human geographer, working on health and development. His research currently focuses on AIDS, valuing global health issues, risk and AIDS behaviour changes, and war and disease.

  • Low-Beer, D (2001) The distribution of early AIDS cases and conditions of the establishment of a new epidemic Proceedings of the Royal Society B

R L Martin, MA, PhD, Professor of Economic Geography, Fellow of St Catharine’s College

Ron Martin is an economic geographer who works on the geography of labour, the geography of money and finance, regional development theory, the regional implications of European economic and monetary integration, and the regional political economy of state intervention.

  • Martin, R (2001) ‘EMU versus the regions?: regional convergence and divergence in Euroland’ Journal of Economic Geography 1(1): 51-80
  • Martin, R (2001) ‘The Geographer as social critic: getting indignant about income inequalities’ Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, NS 26(3): 267-272
  • Martin, R (2001) ‘Geography and public policy: the case of the missing manifesto’ Progress in Human Geography 25(2): 121-137
  • Martin, R (2001) ‘Of publishers and popularizers’ Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, NS 26(1): 3-6
  • Martin, R (2001) ‘Mapping the new deal: mapping local disparities in the performance of welfare-to-work’ Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, NS 26(4): 484-512
  • Martin, R, Fothergill, S, Rowthorn, R and Tyler, P (2001) Labour’s new regional policy: an assessment London: Regional Studies Association
  • Martin, R, Miller, P, Botham, R, Gibson, G and Moore, B (2001) Business clusters in the UK London: TSO, 238pp
  • Martin, R and Sunley, P (2001) ‘Rethinking the ‘economic’ in economic geography: broadening our vision or losing our focus?’ Antipode 33(2): 148-161

C Oppenheimer, BA, PhD, University Lecturer

Clive Oppenheimer’s research involves the elaboration and application of novel remote sensing techniques to volcanology. Some of these methodologies are now being used by volcano observatories for routine surveillance, contributing both to hazard assessment, and a deeper understanding of volcanic processes. Current work focuses on spectroscopic measurements of the atmospheric chemistry of volcanic plumes, and on Quaternary volcanism in Africa.

  • Horrocks, L A, Oppenheimer, C, Burton, M R, Duffell, H R, Davies, N M, Martin, N A and Bell, W, 2001, Open-path Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy of SO2: an empirical error budget analysis, with implications for volcano monitoring, Journal of Geophysical Research-Atmospheres, 106, 27647-27659
  • Duffell, H, Oppenheimer, C and Burton, M R, 2001, Volcanic gas emission rates measured by solar occultation spectroscopy, Geophysical Research Letters, 28, 3131-3134
  • Watson, I M, and Oppenheimer, C, 2001, Particle-size distributions of ash-rich volcanic plumes determined by sun photometry, Atmospheric Environment, 35, 3561-3572
  • Edmonds, M, Pyle, D and Oppenheimer, C, 2001, A model for degassing at the Soufrière Hills Volcano, Montserrat, West Indies, based on geochemical data, Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 186, 159-173
  • Burton, M R, Oppenheimer, C, Horrocks, L A, Francis, P W, 2001, Diurnal changes in volcanic plume chemistry observed by lunar and solar occultation spectroscopy, Geophysical Research Letters, 28, 843-846
  • Oppenheimer, C, 2001, Understanding an angry Earth, Times Higher Education Supplement (5 January 2001)
  • Oppenheimer, C, 2001, Rumble from the roll of dice, Times Higher Education Supplement (8 June 2001)

S E Owens Obe, BSc, MA, PhD, FRSA, Reader in Environment and Policy, Fellow of Newnham College

Susan Owens’ research interests include: environmental issues and policies in Britain and Europe; environmental policy processes, particularly the relationship between knowledge and policy; land-use planning and environmental sustainability; and the political development of environmentalism. She is a member of the Royal Commission on Environmental Pollution.

  • Owens, S E and Cowell, R (2001) ‘Going crisply to damnation?: challenging the metaphor of the “toolkit”‘ eg 7(8): 12-14
  • Owens, S E and Cowell, R (2001) Land and limits: interpreting sustainability in the planning process London: Routledge, 244pp
  • Owens, S E and Cowell, R (2001) ‘Planning for sustainability: new orthodoxy or radical challenge?’ Town and Country Planning 70(6): 170-172

S A Radcliffe, BA, PhD, University Lecturer, Fellow of New Hall

Sarah Radcliffe is a human geographer working on contemporary Latin America, with particular emphasis on social movements, social theory and gender relations, and popular national identities and place.

