Environment and Planning A
1969 - 2025
Bibliographic data for series maintained by SAGE Publications ().
Access Statistics for this journal.
Is something missing from the series or not right? See the RePEc data check for the archive and series.
Volume 52, issue 8, 2020
- Central banks: Climate governors of last resort? pp. 1471-1479

- Paul Langley and John H Morris
- International remittance flows and the economic and social consequences of COVID-19 pp. 1480-1482

- Guy J. Abel and Stuart Gietel-Basten
- Where we are in fighting against COVID-19 pp. 1483-1486

- Xuebin Wei, Mingshu Wang and Menno-Jan Kraak
- Who is contributing? Scientific collaborations on COVID-19 pp. 1487-1489

- Dezhong Duan, Ying Chen and Yang Zhang
- FinTech, economy and space: Introduction to the special issue pp. 1490-1497

- Eric Knight and Dariusz Wójcik
- Banking on refugees: Racialized expropriation in the fintech era pp. 1498-1515

- Ali Bhagat and Leanne Roderick
- Strategic coupling between finance, technology and the state: Cultivating a Fintech ecosystem for incumbent finance pp. 1516-1538

- Reijer Hendrikse, Michiel van Meeteren and David Bassens
- The impact of Brexit on London’s entrepreneurial ecosystem: The case of the FinTech industry pp. 1539-1559

- Franziska Sohns and Dariusz Wójcik
- Initial coin offerings: Linking technology and financialization pp. 1560-1582

- Matthew Zook and Michael Grote
- Performing the city-region: Imagineering, devolution and the search for legitimacy pp. 1583-1601

- Charlotte Hoole and Stephen Hincks
- Counter-institutionalizing First Nation–Crown relations in British Columbia pp. 1602-1621

- Anthony W. Persaud, Terre Satterfield and Eliana Macdonald
- The unlikely revival of private renting in Amsterdam: Re-regulating a regulated housing market pp. 1622-1642

- Cody Hochstenbach and Richard Ronald
- ‘I’m my own boss…’: Active intermediation and ‘entrepreneurial’ worker agency in the Australian gig-economy pp. 1643-1661

- Tom Barratt, Caleb Goods and Alex Veen
- The geographies of the institutional and industrial constraints on the financialization of German brewing pp. 1662-1680

- Liam Keenan
- Motives for foreign direct investment location in Europe and EU enlargement pp. 1681-1699

- Jonathan Jones, Ilona Serwicka and Colin Wren
- Corporate social responsibility: A supplier-centered perspective pp. 1700-1709

- Peter Lund-Thomsen
Volume 52, issue 7, 2020
- Visualising the scales of ethnic diversity in London using a multilevel entropy index pp. 1239-1242

- Richard Harris
- The geographical network of international migration pp. 1243-1245

- Aron Kincses and Géza Tóth
- How international are geography journals? Not international enough pp. 1246-1249

- Nadja Imhof and Martin Müller
- Platform mobilities and the production of urban space: Toward a typology of platformization trajectories pp. 1250-1268

- John Stehlin, Michael Hodson and Andrew McMeekin
- Hidden transcripts of the gig economy: labour agency and the new art of resistance among African gig workers pp. 1269-1291

- Mohammad Amir Anwar and Mark Graham
- ‘I have so little time […] I got shit I need to do’: Critical perspectives on making and sharing in Manchester’s FabLab pp. 1292-1312

- Jennifer Johns and Sarah Marie Hall
- Segmenting the city: McDonald’s, the Metro, and the mobilization of the middle classes underground pp. 1313-1331

- Bruce O’Neill
- Explaining the urban premium in Chinese cities and the role of place-based policies pp. 1332-1356

- Anthony Howell, Chong Liu and Rudai Yang
- Workplace, emotional bonds and agency: Everyday gendered experiences of work in an export processing zone in Tamil Nadu, India pp. 1357-1374

- Madhumita Dutta
- Efficiency in waste collection markets: Changing relationships between firms, informal workers, and the state in urban India pp. 1375-1394

- Aman Luthra
- Bridging the gap between geographic concept and the data we have: The case of labor markets in the USA pp. 1395-1414

