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GREGORY KNAPP Department of Geography and the Environment The University of Texas at Austin 305 E. 23rd Street - A3100 – RLP (CLA) 3.712 Austin, TX 78712 - 1697 [email protected] orcid.org/0000-0002-1556-0006 CV last updated December 1, 2019 Education B.A., University of California, Berkeley, 1975 (Mathematics and Economics). M.S., University of Wisconsin-Madison, 1979 (Geography); Thesis: “The Sunken Fields of Chilca: Horticulture, Microenvironment, and History in the Peruvian Coastal Desert,” W.M. Denevan (Chair). Ph.D., University of Wisconsin-Madison, 1984 (Geography); Dissertation: “Soil, Slope, and Water in the Equatorial Andes: A Study of Prehistoric Agricultural Adaptation,” Committee: W.M. Denevan (Chair), with Frank Salomon, Francis Hole, Thomas Vale, Daniel Doeppers. Areas of Interest Adaptive dynamics, cultural landscapes, archaeology and sustainability of Andean agriculture; regional identities, ethnogeography, linguistic geography and ethnic territoriality; mapping; modernization as contextualized in historical cultural ecology and feminist political ecology; history of geographic thought; Latin America; Ecuador. Current Research Projects Food and Farming Departmental Research Initiative (with William Doolittle, Eugenio Arima, and Rebecca Torres), 2011- present. Recent and current research includes persistence of smallholder farms and gardens, with Katia Raquel Avilés-

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Page 1: minio.la.utexas.edu 12_01...  · Web viewGREGORY KNAPP. Department of Geography and the Environment . The University of Texas at Austin. 305 E. 23rd Street - A3100 – RLP (CLA)

GREGORY KNAPPDepartment of Geography and the Environment

The University of Texas at Austin305 E. 23rd Street - A3100 – RLP (CLA) 3.712

Austin, TX 78712 - [email protected]

orcid.org/0000-0002-1556-0006

CV last updated December 1, 2019

Education

B.A., University of California, Berkeley, 1975 (Mathematics and Economics).

M.S., University of Wisconsin-Madison, 1979 (Geography); Thesis: “The Sunken Fields of Chilca: Horticulture, Microenvironment, and History in the Peruvian Coastal Desert,” W.M. Denevan (Chair).

Ph.D., University of Wisconsin-Madison, 1984 (Geography); Dissertation: “Soil, Slope, and Water in the Equatorial Andes: A Study of Prehistoric Agricultural Adaptation,” Committee: W.M. Denevan (Chair), with Frank Salomon, Francis Hole, Thomas Vale, Daniel Doeppers.

Areas of Interest

Adaptive dynamics, cultural landscapes, archaeology and sustainability of Andean agriculture; regional identities, ethnogeography, linguistic geography and ethnic territoriality; mapping; modernization as contextualized in historical cultural ecology and feminist political ecology; history of geographic thought; Latin America; Ecuador.

Current Research Projects

Food and Farming Departmental Research Initiative (with William Doolittle, Eugenio Arima, and Rebecca Torres), 2011-present. Recent and current research includes persistence of smallholder farms and gardens, with Katia Raquel Avilés-Vázquez (Puerto Rico, 2006-2014), environmental services of small farms in Costa Rica (with Gregory Schwartz, 2012-2015), alternative farming in Texas (with Charlotte McClure, 2014-2015), foodways of Afro-American youth (with Naya Jones, 2011-2016), and the importance of land and resources for indigenous rights, with Ruth Matamoros (Nicaragua, 2017-present) and Jesús Nazario (2018-present).

Raised Fields, Floriculture, and Discourses of Tradition, Modernization and Sustainability in Ecuador, initiated summer 2014. Publications so far include refereed journal articles in the Annals of the American Association of Geographers, and the Journal of Latin American Geography. Recent collaborators include Sophie Fuchs (2016-2018).

Changing Language Map of Kichwa Speakers in Ecuador, initiated spring 2015. The

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most recent publication is a chapter in Stanley Brunn and Roland Kehrein, eds., The Changing World Language Map. This project is motivated by the significance of ethnolinguistic identities to global sustainability objectives, as well as the difficulty of obtaining geographic data to inform local development and education projects. It is grounded in earlier published work in the 1980s to map the Kichwa and other ethnolinguistic geographies in Ecuador, the Andes, and Latin America, over long term time scales.

