| Appendix D: Suggested
Readings |
The readings listed below are suggested to accompany
the activities in this module. Because of copyright restrictions
and cost, the readings have not been reproduced for the on-line version
of this module. Instead, it is suggested that you access these readings
through your library and put them on reserve for your students. Some of
the readings, as indicated below, are available in the printed version
of the module available through the Association
of American Geographers.
Unit 1: Suggested Readings
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The Lancet. 1994. Health and climate change. London: Devonshire
Press.
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Meade, Melinda; John Florin, and Wilbert Gesler. 1988. Medical geography.
New York, NY: Guilford Press.
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World Health Organization. 1990. Potential health effects of climatic
change. Geneva: World Health Organization.
Unit 2: Suggested Readings
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Desowitz, Robert. 1981. On New Guinea tape worms and Jewish grandmothers.
New Guinea tape worms and Jewish grandmothers. New York, NY: W.W.
Norton, pp. 36-45. (Provided in the printed version of the module.)
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Hall, Bob and Mary Lee Kerr. 1993. 1991-1992 Green Index: A state-by-state
guide to the nation's environmental health. Washington, DC: Island Press,
pp. 27-41. (Provided in the printed version of the module.)
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Hillerman, Tony. 1973. We all fall down. The great Taos bank robbery
and other Indian Country affairs. Albuquerque, NM: University of New
Mexico Press, pp. 26-40.
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Jones, Huw. 1990. Population geography. New York, NY: Guilford Press, pp.
18-27, 96-99.
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Martin, Philip and Jonas Widgren. 1996. International migration: A global
challenge. Population Bulletin 51, 1 (April): 2-47.
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Meade, Melinda. 1980. The rise and demise of malaria: Some reflections
on southern landscapes. Southeastern Geographer 20: 77-99.
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Omran, Abdel. 1982. Epidemiologic transition. In J. Ross, ed. The international
encyclopedia of population. New York, NY: The Free Press, pp. 172-183.
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Ross, J., ed. 1982. Epidemiologic transition. International encyclopedia
of population. New York, NY: The Free Press, pp. 172-183.
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United Nations Environment Programme. 1993. Human health. Environmental
data report 1993-94. Oxford: Blackwell Publishers, Part 5, pp. 231-270.
Unit 3: Suggested Readings
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Annas, George. 1993. Control of tuberculosis -- The law and the public’s
health. The New England Journal of Medicine v.328,n.8 (25 February):
585-588.
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Bowen, William, Mark Salling, Kingsley Haynes, and Ellen Cyran. 1995. Toward
environmental justice: Spatial equity in Ohio and Cleveland. Annals
of the Association of American Geographers 85, 4 (December): 641-663.
(Provided in the printed version of the module.)
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Bullard, Robert. 1990. Dumping in Dixie: Race, class, and environmental
quality. Boulder: Westview Press, selected chapters.
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Iseman, Michael, David Cohn, and John Sbarbaro. 1993. Directly observed
treatment of tuberculosis: We can’t afford not to try it. The New England
Journal of Medicine v.328,n.8 (25 February): 576-578.
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US General Accounting Office. 1983. Siting of hazardous waste landfills
and their correlation with racial and economic status of surrounding communities.
Washington, DC: US Government Printing Office.
Unit 4: Suggested Readings
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Lin, Sharat. 1995. Geopolitics of communicable diseases: Plague in Surat,
1994. Economic and Political Weekly, v. 30, n. 46 (November 18):
2912-2914.
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Platt, Anne. 1995. The resurgence of infectious diseases. Worldwatch
(July/August): 26-32.