- Christopher S Fowler and Leif Jensen
- Standards and SSOs in the contested widening and deepening of financial markets: The arrival of Green Municipal Bonds in Mexico City pp. 1415-1433

- Hanna Hilbrandt and Monika Grubbauer
- Disentangling the Brexit vote: The role of economic, social and cultural contexts in explaining the UK’s EU referendum vote pp. 1434-1456

- Maria Abreu and Özge Öner
- Feminist economic geography and the future of work pp. 1457-1468

- Emily Reid-Musson, Daniel Cockayne, Lia Frederiksen and Nancy Worth
Volume 52, issue 6, 2020
- Regional voting dynamics in Europe: The rise of anti-elite and anti-European parties pp. 1019-1022

- Chiara Ferrante and Nicola Pontarollo
- Upset diagrams for examining whether parking maximums influence modal choice and car holdings pp. 1023-1026

- Anthony Kimpton
- Understanding neighborhood isolation through spatial interaction network analysis using location big data pp. 1027-1031

- Timothy Prestby, Joseph App, Yuhao Kang and Song Gao
- Rationality and coordination: Visualizing highway network in Sichuan, China pp. 1032-1036

- Wenjie Sun, Sijing Liu, LuLu Zhu and Guoqi Li
- New energy spaces: Towards a geographical political economy of energy transition pp. 1037-1050

- Gavin Bridge and Ludger Gailing
- Energy landscapes in Mozambique: The role of the extractive industries in a post-conflict environment pp. 1051-1071

- Joshua Kirshner, Vanesa Castán Broto and Idalina Baptista
- Just cuts for fossil fuels? Supply-side carbon constraints and energy transition pp. 1072-1092

- Philippe Le Billon and Berit Kristoffersen
- Energy democracy as the right to the city: Urban energy struggles in Berlin and London pp. 1093-1111

- Sören Becker, James Angel and Matthias Naumann
- Socio-spatial dimensions in energy transitions: Applying the TPSN framework to case studies in Germany pp. 1112-1130

- Ludger Gailing, Andrea Bues, Kristine Kern and Andreas Röhring
- The real estate risk fix: Residential insurance-linked securitization in the Florida metropolis pp. 1131-1149

- Zac J. Taylor
- Urban commoning practices in the repair movement: Frontstaging the backstage pp. 1150-1170

- MarÃa José Zapata Campos, Patrik Zapata and Isabel Ordoñez
- Re-grounding the city with Polanyi: From urban entrepreneurialism to entrepreneurial municipalism pp. 1171-1194

- Matthew Thompson, Vicky Nowak, Alan Southern, Jackie Davies and Peter Furmedge
- Global cities, creative industries and their representation on social media: A micro-data analysis of Twitter data on the fashion industry pp. 1195-1220

- Patrizia Casadei and Neil Lee
- The geographies of intermediation: Labor intermediaries, labor migration, and cane harvesting in rural western India pp. 1221-1236

- Pronoy Rai
Volume 52, issue 5, 2020
- Visualising urban gentrification and displacement in Greater London pp. 819-824

- Yuerong Zhang, Karen Chapple, Mengqiu Cao, Adam Dennett and Duncan Smith
- Mapping the distribution of foreign applications for patents in China, 1987–2017 pp. 825-828

- Feng Shi, Yingcheng Li and Weiting Xiong
- Educational attainment and the Brexit vote pp. 829-832

- Robert Calvert Jump and Jo Michell
- Using position, angle and thickness to expose the shifting geographies of the 2019 UK general election pp. 833-836

- Roger Beecham
- The story of property: Meditations on gentrification, renaming, and possibility pp. 837-855

- Rachel Brahinsky
- Making a market for itself: The emergent financialization of student housing in Canada pp. 856-877

- Nick Revington and Martine August
- Demystifying “localness†of infrastructure assets: Crowdfunders as local intermediaries for global investors pp. 878-897

- Kate Gasparro and Ashby Monk
- An innovative resilience approach: Financial self-help groups in contemporary financial landscapes in the Netherlands pp. 898-915

- Julie-Marthe Lehmann and Peer Smets
- The other side of coastal towns: Young men’s precarious lives on the margins of England pp. 916-932