Academic Positions

1982-1984. Instructor, Department of Geography, University of Wisconsin, Madison

1983. Instructor, Department of Geography, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities

1984. Instructor, Department of Geography, University of Wisconsin, Oshkosh

1984-1991. Assistant Professor, Department of Geography and the Environment, University of Texas at Austin

1991-present. Associate Professor, Department of Geography and the Environment, University of Texas at Austin

1996-2004. Chair, Department of Geography and the Environment, University of Texas at Austin (two consecutive full terms with commendation of Dean at end of second term).

2016-present. Faculty Director, B.A. in Sustainability Studies, and Chair, Sustainability Studies Faculty Advisory Committee, University of Texas at Austin

National and International Elected and Invited Positions

1984-1986. Elected Chair, Cultural Ecology Specialty Group of the Association of American Geographers (Subsequently renamed Cultural and Political Ecology Specialty Group).

1989. Program Chair, Conference of Latin Americanist Geographers Meeting in Querétaro, Mexico.

1989-2011. Member of Comité Académico, Breves Contribuciones del Instituto de Estudios Geográficos, Tucuman, Argentina.

1990-1993. Elected Member, Board of Directors, Conference of Latin Americanist Geographers.

1991-1993. Elected Member, Board of Directors, Latin American Specialty Group of the Association of American Geographers.

1992-1997. Executive Director, Conference of Latin Americanist Geographers.

1993-1995. Invited Program Reviewer, National Research Council Committee for the Study of Research-Doctorate Programs in the United States.

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1996-1997. Member, Program Committee, Annual Meeting of the Association of American Geographers.

1999-2001. Member of Advisory Panel for Geography and Regional Science Dissertations, National Science Foundation, Washington DC.

2002. Invited as Co-Evaluator (with Prof. Lawrence A. Brown) of proposal for new Ph.D. program in Geography at Oklahoma State University, for the Oklahoma State Regents for Higher Education.

2003-2004. Elected to National Nominating Committee, Association of American Geographers.

2010-present. Contributing Editor for Western South America (Geography), Handbook of Latin American Studies, Library of Congress.

2013-2016, 2016-2019, and 2019-2021. Elected Member, Board of Directors, History of Geography Specialty Group, American Association of Geographers.

2017-present. Member, Directorate of External Evaluators, Pontifical Catholic University of Peru, Lima.

2019.  Expert Reviewer for the First Order Draft (FOD) of the Working Group II (WGII) Contribution to the IPCC Sixth Assessment Report 

City and State Positions

Appointed member, Austin-Travis County Food Policy Council, 1995-1996.

Organizer, Meetings, Symposia, and Sessions

1985-1986. Organized and Chaired Cultural Ecology Specialty Group Meetings, Association of American Geographers, Detroit and Minneapolis.

1987. Organizer and field trip leader, Impactos Climáticos: Reunión de Divulgación de los Resultados, May 18-20, Chorlavi, Ecuador. Supported by United Nations University / United Nations Environmental Program / International Institute of Applied Systems Analysis grant.

1988. Chaired session, International Congress of Geography of the Americas, Lima, February.

1989. Organizer of symposium, “Cultural Adaptation at the Edge of the Spanish Empire: A Northern View,” Institute of Latin American Studies, April 14-15, 1989 (Austin).

1989. Chaired session and led field trip, Meeting of the Conference of Latin Americanist Geographers, Querétaro, Mexico, May.

1990. Organizer of symposium, “Cultural Adaptation at the Edge of the Spanish Empire: A Northern View,” February 16-17, 1990 (San Antonio) Supported in part by Institute of Texan Cultures (San Antonio) grant.

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1990. Organizer of symposium, “The Cultural Map of Spanish America: Data and Methods,” March 23 (Austin) [relocated from cancelled 1989 Latin American Studies Association Meeting]. The symposium was featured in the Latin American Population History Bulletin 17: 12-13 (1990).

1991. Organizer of symposium, “Cultural Adaptation at the Edge of the Spanish Empire”, February. (Austin). Supported by grants from Texas Endowment for the Humanities, Duffy Fund, and ILAS HEA funds.