  • Radcliffe, S A (2001) ‘Development, the state and transnational political connections: state formation and networks in Latin America’ Global Networks 1(1): 19-36
  • Radcliffe, S A (2001) ‘Imagining the state as space: territoriality and the formation of the state in Ecuador’ in: T Blom Hanson & F Stepputat (eds) States of imagination: ethnographic explorations of the postcolonial state Durham; London: Duke University Press, 123-145
  • Radcliffe, S A (2001) ‘Indigenous women, rights and the nation-state in the Andes’ in: N Craske & M Molyneux (eds) Gender and the politics of rights and democracy in Latin America London: Palgrave

W G Rees, University Senior Lecturer, Fellow of Christ’s College

  • Cruwys, E and Rees, G (2001) ‘The Polar Record glacier’ Polar Record 37:154-156
  • Kapitsa, A P, Golubeva, E I, Kravtsova, V I, Krasnushkin, A V, Spektor, V A, Rees, W G and Tutubalina, O V (2001) Metodologia diagnostiki sostoyaniya antropogenno transformirovannykh ekosistem Arktiki Territorial’nye sistemy prirodopol’zovaniya. Analis i sintez. A P Kapitsa Moscow, Moscow State University: 113-127
  • Rees, W G (2001) ‘Improving the accuracy of low-cost GPS measurements for remote sensing applications’ International Journal of Remote Sensing 22: 871-881
  • Rees, W G (2001) Physical principles of remote sensing Cambridge: Cambridge University Press
  • Rees, W G and Steel, A M (2001) ‘Radar backscatter coefficients and snow detectability for upland terrain in Scotland’ International Journal of Remote Sensing 22: 3015-3026
  • Rees, W G and Steel, A (2001) ‘Simplified radar mapping equations for terrain correction of spaceborne SAR images’ International Journal of Remote Sensing 22: 3643-3650
  • Saich, P, Rees, W G and Borgeaud, M (2001) ‘Detecting pollution damage to forests in the Kola Peninsula using ERS SAR’ Remote Sensing of Environment 75: 22-28
  • Tutubalina, O V and Rees, W G (2001) ‘Vegetation degradation in a permafrost area as seen from space: Noril’sk (1961-1999)’ Cold Regions Science and Technology 32: 191-203
  • Williams, P J and Rees, W G (2001) ‘The second international conference on Contaminants in Freezing Ground’ Polar Record 37(202): 194
  • White, T L, Williams, P J, Marchand, Y and Rees, W G (2001) ‘Microstructural alteration in permafrost-affected soils due to hydrocarbon contamination: implications for subsurface transport’ in: P J Williams (ed) Contaminants in Feezing Ground: collected proceedings of 2nd international conference Ottawa: Contaminants in Freezing Ground Conference Secretariat 1: 7-21

K S Richards, MA, PhD, Professor of Geography, Fellow of Emmanuel College, Director of the Scott Polar Research Institute

Keith Richards is a fluvial geomorphologist with interests ranging from cold and wet to hot and dry environments, taking in hydrological controls, slope stability, soil erosion, sediment yield and, particularly, river forms and processes.

  • Bradbrook, K F, Lane, S N, Richards, K S, Biron, P M and Roy, A G.(2001) ‘Role of bed discordance at asymmetrical river confluences’ Journal of Hydraulic Engineering 127: 351-368
  • Hughes, F M R, Adams, W M, Muller, E, Nilsson, C, Richards, K S and 13 others (2001) ‘The importance of different scale processes for the restoration of floodplain woodlands‘ Regulated Rivers: Research and Management 17: 325-345
  • Lane, S N and Richards, K S (2001) ‘The ‘validation’ of hydrodynamic models: some critical perspectives’ in: M G Anderson and P D Bates (eds) Model validation: perspectives in hydrological science Chichester: Wiley, 413-438
  • Richards, K S (2001) ‘Floods, channel dynamics, and riparian ecosystems’ in: M P Mosley (ed) Gravel-bed rivers V Wellington, NZ: New Zealand Hydrological Society, 465-477

R M Smith, MA, PhD, FBA, Reader in Historical Demography and Director of the Cambridge Group for the History of Population and Social Structure

Richard Smith’s research interests are in the characteristics of medieval and early modern demographic regimes with particular reference to marriage and household formation behaviour. He also works on long-term changes in mortality patterns and the demographic correlate of welfare systems.

  • Smith R M (2001) ‘Plagues and peoples: the long demographic cycle 1250-1670’ in: P Slack (ed) The peopling of Britain Oxford: Oxford University Press, 177-209
  • Smith R M (2001) ‘Social institutions and demographic regimes in non-industrial societies: a comparative approach’ in: H Macbeth and D Collinson (eds) Human population dynamics Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 112-131
  • Smith R M (2001) ‘Welfare of the individual and the group: Malthus and externalities’ Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society 145: 402-414

T Spencer, MA, PhD, University Senior Lecturer, Fellow of Magdalene College, Director of the Cambridge Coastal Research Unit

Tom Spencer works at the interface between geomorphology and the geological and biological sciences, particularly in tropical environments. He has particular interests in coral reef, mangrove, saltmarsh and rain forest ecosystems.

