IGU International Geographical Union

IGU International Geographical Union COMMISSION ON GENDER AND GEOGRAPHY No. 33 NOVEMBER, 2004 INTERNATIONAL GEOGRAPHICAL UNION COMMISSION ON GENDE...
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IGU International Geographical Union

COMMISSION ON GENDER AND GEOGRAPHY

No. 33

NOVEMBER, 2004

INTERNATIONAL GEOGRAPHICAL UNION COMMISSION ON GENDER and GEOGRAPHY NEWSLETTER

GLASGOW CONGRESS FEATURED AN ARRAY OF GENDER RESEARCH At the International Geographical Congress held in Glasgow. August 15-19, a substantial number of presentations were offered on gender themes. They were included in sessions sponsored by the Commission, in a series organized by the Women and Geography Study Group of the Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British Geographers), and in sessions on other themes such as tourism, women’s health, and women in the history of geography. Presenters represented western, eastern, and southern Europe, North America, east, south, and southeast Asia, southern and eastern Africa, Israel, and Australia and New Zealand. Regrettably, Latin American scholars were not able to participate. The papers reveal the breadth of interest and topics in gender studies, ranging from work in urban public spaces to migration, women’s economic strategies, gender and security; women’s education; political participation and local activisms, to feminist engagements with technology; representations of sexuality in film. In celebration of 20 years since the publication of Gender and Geography by the UK Women and Geography Study Group, a number of presenters reflected on changes and continuities over

the two decades in research, teaching, and their experiences as academic geographers. A CD offering selections from the work of the WGSG is available (see below). The full Congress program is available by consulting the web site of the International Geographical Congress (http://www.meetingmakers.co.uk/igc-uk2004/). The delegate assembly at the Congress approved the continuation of the Commission for the period 20042008, with Tovi Fenster of the University of Tel Aviv ([email protected]) as Chair. The broad topic, Crossing Borders has been selected as the working theme. Further communications will indicate ways in which this will be implemented and the Chair is open for suggestions. She has already issued a tentative list of ideas and locations and dates for potential meetings (see message of November 12, 2004). Commission members also expressed their thanks to Joos Droogleever Fortuijn for her excellent leadership of the Commission between 2000-2004.

GLOBALISATION AND DEVELOPMENT PERSPECTIVES: TOWARDS A FEMINIST DIALOGUE

Page 2 Although there has been some research on gender and globalisation and large volumes of work on gender and development, there has been much less work at the intersections between these three themes. The pre-conference meeting of the IGU Gender Commission held in Durham, UK (12-14 August 2004) attempted to address this lacuna by bringing into dialogue feminists working on issues of development and globalisation from different parts of the world. The meeting was organised by Eleonore Kofman, Parvati Raghuram and Janet Townsend and attended by geographers from 14 countries (Bangladesh, Canada, Denmark, Guyana, Malawi, Malaysia, Norway, India, Israel, Spain, Switzerland, Taiwan, UK and the USA), three of whom were funded by British Academy grants, as well as by overseas postgraduates studying in the UK. It was also attended by non-geographers working in related fields. The papers focused on a range of issues, such as the intersections between different approaches, the praxis of development research, the globalising health agenda, global childhood, gendered livelihoods and transnational migration. These sessions gave rise to lively exchanges which could be taken up in future in considering the crossing of paradigms. Two sessions 'Feminist perspectives on political geography' and 'Transnational/transboundary spaces' were co-hosted with the Political Geography Commission. (Eleonore Kofman and Parvati Raghuram)

Gender, Place and Culture is seeking applications for a North American book review editor to succeed Karen Morin whose term ends June, 2005. The term of office is for four years. Nominations and applications should be sent to Linda Peake, Division of Social Sciences, York University, Toronto, ONT, Canada, M3J 1P3 ([email protected]). Applications should consist of a letter detailing the candidate’s editorial experience, plus a CV.