1993-1997. Organized and Chaired Latin American Specialty Group / Conference of Latin American Geographers Specialty Group meetings, Association of American Geographers Annual Meetings at Atlanta, San Francisco, Chicago, Charlotte, and Fort Worth.

1992. Organizer of symposium (co-organizer with Municipal Archive of Saltillo, Mexico), “Encuentro Internacional sobre Adaptaciones Culturales y Cambios Ecologicos en el Norte de Mexico y Texas, Pasado y Presente” Saltillo, May 15-17, 1992.

1993. Organizer of symposium, “Life on the Corridor: Cultural Adaptation and Ecological Impacts in Texas and Mexico,” Austin, May 7-8, 1993. Supported by Ford Foundation grant.

1995. Organizer of symposium, “The Environment and the New Global Economic Order,” co-sponsored by CIBER, UT Asian Studies, Latin American Studies, Middle Eastern Studies, and post-Soviet studies, Austin, April 7-8, 1995, Knopf Room, Flawn Academic Center. Supported by grants from the sponsoring units.

1997-2003, Director, Colloquium Series of Department of Geography, University of Texas at Austin. Approximately 103 colloquia were organized.

1999. Co-organizer, “Ancient Cultures of Our World,” teacher conference, co-sponsored by Texas Council for the Humanities, UT Asian Studies, Latin American Studies, Middle Eastern Studies, and post-Soviet studies, Austin, June 28-July 2, 1999, Flawn Academic Center.

1999. Organizer of 50th Anniversary Celebration, UT Department of Geography, Town Lake, September 24.

2000. Organizer, International Meeting of the Conference of Latin Americanist Geographers, Austin, Texas, January 6-7, 2000.

2000. Organizer of session on The Strategically Relevant Environment, International Congress of the Latin American Studies Association, Miami, March 16-18.

2004. Organizer, Celebration of Partnership (Memorandum of Understanding) between Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center and Department of Geography and the Environment, Austin, Texas, May.

2016. Co-organizer (with Kent Mathewson), three paper and panel sessions, People, Biota and the Environment in Cultural History: Honoring Daniel Gade, Association of

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American Geographers (AAG) Annual Meeting, San Francisco March 29-April 2.

2017. Co-organizer (with William Doolittle) and Chair, The Legacy of Karl Butzer Beyond Physical Geography. American Association of Geographers (AAG) Annual Meeting, Boston, April 7.

Major External Research Grants

1980-1982. Fulbright and NSF Dissertation Improvement Grants, Ecuador, August 15, 1980 – April 16, 1982.

1986-1987. Fulbright-Hays Faculty Research Abroad Grant, Ecuador, Peru, Argentina, and Chile. August 1, 1986 – August 23, 1987.

2005-2006. Fulbright-Hays Faculty Research Abroad Grant, Ecuador. December 1-August 31.

In addition, six supervised doctoral students have received Fulbright grants, and two received NSF Dissertation Improvement Grants with Knapp as PI.

Other Honors and Awards

1970. Elected to Phi Beta Kappa, Alpha of California, University of California, Berkeley.

1975. Distinction in General Scholarship, University of California, Berkeley.

1994. Nominee for the Jean Holloway Award for Teaching Excellence in Liberal Arts or Natural Sciences, University of Texas at Austin.

1994 and 1995 Elected President, Phi Beta Kappa, Alpha of Texas chapter.

2004. Outstanding Service Award, Conference of Latin Americanist Geographers. See profile: Maria Elisa Christie, CLAG Outstanding Service Award for 2004: Gregory W. Knapp, Journal of Latin American Geography, Volume 3, Number 1, 2004, pp. 132-133. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/lag.2005.0004

2006. Profiled in Special Feature: Practicing Geographers, p.12 in T. Jordan-Bychkov et al., The Human Mosaic: A Thematic Introduction to Cultural Geography, New York: W.H. Freeman and Co.

2012. Recipient, "Dedicated Graduate Advisor" award by Department’s Graduate Student Association (was GAGS, now GAGE). November 16.

2013. Recipient, Grand Prize, Sustainability and Ethics Course Development Award competition, University of Texas at Austin. February 7.

