William Garrison

Bill Garrison, one of the leaders of geography’s “quantitative revolution” in the 1950s and an outstanding transportation geographer, passed away on February 1, 2015, at the age of 90.

William Louis Garrison was born in April 1924 and raised in Tennessee. During the Second World War he did meteorological work for the US Army. He received his bachelor’s and master’s degrees from Peabody College in Nashville and a doctorate in geography from Northwestern University.

In 1950 Garrison moved to the University of Washington and, as a young faculty member, led the way in revitalizing the field of geography through the use of scientific methods. In particular, he came up with the idea of using of statistics and computers to study and better understand spatial problems. Thus began an immensely exciting and important period in the history of geography, the so-called “quantitative revolution.”

Under Garrison’s supervision at the University of Washington were a number of doctoral students who were also interested in scientific approaches to spatial problems. They included Brian Berry, William Bunge, Michael Dacey, Arthur Getis, Duane Marble, Richard Morrill, John Nystuen and Waldo Tobler, and were dubbed the “space cadets.” Starting with computing systems such as the IBM 604 and IBM 650 they went on to be instrumental in the evolution of geographic information systems.

In 1960 Garrison moved to Northwestern University and subsequently had stints at University of Pennsylvania, University of Illinois and University of Pittsburgh, before moving to University of California, Berkeley in 1973 as a Professor in the Civil Engineering Department.

By this time Garrison’s interests had shifted to transportation. His work at Berkeley focused on how innovation and technological change occurs in large transportation systems. This included an interest in alternative vehicles and the future of the car. He was genuinely able to ‘think outside the box’ in envisioning a better and more efficient transportation future; for example, he organized the first ever U.S. conference on Intelligent Vehicle-Highway Systems.

Garrison made invaluable contributions to the Transportation Engineering Program in the department, expanding and strengthening the planning and policy elements of the curriculum. From 1973 to 1980 he was also Director of the university’s Institute of Transportation and Traffic Engineering (later renamed the Institute of Transportation Studies). During his tenure he set out to broaden its scope beyond transportation and traffic engineering. He believed in the value of interdisciplinary work and drew in colleagues from the departments of City and Regional Planning, Economics, Geography, Public Policy and Sociology.

He served on numerous national committees advising the Bureau of Public Roads, Department of Transportation, Department of Commerce, and Bureau of the Census, as well as the National Science Foundation, National Science Board, and National Research Council. He also served as consultant to non-profit and business organizations, and had a stint as Chairman of the Transportation Research Board.

Garrison retired from UC Berkeley in 1991 as Professor Emeritus of Civil and Environmental Engineering and Emeritus Research Engineer in the Institute of Transportation Studies but that was by no means the end of his academic career. Post-retirement publications included the book Tomorrow’s Transportation: Changing Cities, Economies, and Lives with Jerry Ward (2000), the report Historical Transportation Development (2003), and two editions of the book The Transportation Experience: Policy, Planning, and Deployment with David Levinson (2005, 2014) which drew on his work in Austria examining the growth trajectories of various transportation technologies.

Garrison was a long-time member of the AAG, having joined in January 1947. His early contributions to the discipline were recognized in 1960 with an award for Meritorious Contributions in the annual honors. In 1994 two of the AAG Specialty Groups also bestowed their highest honors upon him for his outstanding contributions: the Edward L. Ullman Award from the Transportation Geography Specialty Group and the James R. Anderson Medal from the Applied Geography Specialty Group. Beyond the AAG he received the Roy W. Crum Award from Transportation Research Board in 1976 and the Award for Distinguished Contribution to University Transportation from the Council of University Transportation Centers in 1998. In 2000, his “space cadets” reunited to honor his 50 years of inspirational leadership in geographical and transportation sciences.

An AAG award was also established in his name. The biennial William L. Garrison Award for Best Dissertation in Computational Geography aims to encourage students to use advanced computation for resolving the complex problems of space–time analysis that are at the core of geographic science.

Garrison was one of the most important geographers of the twentieth century. When introducing him as the speaker at the 2007 Anderson Distinguished Lecture in Applied Geography, Ross Mackinnon described him as “a true ‘Mount Rushmore’ figure in modern American geography.”

Bill is survived by his wife Marcia and their four children, Deborah, James, Jane and John; his three children from his first wife Mary (who predeceased him), Sara, Ann and Helen; as well as 16 grandchildren, and one great grandchild.

 

Further reading

Barnes T. J. (2001) “Lives lived and lives told: biographies of geography’s quantitative revolution” Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 19 (4) 409–429

Garrison, W. L. (2002) “Lessons From the Design of a Life” in Peter Gould and Forrest R. Pitts (eds.) Geographical Voices: Fourteen Autobiographical Essays Syracuse University Press

DeVivo, M. S. (2014) Leadership in American Academic Geography: The Twentieth Century Lexington Books

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Graeme Hugo

Professor Graeme Hugo AO from the University of Adelaide, one of Australia’s leading geographers and a world authority on demography and migration, passed away on January 20, 2015, at the age of 68 after a short illness.