COMMISSION PUBLICATION NOW AVAILABLE

Ellen Hansen (Emporia State, USA) reports that Gender and Geography bibliography now has a google function on the first page and can be searched by name, subject matter, or key word. The bibliography can be accessed at http://www.emporia.edu/socsci/fembib/

A selection of papers given at the Commission’s Symposium in Rome, June 2003 is now available as Volume 6 in the publications from the IGU’s Home of Geography. Edited by Gisella Cortesi, Flavia Cristaldi, and Joos Droogleever Fortuijn, Gendered Cities: Identities, Activities, Networks: A Life Course Approach includes sixteen chapters from contributors from Greece, Hungary, Israel, Italy, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Roumania, Spain, and Switzerland. Research addresses the ways in which life course intersects not only with gender but with ethnicity, class, experiences of migration, blurring the boundaries between “first” and “third” worlds and exploring feelings and identities in addition to women’s activities. Individual chapters are listed in the articles and chapters session of this newsletter. Copies may be ordered from Laure Ayo ([email protected]) for 12 Euros. BOOK REVIEW EDITOR SOUGHT

NEWS FROM AROUND THE WORLD Dominiqe Creton reports that French geographers are working on a book on gender and geography following up on the conference organized in Lyon in 2003. Polly Vauquline is nearing completion of the research for her PhD on crime against women in Guwahati (Assam) at North East Hill University in Shilling (India). Several recent PhD theses have also recently been completed at the University of Amsterdam including W.Koster, Secret strategies: women and abortion in Yoruba society,Nigeria; M. De Regt (2003) Pioneers or pawns? Women health workers and the politics of development in Yemen; A. van Vuuren (2003) Women striving for selfreliance: Diversity of female-headed households in Tanzania and the livelihood strategies they employ.

Feminist geography is faring well at the Universities of Bern and Zurich, Switzerland. At the former, is an active group led by Doris Wastl-Walter as well as an interdisciplinary gender studies center. In Zurich, Elisabeth Buehler reports growing interest with expansion into work in development studies in geography prompted by funding institutions. Congratulations to Anne Buttimer on the presentation to her the book edited by Tom Mels entitled Re-Animating Places: A Geography of Rhythms (Ashgate 2004), essays by her former students and colleagues. Feministisches Geo-RundMail 24 features a discussion of critical university education, drawing on the experiences of Kerstin Schenkel and Eva

Page 3 Reisinger from the Free University, Berlin who have been engaged intensively in a project that aimed at integrating women and gender as well as critical epistemological themes into the recently reformed curricula for geosciences at the University. They describe the context, show opportunities and obstacles, and evaluate the results of this attempt. Overall, their evaluation is rather pessimistic, since most of the original goals have not been reached. Persistant dominance of an androcentric mainstream in physical geography and geology, marginalisation of human geography and heavy financial cuts for geosciences at the FU Berlin are some of the main reasons. Also of concern is a backlash against feminist teaching which is placed in the context of socio-political changes in Germany. Anne Vogelpohl also reports a similar drop of interest for the traditional annual meeting of female students of geography "Geografinnentreffen". The future of these meetings is very much open but there are hopes that a new generation of students will be interested in sustaining this network that started during the 80s. (Thanks to Elisabeth Buehler for translation from the German.) To be on the mailing list for the newsletter, which is published four times per year, contact [email protected]. Congratulations to Hae Un Rii who has been elected President of the Society of Women Geographers of Korea. She also hopes to have geographical sessions in the 9th International Interdisciplinary Congress on Women to be held in Seoul in 2005 (see http://www.ww05.org for details of the Congress. Judit Timár has collaborated with colleagues in a women’s organization in Hungary on a book that deals with women in local public life (see Sáfrány, R. (ed.) below in book section.). The publication’s four chapters address experiences of a questionnaire survey (by H. Lehmann and G. Polonyi); differewnt conditions of communities, common fates of women (by J. Timár); assigned roles and attempts at breaking free (by G. Schwarcz); and three interviews (edited by G. Barath). A Companion to Feminist Geography, edited by Lise Nelson and Joni Seager has been published by Blackwell. This volume, with contributions by 50 scholars, examines the changing nature of the field since the 1970s and highlights areas of emerging scholarship. Sections include Contexts; Work; City/ Built Environment/Community; Body/Identities; Nature/Environment; State/Nation, Public Power. Congratulations also to Joni who has been appointed Dean of the Faculty of Environmental Sciences at