  • Burnett, J C, Kavanagh, J and Spencer, T (eds) (2001) Shoals of Capricorn Field Report 1998-2001: Marine science, training and education in the western Indian Ocean London: RGS – IBG, 108pp
  • Cooper, M, Gallienne, C, Hagan, A, Marie, D, Opdyke, B, Persand, S, Robinson, J, Rosette, M, Wilson, P A and Spencer, T (2001) ‘SRV Zuza research cruise along the Mascarene Ridge March – May 2001’ Shoals of Capricorn Marine Programme Report R028, 37pp
  • French, J R and Spencer, T (2001) ‘Sea level rise’ in: A Warren & J R French (eds) Conservation and the physical environment Chichester : J Wiley, 305-347
  • Möller, I, Spencer, T, French, J R, Leggett, D J and Dixon, M (2001) ‘The sea-defence value of salt marshes – a review in the light of field evidence from North Norfolk’ Journal of the Chartered Institution of Water and Environmental Management 15: 109-116
  • Spalding, M D, Teleki, K, and Spencer, T (2001) ‘Climate change and coral bleaching’ in: R E Green, M Harley, M D Spalding & C Zöckler (eds) Impacts of climate change on wildlife Sandy: RSPB, 38-39
  • Spencer, T (2001) ‘Introduction to Shoals science’ in: J C Burnett, J Kavanagh & T Spencer (eds) Shoals of Capricorn Field Report 1998-2001: Marine science, training and education in the western Indian Ocean London: RGS – IBG, xxvi – xxxi
  • Spencer, T and Turner, J D (2001) ‘An introduction to the Mascarene Plateau and its region’ in: J C Burnett, J Kavanagh & T Spencer (eds) Shoals of Capricorn Field Report 1998-2001: Marine science, training and education in the western Indian Ocean London: RGS – IBG, xxxii – xxxv
  • Spencer, T and Whatmore, S (2001) ‘Editorial: Bio-geographies: putting life back into the discipline’ Transactions, Institute of British Geographers 24(2): 139-141

S T Trudgill, BSc, PhD, University Senior Lecturer, Fellow of Robinson College

Stephen Trudgill is a physical and environmental geographer whose current research addresses land use and water quality, and soil hydrochemistry, together with a wider interest in environmental philosophy.

  • Trudgill, S T (2001) ‘Psychobiogeography: meanings of nature and motivations for a democratized conservation ethic’ Journal of Biogeography, 28: 677-698
  • Trudgill, S T, Viles, H A, Inkpen, R, Moses, C, Yates, T, Collier, P, Smith, D I and Cooke, R U (2001) ‘Twenty-year weathering remeasurements at St Paul’s Cathedral, London’ Earth Surface Processes and Landforms 26: 1129-1142

B Vira, MA, MPhil, University Assistant Lecturer, Fellow of Fitzwilliam College, Executive Secretary of the University of Cambridge Committee for Interdisciplinary Environmental Studies (CIES)

Bhaskar Vira’s research has examined the process of institutional and policy reform in India’s forest sector, especially since the 1970s. He has also written on international trade and the environment, and on North-South issues in the context of environmental decision making.

  • Jeffery, R and Vira, B (eds) (2001) Conflict and cooperation in participatory natural resource management London; New York: Palgrave, 246pp
  • Jeffery, R and Vira, B (2001) ‘Introduction.’ in: R Jeffery & B Vira (eds) Conflict and cooperation in participatory natural resource management London; New York: Palgrave, 1-15
  • Vira, B (2001) ‘Claiming legitimacy: analysing conflict in the environmental policy process’ Environment and Planning C: Government and Policy 19(5): 637-650
  • Vira, B and Jeffery, R (eds) (2001) Analytical issues in participatory natural resource management London; New York: Palgrave, 245pp
  • Vira, B and Jeffery, R (2001) ‘Introduction: analytical issues in participatory natural resource management’ in: B Vira & R Jeffery (eds) Analytical issues in participatory natural resource management London; New York: Palgrave, 1-16

M Warrington, MA, PhD, University Lecturer and Director of Studies, King’s College

Molly Warrington’s research focuses on domestic violence and on the educational aspects of social exclusion in Britain. She is also co-directing a DfES project examining the gender gap in achievement in British schools.

  • Warrington, M (2001) ”I must get out’: the geographies of domestic violence’ Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 26(3): 365-382
  • Warrington, M and Younger, M (2001) ‘Single-sex classes and equal opportunities for girls and boys: perspectives through time from a mixed comprehensive school in England’ Oxford Review of Education 17(3): 339-356

E E Watson, BSc, PhD, University Assistant Lecturer, Fellow of Newhnam College

Liz Watson’s research interests broadly concern social and cultural change, natural resource management and agriculture, particularly in Africa (Ethiopia, Kenya and Mozambique). Her specific research interests include religious conversion, conflict, post-conflict reconstruction, and the relationship between these processes and environmental management practices.