Graeme John Hugo was born on December 5, 1946, and grew up in Adelaide. His academic studies began with a BA at the University of Adelaide. He then stayed in Adelaide but moved to Flinders University where he spent 3 years as a Tutor in geography and completed an MA (1972). Next he moved to the Australian National University (ANU) in Canberra for a PhD (1975), his thesis investigating circular migration in West Java. At that time ANU had just commenced its strong focus upon the demography of Indonesia and Hugo’s research played a role in developing this.

After completing his doctorate, Hugo returned to Flinders University where he stayed from 1975 to 1991, rising through the academic ranks. He was instrumental in establishing the postgraduate program in Applied Population Studies and also made significant contributions to the National Institute of Labour Studies based at the university. During this time he also held visiting positions overseas at Hasanuddin University, Indonesia (1977-78), University of Iowa, USA (1985), University of Hawaii (1988), and University of Auckland (1989).

In 1991 Hugo was appointed Professor of Geography at the University of Adelaide, and served as head of the department from 1992 to 1996. He also had a stint as a Visiting Scholar at the United Nations Population Division in New York. In 1996 he became Director of the university’s National Centre for Social Applications of GIS, and in 2012 the Director of its new Australian Population and Migration Research Centre.

Hugo’s academic career was spent studying migration, mobility and development in Australia and Southeast Asia, particularly Indonesia. He was interested in both international and internal migration, its changing patterns and causes, the implications for social and economic change, and the role and contribution of migrants and refugees in a multicultural society. A colleague noted his ability to think outside the box, and in so doing seed new subfields within migration studies, almost effortlessly.

His publications output was prolific. He produced more than 30 books, about 200 refereed articles, and over 250 book chapters, as well as over 1,000 conference papers, 20 plenary addresses, 120 reports and over 30 book reviews, with many more in progress at the time of his death. The latter included an entry on “Population Geography” for the AAG’s forthcoming International Encyclopedia of Geography.

Hugo’s work led to a much more sophisticated understanding of the theory and practice of migration in the Asia-Pacific region. His scholarship has been well cited, perhaps most notably the books The Demographic Dimension in Indonesian Development (1987) with Terry and Valerie Hull and Gavin Jones, and Worlds in Motion: Understanding International Migration at the End of the Millennium (1998) with Douglas Massey and others.

Hugo was renowned for his willingness to pitch in when others of a similar rank would decline, for example, teaching first year classes and marking their exams, reviewing papers for an astonishing 53 different journals, and refereeing grant applications. He also supervised 22 Masters theses and 36 PhD theses, with a further 20 ongoing when he passed away.

Recent large research projects included an Australian Research Council (ARC) Federation Fellowship (2002-07) for a study entitled “The new paradigm of international migration to and from Australia: dimensions, causes and implications” and an ARC Australian Professorial Fellowship (2009-13) for a research project on “Circular migration in Asia, the Pacific and Australia: Empirical, theoretical and policy dimensions.”

In 2012 Hugo became the Director of the new Australian Population and Migration Research Centre at the University of Adelaide, a world-class center tasked with developing a sustainable population and workforce strategy for Australia and the Asia Pacific, and looking at international patterns of migration and the challenges posed by an ageing society. Some of his most recent research focused on the problems, including discrimination, faced by jobseekers from non-English speaking backgrounds.

In addition to his extraordinary intellectual output, Hugo was an activist, concerned with the development of equitable population and migration policies informed by evidence, building positive relationships between Australia and Asian nations, and the rights of migrants and refugees. He was also a regular voice on radio as a social commentator.

In Australia Hugo was much in demand from both federal and state governments for advice on population, ageing and migration and served on a vast number of committees. In 2011 he led a major enquiry by the Australian Government on population policy. On the international scene he frequently participated in meetings focused on migration policy sponsored by agencies such as UNFPA, the World Bank, the International Organisation for Migration, and the Asian Development Bank. His reports for these agencies were highly influential. In 2009, with colleagues, he completed a study of Climate Change and Migration in Asia and the Pacific for the Asian Development Bank.

Hugo became a member of the International Union for the Scientific Study of Population (IUSSP) in 1977, and throughout his career actively contributed his expertise and time to IUSSP scientific groups and publications. He was also a Fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences (Australia), and a Member of the Institute of Australian Geographers, the Australian Population Association, the Australian Association of Gerontology, the Royal Geographical Society of Australasia, and the Population Association of America. Hugo gave very valuable service to Geography as Chair of the ARC’s Expert Advisory Committee on the Social, Behavioral and Economic Sciences between 2000 and 2004.

In 2006, Hugo was an inaugural recipient of Flinders University’s Distinguished Alumnus Award for his vast contributions to academia as a teacher, researcher and author; for his distinguished service to population growth, migration and ageing; and through various leadership and advisory roles, including service to government agencies and international organisations.

This was followed in 2012 by the highest honor of the Order of Australia (AO) ‘for distinguished service to population research, particularly the study of international migration, population geography and mobility, and through leadership roles with national and international organisations.’

He was also recognized within the discipline in 2014 with the Australia-International Medal of the Institute of Australian Geographers in recognition of his outstanding contribution to the advancement of geography worldwide.

Hugo was one of the most distinguished, dedicated and productive geographers that Australia has ever seen, and considered the leading expert on population migration in the Asia-Pacific region. He was internationally respected for the depth of his knowledge, yet also made a significant contribution to the real world beyond academia’s ivory towers. He was an inspiration to many generations of students, and a much-loved friend and colleague known for being genuine, kind, and generous.