York University. The Women and Geography Study Group of the Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British Geographers) has released a CD Geography and Gender Reconsidered to mark the twentieth anniversay of its publication of the book Gender and Geography in 1984. The CD includes 13 chapters that can be downloaded. While some focus on continuities and changes over the two decades others take up new themes that have emerged such as the emotions in/and geography. Whereas the original volume’s authors were all based in the UK, the CD includes reflections by contributors from other parts of the world, among them authors from India and Malaysia, who contextualize developments in feminist geography. For information about purchasing the CD see http:online.northumbria.ac.uk/geography_research/w gsg/ or contact WGSG Publication, Department of Geography and Geomatics, University of Glasgow, University Ave., Glasgow, G12 8QQ Scotland. [email protected] is an e-mail alert system addressing issues related to women in urban planning with substantial coverage in Spanish including European and Latin American material. For further information contact [email protected] or the listserv. NEW BOOKS Bauhardt, C. 2004. Entgrenzte Räume. Zu Theorie und Politik räumlicher Planung (Spaces without frontier:Theory and Politics of Spatial Planning). Wiesbaden: Verlag für Sozialwissenschaften. ----. 2004. (ed.) Räume der Emanzipation (Spaces of emancipation). Wiesbaden: Verlag für Sozialwissenschaften. Berg, N. G., B. Dale, H.K. Lysgård, and A. Løfgren, eds.(2004): Mennesker, steder og regionale endringer (People, places and regional changes). Tapir akademisk Forlag, Trondheim. Carcangiu, B.M. (ed.). 2004. Donne e potere nel continente africano. Torino: L'Harmattan Italia. Cortesi, G., F. Cristaldi, and J. Droogleever Fortuijn (eds) Gendered Cities: Identities, Activities, and Networks: A Life Course Approach. Rome: Home of Geography Publications Series, Volume 6.

Page 4 Dell’Agnese, E. 2004. Turismo al maschile, turismo al femminile. L'esperienza el viaggio, il mercato del lavoro, il turismo sessuale. Padua: Cedam. Denman, C., J.Monk y N. Ojeda de la Peña (eds).Compartiendo historias de fronteras: cuerpos, géneros, generaciones, y salud Hermosillo: El Colegio de Sonora, 2004. Essed, P., D. Goldberg, and A. Kobayashi (eds) The Companion to Gender Studies. Oxford and Malden, MA: Blackwell.

Schenk-Sandbergen, and N. Choudhury. 2003. From heroines to beneficiaries, from beneficiaries to heroines? The impact of a small-scale irrigation project on gender in the West Begal Terai. ADPAD Series. Delhi: Manohar. Schwiter, Karin (2003) Arbeitsteilung in der Familie: zwischen gelebter und gewuenschter Wirklichkeit. Zurich: Institute of Geography. Available online: http://www.geo.unizh.ch/~karin/ (English and German summary; full text in German.

SPECIAL JOURNAL ISSUES Falah, G.-W. and C. Nagel. 2005. Geographies of Muslim Women: Gender, Religion, and Space. New York: Guildford. Garcia Ballesteros, A. (ed. ) Migrations in Europe. The four last decades. Rome: SGI. Greed, C. 2004. Inclusive Urban Design: Public Toilets. Oxford: Elsevier, Architectural Press. Greed, C. and M. Roberts. Introducing Urban Design. (Chinese edition). Beijing: Pearsons, in association with China Architectural Press. Jedrzejczyk, I. (ed) 2004. Status Kobiet Ubezpieczeniach: Zagrozenia, przeciwdzialanie i ochrona ubezpieczeniowa. Katowice: The Karol Adamiecki University of Economics. Katz, C. 2004. Growing Up: Global Economic Restructuring and Children’s Everyday Lives.Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. Kibbelaar. P. and B. Haersma. 2004. Hoge hakken, wereldbaan, vrouwen op sleutelposities op Curaçao. Zutphen: Walburg Press. Muhadjir, D. A.M. Wattie, and S. E. Yuarsi. Living on the Edges: Cross-border Mobility and Sexual Exploitation in the Greater South-east Asia Subregion. Yogyakarta. Nelson, L. and J. Seager. 2004. A Companion to Feminist Geography. Oxford and Malden, MA: Blackwell. Sáfrány, R. (ed.) 2004. Életpályák és mozgásterel: nok a helyi közéletben. Budapest: MONA (Life courses and scope for action: women in local public life).

