1. Don Mitchell - On Culture… Don Mitchell; Rosati Clayton (2006): “The Globalization of ‘Culture’: Geography and the Industrial Production of Culture.” In: D. Conway; N. Heynan (eds.): Globalization’s Contradictions: Geographies of Discipline, Destruction, and Transformation. London: Routledge, 144-160. Mitchell, Don (2004): “Cultural Geography at the New Millennium: A Call to (Intellectual) Arms.” In: Journal of Cultural Geography 22 (1), 155-157. Mitchell, Don (2002): “Between Books and Streets, Between Home, Mall and Battlefield: The Politics and Pleasures of Cultural Geography” (Response to Critics). In: Antipode 34, 334339. Mitchell, Don (2001): “Culture is Not What it Used to Be: The Transformation of AngloAmerican Cultural Geography.” In: Jimbun-chiri (Japan) 53 (1), 36-53. Mitchell, Don (2000): Cultural Geography: A Critical Introduction. Oxford and Malden: Blackwell Publishers. Mitchell, Don (2000): “The End of Culture? Culturalism and Cultural Geography in the Anglo-American ‘University of Excellence’.” In: Geographische Revue 2 (2), 3-17. Mitchell, Don (1998): “Commentary: Winning a Battle in the Culture Wars.” In: Environment and Planning A 30, 1969-1971. Mitchell, Don (1996): “Explanation in Cultural Geography: A Reply to Cosgove, Jackson, and the Duncans.” In: Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, 580-582. Mitchell, Don (1995): “There’s No Such Thing as Culture: Towards a Reconceptualisation of the Idea of Culture in Geography.” In: Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 19, 102-116. 2. Kulturferneres: Mitchell, Don (2008): “Confessions of a Desk-Bound Radical.” In: Antipode 40, 448-454. Mitchell, Don (2008): “Which Side Are You On? From Haymarket to Now.” In: ACME 7, 59-68. Mitchell, Don (2008): “The Insidious Work of the University.” Human Geography 1, 1-11. Mitchell, Don (2005): “Landscape.” In: D. Sibley; P. Jackson; D. Atkinson; N. Washbourne (eds.): Cultural Geography: A Critical Dictionary of Key Ideas. London: I.B. Taurus, 48-56. Mitchell, Don (2005): “Working-Class Geographies: Capital, Space, and Place.” In: S. Linkon; J. Russo (eds.): The New Working-Class Studies. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 78-97. Staeheli, Lynn; Mitchell, Don: “Relevant/Esoteric.” In Paul Cloke et al (eds): Introducing Human Geography (2. Afl.). London: Arnold, 130-141. Mitchell, Don (2005): “You Who Are the Bureaucrats of Empire: Remember Who We Are.” In: Antipode 37, 203-207. Mitchell, Don (2004): “Geography in an Age of Extremes: A Blueprint for a Geography of Justice.” In: Annals of the Association of American Geographers 94, 764-770. Kirsch, Scott; Mitchell, Don (2004): “The Nature of Things: Dead Labor, Nonhuman Actors, and the Persistence of Marxism.” In: Antipode 36, 681-699. Mitchell, Don (2003): “Just Landscape or Landscapes of Justice?” (Progress Report) In: Progress in Human Geography 27, 813-822. Mitchell, Don (2003): “The Lure of the Local: Landscape studies at the End of a Violent Century” (Progress Report). In: Progress in Human Geography 25, 269-281. Kirsch, Scott; Mitchell, Don (1998): “Earth Moving as the ‘Measure of Man’: Edward Teller, Geographical Engineering, and the Matter of Progress.” In: Social Text 54, 100-134. Mitchell, Don (1993): “Public Housing in Single-Industry Towns: Changing Landscapes of Paternalism.” In: James Duncan; David Ley (eds.): Place/Culture/ Representation. New York: Routledge, S. 110-127. Editorial Work: Book Series Co-Editor, Rematerializing Cultural Geography, Ashgate Publishers, 2003-2006, 2008North American Editor, Ecumene, now Cultural Geographies, 1996-2002 Reviews: siehe CV 3. Nicht analysiert (Steht in seinem CV unter ‘On Culture, Geography, and General Trouble-Making’): On Landscape and Laborers: The Lie of the Land: Migrant Workers and the California Landscape (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1996). Kenneth Olwig and Don Mitchell (eds.) Justice, Power and the Political Landscape (London: Routledge, 2009) “Work, Struggle, Death, and Geographies of Justice: The Transformation of Landscape in and beyond California’s Imperial Valley,” Landscape Research 32(2007), 559-577 (Reprinted in Kenneth Olwig and Don Mitchell (eds.) Justice, Power and the Political Landscape (London, Routledge, 2009). “California Living, California Dying: Dead Labor and the Political Economy of Landscape,” in K. Anderson, S. Pile, and N. Thrift (eds.), Handbook of Cultural Geography (London: Sage, 2003), 233-248. “Landscape,” in D. Sibley, D. Atkinson, P. Jackson, and N. Washbourne (eds.), Critical Concepts in Cultural Geography (London: I.B. Taurus, forthcoming). “The Geography of Injustice: Borders and the Continuing Immiseration of California Agricultural Labor in an Era of ‘Free Trade,’” Richmond Journal of Global Law and Business (2002). “The Devil’s Arm: Points of Passage, Networks of Violence and the Political Economy of Landscape,” New Formations 43 (2001), 44-60. “The Scales of Justice: Localist Ideology, Large-Scale Production and Agricultural Labor’s Geography of Resistance in 1930s California,” in Andrew Herod (ed.), Organizing the Landscape: Geographical Perspectives on Labor Unionism (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1998). On Public Space, Radical Politics and Marginalized Peoples: Lynn Staeheli and Don Mitchell, The People’s Property? Power, Politics, and the Public (New York: Routledge, 2008) Don Mitchell, The Right to the City: Social Justice and the Fight for Public Space. Don Mitchell and Nik Heynen, “The Geography of Survival and the Right to the City: Speculations on Surveillance, Legal Innovation, and the Criminalization of Intervention,” Urban Geography (Forthcoming). Lynn Staeheli and Don Mitchell, “USA’s Destiny? Regulating Space and Creating Community in American Shopping Malls,” Urban Studies 43 (2006), 977-992. “Property Rights, the First Amendment, and Judicial Anti-Urbanism: The Strange Case of Hicks v. Virginia,” Urban Geography 26 (2006), 565-586. Don Mitchell and Lynn Staeheli, “Permitting Protest: Constructing – and Dismantling – the Geography of Dissent in the United States,” International Journal of Urban and Regional Research 29 (2005), 796-813 “The S.U.V. Model of Citizenship: Floating Bubbles, Buffer Zones, and the Rise of the ‘Purely Atomic’ Individual,” Political Geography 24 (2005), 77-100. The Right to the City: Social Justice and the Fight for Public Space (New York: Guilford, 2003).