Graeme leaves behind his partner Sharon, daughter Justine, step-daughters Melissa and Emily, and two faithful dogs, Jesse and Tyler.

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Elizabeth A. Frederic

Elizabeth “Liz” A. Frederic, a leader in environmental education, passed away on January 11, 2015, aged 73, after a struggle with illness.

Frederic was born in 1941 in Long Island City, NY, and grew up in Floral Park, NY. She earned four college degrees: B.S. in Home Economics from State University of New York at Oneonta, B.A. in Geography from University of Maine at Farmington, M.A. in Nutrition from New York University, and M.A. in Geography from University of Connecticut.

She had a varied early career which included teaching home economics in Greenlawn, NY, working as a social services consultant for New York City, being a day care inspector in Nassau County, NY, and acting as office manager for her first husband’s chiropractic practice in Skowhegan, ME.

From 1994 to 2003, Frederic worked as adjunct geography faculty at the University of Maine at Farmington. During this time, she was Education Coordinator for the Maine Association of Conservation Districts and developed and strengthened the Envirothon Program for high school students. Her work in conservation and environmental education was recognized in 2001 when she received the Outstanding Forest Stewardship Award from the Maine Forest Service.

Meanwhile Frederic was a member of the Association of American Geographers and the New England–St. Lawrence Valley Geographical Society, and served as Maine Geographic Alliance Advisor. She also owned Liz Maps, a cartography business, and published many maps.

She loved to travel, both for work and pleasure, visiting Cuba, the Caribbean, southern Africa, China, Mongolia, Vietnam, Europe and North America. She spent time at the University of Namibia and Beijing University of Technology acting as teaching assistant for her second husband. She participated in academic conferences around the world, presenting on topics as diverse as the reuse of dairy barns, water quality and African land ownership. Her professional publications were also varied, including work on the Cuban sugar industry, grazing systems in Namibia and Mongolia, and natural resource related education in Maine.

Closer to home, Frederic was a great supporter of community organizations and activities ranging from the state fair and cub scouts to the library and women’s club. She also loved gardening, cooking, reading, and time with the family.

Liz lived life as an adventure and will be missed by all who knew her. She is survived by her second husband, Dr. Paul Frederic, son Bradford Anderson, three step-children, and several step-grandchildren and step-great-grandchildren.

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Harley E. Johansen

Harley E. Johansen, Chair of the Geography Department at the University of Idaho for 30 years, will be both remembered for his scholarly work on rural development and departmental accomplishments which culminated in 2010 with the National Academy of Sciences ranking the graduate program among the top 20 geography doctoral programs in the nation, and as the top small department program.

He was born and raised on his parent’s dairy farm in Wisconsin, lived in state until the completion of his PhD from the Geography Department at the University of Wisconsin-Madison in 1974. He accepted a position at West Virginia University and in 1981 he was hired as Chair at the University of Idaho.

Harley proceeded to slowly and deliberately build the department, hiring new faculty, and over the span of his tenure encouraging the department to change and adapt with the times. He encouraged the early addition of GIS courses, adding support faculty necessary in that area, then the creation of the first Certificate Program at the university, which was in GIS.

The department had a Master’s Program when Harley arrived. He spearheaded the development of a PhD program which was reviewed and recommended by an outside committee of eminent geographers, and graduated its first PhD student in 1991. The next major shift in the department initiated by Harley was the hiring of physical geographers with a specific focus on climate change.

Harley’s own research work expanded geographically, though he remained rooted in understanding and expanding our knowledge of the process of rural development. Later his focus expanded to, at first, the Post-Soviet transition, and then most recently the impact of climate change on communities in the northern latitudes of Europe and Russia. In carrying out his evolving research agenda he was awarded a variety of grants over the years, notably nine from the National Science Foundation. Harley’s research and teaching was rewarded with four Fulbright Scholar or Senior Specialist Awards to Finland, Russia, and Macedonia. In Macedonia he developed a curriculum for a new university-level school in Skopje. He also conducted research in Denmark, Norway, Sweden and the Baltic countries, especially Estonia.

In 1984 he co-published a now classic book, The Changing Rural Village in America: Demographic and Economic Trends Since 1950 with rural sociologist Glenn Fuguitt, who had been one of his major PhD advisors at Madison. In 1987 he was the lead co-editor of the book Mineral Resource Development: Geopolitics, Economics, and Policy. He continued to publish book chapters and articles, individually and with colleagues, in diverse journals such as Annals of the Association of American Geographers, Business Geographics, Environment and Planning A, Eurasian Geography and Economics, Geografiska Annaler, Journal of Balkan and Near East Studies, Rural Development Perspectives, Rural Sociology, Western Wildlands and most recently Polar Geography in his expanding interests. Harley also attracted the attention of the international press for his work on the Post-Soviet transition and was invited to publish periodically in the Financial Times of London.

His most recent Barents Project initiated in 2012 was on climate adaption policies in Murmansk above the Arctic Circle, published in 2013 with Liza Skryzhevska in Polar Geography as “Adaption Priorities in Russia’s High North: Climate Change vs Post-Soviet Transition.” Harley believed strongly in field research and amazed us with the enthusiasm and obvious joy with which he would go to the coldest northern reaches of Norway or Finland in January or February, where he would drive around in a rental car interviewing people in communities undergoing climate change.