  • Watson, E E (2001) ‘Developing Institutions in post-conflict situations: preliminary research findings from Borana’ in: A Pankhurst (ed) Natural resource management in Ethiopia Addis Ababa: Forum for Social Studies, pp 105-136
  • Watson, E E and Regassa, L (2001) ‘Konso’ in: D Freeman & A Pankhurst (eds) Living on the edge: marginalised minorities of craftworkers and hunters in Southern Ethiopia Addis Ababa: Addis Ababa University, pp 246-264
  • Watson, E E (2002) ‘Capturing a Local Elite: The Konso Honeymoon’ in Wendy James, Don Donham, Alessandro Triulzi and Eisei Kurimoto (eds) Remapping Ethiopia: Socialism and After, James Currey and Ohio University Press, pp 198-218.
  • Richards, K S, Watson, E E, Bulkeley, H A and Perkins, R (2002) ‘Some Ideas and Reflections on Teaching ‘Ideas’ in Geography’, Journal of Geography in Higher Education, 26(1): 33-48

I C Willis, BSc, PhD, University Lecturer, Fellow of St Catharine’s College

Ian Willis is a glaciologist, with particular research interests in glacier climate and mass balance; glacier hydrology; glacier dynamics; and subglacial mechanical and chemical weathering processes and the transfer of sediments and solutes through glacierised catchments.

  • Gordon, S, Sharp, M, Hubbard, B, Willis, I, Smart, C, Copland, L, Harbor, J and Ketterling, B (2001) ‘Borehole drainage and its implications for the investigation of glacier hydrology: experiences from Haut Glacier d’Arolla, Switzerland’ Hydrological Processes 15: 797-813
  • Mair, D, Nienow, P, Willis, I and Sharp, M (2001) ‘Spatial patterns of glacier dynamics during an early melt-season high velocity event: Haut Glacier d’Arolla, Switzerland’ Journal of Glaciology 47(156): 9-20

Affiliated, College, Research and Technical Staff

H Bulkeley, MA, PhD, Research Fellow, St Catharine’s College

Harriet Bulkeley is a human geographer, her interests lie in the public understanding of environmental issues, environmental policy and politics. Her research has focused on responses to global environmental issues, in particular climate change, in Australia and the UK. Her current research examines the role of cities in addressing climate change.

  • Bulkeley, H (2001) ‘Governing climate change: the politics of risk society?’ Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 26(4): 430-447
  • Bulkeley, H (2001) ‘No-regrets?: economy and environment in Australia’s domestic climate change policy process’ Global Environmental Change 11: 155-169

L Cameron, MA, PhD, Affiliated Lecturer, Junior Research Fellow of Churchilll College

Laura Cameron is an historical cultural geographer. Her work in Canada and England focuses on life geographies of early twentieth century ecologists and local and interdisciplinary studies of human-environment relations.

  • Cameron, L (2001) ‘Oral history in the Freud archives: incidents, ethics and relations’ Historical Geography 29: 38-44

M D I Chisholm, ScD, Emeritus Professor of Geography, Emeritus Fellow of St Catharine’s College

Michael Chisholm is an economic geographer. His research interests cover regional development, location of production and government policy.

  • Economic doctrine, politics and local government finance, Journal of local Government Law, 4:pp 8-23
  • Financing community leadership, in H Kitchin (ed) A Democratic Future, pp 46-9 London: Local Government Information Unit
  • Human geography joins the social Science Research council: personal recollections, Area, 33: pp 428-30

Richard Grove

  • Grove, A T and Oliver Rackham, (2001) The Nature of Mediterranean Europe: an Historical Ecology, Yale University Press, 384 pp
  • Grove, A T (2001) ‘The Little Ice Age and its Geomorphological Consequences in Mediterranean Europe’, Climatic Change 48: 121-36
  • Grove, A T, Moody, J and Rackham, O (2001) ‘Gavdhos, Crete’, in Green, B and Vos, W (eds) Threatened Landscapes: conserving cultural environments, London, Spon Press
  • Nichol, J E and Grove, A T (2001) ‘Thermal satellite images and boundary layer structures in desert marginal areas’, Geophysical Research Letters 28: 2943-6

M J Head, PhD, Visiting Fellow of Wolfson College

Martin Head is a palynologist whose particular interest is in Quaternary and Neogene dinoflagellates.