2019. Recipient, Undergraduate Research Apprenticeship award, Spring 2019, College of Liberal Arts.

2019. Course selected for inclusion, Eyes on Teaching Event, Provost’s Teaching Fellows, February 12, 2019, University of Texas.

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2019-2020. Recipient, Rapoport-King Thesis Scholarship Supervisor Award. College of Liberal Arts, University of Texas.

2019-2020. Recipient, President’s Associates Teaching Excellence Award.

2020. Recipient, Preston E. James Eminent Latin Americanist Career Award. Conference of Latin American Geography (CLAG). “Given in recognition of a lifetime achievement towards the understanding of the geography of Latin America. Recipients will have strong career-long research contributions that build on the solid foundations of academic Latin American geography.”

International Field Experience with Funding Sources

1975-1976. Mexico, Belize and Guatemala (December 31-March 31). Field course in Culture and Environment, St. Mary’s College of California Office of Continuing Education.

1977. Peru (June 20-August 20) Master’s thesis research.

1979. Ecuador (May 29-August 26). Graduate summer field course in natural resources, taught in Spanish, Centro Panamericano de Estudios e Investigaciones Geográficas (CEPEIGE), Graduated "with distinction." Funded by Organization of American States Scholarship.

1980-1982. Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia (August 15-April 16). Research on adaptive dynamics funded by Fulbright Grant, NSF Dissertation Improvement Grant (co-P.I. William Denevan); Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation Fellowship.

1984. Ecuador (July 19-August 14) research on indigenous landscapes and ditched fields funded by Tinker Summer Field Research Grant.

1985. Ecuador (January19-28). Climate change project. Funded by International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis grant.

1985. Austria (March 30-April 7). Climate change project. Funded by UT Attendance at Professional Meetings and Brown-Lipton Account grants.

1985. Ecuador and Colombia (summer). Research on contemporary and prehistoric irrigation systems, attend Americanist Congress. Funded by University Research Institute, Research Grant and Summer Research Award, and Tinker Grant.

1985. Ecuador (November 2-12). Climate change project. International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis Grant.

1986. Mexico (January 4-13). Led graduate student field trip to study cultural landscapes.

1986. Mexico (March 22-29). Co-leader of faculty / graduate student field trip to Querétaro, Mexico.

1986-1987. Ecuador, Peru, Chile and Argentina (August 1-August 23). Research on soil management and ethnogeography funded by Fulbright-Hays Faculty Research Abroad

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Grant; also organized climate change meeting with funding from a United Nations University - United Nations Environmental Program - International Institute of Applied Systems Analysis grant.

1988. Mexico (March 17-26). Co-leader of faculty / graduate student field trip to Querétaro and Michoacán.

1988. Mexico (June 12-16). Northwestern Mexico to set up Culture and History Working Group agenda, research ethnic geography and censuses, funded by University Research Institute Summer Research Award and Mellon Grant.

1988. Amsterdam and Spain (July 5-20) to research ethnic geography and censuses in Seville and participate in Americanist Congress, funded by Summer Research Award and Mellon Grant.

1989. Mexico (May 18-29) for CLAG Queretaro meeting; led field trips to and from the meeting.

1991. Ecuador (July 10-August 1) research on cultural contexts of environmental movements, funded by U. of Texas Mellon Grant.

1992. Mexico (March 17-22) to work on preparing Saltillo conference.

1992. Mexico (May 14-19) for co-organized Saltillo conference on cultural adaptations in Texas and Mexico.

1992. Ecuador (July 8-August 2) to work with student (Jodi Vender) on environmental education, and to study impacts of oil development, funded by U. of Texas Zimmerman Grant.

1992. Dominican Republic (September 23-29) to attend CLAG meeting and study landscapes associated with Columbus.

1994. Venezuela (June 20-July 3) to study Pemón land and resource management in the Guiana highlands, with Ph.D. student Deborah Salazar, funded by U. of Texas Institute of Latin American Studies grant.

1994 Mexico (September 28-October 8) to manage and attend CLAG meeting in Ciudad Juarez and participate professional field trip to Sierra Madre Occidental via railroad.