This past summer, even with illness, he joined another Finnish based group to do similar research for a diverse set of regions in Russia. A week before he died at 73 he was talking about developing another NSF grant and an article. Unfortunately, he contracted pneumonia when he was receiving treatment for myelodyplastic syndrome (MDS) after having had a full bone marrow transplant in Seattle, and for which he was dealing with myriad after-affects.

He is sorely missed by his colleagues, students and a multitude of friends around the world. There will be special sessions at the Chicago AAG meetings this April in his honor. Harley is survived by his wife, Nancy; his sister, Amy; his brother, Harry; his son, Peder; his daughter, Ingrid; and his young granddaughters, Johanna and Klara.

This article was reprinted with permission from the Department of Earth and Spatial Sciences, University of Idaho. 

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Florence M. Margai

The sudden passing of Florence M. Margai on January 8, 2015, is of great sadness to the AAG and the geography community. She was a great advocate for the use of geographic data and tools to identify and address health issues.

Margai was born and raised in Freetown, Sierra Leone. She graduated with a BA in Geography from Fourah Bay College in 1985 then moved to the US where she earned a MA (1987) and PhD (1991) in Geography from Kent State University, Ohio.

From 1991 to 1994 she taught in the Department of Geography and Geological Sciences at Hunter College. She then moved to the Department of Geography at Binghamton University. In addition to her active involvement in the department, she served as an Associate Dean since 2011 and Interim Director of the Institute of Global Cultural Studies since 2014.

Margai’s research and teaching centered around the Geographies of Health, particularly health disparities, environmental hazards, and environmental justice and equity. She also maintained an active interest in Africa, particularly her home region of West Africa.

The focus of her work was applied, utilizing geographic data and technologies to understand the spatial distribution of health disparities, particularly within marginalized communities, women, the elderly, and children. Research studies included malaria morbidity and treatment in West Africa, childhood health in Burkina Faso, linkages between lead poisoning and learning disabilities in US cities, and the distribution of hazardous substances in low-income and minority communities.

She also worked with several non-profit organizations in the US and Africa on the geographic targeting of vulnerable population groups for disease intervention and health promotional campaigns.

Margai’s extensive publication record included three books, the most recent of which was Environmental Health Hazards and Social Justice: Geographical Perspectives on Race and Class Disparities (Earthscan 2010). She also served as editor of the African Geographical Review.

She was actively involved in the AAG since becoming a member in 1987. Her contributions included serving as Chair of the African Specialty Group, organizing the first Race, Ethnicity, and Place Conference, and running one of the My Community, Our Earth workshops in Ghana in 2013. In 2014 she was elected to the Council and we were looking forward greatly to her further contributions to the work of the Association.

Florence leaves behind a husband, William, and two daughters, to whom we extend our most sincere condolences.

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C. Gregory Knight

Greg Knight, emeritus professor of geography at Penn State University, passed away on January 1, 2015, after a period of illness.

Knight received his bachelor’s degree from Dartmouth College (1963) followed by a master’s (1965) and PhD (1970) in geography both from the University of Minnesota. After a short appointment at the University of Kansas, he moved to Penn State University in 1971 where he remained until retirement in 2011.

His interests lay in human-environment interactions, specifically climate change, water resources, resource management, global environmental change, and sustainable development. He conducted extensive field research Africa (especially Tanzania and Nigeria) and Southeastern Europe (especially Bulgaria).

Among his early publications were the monograph Ecology and change: rural modernization in an African community (1974) and the edited volume Contemporary Africa: Geography and Change (1976). More recently he was among the editors of Integrated Regional Assessment of Global Climate Change (2009) and Global Environmental Change: Challenges to Science and Society in Southeastern Europe (2010).

Knight served as head of the geography department from 1982 to 1989. It was during this time that the GeoGraphics Laboratory was developed and its successors – the GeoVISTA and Gould Centers – are among the leading GIS/cartography centers in the country. It was also during his time as head that the graduate program was ranked second nationally and that three women were added to an all-male faculty.

He viewed his role as department head as someone helping to plant orchards that other colleagues could tend to maturity. He took great pride in the accomplishments of all the junior colleagues he brought to the department. In the early 1980s Knight was also editor of the AAG Resource Publications in Geography, providing an opportunity for many scholars to add a book to their vitae.

From 1989 to 1993, Knight held a university-level administrator position as Vice Provost and Dean for Undergraduate Education before returning to the College of Earth and Mineral Sciences to become associate director of the Earth Systems Science Center and founding director of the Center for Integrated Regional Assessment, an NSF-sponsored center of excellence on climate change impacts.

Greg leaves behind his wife, Marieta Staneva, also in the geography department at Penn State.

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Roger Tomlinson

Roger Tomlinson, often referred to as the “Father of GIS” was born in Cambridge, England in 1933, and received degrees in geography from Nottingham University in England and McGill University in Montreal, and a PhD from University College in London. After a stint in the Royal Air Force, he adopted Canadian citizenship and joined Canada’s government as a GIS developer in the early 1960s. In that position, he conducted a geographic analysis of Canada’s vast landbase, a major national need at the time.An outgrowth of that project in which he played the leading role was the development of the Canada Geographic Information System, widely regarded as the first serious GIS.