  • De Vernal, A, Henry, M, Matthiessen, J, Mudie, P J, Rochon, A, Boessenkool, K P, Eynaud, F, Grøsfjeld, K, Guiot, J, Hamel, D, Harland, R, Head, M J, Kunz-Pirrung, M, Levac, E, Loucheur, V, Peyron, O, Pospelova, V, Radi, T, Turon, J-L, and Voronina, E (2001) ‘Dinoflagellate cyst assemblages as tracers of sea-surface conditions in the northern North Atlantic, Arctic and sub-Arctic seas: the new Œn = 677¹ data base and its application for quantitative palaeoceanographic reconstruction’ Journal of Quaternary Science 16(7): 681­698
  • Head, M J, Harland, R, and Matthiessen, J (2001) ‘Cold marine indicators of the late Quaternary: the new dinoflagellate cyst genus Islandinium and related morphotypes’ Journal of Quaternary Science 16(7): 621­636

J Henderson, HPSS, Wellcome Senior Research Fellow

  • Henderson, J (2001) ‘Healing the body and healing the soul: hospitals in Renaissance Florence’ Renaissance Studies
  • Henderson, J (2001) ‘Ospedali Fiorentini ed opere d’arte nel rinascimento: valore storico e ruolo sanitario-devozionale’ Medicina nei secoli. Journal of History of Medicine
  • Henderson, J (2001) ‘”La schifezza, madre di corruzione”: Peste e società a Firenze nella prima epoca moderna’ Medicina e Storia, 2

F M R Hughes, MSc, PhD, Senior Research Associate and Affiliated Lecturer

Francine Hughes is a biogeographer interested in wetlands and the functioning of alluvial ecosystems.

  • Hughes, F M R, Adams, W M, Muller, E, Nilsson, C, Richards, K S R, Barsoum, N, Decamps, H, Foussadier, R, Girel, J, Guilloy, H, Hayes, A, Johansson, M, Lambs, L, Pautou, G , Peiry, J-., Perrow, M, Vautier, F and Winfield, M (2001) ‘The importance of different scale processes for the restoration of floodplain woodlands’ Regulated Rivers:Research and Management 17:325-345
  • Hughes, F M R and Rood, S B (2001) ‘Floodplains’ in: A Warren & J R French (eds) Habitat conservation: managing the physical environment Chichester: Wiley, 105-121

D R Lambert, BA, Research Fellow, Emmanuel College

David Lambert is an historical geographer working on the historical and cultural geography of the Caribbean; slavery and humanitarian movements; and the geographies of white identities.

  • Lambert, D (2001) ‘Competing discourses of whiteness in the 1816 Barbados enslaved revolt: theoretical possibilities and ethical dilemmas’ The Society for Caribbean Studies Annual Conference Papers 2 http://www.scsonline.freeserve.co.uk/olvol2.html
  • Lambert, D (2001) ‘Liminal figures: poor whites, freedmen, and racial re-inscription in colonial Barbados’ Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 19(3): 335-350

A J S McGonigle, MSci, DPhil, EC Research Associate/NERC Postdoctoral Research Fellow

Andrew McGonigle is a physicist developing and implementing novel optical strategies for monitoring volcanic gas emissions.

  • Johnston, K S, McGonigle, A J S and Coutts, D W (2001) ‘Investigation of the polarization flipping behavior observed in a broadly tunable Ce:LiLuF4 laser’ in: H Injeyan, U Keller & C Marshall (eds) OSA Trends in Optics and Photonics Vol. 50, ASSL. Washington, DC: Optical Society of America, 119-123
  • McGonigle, A J S, Girard, S, Coutts, D W and Moncorgé, R (2001) ‘A 10 kHz Ce:LiSAF laser pumped by the sum-frequency-mixed output of a copper-vapour-laser’ Opt Comm 193: 233-236
  • McGonigle, A J S, Moncorgé, R and Coutts, D W (2001) ‘Temperature dependent polarisation effects in Ce:LiLuF’ Appl Opt 40: 4326-4333

I Möller, MPhil, PhD, College Lecturer in Geography, Fellow of Fitzwilliam College and Deputy Director of Coastal Research Unit

Iris Möller is a coastal geomorphologist with a research focus on wave-vegetation interaction in the intertidal zone, the monitoring and the prediction of long-term (>5 year) coastal morphodynamics.

  • Möller, I (2001) ‘Implementation of managed realignment overseas’ in: Managed realignment as a coastal management option, Phase 1 Report to DEFRA/EA, 13pp
  • Möller, I (2001): ‘Land reclamation from seas’ in: T Munn (ed) Encyclopedia of global environmental change: volume 3; causes and consequences of global environmental change (I Douglas (ed)) Chichester: John Wiley, 424-430
  • Möller, I, Garbutt, A & Wolters, M (2001) ‘Managed realignment of sea defences and the re-creation of saltmarshes in south-east England’ in: R E Green, M Harley, M Spalding & C Zöckler (eds) Impacts of climate change on wildlife Sandy: Royal Society for the Protection of Birds, 40-43
  • Möller, I, Spencer, T and French, J (2001) Wave attenuation over saltmarshes R&D Technial Report to the Environment Agency, R&D Project W5B-022, July 2001 60pp
  • Möller, I, Spencer, T, French, J R, Leggett, D J, Dixon, M (2001) ‘The sea-defence value of salt marshes: a review in the light of field evidence from North Norfolk’ Journal of the Chartered Institution of Water and Environmental Management 15: 109-116