HAGAR: Studies in Culture, Polity and Identities (in cooperation with the Program in Gender Studies, Ben Gurion University, Israel). Volume 5 (1), 2004 is a special issue entitled “Beyond Tolerance? Globalization and Gendered Exclusions” guest edited by Tovi Fenster. The issue includes a selection of the papers presented at the IGU Commission on Geography and Gender Workshop held in Tel Aviv in 2002. For individual articles see entries under the authors’ names.

Espace, Populations et Sociétés 2004 (1), edited by Dominique Creton, is devoted to the theme “geographie et genre: mobilités, politiques publiques, et constructions territoriales.” Volume 2003 (3) “Espace, genre, et sociétés. Details of ordering publications are available at http://www.univ-lille1.fr-geographie/pubi.htm Rooilijn 37(7) 2004 is a special issue (in Dutch) including seven articles on sex in the city. Individual articles are listed below. ARTICLES and BOOK CHAPTERS Åquist, Ann-Cathrine (2004) "Time-Space Rhythms and Everyday Urban Life" in Mels, Tom (ed.) Reanimating Places. A Geography of Rhythms. Aldershot & Burlington: Ashgate. Asis, M.M.B., S. Huang, and B.S.A. Yeoh. 2004. When the light of the home is abroad: unskilled female migration and the Filipino family. Singapore Journal of Tropical Geography 25(2): 198-215. Aure, M. 2001. Innovative traditions? Coping processes among households, villages, and the municipality. In N. Aarsæther and J.O.Bærenholdt. The Reflexive North. Nord 2001:10. Copenhagen: Nordic Council of Ministers.

Page 5 Bäschlin, E. 2004: The processes of democratic institution building in the context of a liberation war: from social organisation in a fighting context to state institutions for a civil society. The Example of POLISARIO Front and SADR. In: M. Barlow and D.Wastl-Walter (eds). New Challenges in Local and Regional Administration. Ashgate, Aldershot. Bäschlin, E. and A. Schweizer. 2003. Dort oben ist gut sein, da können Leib und Seele gesunden. Landwirtschaftliche Nutzen der Alpen zwischen Mythos und Lebensalltag. In F. Jeanneret, D. WastlWalter, U. Wiesmann, and M. Schwyn (eds). Welt der Alpen - Gebirge der Welt: Ressourcen Akteure, Perspektiven. Bern, Stuttgart and Vienna: Verlag Paul Haupt. Bailey, A,J., M.K. Blake, and T.J. Cooke. 2004. Migration, care, and the linked lives of dual-earner households. Environment and Planning A 36(9): 1617-32. Bain, A. 2004. Female artistic identity in place: the studio. Social and Cultural Geography 5(2): 171-93. Baylina, M. 2004. Invisible work and exclusionary spaces: too many challenges for home-workers Hagar 5(1): 53-68. Bennett, K. 2004. A time for change? Patriarchy, the former coalfields and family farming. Sociologica Ruralis 44(2): 147-66. Berg, N.G. (2004): Discourses on rurality and gender in Norwegian rural studies. In H. Goverde, H. de Haan, Henk and M. Baylina (eds) Power and Gender in European Rural Development. Aldershot: Ashgate. Blue, S.A. 2004. State policy, economic crisis, gender, and familed-tied determinants of family remittances to Cuba. Economic Geography 80(1): 6392. Bondi, L. and J. Davidson. 2004. Spatializing affect, affecting space: an introduction. Gender, Place and Culture 11(3):373-74. Bottai, M., P. Parrella and N. Salvati. 2004. Daily urban mobility and gender differences: methods and tools. In G. Cortesi, F. Cristaldi, and J.D. Fortuijn. Gendered Cities: Identities, Activities, Networks-A Life Course Approach. IGU Home of Geography