In his approach to Geographic Information Systems, Tomlinson has consistently stressed the idea that GIS begins with and is based on geography. He emphasized that the strength of the term GIS comes from its fundamentals: “The word “geography” is not going to go away. It has been in use for hundreds (some would say thousands) of years…It is clear to me that the overall process is that of earth description; in short, it is geography. It has been demonstrated beyond any refutation that geography matters in human decision making.”

His career focused on the development of major international GIS programs, ranging widely in geographic scope and content, but with a special emphasis on environmental protection, natural resources management, national parks, and forests. Throughout his impressive career in geography and GIS, Tomlinson served as a consultant to many governmental and international organizations, including the World Bank; several branches of the United Nations, including UNESCO, the FAO, UNIDO, and UNEP; the U.S. Departments of Commerce and Agriculture, the U.S. Geological Survey, the U.S. Forest Service, the U.S. Bureau of the Census; several U.S. state governments; and the national governments of Canada, the United Kingdom, France, Australia, and Sweden.

Roger also places enormous importance on geographic education, calling it a vital goal, and has long supported geography education at all levels of our schools and universities. He says that it was a high school geography teacher that first captured his imagination in the geography of the world around him, and led to his lifelong interest and pioneering career in the field.

Jack Dangermond, founder and president of Esri, sees Tomlinson as one of the great contributors to the origin and development of GIS. Regarding Tomlinson’s career, Jack commented:

“Roger has brought great distinction to our field by defining the basic and essential vision that GIS is both an extension of geographic science and a practical way to apply geographic knowledge to a whole world of applications. His work over the last three decades has also defined our field as a kind of profession with formal methodology for designing and implementing systems. Finally, Roger always makes me realize that GIS must first and foremost be focused on providing information that really matters (maps, reports, etc.) and that improves our sciences, processes, and decision making.”

Geographers and friends from around the world gathered to honor GIS pioneer Roger Tomlinson when he received the first Robert T. Aangeenbrug Distinguished Career Award on April 7, 2005, at the Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting in Denver. That inaugural award was formally bestowed at the AAG Banquet by the Association’s Geographic Information Science and Systems Specialty Group. The Distinguished Career Award is named after the late Dr. Robert Aangeenbrug, also an early leader in GIS and a contemporary of Roger Tomlinson.

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Joseph Sonnenfeld

Born in Manhattan just weeks before the great stock market crash of 1929, Joseph Sonnenfeld, Emeritus Professor of Geography, Texas A&M University, died in Colorado Springs in December 2014, at 85 years of age.

A foundational faculty member of departments of Geography at the University of Delaware and Texas A&M University, he was a pioneer of environmental perception and behavior studies, perhaps most well-known for his work on spatial orientation, sense of place, and Inupiat adaptation to social and environmental change in northern Alaska.

Educated in the New York City Public Schools, Sonnenfeld’s early aspiration was to become a veterinarian; this based on experiences at the Bronx Zoo and at a summer youth camp/ collective farm outside of the City. He undertook an extended, circuitous path towards realizing this goal. In the summer of 1946, with the announced end of the GI Bill weeks away, Sonnenfeld discontinued studies at the Bronx High School of Science, and, at 17 years of age (requiring parental consent), enlisted in the United States Marines Corps, believing military service to be a way he might be able to afford attending college.

Following basic training at Parris Island, South Carolina, in the fall of 1946, Sonnenfeld’s unit was assigned to duty at Camp Lejeune, North Carolina. There, requesting a transfer after being bullied by a fellow enlistee, he was given the choice of two overseas assignments: post-war Japan or the Aleutian Islands, part of the Alaskan Territory. He chose the latter, traveling to Adak Island to help protect a United States Navy submarine base, and later to Dutch Harbor, on Amaknak Island. Among his assignments at Dutch Harbor was accompanying an archeologist excavating the site of an early 1800s Russian Orthodox mission. Sonnenfeld was in the Aleutians (also at Kodiak Island) from 1947-49.

While in the Aleutians, he completed the high school equivalency exam, also earning credits towards a college degree. Upon honorable discharge as a corporal from the Marine Corps in 1949, Sonnenfeld enrolled first as a pre-Veterinary Science student at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; then transferred to Oregon State College, in Corvallis, to study Fish and Wildlife Science.[1] At Oregon State, it was Geography, however, notably a course in Regional Geography taught by Oliver Heintzelman, which piqued his interest. This led to a Bachelor’s degree (with honors) in Natural Resources, in 1952.[1] Sonnenfeld continued his education at the recently established Isaiah Bowman School of Geography, at Johns Hopkins University, in Baltimore. There he studied under economic geographer E. Francis Penrose; climatologist Douglas H. K. Lee; and cultural geographer George F. Carter, a former student of Carl Sauer, Robert Lowie, and Alfred Kroeber at the University of California at Berkeley.[1]

Taking advantage of Hopkins’ strong relationship with the Unites States Navy,[2] Sonnenfeld returned to Alaska in the spring and summer of 1954, under contract from the Office of Naval Research. There, he investigated whether Inupiat who had been working in petroleum exploration for Federal contractors would be able to return to traditional hunting and fishing subsistence activities when testing had been completed. His PhD dissertation, entitled “Changes in Subsistence Among the Barrow Eskimo,” was based on this study and completed in 1957.

