1.
Forgotten Ellis Island The Extraordinary Story of America’s Immigrant Hospital on Vimeo. (2012).
2.
Bulkeley, H. & Betsill, M. Cities and Climate Change. (Routledge, 2003).
3.
Extreme Cities: Climate Change and the Urban Future. (Verso, 2017).
4.
Clark, N. & Yusoff, K. Geosocial formations and the Anthropocene. Theory, Culture & Society 34, 3–23 (2017).
5.
Cronon, W. Uncommon Ground: Rethinking the Human Place in Nature. (W.W. Norton & Co, 1996).
6.
Gandy, M. Concrete and Clay: Reworking Nature in New York City. (MIT Press, 2002).
7.
The Plan for a Strong and Just City.
8.
Lewis, S. L. & Maslin, M. A. Human planet: How We Created the Anthropocene. vol. 20 (Pelican, 2018).
9.
Lorimer, J. Wildlife in the Anthropocene:Conservation after Nature. (Minneapolis, MN).
10.
Lowenhaupt Tsing, A., Swanson, H. A., Gan, E. & Bubandt, N. Arts of Living on a Damaged Planet. (University of Minnesota Press).
11.
Haraway, D. Primate Visions: Gender, Race, and Nature in the World of Modern Science. (Routledge, 1989).
12.
Haraway, D. Teddy bear patriarchy: Taxidermy in the garden of Eden, New York City, 1908-1936. Social Text (1984) doi:10.2307/466593.
13.
Yusoff, K. & Gabrys, J. Time lapses: Robert Smithson’s mobile landscapes. Cultural geographies 444–450 (2006).
14.
Wakefield, S. Inhabiting the Anthropocene back loop. 2, 77–94.
15.
Bullard, R. D. Overcoming Racism in Environmental Decisionmaking. Environment: Science and Policy for Sustainable Development 36, 10–44 (1994).
16.
Bullard, R. D. Dismantling environmental racism in the USA. Local Environment 4, 5–19 (1999).
17.
Byrne, J. A. & Wolch, J. Nature, race, and parks: past research and future directions for geographic research. Progress in human geography (2009).
18.
Collard, R.-C., Dempsey, J. & Sundberg, J. A Manifesto for Abundant Futures. Annals of the Association of American Geographers (2015).
19.
Cronon, W. Uncommon Ground: Rethinking the Human Place in Nature. (W.W. Norton & Co, 1996).
20.
Cronon, W. A Place for Stories: nature, history, and narrative. The Journal of American History 78, (1992).
21.
Harris, C. How did colonialism dispossess? Comments from an edge of empire. 94, 165–182.
22.
Hatuka, T., Rosen-Zvi, I., Birnhack, M., Toch, E. & Zur, H. The political premises of contemporary urban concepts: The global city, the sustainable city, the resilient city, the creative city, and the smart city. Planning Theory & Practice 19, 160–179 (2018).
23.
Heynen, Nik. Green urban political ecologies: toward a better understanding of inner-city environmental change. Environment and planning. A 499–516 (2006).
24.
Holifield, R. Defining Environmental Justice and Environmental Racism. Urban Geography 22, 78–90 (2001).
25.
Larsen, L. et al. Social justice and sustainability in poor neighborhoods. Journal of Planning Education and Research 34, 5–18 (2014).
26.
Morgensen, S. L. Theorising Gender, sexuality and settler colonialism: An introduction. Settler Colonial Studies 2, 2–22 (2012).
27.
Pearsall, H. & Pierce, J. Urban sustainability and environmental justice: evaluating the linkages in public planning/policy discourse. Local Environment 15, 569–580 (2010).
28.
Ranganathan, M. Thinking with flint: Racial liberalism and the roots of an American water tragedy. Capitalism Nature Socialism 27, 17–33 (2016).
29.
Simpson, Audra. From White into Red: Captivity Narratives as Alchemies of Race and Citizenship. American quarterly (2008).
30.
Andrea Smith. American Studies without America: Native Feminisms and the Nation-State. American Quarterly 60, (2008).
31.
Schmelzkopf, K. Incommensurability, Land Use, and the Right to Space: Community Gardens in New York City. Urban Geography 23, 323–343 (2002).