Publications Series 6. Rome: Società Geografica Italiana. Boyer, K. 2004. Miss Remington goes to work: gender, space, and technology at the dawn of the information age. The Professional Geographer 56(2): 201-12. Bracken née Bull, L. and E. Mawdsley. 2004. ‘Muddy glee:’rounding out the picture of women and physical geography fieldwork. Area 36(3):280-86. Brants, S.. 2004. De paradox van pressie en illegale prostitutie. (The paradox of repression and illegal prostitution. Rooilijn 37(7). Brown, K. 2004. Genderism and the bathroom problem: (re)materialising sexed sites, (re)creating sexed bodies. Gender, Place and Culture 11(3): 331346. Bru Bistuer, J. and M. Aguera Cablo. 2004. Politics of the Environment. In L.A. Staeheli, E. Kofman, L. Peake (eds) Mapping Women, Making Politics: Feminist Perspectives on Political Geography. London: Routledge Buckingham, S. 2004. Ecofeminism in the twentyfirst century. The Geographical Journal 170 (2): 14654. Buehler, E. 2004: Maternity insurance: What can we learn from the Swiss experience? In: Jedrzejczyk, Irena (ed): The status of women in insurance. Threats, prevention and insurance protection.Katowice: The Karol Adamiecki University of Economics. Burman, E. and K. Chantler. 2004. There’s no place like home: emotional geographies of researching ‘race’ and refuge provision in Britain. Gender, Place and Culture 11(3): 375-97. Chant, S. (2004) Urban livelihoods, employment and gender. In R. Gwynne and C. Kay (eds) Latin America Transformed, 2nd ed. Arnold: London. ----. (2004) ‘Dangerous equations? How womenheaded households became the poorest of the poor: causes, consequences and cautions, IDS Bulletin 35(4) (Special issue, Repositioning Feminisms in Development) ----. (2004) Female headship and the “feminisation of Poverty. ’ In Focus (Online Newsletter of United Nations Development Program (UNDP) International Poverty Centre. 3:3-5.

Page 6 (http://www.undp.org/povertcentry/newsletters/info cus3May04eng.pdf ---- (with W. Moreno). (2004) ‘Desintegración Familiar’ o ‘Transición Familiar’? Perspectivas sobre cambio familiar en Guanacaste, Diálogos Revista Electrónica de Historia – Special issue: ‘Historia, Política, Literatura y Relaciones de Género en América Central y México, Siglos XVIII, XIX y XX’ (Universidad de Costa Rica, San José), 5:1 (March 2004 – February 2005) (http://historia.fcs.ucr.ac.cr/dialogos.htm). Cirelli, C. and S. Malafarina. 2004. The presence and role of women in the Italian university of Catania. In G. Cortesi, F. Cristaldi, and J.D. Fortuijn. Gendered Cities: Identities, Activities, Networks-A Life Course Approach. IGU Home of Geography Publications Series 6. Rome: Società Geografica Italiana. Cortesi, G., F. Cristaldi, and J.D. Fortuijn. 2004. Introduction. In G. Cortesi, F. Cristaldi, and J.D. Fortuijn. Gendered Cities: Identities, Activities, Networks-A Life Course Approach. IGU Home of Geography Publications Series 6. Rome: Società Geografica Italiana. Cortesi, G. M. Bottai and M. Lazzeroni. 2004. Gender differences and urban residential mobility: first results of the “housing, household, habitat” project. In G. Cortesi, F. Cristaldi, and J.D. Fortuijn. Gendered Cities: Identities, Activities, Networks-A Life Course Approach. IGU Home of Geography Publications Series 6. Rome: Società Geografica Italiana. Cowen, D. From the American lebensraum to the American living room: class, sexuality, and the scale production of domestic intimacy. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 22(5): 755-72. Cristaldi, F. and J. Darden. 2004. Similarities and differences in demographic structures and social networks among Filipino immigrant women in Rome and Toronto. In G. Cortesi, F. Cristaldi, and J.D. Fortuijn. Gendered Cities: Identities, Activities, Networks-A Life Course Approach. IGU Home of Geography Publications Series 6. Rome: Società Geografica Italiana. Davidson, J. and L. Bondi. 2004. Spatialising affect; affecting space: an introduction. Gender, Place and Culture 11(3): 37374. Devasahayam, T.W., S. Huang, B.S.A. Yeoh. 2004.