1995. Honduras and Costa Rica (January 3-January 11) for CLAG meeting and professional field trips, and to meet with geographers at the University of Costa Rica.

1995. Ecuador (June 4-June 29) to study relationships between irrigation districts and environmental preserves, funded by U. of Texas Mellon Grant.

1995. England and Wales (July 21-August 13) to teach faculty-led study abroad field course on Mankind and Nature: The English Sense of Place; with Shane Davies.

1996. Guatemala and Nicaragua (May 14-25) to mentor doctoral students Juanita Sundberg (in the Petén, working on NGO landscapes) and Karl Offen (in Puerto Cabezas,

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working on ethnogeography).

1996. England and Wales (July 13-August 17) to teach faculty-led study abroad field course on The English Landscape; with Paul English.

1997. Ecuador and Peru (June 25-July 25). Research on volcanic impacts on raised fields in Ecuador, participation in Olaf Holm Colloquium and research workshop on Ecuadorian coast, research on landscapes near Arequipa, funded by U of Texas Mellon Grant and grant from Ecuadorian Central Bank.

1998. Ecuador (June 18-July 2) to study volcanic impacts on agriculture.

2000. Mexico (January) professional field trip related to preparing field trip for Austin CLAG meeting.

2000. South Korea and China (July 26-August 27) studying agricultural landscapes, funded in part by an AAG grant to attend IGU meeting and in part by Webb Chair funds.

2001. Spain (June 7-19) to attend CLAG meeting at Benicassim and participate in field trips studying cultural landscapes.

2002. England, Wales and France (July 14-August 16) to teach faculty-led study abroad field course on Nature and Society, with Shane Davies.

2002. Ecuador (August 31-September 8) to meet with local scholars on future collaborations.

2003. Nicaragua (March) studying Miskito forest management with Ph.D. student Mary Brook.

2003. England, Wales and and France (July 14-August 16) to teach faculty-led study abroad field course on Nature and Society, with Shane Davies.

2004. Guatemala (May 17-24) to attend CLAG meeting at Antigua and participate in professional field trips.

2005. Ecuador (February 22-March 8) to perform research on role of water in mountain agriculture. Funded by Dean’s Liberal Arts Proposal Award.

2005. Ecuador (June 7-July 12) to perform research on political ecology of water management, funded by U. of Texas LLILAS Trade Center Award, and Dean’s Liberal Arts Proposal Award.

2005. Mexico (October 24-30) to mentor doctoral student Cyrus Reed, studying discourses about water management in Chihuahua.

2005-2006. Ecuador (December 1-August 31) to perform research on agricultural change and floriculture, funded by Fulbright grant. This also included work on community-led tourism and conservation with student Maria Belén Noroña Salcedo.

2007. Ecuador (May 27-July 6) to perform research early ethnic mapping, agricultural

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modernization, and smallholders, funded by U. of Texas Mellon grant.

2009. Nicaragua (January 6-12) for CLAG conference and field trips related to adaptation to volcanoes.

2009. Argentina and Paraguay (July 18-26) to study urban issues and agricultural change and visit graduate student projects, funded by U. of Texas Signature Course grant.

2009. Ecuador (July 26-August 8) to study agriculture and irrigation, funded by U. of Texas Signature Course grant.

2010. Puerto Rico (March 15-20) to research smallholder agriculture with Ph.D. student Katia Aviles-Vasquez, funded by U. of Texas Signature Course grant.

2010. Colombia (May 21- June 1) to participate in CLAG Bogotá conference and field trips, including floriculture field trip.

2011. Argentina (June 7-22) to research cultural landscapes of northwest Argentina and develop future faculty-led study abroad courses; funded by U. of Texas Study Abroad Office.

2012. Argentina, Uruguay, and Bolivia (May 20-July 13), to teach a faculty led study abroad course on nature, society and sustainability, and perform research on cultural landscapes.

2013. Ecuador (June 11-July 9) to research sustainability discourses and international education, funded by U. of Texas Sustainability and Ethics Course Conversion Award from the Office of Sustainability.

2014. Panama (January 6-12) to attend CLAG conference and participate in professional field trips.

2014. Argentina and Uruguay (May 21- July 5) to study urban agriculture, resource management, and sustainability issues (while teaching faculty-led study abroad course).