32.
Whitehead, Mark. The Wood for the Trees: Ordinary Environmental Injustice and the Everyday Right to Urban Nature. International journal of urban and regional research 662–681 (2009).
33.
Wolfe, P. Settler colonialism and the elimination of the native: Journal of Genocide Research: Vol 8, No 4. 8, 387–409.
34.
Gandy, M. Negative Luminescence. Annals of the American Association of Geographers 107, 1090–1107 (2017).
35.
Nye, D. E. Accident. in When the lights went out: a history of blackouts in America 67–103 (MIT Press).
36.
Tillett, L. Lighting Should Animate, and not Just Illuminate, the Dark - Metropolis. (2013).
37.
Tillett, L. Lessons from Sandy: Tactics for Lighting Cities Without Electricity. https://www.metropolismag.com/design/lighting/lessons-sandy-tactics-lighting-cities-without-electricity/ (2012).
38.
Bennett, J. The Agency of Assemblages and the North American Blackout. Public Culture 17, 445–466 (2005).
39.
Bennett, J. Vibrant matter: a political ecology of things. (Duke University Press, 2010).
40.
Luke, T. W. & 69, 55. Power loss or Blackout: The Electricity Network Collapse of August 2003 in North America. in Disrupted Cities (Routledge; 1 edition, 26AD).
41.
Yuill, C. Emotions after Dark - A Sociological Impression of the 2003 New York Blackout. Sociological Research Online 9, 1–8 (2004).
42.
Crary, J. 24/7: late capitalism and the ends of sleep. (Verso, 2014).
43.
Tim Edensor. From Light to Dark: Daylight, Illumination, and Gloom. (Univ Of Minnesota Press, 21AD).
44.
Professor John A. Jakle. City Lights: Illuminating the American Night (Landscapes of the Night). (The Johns Hopkins University Press).
45.
Isenstadt, S., Petty, M. M. & Neumann, D. Cities of Light: Two Centuries of Urban Illumination. (Routledge; 1 edition, 23AD).
46.
Nye, David E. Electrifying America: social meanings of a new technology, 1880-1940. in (MIT Press, 1990).
47.
Meier, J., Hasenöhrl, U., Krause, K. & Pottharst, M. Urban Lighting, Light Pollution and Society. (Routledge, 2014).
48.
Melbin, M. Night as Frontier: Colonizing the World After Dark. (The Free Press).
49.
Robert Shaw. The Nocturnal City (Routledge Research in Culture, Space and Identity). (Routledge; 1 edition, 20AD).
50.
Shaw, R. Night as Fragmenting Frontier: Understanding the Night that Remains in an era of. Geography Compass 9, 637–647 (2015).
51.
Braun, B. & Wakefield, S. Inhabiting the postapocalyptic city.
52.
Dawson, A. The Jargon of Resilience. in Extreme cities: the peril and promise of urban life in the age of climate change (Verso, 2017).
53.
Swyngedouw, E. Apocalypse Forever? Theory, Culture & Society 27, 213–232 (2010).
54.
E. Ann Kaplan. Introduction: Pretrauma Imaginaries: Theoretical Frames. in Climate Trauma: Foreseeing the Future in Dystopian Film and Fiction (Rutgers University Press, 30AD).
55.
Wakefield, S. Inhabiting the Anthropocene back loop. Resilience 6, 77–94 (2018).
56.
Anderson, B. What Kind of Thing is Resilience? Politics 35, 60–66 (2015).
57.
Braun, B. P. A New Urban Dispositif? Governing Life in an Age of Climate Change. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 32, 49–64 (2014).
58.
Bulkeley, H., Castán Broto, V. & Maassen, A. Low-carbon Transitions and the Reconfiguration of Urban Infrastructure. Urban Studies 51, 1471–1486 (2014).
59.
Eriksen, S. H., Nightingale, A. J. & Eakin, H. Reframing adaptation: The political nature of climate change adaptation. 35, 523–533.
60.
Luque-Ayala, A. & Marvin, S. Developing a critical understanding of smart urbanism? Urban Studies 52, 2105–2116 (2015).
61.