South-east Asian migrant women: navigating borders, negotiating scales. Singapore Journal of Tropical Geography 25(2): 135-40. Díaz Muñoz, M.A. y Jiménez Gigante. (2003). Transportes y movilidad: ¿Necesidades diferenciales según género? In Segundo Seminario Internacional sobre Género y Urbanismo. Infraestructuras para la vida cotidiana. Escuela Técnica Superior de Arquitectura de Madrid, Universidad Politécnica de Madrid, Spain. Available in http://www.generourban.org Dixon, D. and J.P. Jones III (2004, in press). Feminist geographies of difference, relation, and construction. In G. Valentine and S. Aitken (eds) Philosophies, People, Places and Practices: An Introduction to Approaches in Human Geography. Thousand Oaks: Sage Publications. Droogleever Fortuijn, J. 2004. Exclusion, coexistence, tolerance and beyond: the elderly in the Netherlands. Hagar 5(1): 121- 136. Ettlinger, N. 2004. Toward a critical theory of untidy geographies: the spatiality of emotions in consumption and production. Feminist Economics 10(3):21-54. Fagnani, J. (2004), Schwestern oder entfernte Kusinen? Deutsche und französische Familienpolitik im Vergleich. In W.Neumann (ed.): Welche Zukunft für den Sozialstaat? Reformpolitik in Frankreich und Deutschland, Opladen: Leske und Budrich. ----. (2004), Die Familienpolitik in Frankreich seit den 70er-Jahren: die allmähliche Integration des Modells der “berufstätigen Mutter.” In Commission fédérale de coordination pour les questions familiales (ed.), Zeit für Familien Beiträge zur Vereinbarkeit von Familien- und Erwerbsalltag aus familienpolitischer Sicht, Bern, Suisse (also in Italian and French). ----. (2004), Responsabilités familiales et vie professionnelle. Les Cahiers français, 322:34-38. Fagnani, J. and G. Houriet-Segard. (2004) Fécondité et politiques de soutien aux parents qui travaillent: similarités et différences entre six pays européens, Informations sociales, 118: 82-92. Fagnani, J. and M.T. Letablier. (2004). Work and Family Life Balance: the impact of the 35 hour laws in France. Work, Employment and Society 18 (3): 551 - 572.

Page 7 ----. (2003), Qui s’occupe des enfants pendant que les parents travaillent? Les enseignements d’une recherche auprès de parents de jeunes enfants, Recherches et Prévisions, 72: 21 - 36. Fenster, T. 2004. Why beyond tolerance? Hagar 5(1): 1-10. ----. 2004. Globalization and gendered exclusions in the city’s management: beyond tolerance in Jerusalem and London. Hagar 5(1): 85-104. ----. 2004. Can we look beyond tolerance in the age of globalization ? Hagar 5(1): 159-64. ----. 2004. Gendered cities: notions of comfort, belonging and commitment in London and Jerusalem. In G. Cortesi, F. Cristaldi, and J.D. Fortuijn. Gendered Cities: Identities, Activities, Networks-A Life Course Approach. IGU Home of Geography Publications Series 6. Rome: Società Geografica Italiana. Fielding, A.J. 2998. Gender, class and region in England and Wales. Ritsumeikan Chirigaku 10: 122.

Garcia Ballesteros, A. y Sanz Berzal, B. (coords) . Inmigración y sistema productivo en la Comunidad de Madrid. Madrid: Consejería de Economía e Innovación Tecnológica de la Comunidad de Madrid. García-Ramon, M.D. 2004. On diversity and difference in geography: A southern European perspective. European Urban and Regional Studies 11(4): 367-70. García Ramon, M.D., A. Ortiz, and M. Prats. 2004. Urban planning, gender and the use of space in a peripheral neighbourhood of Barcelona. Cities 21(3): 215-223. Gibson-Graham. J.K. 2004. The violence of development: two political imagineries. Development 47(1): 27-34. ----. 2002. Intervenciones posestructurales. Revista Columbiana de Antropologia 38: 261-86.Greed, C. 2004.Planning for accessibility. In K. Bright (ed.) Disability: Makings Buildings Accessible. Special Report 19000647. 84(9). London: Workplacelaw Network.