Sonnenfeld’s first tenure-track faculty appointment was in the Department of Sociology, Anthropology, and Geography, at the University of Delaware, in 1955. In Newark, his departmental colleagues included fellow Hopkins geographer Edward Higbee; sociologists Arnold Feldman, Charles Tilly, and Irwin Goffman; and later, another Hopkins geographer, climatologist John “Russ” Mather.[3] Sonnenfeld returned to Alaska in the fall and winter of 1964-65, this time in cooperation with the Arctic Naval Research Laboratory, in Point Barrow. Geography came into its own as a department at the University of Delaware in 1966, with Russ Mather as chair.[4] [5] Altogether, Sonnenfeld was at Delaware for 13 years.

In 1968, Sonnenfeld rejoined George Carter at an expanding Texas A&M University, in its new College of Geosciences.[6] When a new department in Geography was proposed, various persons were considered for staffing the faculty. According to colleagues, Sonnenfeld was a natural for selection. Although he acknowledged the reality of the natural environment, he insisted that humans ‘discovered’ it through the senses, thus individuals’ decision-making was in relation to a perceived environment. This perceived environment was the one with which humans then made decisions about their own behaviors, with regards to it, hence the creation of a ‘behavioral environment’. Horace R. Byers, A&M’s new dean of geosciences, recognized this immediately, after Carter suggested his name to him. Initially, five faculty were hired to constitute A&M’s Geography department, including also Clarissa Kimber, Ben L. Everitt, and Edwin B. Doran, Jr., who became the department’s first chair. In coming years, they were followed by Kenneth L. White, Robert S. Bednarz, Peter J. Hugill, Campbell W. Pennington, and others.

One of Sonnenfeld’s signal contributions was a 1972 paper on “Geography, Perception, and the Behavioral Environment,” in which he classified the human behavioral environment as consisting of geographical, operational, perceptual, and behavioral elements.[7] Considered innovative, this was required reading in courses in behavioral geography. During the 1980s, he became interested in physiological dimensions of spatial orientation, working across the disciplines with medical researchers and psychologists. He developed a particularly close and stimulating professional relationship with James D. Frost, Jr., MD, a neurologist at the Baylor College of Medicine, in Houston, who had helped develop a portable electroencephalograph machine for the National Aeronautical and Aerospace Agency (NASA).[1] Sonnenfeld was eager to explore the unit’s usefulness in scientific field research.

In 1991, in what he considered a peak achievement, Sonnenfeld received a National Science Foundation grant to return to the far north of Alaska to conduct in-depth interviews on environmental perception, sense of place, and spatial orientation of Inupiat in three villages he had worked in previously, Barrow, Wainwright, and Anaktuvuk Pass, including a few whom he had interviewed in the mid-1950s, forty years earlier. Retiring early from Texas A&M, in 1993, Sonnenfeld moved to Port Angeles, Washington, to continue working on his Alaska study. That effort remained a major focus for over two decades, even after his move to Colorado Springs, in 2006. By the time of his death, the book manuscript, with the working title, “Arctic Wayfinders: Inupiat Travel Behaviors and Travel Environments in Northern Alaska,” had grown to more than twenty chapters; at the time of this writing, it remains unpublished.

At A&M, Sonnenfeld taught courses in Behavioral Geography and Economic Geography. Later, he was asked to engage with students’ increasing awareness of environmental issues and help develop a new undergraduate option with a professional focus on environmental concerns, building on the College’s strengths in the environmental sciences. This became the Environmental Studies Option in Geography, which included foundation courses in Geography together with courses from other departments. He and Kimber team-taught the introductory course for several years as the Option got established.[8] Sonnenfeld’s graduate students at A&M researched topics such as sense of place, environmental perception, and spatial orientation.

Always supportive of human rights, Sonnenfeld recognized early after arriving at A&M that developing a positive environment for the institution’s newly co-educational student body was essential. He worked with others to develop policies and procedures to protect young women from harassment in campus life, including arguing for the establishment of the position of Dean of Women to advocate for women. When that effort failed, he helped establish a path for raising such concerns to the Dean of Students. Sonnenfeld was a frequent advisor on the subject of faculty governance to successive Deans of Faculties, contributing to the establishment of a Faculty Senate at A&M. He served as associate dean of the College of Geosciences, as well in occasional stints as acting department chair.

Sonnenfeld was an active, 50-year member of the Association of American Geographers; a life member of the American Association for the Advancement of Science; and a member, among others, of the International Association for Cross-Cultural Psychology, and the Society for Psychological Anthropology. He was a decades-long member of the Sigma Xi scientific honor society. He was active also in local civic affairs, chairing the Brazos County, Texas, chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union in the early 1970s.

He had a rich, if at times complicated, family life. The son of Jewish immigrants, he and his brother and sister grew up in a Yiddish-speaking, Orthodox household. His father, Rabbi Isaac L. Sonnenfeld, a shochet in a kosher slaughterhouse in New Jersey, had grown up in an Austro-Hungarian Jewish household in Jerusalem, first under the Ottoman Empire, then the British Protectorate. His mother, Mary (Goldhirsh) Sonnenfeld, a piano teacher, had emigrated with her parents from Galicia (today, part of Poland) to Philadelphia. Each day, following classes in the public schools, Sonnenfeld attended Hebrew day school in the afternoon. The Marine Corps was a major change from social world that he grew up in.