- Linda McDowell and Carl Bonner-Thompson
- Effect of regional skill gaps and skill shortages on firm productivity pp. 933-952

- David Morris, Enrico Vanino and Carlo Corradini
- Let’s stick together: Labor market effects from immigrant neighborhood clustering pp. 953-980

- José Lobo and Charlotta Mellander
- Urban government capacity and economic performance: An analysis of Chinese cities pp. 981-1004

- Jiejing Wang
- Uber-production: From global networks to digital platforms pp. 1005-1016

- Gernot Grabher and Erwin van Tuijl
Volume 52, issue 4, 2020
- What’s next? Trump, Johnson, and globalizing capitalism pp. 679-687

- Eric Sheppard
- Fighting coronavirus at home: Visualizing “slammers†for the extended Spring Festival break in China pp. 688-690

- Jiangping Zhou and Yuling Yang
- Mapping the changing Internet attention to the spread of coronavirus disease 2019 in China pp. 691-694

- Hong Zhang, Yanyu Chen, Peichao Gao and Zhiwei Wu
- Should internal migrants be held accountable for spreading COVID-19? pp. 695-697

- Qiujie Shi and Tao Liu
- Visualising the expansion and spread of coronavirus disease 2019 by cartograms pp. 698-701

- Peichao Gao, Hong Zhang, Zhiwei Wu and Jicheng Wang
- Visualizing the evolution of per capita carbon emissions of Chinese cities, 2001–2016 pp. 702-706

- Weiting Xiong, Zhicheng Liu, Shaojian Wang and Yingcheng Li
- One-sided or two-sided love? Visualizing connections between metro station pairs in Beijing pp. 707-709

- Yuling Yang, Hanxi Ma and Jiangping Zhou
- Answers to questions on uncertainty in geography: Old lessons and new scenario tools pp. 710-727

- James Derbyshire
- Underinsurance as adaptation: Household agency in places of marketisation and financialisation pp. 728-746

- Kate Booth and Dave Kendal
- The limits to openness: Co-working, design and social innovation in the neoliberal city pp. 747-765

- Colin Lorne
- The ‘factory manager dilemma’: Purchasing practices and environmental upgrading in apparel global value chains pp. 766-789

- Mahwish J Khan, Stefano Ponte and Peter Lund-Thomsen
- Book symposium: Pike et al.’s Financialising City Statecraft and Infrastructure pp. 790-813

- N/a
Volume 52, issue 3, 2020
- Sensing global tourism numbers with millions of publicly shared online photographs pp. 471-477

- Tobias Preis, Federico Botta and Helen Susannah Moat
- Regional delineation of China based on commuting flows pp. 478-482

- Xiaoyan Mu and Anthony Gar-On Yeh
- Urban entrepreneurialism 2.0 or the becoming south of the urban world pp. 483-489

- Ugo Rossi and June Wang
- The environmentalization of urban entrepreneurialism: From technopolis to start-up city pp. 490-509

- Anthony M Levenda and Eliot Tretter
- Social factory as prosaic state space: Redefining labour in China’s mass innovation/mass entrepreneurship campaign pp. 510-531

- June Wang and Yujing Tan
- The start-up state: Governing urbanised capitalism pp. 532-552

- Sami Moisio and Ugo Rossi
- Selling black places on Airbnb: Colonial discourse and the marketing of black communities in New York City pp. 553-572

- Petter Törnberg and Letizia Chiappini
- Architectures of millennial development: Entrepreneurship and spatial justice at the bottom of the pyramid in Cape Town pp. 573-592

- Andrea Pollio
- ‘Stand back and watch us’: Post-capitalist practices in the maker movement pp. 593-610

- Thomas S.J. Smith
- Reading risk: The practices, limits and politics of municipal bond rating pp. 611-631

- Mikael Omstedt
- The state project of crisis management: China’s Shantytown Redevelopment Schemes under state-led financialization pp. 632-653

- Shenjing He, Mengzhu Zhang and Zongcai Wei
- Commercial Counterurbanisation: A driving force in rural economic development pp. 654-674