Gabb, J. 2004. ‘I could eat my baby to bits’: passion and desire in lesbian mother-children love. Gender, Place and Culture 11(3): 399-415.

----. 2004. Women in surveying and planning. In A. Gale and M. Davidson (eds) Managing Diversity in the Construction Sector. London: Taylor and Francis.

Gammage, S. 2004. Exercising exit, voice, and loyalty: a gender perspective on transnationalism in Haiti. Development and Change 35(4): 743-71.

----.2004. Public toilets: the need for compulsory provision. Municipal Engineer 157:77-86.

Garcia Ballesteros, A. 2004. L’estructure de la població per gènere. Enciclopedia Catalana. Barcelona. ----. 2004. Dona i fecunditat. Enciclopedia Catalana. Barcelona. ----. 2004. Dona i treball. Enciclopedia Catalana. Barcelona. ----. Dona i poder. Enciclopedia Catalana. Barcelona. Garcia Ballesteros, A., M.I. Ortiz Alvarez, and M.C. Gomez Escobar. 2003. El envejecimiento de las poblaciones: los casos de España y México. Anales de geografía de la UCM.

Greed, C. and B. van Hoven. 2004. Gender en de ontworpen stad. Rooilijn 7: 354-58. Grewal, M. 2004. Mass media and the tolerance of middle-class immigrant Indian women in the US: Implications for their adjustment process. Hagar 5(1): 23-38. Hanson, S. 2003. Geographical and feminist perspectives on entrepreneurship. Geographische Zeitschrift 9(1): 1-23. Hapke, H.M. and D. Ayyankeril. 2004. Gender, the work life course, and livelihood strategies in a south Indian fish market. Gender, Place and Culture 11(2): 229-56. Hardill, I. 2004. Juggling work and home in a postindustrial world: case studies of dual career households. Hagar 5(1):39-52.

Page 8 Series 6. Rome: Società Geografica Italiana. Hermans, J. 2004. Ruimtelijk realisme op tv” (Spatial realism on tv). Rooilijn, 37(7). Herzig. P. 2004. Identities, generations, and gendered social boundaries among South Asians in Nairobi , Kenya. In G. Cortesi, F. Cristaldi, and J.D. Fortuijn. Gendered Cities: Identities, Activities, Networks-A Life Course Approach. IGU Home of Geography Publications Series 6. Rome: Società Geografica Italiana. Järvinen. T. 2004. Housing opportunities of Finnish dual-career families. In G. Cortesi, F. Cristaldi, and J.D. Fortuijn. Gendered Cities: Identities, Activities, Networks-A Life Course Approach. IGU Home of Geography Publications Series 6. Rome: Società Geografica Italiana. Johnson, L. 2003. Serving the service sector: gendering regional (un)employment in Geelong, Australia. New Zealand Geographer 59(1): 17-26. Katz, C. 2004. Reconfiguring childhood: boys and girls growing up global. Revista: Harvard Review of Latin America 32(2): 12-15. Kibbelaar, P. (2003) Beeldvorming en gender (Image and gender), In: R.M.Allen, C. Heyes and V. Marcha (eds) Curaçao, 1863-2003. Beeldvorming, identiteit en cultuur. Amsterdam:SWR. Klodawsky, F. 2004. Tolerating Homelessness in Canada’s Capital: Gender, Place and Human Rights. Hagar 5(1): 105-120. Kobayashi, A. 2004. Anti-racist feminism in geography: an agenda for social action." In L. Nelson and J. Seager (eds). The Companion to Feminist Geography. Oxford and Malden, MA: Blackwell. ----. 2004. Critical 'race' approaches to cultural geography." In J.Duncan, N. Johnson and Richard Schein (eds). The Companion to Cultural Geography. Oxford and Malden: Blackwell. Lam, T. and Yeoh, B.S.A. 2004. Negotiating ‘home’ and ‘national identity’: Chinese-Malayan transmigrants in Singapore. Asia Pacific Viewpoint. 45(2):141-64. Listerborn, C. 2004. Safe city: discourses on women’s fear in safer cities programmes. In G.Cortesi, F. Cristaldi, and J.D. Fortuijn. Gendered Cities: Identities, Activities, Networks-A Life Course Approach. IGU Home of Geography Publications

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