J Oeppen, Senior Research Associate, Cambridge Group for the History of Population and Social Structure

  • Harvey, B and Oeppen, J (2001) ‘Patterns of morbidity in late medieval England: a sample from Westminster Abbey’ Economic History Review LIV(2): 215-239
  • Johansen, H-C and Oeppen, J (2001) Danish population estimates 1665-1840 Research Report 21 Odense: Danish Center for Demographic Research, SDU – Odense University, 34pp
  • Yashin, A I, Begun, A S, Boiko, S I, Ukraintseva, S V and Oeppen, J (2001) ‘The new trends in survival improvement require a revision of traditional gerontological concepts’ Experimental Gerontology 37(1):157-167

R Randall, MA, MSc, PhD, Fellow and Tutor of Girton College

Roland Randall is a biogeographer who works mainly on dry coastal ecosystems and high-stress environments.

  • Packham, J R, Randall, R, Barnes, R S K and Neal, A (eds) (2001) Ecology and geomorphology of coastal shingle Otley: Smith Settle, 460pp
  • Randall, R (2001) Solway Firth: inventory of shingle vegetation {CD-ROM} Commissioned Report Edinburgh: Scottish Natural Heritage, 197pp
  • Randall, R and Fuller, R M (2001) ‘The Orford Shingles, Suffolk, UK: evolving solutions in coastline management’ in: J R Packham, R Randall, R S K Barnes and A Neal (eds) Ecology and geomorphology of coastal shingle Otley: Smith Settle,242-260
  • Randall, R and Sneddon, P (2001) ‘Initiation, development and classification of vegatation on British shingle beaches: a model for conservation management’ in: J R Packham, R Randall, R S K Barnes and A Neal (eds) Ecology and geomorphology of coastal shingle Otley: Smith Settle, 202-223

N Rushton

  • Rushton, N (2001) ‘Monastic charitable provision in Tudor England: quantifying and qualifying poor relief in the early sixteenth century’ Continuity and Change 16: 9-44
  • Rushton, N and Currie, C K (2001) ‘Land management and custumal diversity on the estate of Mottisfont Priory in the 1340s’ Hampshire Studies 56: 202-218
  • Rushton, N and Sigle-Rushton, W (2001) ‘Monastic poor relief in sixteenth-century England’ Journal of Interdisciplinary History 32: 193-216

L Shaw-Taylor, HPSS, Research Associate

  • Shaw-Taylor, L (2001) ‘Labourers, cows, common rights and parliamentary enclosure: the evidence of contemporary comment c. 1760-1810’ Past and Present 171: 95-126
  • Shaw-Taylor, L (2001) ‘Parliamentary enclosure and the emergence of an English agricultural proletariat’ Journal of Economic History 61(3): 640-662

J M Stargardt, MA, DLett, Affiliated Lecturer (PACSEA Senior Research Fellow), Fellow of Sidney Sussex College

Janice Stargardt is an archaeologist working on human-environmental interaction in early and recent South and South East Asia, including holocene rainforests, land formation, settlement patterns and commercial and cultural exchanges.

  • Stargardt, J (2001) ‘Behind the shadows: archaeological data on two-way sea trade between Quanzhou and Satingpra, South Thailand, 10th-14th century’ in: A Schottenhammer (ed) The Emporium of the World, Maritime Quanzhou 1000-1400 Leiden: E J Brill, 309-993
  • Stargardt, J (2001) ‘Common Pool Resources: a common pool for whom and how?’ **Background Paper for Natural Resources Systems Programme London: DFID, 28 pp also available on the internet at http://www.nrsp.co.uk/nrspweb
  • Stargardt, J (2001) ‘The historical geography of Burma: the creation of enduring patterns in the Pyu period’ Newsletter – Special Burma Issue Leiden: International Institute of Asian Studies [IIAS], March
  • Stargardt, J (2001) ‘Making the change from knowledge to impact on poverty’ Review of the CPR Workshop for NRSP November, 17 pp also available on the internet at http://www.nrsp.co.uk/nrspweb

F J Thomalla, BSc, PhD, Research Associate in the Cambridge Coastal Research Unit

Frank Thomalla is a geological oceanographer with research interests in coastal processes, shoreline management and natural hazards.