- Gary Bosworth and Hanne Bat Finke
Volume 52, issue 2, 2020
- Reverse traffic flows: Visualizing a new trend in Spring Festival travel rush in China pp. 251-254

- Zhenxuan Yin, Linxin Ouyang and Wang De
- Visit Britain: Differences in life expectancy by famous places and landmarks pp. 255-259

- Kingsley Purdam and Harry Taylor
- Visualizing disparities in park access for the elderly in Shanghai, China pp. 260-265

- Linxin Ouyang, Zhenxuan Yin and Wang De
- Comparing the relational work of developers pp. 266-276

- Richard Ballard and Siân Butcher
- Habitus, spatial capital and making place: Housing developers and the spatial praxis of Johannesburg’s inner-city regeneration pp. 277-296

- Aidan Mosselson
- Re-directing developers: New models of rental housing development to re-shape the post-apartheid city? pp. 297-317

- Alison Todes and Jennifer Robinson
- Land developers as institutional and postpolitical actors: Sites of power in land use policy and planning pp. 318-336

- Donald Leffers and Gerda R Wekerle
- Appropriating rent from greenfield affordable housing: developer practices in Johannesburg pp. 337-361

- Siân Butcher
- Complexity and coordination in London’s Silvertown Quays: How real estate developers (re)centred themselves in the planning process pp. 362-382

- Frances Brill
- Transnational urbanism interrupted: A Chinese developer’s attempts to secure approval to build the ‘New York of Africa’ at Modderfontein, Johannesburg pp. 383-402

- Richard Ballard and Philip Harrison
- Strategizing the for-profit city: The state, developers, and urban production in Mega Manila pp. 403-422

- Morgan Mouton and Gavin Shatkin
- Agglomeration and innovation: Selection or true effect? pp. 423-448

- Li Fang
- Online rental housing market representation and the digital reproduction of urban inequality pp. 449-468

- Geoff Boeing
Volume 52, issue 1, 2020
- Delta-shaped openness: Visualizing the foreign capital in mainland China pp. 3-5

- Ze Zhang and Tong Cai
- Mapping the topology of the air transport network in Turkey pp. 6-9

- Umut Erdem, K. Mert Cubukcu and Dimitrios Tsiotas
- Cities reshaped by Airbnb: A case study in New York City, Chicago, and Los Angeles pp. 10-13

- Junfeng Jiao and Shunhua Bai
- M/market frontiers pp. 14-26

- Christian Berndt, Norma M. Rantisi and Jamie Peck
- Market analysis beyond market fetishism pp. 27-45

- Damien Cahill
- (Re-)writing markets: Law and contested payment geographies pp. 46-65

- Shaina Potts
- This can(’t) be an asset class: The world of money management, “societyâ€, and the contested morality of farmland investments pp. 66-87

- Stefan Ouma
- Stretching scales? Risk and sociality in climate finance pp. 88-110

- Brett Christophers, Patrick Bigger and Leigh Johnson
- Bringing finance inside the state: How income-contingent loans blur the boundaries between debt and tax pp. 111-129

- Gareth Bryant and Ben Spies-Butcher
- The folds of social finance: Making markets, remaking the social pp. 130-147

- Paul Langley
- Open-display and the ‘re-agencing’ of the American economy: Lessons from a ‘pico-geography’ of grocery stores in the USA, 1922–1932 pp. 148-172

- Franck Cochoy
- Creating a gap that can be filled: Constructing and territorializing the affordable housing submarket in Gauteng, South Africa pp. 173-199

- Siân Butcher
- Marketization and development on a European periphery: From peasant oikos to socialism and neoliberal capitalism on the Danube-Tisza interfluve pp. 200-215

- Chris Hann
- Postneoliberalism as institutional recalibration: Reading Polanyi through Argentina’s soy boom pp. 216-236

- Christian Berndt, Marion Werner and VÃctor Ramiro Fernández
- Two icebergs: Difference in feminist political economy pp. 237-247

- Rosemary-Claire Collard and Jessica Dempsey
- Corrigendum pp. NP1-NP1

- N/a
- Corrigendum pp. NP2-NP2

- N/a
| |