Wakefield, S. Infrastructures of liberal life: From modernity and progress to resilience and ruins. Geography Compass 12, (2018).
62.
Hinchliffe, S., Bingham, N., Allen, J. & Carter, S. Biosecurity and the diagramming of Disease. in Pathological Lives: Disease, Space and Biopolitics 25–52 (Wiley Blackwell, 2017).
63.
Fairchild, A. L. The Rise and Fall of the Medical Gaze: The Political Economy of Immigrant Medical Inspection in Modern America. Science in Context 19, (2006).
64.
BBC Radio 3, The Essay, Contagious Cities. https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m00019g0/episodes/guide.
65.
Contagious Cities: Cultural programming in a policy context. https://www.openaccessgovernment.org/contagious-cities/51838/.
66.
Fairchild, A. L., Bayer, R. & Colgrove, J. Searching Eyes: Privacy, the State and Disease Surveillance in America. (University of California Press, 2007).
67.
What means this thing called stigma? A response to Burris. Social Science and Medicine 67, (2008).
68.
Fairchild, A. L. Science at the borders: immigrant medical inspection and the shaping of the modern industrial labor force. (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2003).
69.
Craddock, S. Embodying Place: Pathologizing Chinese and Chinatown in Nineteenth-Century San Francisco. Antipode 31, 351–371 (1999).
70.
Dorn, M. & Laws, G. Social theory, body politics, and medical geography: extending Kearns’s invitation. The Professional Geographer 46, 106–110 (1994).
71.
France, D. How to Survive a Plague. (2014).
72.
McCormick, S. & Whitney, K. The making of public health emergencies: West Nile virus in New York City. Sociology of Health & Illness 35, 268–279 (2013).
73.
GOLDSTEIN, D. M. & HALL, K. Mass hysteria in Le Roy, New York: How brain experts materialized truth and outscienced environmental inquiry. American Ethnologist 42, 640–657 (2015).
74.
Colgrove, J. Between persuasion and compulsion: Smallpox control in Brooklyn and New York, 1894-1902. Bulletin of the History of Medicine 78, (2004).
75.
Craddock, S. Sewers and scapegoats: Spatial metaphors of smallpox in nineteenth century San Francisco. Social Science & Medicine 41, 957–968 (1995).
76.
Gould, P. The Slow Plague: A Geography of the AIDS Pandemic. (Blackwell Publishers, 1993).
77.
Hayes, C. West Nile Virus: Uganda, 1937, to New York City, 1999. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 951, 25–37 (2006).
78.
Mayer, J. D. Geography, ecology and emerging infectious diseases. Social Science and Medicine vol. 50 937–952 https://www-sciencedirect-com.ezproxy.library.qmul.ac.uk/science/article/pii/S0277953699003469 (2000).
79.
Lakoff, A. A fragile assemblage: Mutant bird flu and the limits of risk assessment. Social Studies of Science 47, 376–397 (2017).
80.
Barry, J. M. The Great Influenza: The Epic Story of the Deadliest Plague in History. (Viking, 2004).
81.
Collier, S. J. & Lakoff, A. Vital systems security: reflexive biopolitics and the government of emergency. Theory, Culture & Society 32, 19–51 (2015).
82.
Fearnley, Lyle. Signals come and go: syndromic surveillance and styles of biosecurity. Environment and planning. A 1615–1632 (2008).
83.
Lakoff, A. & Collier, S. J. Biosecurity Interventions: Global Health & Security in Question. (Columbia University Press, 2008).
84.
Pløger, J. Foucault’s dispositif and the city. Planning Theory 7, 51–70 (2008).
85.
Bayer, R. Stigma and the ethics of public health: Not can we but should we - ScienceDirect. Social Science and Medicine 67, 463–472 (2008).
86.
Alison  Bateman-House. Medical Examination of Immigrants at Ellis Island. AMA Journal of Ethics 10, 235–241.
87.
Lakoff, A. A fragile assemblage: Mutant bird flu and the limits of risk assessment. Social Studies of Science 47, 376–397 (2017).
88.
Lakoff, A. Unprepared: Global Health in a Time of Emergency. (University of California Press, 2017).
89.
Corburn, J. Toward the Healthy City: People, Places, and the Politics of Urban Planning. (MIT Press, 2009).
