L. HARRIS PUBLICATIONS April 2011

Most directly related to the Program on Water Governance**

Peer Reviewed Journal Articles:

Harris, L. (in press) State as Effect of Environmental and Developmental Change Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa, and the Middle East 2012, Vol 32, No 1

** O. Mirosa and L. Harris (in press) Human Right to Water: Contemporary Challenges and Contours of a Global Debate Antipode

Hawkins, R., and D. Ojeda with K. Asher, B. Baptiste, L. Harris, S. Mellott, A. Nightingale, D. Rocheleau, J. Seager and F. Sultana (in press) Gender and Environment: Critical Tradition and New Challenges Environment and Planning D: Society and Space

Harris, L. (in press, 2011) (Neo)Liberal Citizens of Europe: Politics, Scales, and Visibilities of Environmental Citizenship in Contemporary Turkey Citizenship Studies

Harris, L. (forthcoming, 2011) (Neo)Liberal Citizens of Europe: Politics, Scales, and Visibilities of Environmental Citizenship in Contemporary Turkey Citizenship Studies

** Harris, L. and S. Alatout (2010) Negotiating Scales, Forging States: Comparison of the Upper Tigris/Euphrates and Jordan River Basins Political Geography 29: 148 – 156.

Harris, L. (2009) States at the Limit: Tracing Evolving State-Society Relations in the Borderlands of Southeastern Turkey EJTS: European Journal of Turkish Studies 10.

** Harris, L. (2009) Contested Sustainabilities: assessing narratives of environmental change in southeastern Turkey. Local Environment 14 (8): 699-720.

*Harris, L. (2009) Gender and Emergent Water Governance: Comparative Overview of Neoliberalized Natures and Gender Dimensions of Privatization, Devolution and Marketization Gender, Place and Culture16 (4): 387-408.

** Harris. L. (2008) Water Rich, Resource Poor: Intersections of Gender, Poverty, and Vulnerability in Newly Irrigated Areas of Southeastern Turkey World Development 36 (12). 36 (12): 2643- 2662.

Harris, L. (2008) Postcolonialism, Postdevelopment, and Ambivalent Spaces of Difference in Southeastern Turkey. Geoforum (39): 1698-1708.

Hazen, H. and L. Harris (2007) The Limits of Territorially Based Conservation: a critical assessment based on cartographic and geographic approaches Environmental Conservation 35 (1): 1-11.

** Harris, L. (2006) Irrigation, Gender, and Social Geographies of the Changing Waterscape in Southeastern Anatolia. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space. 24 (2): 187–213.

Harris, L. and H. Hazen (2006) Power of Maps: (Counter)-mapping for Conservation Acme International E-journal of Critical Geographies. 4 (1): 99–130.

Harris, L. and M. Harrower (2006) Critical Interventions and Lingering Concerns: Critical Cartography/GISci, Social Theory, and Alternative Possible Futures. Acme International E-journal of Critical Geographies. 4 (1): 1–10.

Harris, L. and N. Atalan (2002/2004) Developing Women’s Spaces: Evaluation of the Importance of Sex-segregated Spaces for Gender and Development Goals in Southeastern Turkey. Kadin/Woman 2000. 3 (2): 17–46.

** Harris, L. (2002) Water and Conflict Geographies of the Southeast Anatolia Project. Society and Natural Resources. 15: 743–759.

** Sneddon, C., L. Harris, R. Dimitrov, U. Özesmi (2002) Contested Waters: Social Conflict, Spatial Scale and Sustainability in Aquatic Systems. Society and Natural Resources. 15: 663–675.

Book Chapters:

Harris, L. (forthcoming) “Salts, Soils and (un)sustainabilities? Analyzing Narratives of Environmental Change in Southeastern Turkey” in D. Davis and E. Burke III Environmental Imaginaries of the Middle East: History, Policy, Power and Practice

Harris, L. and H. Hazen (2009) “Rethinking Maps from a More-than-Human Perspective: Nature-Society, Mapping, and Conservation Territories.” in C. Perkins, M. Dodge, and R. Kitchin (eds). Rethinking Maps: New Frontiers in Cartographic Theory Routledge: 50-67.

** Harris, L. (2007) “Tigris-Euphrates” in P. Robbins Encyclopedia of Environment and Society. Sage Publications, 1736-1739.

Harris, L. (2006) “Women, Gender, and Environmental Change and Resource Extraction: Turkey” S. Joseph (ed) Encyclopedia of Women in Islamic Cultures. Brill Publishers: 28-29.

** Harris, L. (2006) “Women, Gender, and Water and Pollution: Turkey” S. Joseph (ed) Encyclopedia of Women in Islamic Cultures. Brill Publishers: 5-6.

** Harris, L. (2005) “Negotiating Inequalities: Democracy, Gender, and the Politics of Difference in Water User Groups of Southeastern Turkey” M. Arsel and F. Adaman Turkish Environmentalism: Between Democracy and Development. Aldershot, Ashgate: 185–200.

** Harris, L. (2005) “Navigating Uncertain Waters: Geographies of Water and Conflict, Shifting Terms and Debates” C. Flint Geography of War and Peace. Oxford, Oxford University Press: 259–279.

Multimedia and Policy Papers:

** Harris, L. and W. Gantt (2007) “Gender and Shifting Water Governance: Differential Effects of Privatization, Commodification, and Democratization” Land Tenure Center, UW-Madison.

Harris, L. (2003) Irrigation Effects in Southeastern Turkey, in P. Gersmehl, ARGWORLD CDROM, Multimedia Units for Geographic Education. Association of American Geographers.

Book Reviews:

** Harris. L. (2009) Review of Heynen, McCarthy, Prudham and Robbins (2007) Neoliberal Environments Annals of the Association of American Geographers 99 (1) 209-213.

** Harris, L. (2006) Review of V. Bennett et al. (2005) Opposing Currents: The Politics of Water and Gender in Latin America. Feminist Economics. 12 (1–2): 316–318

Harris, L. (2003) Review of T. Mayer (2000) Gender Ironies of Nationalism: Sexing the Nation. Political Geography. 22 (7): 799–801.

** Harris, L. (2002) Review of P. Kurian (2000) Engendering the Environment? Gender in the World Bank’s Environmental Policies. Progress in Development Studies. 2 (1): 80–81.

Harris, L., T. Buller, A. Samatar (2001) Review of J. Scott (1998) Seeing Like a State. Progress in Development Studies. 1 (2): 183–185.

Geography Reading Group, U. of M. (1999) “Difference, Justice and the Dialectics of a Just Process.” Review of D. Harvey (1996) Justice, Nature, and the Geography of Difference. Ethics, Place, and Environment. 3(1): 105–109.

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