  • Thomalla, F (2001) Flood Risk Management Issues in the UK: An Overview Focus on Environmental Research, Special Publication Number 1, 7 May 2001, Committee for Interdisciplinary Environmental Studies, University of Cambridge
  • Thomalla, F (2001) “Managing Flood Risk in the UK” Town & Country Planning, Vol 70, Number 4, pp 111-112
  • Thomalla, F, J Brown, I Kelman, I Möller, R Spence and T Spencer (2001). “Coastal Flood Risk Assessment in England” Poster presentation at Flood Risk in a Changing Climate, held 21-22 November 2001 at the Royal Society, London
  • Thomalla, F, C Vincent and K Black (2001) The Effects of the Segmented Shore-parallel Breakwaters at Sea Palling on the Longshore Transport of Sand: Lessons for the Future Proceedings of the 36th Annual Conference of River and Coastal Engineers 20-22 June 2001, Keele University
  • Thomalla, F and C Vincent (2001) Beach Response to Shore-Parallel Breakwaters at Sea Palling, Norfolk, UK Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science (in press)

O V Tutubalina, MPhil, PhD, Junior Research Fellow Trinity Hall

Olga Tutubalina’s research interests include the application of Remote Sensing to the study of polar and boreal environments, especially state of high latitude vegetation. She has worked in the European Arctic and North-Central Siberia.

  • O V Tutubalina and W G Rees 2001 Vegetation degradation in a permafrost region as seen from space: Noril’sk, 1961-1999 Cold Regions Science and Technology, Vol 32, pp 191-203
  • D A Paramonov, O V Tutubalina, and S S Chernomorets 2001 Geoinformatsionnoye kartografirovaniye basseina Gerkhozhan-Su (Tsentralny Kavkaz) dlya podgotovki k monitoringu selevykh protsessov [Geoinformation mapping of the Gerkhozhan-Su basin (Central Caucasus) in view of mudflow monitoring] In Russian with English abstract In: Ustoichivoe razvitie gornukh territorii: problemy regionalnogo sotrudnichestva i regionalnoi politiki gornukh raionov: tezisy dokladov uchastnikov IV mezhdunarodnoi konferentsii [Proceedings of the IV International Conference on Sustainable Development of Mountain Territories], Vladikavkaz, 23-26 September 2001 Vladikavkaz: Remarko pp 476-477
  • O V Tutubalina 2001 Phenological correction of satellite imagery to facilitate change detection of northern vegetation in the areas of industrial impact In: Abstracts of the V International Conference on the Development of the North and Problems of Nature Restoration Syktyvkar: Komi Science Centre of RAS, 5-8 June 2001, pp 256-259
  • A P Kapitsa, E I Golubeva, V I Kravtsova, A V Krasnushkin, V A Spector, W G Rees, and O V Tutubalina 2001 Metodologiya diagnostiki sostoyaniya antropogenno transformirovannukh ekosistem Arktiki [A methodology to diagnose the state of antropogenically transformed Arctic ecosystems] In Russian In: A P Kapitsa, T A Vorobyova, G G Mukhin (eds) Territorialnye sistemy prirodopolzovaniya Analiz i sintez [Territorial systems of environmental management Analysis and syntesis] Moscow: Faculty of Geography, Moscow State University, pp 113-127
  • O V Tutubalina and E R Chalova 2001 Pervyi Internet seminar Mezuniversitetskogo aerokosmicheskogo tsentra [The First Internet seminar of the Inter-University Aerospace Centre] In Russian Vestnik Moskovskogo Universiteta, Seriya 5 (Geografiya), No 3, pp 72-73
  • Yu F Knizhnikov, E A Baldina, O V Tutubalina and E R Chalova 2001 Internet-seminary – perspektivnaya forma aerokosmicheskogo obrazovaniya [Internet seminars as a perspective way of distant aerospace education] In Russian In: Nauchny servis v seti Internet Trudy Vserossiiskoi nauchnoi konferentsii [Scientific services over the Internet Proceedings of the All-Russian Scientific Conference] Novorossiysk, 24-29 September 2001 Moscow: pp 122-124
  • Yu F Knizhnikov, E A Baldina, O V Tutubalina and E R Chalova 2001 Poluchenie kosmicheskikh snimkov po seti Internet-pervaya Internet-shkola Mezhuniversitetskogo aerokosmicheskogo tsentra [Obtaining satellite images over Internet – the First Internet workshop of the Inter-University Aerospace Centre] In Russian In: I Vserossiiskiy uchebno-prakticheskiy seminar “GIS i Internet”, Moskva, 5-7 dekabrya 2000 GeoDisk’2001, No 5, “Ot Foruma do Foruma” [The 1st All-Russian Educational and Practical Seminar on the GIS and the Internet, Moscow, 5-7 December 2001] GeoDisk’2001, No 5, From Forum to Forum] Moscow [CD-ROM]
  • Yu F Knizhnikov, E A Baldina, O V Tutubalina and E R Chalova 2001 Internet-seminary Mezhuniversitetskogo aerokosmicheskogo tsentra – shag k distantsionnomu obrazovaniju v oblasti aerokosmicheskikh metodov [Internet seminars of the Inter-University Aerospace Centre – a step towards distant learning in remote sensing] In Russian In: V konferentsiya GIS-Assotsiatsii “Geoinformatika i obrazovaniye”, Moskva, 5-8 ijunia 2001 GeoDisk’2001, No 5, “Ot Foruma do Foruma” [The 5th Conference of the GIS Association on Geoinformatics and Education, Moscow, 5-8 June 2001 GeoDisk’2001, No 5, From Forum to Forum] Moscow [CD-ROM]
  • Yu F Knizhnikov, E A Baldina, O V Tutubalina and E R Chalova 2001 Aerokosmicheskoye distantsionnoye obrazovaniye – perspektivy i problemy [Distant aerospace education: prospects and problems] In Russian In: Kartografiya XXI veka: teoriya, metody, praktika Trudy II Vserossiskoi nauchnoi konferentsii po kartografii, Moskva, 2-5 oktyabrya 2001 [Cartography of the 21st Century: theory, methods, practice Proceedings of the 2nd All-Russian Scientific Conference on Cartography Moscow, 2-5 October 2001] Moscow: Vol 2, pp 689-695