Sonnenfeld was married four times: twice to Valerie Wilmot (once in a civil marriage, and again in a religious ceremony officiated by his father), a Canadian biochemist whom he met at Oregon State; once to Carol Price, a graduate student in sociology he had met at Delaware; and lastly, to Liana Bisiani, an accountant and immigrant from Paris and Trieste, whom he met through friends at Texas A&M – their marriage endured more than thirty years, until his death.

As a youth, Sonnenfeld enjoyed singing in a choir, and playing stick-ball in the street. He was a competitive marksman in the Marines. In after-hours at Delaware, he frequented the paddleball courts with colleagues from across the campus. A son of the nation’s largest metropolis, the natural world held a special place in his heart. As a young man, nowhere had he perhaps felt so alone as overnight by himself in a hunting cabin on an Aleutian island. In Delaware and again in Texas he found solace in owning, maintaining, and traipsing on small wooded properties. He delighted, as well, in recreational and productive summer family retreats: in his Delaware days, to the Gatineau River, Quebec; Rehoboth Beach, Delaware; and Acadia National Park, Maine; later, from College Station, to the highlands of Durango, Mexico; the Oregon coast; and the town of Petersburg, on the Alaskan panhandle. In retirement, there was nothing better than walks in the lush, moist rainforest of the Olympic National Park, in Washington state; or among the striking, red sandstone megaliths of the ‘Garden of the Gods’, in Colorado Springs. In his final years, he especially took pleasure in gazing at the towering, snowy Pikes Peak, from the deck of his home.

He is survived by three sons (with Valerie Wilmot), David A. Sonnenfeld, a sociologist; Michael J. Sonnenfeld, lawyer and finance sector executive; and William E. Sonnenfeld, an Aggie forester and forest industry analyst; their wives, and nine grandchildren. And by his wife, Liana Sonnenfeld; and her children by a prior marriage, Kristin (Robbins) Cruz, an architect; and Söndra (Robbins) Rymer, a professional photographer and illustrator; and their respective families.

 

Selected Bibliography [9]

Sonnenfeld, Joseph. 1957. “Changes in Subsistence Among the Barrow Eskimo.” Ph.D. dissertation, Geography, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, 561 pp.

Sonnenfeld, Joseph. 1960. “Changes in Eskimo Hunting Technology, an Introduction to Implement Geography,” Annals of the Association of American Geographers 50(2): 172-186.

Sonnenfeld, Joseph. 1966. “Variable Values in Space and Landscape: An Inquiry into the Nature of Environmental Necessity,” Journal of Social Issues 22(4): 71-82.

Sonnenfeld, Joseph. 1967. “Environmental Perception and Adaptation Level in the Arctic.” In Environmental Perception and Behavior, ed. David Lowenthal. Research Paper No. 109. University of Chicago.

Sonnenfeld, Joseph. 1969. “Equivalence and Distortion of the Perceptual Environment,” Environment and Behavior 1(1): 83-99.

Sonnenfeld, Joseph. 1969. “Personality and Behavior in Environment,” Proceedings of the Association of American Geographers 1: 136-140.

Sonnenfeld, Joseph. 1972. “Geography, Perception, and the Behavioral Environment.” Pp. 244-251 in Man, Space, and Environment: Concepts in Contemporary Human Geography, eds. P.W. English and R.C. Mayfield. New York: Oxford University Press.

Sonnenfeld, Joseph. 1982. “Egocentric Perspectives on Geographic Orientation,” Annals of the Association of American Geographers 72(1): 68-76.

Sonnenfeld, Joseph. 1994. “Way-Keeping, Way-Finding, and Way-Losing: Disorientation in a Complex Environment.” Pp. 374-386 in Re-reading Cultural Geography, eds. Kenneth E. Foote, Peter J. Hugill, Kent Mathewson, and Jonathan M. Smith. Austin: University of Texas Press.

Sonnenfeld, Joseph. 2002. “Social Dimensions of Geographic Disorientation in Arctic Alaska,” Études/ Inuit/ Studies 26(2): 157-173.

 

Notes 

[1] Interview by Maynard Weston Dow, Geographers on Film: Joseph Sonnenfeld, San Francisco, California, March 1994.

[2] See Neil Smith, American Empire: Roosevelt’s Geographer and the Prelude to Globalization. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2003, p. 264.

[3] Tilly went on to teach sociology and history at Michigan and Columbia, later becoming President of the American Sociological Association. Mather taught at Delaware for 39 years, serving as President of the Association of American Geographers in 1991.

[4] John A. Munroe, The University of Delaware: A History. Newark: University of Delaware, 1986, ch. 12. Available: https://www.udel.edu/PR/munroe/chapter12.html.

[5] Cort J. Willmott, “John Russell Mather, 1923-2003,” Annals of the Association of American Geographers 96 (2006) 660-665. Available: https://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-8306.2006.00711.x.