90.
de Blasio, B. Healthier neighbourhoods though healthier parks. The Lancet 38, 2850–2851 (2016).
91.
Lakoff, A. & Collier, S. Infrastructure and Event: The Political Technology of Preparedness. in Political Matter: Technoscience, Democracy and Public Life 243–266 (University of Minnesota Press, 2010).
92.
Gabrys, J. Programming Environments: Environmentality and Citizen Sensing in the Smart City. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 32, 30–48 (2014).
93.
Mattern, S. Instrumental City: The View from Hudson Yards, circa 2019. Places Journal (2016) doi:10.22269/160426.
94.
Feuer, M. The Mayor’s Geek Squad. (2013).
95.
Nicholas Mirzoeff. How to See the World. (Pelican, 2015).
96.
Anderson, B. Imagined Communities: Reflections on the Origin and Spread of Nationalism. (Verso, 2006).
97.
Miller, C. A. Civic Epistemologies: Constituting Knowledge and Order in Political Communities. Sociology Compass 2, 1896–1919 (2008).
98.
White, J. M. Anticipatory logics of the smart city’s global imaginary. Urban Geography 37, 572–589 (2016).
99.
Hatuka, T., Rosen-Zvi, I., Birnhack, M., Toch, E. & Zur, H. The political premises of contemporary urban concepts: The global city, the sustainable city, the resilient city, the creative city, and the smart city. Planning Theory & Practice 19, 160–179 (2018).
100.
Collard, R.-C., Dempsey, J. & Sundberg, J. A Manifesto for Abundant Futures. Annals of the Association of American Geographers (2015).
101.
McCann, E. Urban policy mobilities and global circuits of knowledge: toward a research agenda. Annals of the Association of American Geographers 101, 107–130 (2011).
102.
Mattern, S. Code and Clay, Data and Dirt: Five Thousand Years of Urban Media. (University of Minnesota Press).
103.
Kitchin, R. Making sense of smart cities: addressing present shortcomings. Cambridge Journal of Regions, Economy and Society 8, 131–136 (2015).
104.
Gabrys, J., Pritchard, H. & Barratt, B. Just good enough data: Figuring data citizenships through air pollution sensing and data stories. Big Data & Society 3, (2016).
105.
Kitchin, R. The Programmable City. Environment and Planning B: Planning and Design 38, 945–951 (2011).
106.
Perng, S.-Y. Code and the City. vol. 97 (Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group, 2016).
107.
Lakoff, A. Preparing for the next emergency. Public Culture 19, 247–271 (2007).
108.
Anderson, B. Preemption, precaution, preparedness: Anticipatory action and future geographies. Progress in Human Geography 34, 777–798 (2010).
109.
Lakoff, A. Preparing for the next emergency. Public Culture 19, 247–271 (2007).
110.
Amoore, L. The Politics of Possibility: Risk and Security Beyond Probability. (Duke University Press, 2013).
111.
Lakoff, A. & Klinenberg, E. Of risk and pork: urban security and the politics of objectivity. Theory and Society 39, (2010).
112.
Collier, S. J. & Lakoff, A. Distributed Preparedness: The Spatial Logic of Domestic Security in the United States. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 26, 7–28 (2008).
113.
Kinsley, S. Futures in the Making: Practices to Anticipate ‘Ubiquitous Computing’. Environment and Planning A 44, 1554–1569 (2012).
114.
Kitchin, R. & Dodge, M. The (In)Security of Smart Cities: Vulnerabilities, Risks, Mitigation, and Prevention. Journal of Urban Technology 1–19 (2017) doi:10.1080/10630732.2017.1408002.
115.
Gandy, M. Rethinking urban metabolism: water, space and the modern city. City 8, 363–379 (2010).
116.
Sallis et al., J. Use of science to guide city planning policy and practice: how to achieve healthy and sustainable future cities. The Lancet 388, (2016).
117.
Corburn, J. & Gottlieb, R. Street Science: Community Knowledge and Environmental Health Justice. (MIT Press, 2005).
118.
Acuto, M., Parnell, S. & Seto, K. C. Building a global urban science. Nature Sustainability 1, 2–4 (2018).