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Patricia L. Price

Patricia L. Price

Patricia L. Price is associate professor of geography at Florida International University. She earned her Ph.D. at the University of Washington. Connecting the long-standing theme of humanistic scholarship in geography to more recent critical approaches best describes her ongoing intellectual project. From her initial field research in Mexico, she has extended her focus to the border between Mexico and the United States and, most recently, to south Florida as a borderland of sorts. Recent field research is on comparative ethnic neighborhoods, conducted with colleagues and graduate students in Phoenix, Chicago, and Miami, and funded by the National Science Foundation. She is using this work to discuss the Latinos/as, neighborhood change, civic engagement, immigrant and exile landscapes, and critical geographies of race. Price is the author of Dry Place: Landscapes of Belonging and Exclusion (2004) and coeditor (with Tim Oakes) of The Cultural Geography Reader (2008).
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Books and Media by this Author

  • Displaying 1-2 of 2   
  • Available March 2014

    eBook Access Card for World Regional Geography without Subregions
    A W.H. Freeman Interactive e-Book

    Lydia Mihelic Pulsipher; Alex Pulsipher; Patricia L Price
    ©2014 | Sixth Edition
    ISBN-13: 9781464121296

    World Regional Geography eBook integrates a complete and customizable onlin .....[+]

            
  • Book Companion Site for Human Mosaic

    Terry G. Jordan-Bychkov, Mona Domosh, Roderick P. Neumann, Patricia L. Price
    ©2010 | Eleventh
    ISBN-13: 9781429229746

    Learn More | Go to Site
        
  • Displaying 1-2 of 2   

Patricia L. Price

Patricia L. Price

Patricia L. Price is associate professor of geography at Florida International University. She earned her Ph.D. at the University of Washington. Connecting the long-standing theme of humanistic scholarship in geography to more recent critical approaches best describes her ongoing intellectual project. From her initial field research in Mexico, she has extended her focus to the border between Mexico and the United States and, most recently, to south Florida as a borderland of sorts. Recent field research is on comparative ethnic neighborhoods, conducted with colleagues and graduate students in Phoenix, Chicago, and Miami, and funded by the National Science Foundation. She is using this work to discuss the Latinos/as, neighborhood change, civic engagement, immigrant and exile landscapes, and critical geographies of race. Price is the author of Dry Place: Landscapes of Belonging and Exclusion (2004) and coeditor (with Tim Oakes) of The Cultural Geography Reader (2008).