[6] Petroleum again played a role in Sonnenfeld’s academic fortunes. Texas’ Permanent University Fund, derived in part from oil revenue, was quite flush at the time and was used to finance major expansion of higher education across the state. See Vivian Elizabeth Smyrl, “Permanent University Fund,” Handbook of Texas Online. Denton, TX: Texas State Historical Association, 2010. Available: https://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/khp02.

[7] Joseph Sonnenfeld, “Geography, Perception, and the Behavioral Environment.” Pp. 244-251 in Man, Space and Environment, eds. P.W. English and R.C. Mayfield. New York: Oxford University Press, 1972.

[8] Clarissa Kimber and Peter J. Hugill, “Berkeley-on-the-Brazos and other pipe dreams: History of the Department of Geography at Texas A&M University,” Southwestern Geographer 4 (2000): 99-120. Available: https://geography.tamu.edu/pdfs/depart_history.pdf.

[9] For a more complete listing of Sonnenfeld’s works, see: https://tinyurl.com/pzqqvy7.

 


Written by David A. Sonnenfeld ([email protected]), with contributions from Clarissa Kimber, Professor Emerita, Texas A&M University; and Chang-Yi David Chang, Professor Emeritus, National Taiwan University. Thanks also to David Lowenthal, Professor Emeritus, University College London; David Cairns, Professor and Chair, Texas A&M University; Karen Riedel, Texas A&M University; David Coronado and Jenny Lunn, AAG; and Geoff Somnitz, Oregon State University Library.

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George Demko

George Demko, an internationally renowned geographer, academic, and PhD scholar has died at age 81 of natural causes.

Demko came from humble origins growing up with four siblings in the steel mining town of Catasauqua, PA. He served his country in the Marine Corps in the Korean War and earned a Purple Heart for his bravery. When he returned from Korea, he used the GI Bill to go to college and received his Bachelor’s Degree from West Chester State Teachers College. It was there he met his wife Jeanette Small. Demko was later inducted into the West Chester Athletics Hall of Fame for excellence in football.

Demko learned that education could radically alter the course of one’s life and he continued on to earn a PhD in Geography from Penn State University in 1964. While pursuing his PhD, he was accepted into a special International Exchange Program to study for a year at Moscow State University. Dr. and Mrs. Demko lived in the Soviet Union during some of the most intense days of the Cold War, including during the Bay of Pigs and the Cuban Missile Crisis.

Upon return from completing his studies overseas, he received a professional position in the geography department of Ohio State University. He taught undergraduate and graduate students for 18 years at OSU with brief teaching assignments at both the University of Hawaii and Hong Kong University. He also worked on projects for NASA, the World Bank and United Nations in population and demographic studies of less developed nations.

In the 1980s, he left academia for public service at the National Science Foundation and Federal Government in Washington, DC. He served as the Geographer of the United States in the Department of State, and helped develop the office’s integral cross-departmental mission. He also served as the President of the American Association of Geographers (AAG) from 1986-1987.

Demko returned to academia in 1989 as Director of the Rockefeller Center for Social Sciences at Dartmouth College and as professor of Geography. He launched the Prague Foreign Study Program, a joint program between Dartmouth and Charles University. He received the Gold Medal of Charles University for a lifetime of contributions to geographical knowledge and the promotion of international intellectual cooperation.

Demko was a Fellow of the American Geographical Society, a contributor to the Geographical Review and FOCUS on Geography magazine, and a member of the Board of Editors of FOCUS on Geography. He published many books and articles over a prolific lifetime of research. He was also a contributor to the mystery writing genre and published articles on mysterynet.com and hosted a blog Landscapes of Crime.

Over his lifetime in academia, his greatest achievement was the mentoring and influencing of thousands of students who carry his legacy with them today.

He is survived by his wife and lifelong cheerleader, Jeanette Demko, two daughters, Megan and Kerstin, and five grandsons.

Services will take place on November 22 at The Church of Saint Kevin, 200 West Sproul Road, Springfield, PA. Visitation will begin at 9 a.m. and a mass will be held at 11 a.m.

In lieu of flowers, the family has asked for donations to be made to the American Stroke Foundation in honor of George Demko.

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Peter Francis Fisher

Peter Francis Fisher, professor and chair of geographic information systems at the University of Leicester, has passed away. Peter was a prominent figure during the emersion of GIS and served at many academic institutions including Kingston Polytechnic (now Kingston University), Kent State University, City University, as well as the University of Leicester.

He received his degree in environmental science at the University of Lancaster in 1977, after which he received his MSc in pedology and soil survey from the University of Reading. Fisher also received his PhD from Kingston Polytechnic where he studied the plateau gravels of the western part of the London Basin.

His work in the 1980s consisted of research on expert systems and artificial intelligence that sought to automate human processes in the identification and mapping of landscape features. He also developed strong interest in the research on fuzzy sets. The concept of uncertainty in geographic phenomena was also a specialization of his where he looked at spatial data quality, virtual reality, and visualization of geographic information. Fisher critiqued the dangers of the ubiquity of GPS and questioned the impact of locational information on human rights. He was also very committed to peace and green movements.

He is survived by his wife, Jill, and three children, Beth, Kate, and Ian. Peter Fisher will be greatly missed by the many students and young researchers to which he assumed the role of a second father. Fisher taught all levels of students, from undergraduates to masters students, however most recently specifically requested the role of teaching introductory GIS to new students.

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