T C Whitmore, MA, PhD, ScD, DSc (Hon), Affiliated Lecturer, St John’s College

Tim Whitmore is a tropical botanist whose interests cover all aspects of tropical rain forests.

Tim Whitmore sadly died before this list could be compiled.

Z Zhao, Hpss, Senior Research Associate

  • Khoo S and Zhao, Z (2001) ‘A decomposition of immigrant divorce rates in Australia’ Journal of Population Research 18: 68-77
  • Zhao, Z (2001) ‘Chinese genealogies as a source for demographic research: a further assessment of their reliabilities and biases’ Population Studies 55: 181-193
  • Zhao, Z (2001) ‘Database core: genealogy and demography’ in: International encyclopedia of the social and behavioural sciences. :Elsevier Science
  • Zhao, Z (2001) ‘Demographic conditions and household formation in Chinese history: a simulation study’ in: T Liu et al (eds) Asian population history Oxford: Oxford University Press, 374-394
  • Zhao, Z (2001) ‘Registered households and micro-social structure in China: residential patterns in three settlements in Beijing area’ Journal of Family History 26: 39-65

Graduate Students

T T De Lopez

  • de Lopez T T (2001) ‘Brave New Parks: lessons from international funded protected areas in Cambodia’ Natural Areas Journal 21(4):
  • de Lopez T T (2001) ‘Deforestation in Cambodia: a stakeholder management approach’ International Journal of Sustainable Development and World Ecology, December 2001, 8
  • de Lopez T T (2001) ‘Policy options for Cambodia’s Ream National Park: a stakeholder and economic analysis’ Singapore; Ottawa: EEPSEA; IDRC
  • de Lopez T T (2001) ‘Stakeholder management for protected areas: a case study of Ream National Park, Cambodia’ Environmental Management 28(1):
  • de Lopez T T (2001) ‘Thermal conditions and home temperatures’ in: R Moore (ed) English house condition survey 1996- Energy Report London: HMSO

N A S P Johnson

  • Johnson, N (2001) ‘Animating geography: multimedia and communication’ Journal of Geography in Higher Education 26(1): 13-18

N Kerle

  • Kerle, N (2001) ‘Volume estimation of the 1998 flank collapse at Casita volcano, Nicaragua: a comparison of photogrammetric and conventional techniques’ American Geophysical Union (AGU) Fall meeting, San Francisco, December 2001 Abstract in EOS 82(47)
  • Kerle, N and van Wyk de Vries, B (2001) ‘The 1998 debris avalanche at Casita volcano, Nicaragua: investigation of structural deformation as the cause of slope instability using remote sensing’ Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research 105(1-2):49-63

D Kostovicova

  • Kostovicova, D (2001) ‘Albanian schooling in Kosovo 1992-1998: ‘liberty imprisoned” in: M Waller et al (eds) Kosovo: the politics of delusion London; Portland, Or: Frank Cass

S Oosthuizen

  • Oosthuizen, S (2001) ‘Anglo-Saxon Minsters in South Cambridgeshire’ Proceedings of the Cambridge Antiquarian Society 90: 46-67
  • Oosthuizen, S and Hesse, M (eds) (2001) South-West Cambridgeshire project: informal interim report 1999-2000 Cambridge: University of Cambridge, Board of Continuing Education

H Schans

  • Schans, H, Möller, I M and Spencer, T (2001) ‘Large-scale classification of the East Anglian coastline, UK’ in: Proceedings of Coastal Dynamics ’01, 11-15 June 2001; Lund, Sweden Reston, Virginia :ASCE

A Storeygard

  • Storeygard, A (2001) ‘Greek origami: a sculpture exploring the golden ratio’ Leonardo 34(3): 227-229