2014. Ecuador (July 10-August 19) to research agricultural change funded by University of Texas Mellon Grant.

2015. Ecuador and Peru (June 3-August 15), to teach faculty-led study abroad course (June 3-July 3), and perform research on agricultural and ethnic change (July 3-August 15). Funding: University of Texas Signature Course grant.

2016. Ecuador (June 1-July 17) to teach faculty-led study abroad course (June 1-July 1) and perform research on agriculture and linguistic geography. Funding: University of Texas Signature Course grant.

2017. Ecuador (May 31-July 29) to teach faculty-led study abroad course (May 31-June 30) and perform research on agricultural change. Funding: University of Texas Signature Course grant and Sustainability Program funds.

2018 Costa Rica (May 19-24) to attend CLAG conference and participate in professional

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field trip. Funding: University of Texas Signature Course grant.

2018. Ecuador (June 6-July 7) to teach faculty-led study abroad course and perform research.

2019 Ecuador (June 5-August 17) to teach faculty-led study abroad course and perform research. Funding: University of Texas Sustainability Program funds.

Forthcoming, Ecuador (June 3-August 15) to teach faculty-led study abroad course and perform research.

Professional Associations

American Association for the Advancement of Science.

American Association of Geographers (AAG) since January 1977. Specialty Groups: Latin America, Cultural and Political Ecology, History of Geography. Elected to national leadership positions in both the AAG and each of the three specialty groups.

American Geographical Society.

Conference of Latin American Geography (CLAG). Served in national leadership position.

Latin American Studies Association.

Books, Monographs, Theses, Edited Volumes and Special Issues

1979. The Sunken Fields of Chilca: Horticulture, Microenvironment, and History in the Peruvian Coastal Desert. M.S. thesis, University of Wisconsin-Madison. Published and distributed by the author (photocopied and online via Academia and Researchgate).

1984. Soil, Slope, and Water in the Equatorial Andes: A Study of Prehistoric Agricultural Adaptation. Ph.D. dissertation, University of Wisconsin-Madison. Published and distributed by the author (photocopied and online via Academia and Researchgate); University Microfilms International, and Proquest Dissertations and Theses (online).

1987. Geografia Quichua de la Sierra del Ecuador. Quito: Ediciones Abya Yala. (First Edition; third edition 1991).

1987. (editor, with W. M. Denevan and K. Mathewson), Pre-Hispanic Agricultural Fields in the Andean Region, (2 Volumes). Oxford: BAR International Series.

1988. (editor, with N. Allan and C. Stadel), Human Impact on Mountains. Totowa, New Jersey: Rowman and Littlefield.

1988. Ecología Cultural Prehispánica del Ecuador. Quito: Banco Central del Ecuador. Spanish translation of an edited version of the doctoral dissertation.

1991. Andean Ecology: Adaptive Dynamics in Ecuador. Boulder, Colorado: Westview Press.

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1992. Riego Precolonial y Tradicional en la Sierra Norte del Ecuador. Hombre y Ambiente 22 (special issue devoted to this one work). Quito: Ediciones Abya Yala.

1995. (with Cesar Caviedes) South America. Englewood Cliffs: Prentice-Hall.

2002. (editor) Latin America in the Twenty-First Century: Challenges and Solutions. Conference of Latin Americanist Geographers and University of Texas Press.

2003. (guest editor, with Peter Herlihy) Participatory Mapping of Indigenous Lands in Latin America, special issue of Human Organization. Volume 62, number 4.

Articles

1980. Cambios en el Clima de los Andes Ecuatorianos: Una Tentativa Explicación Genética, Revista del Centro Panamericano de Estudios e Investigaciones Geográficas 39-48. Revised and reprinted in 1982, Cambios en el Clima de los Andes Ecuatorianos: Una Tentativa Explicación Genética, in Geografía y Desarollo: Metodologías y Casos de Estudio, R. Ryder and N. Robelly, ed., pp. 19-26. Quito: Instituto Geográfico Militar.

1981. El Nicho Ecológico Llanura Húmeda, en la Economía Prehistórica de los Andes de Altura: Evidencia Ethnohistórica, Geográfica y Arqueológica, Sarance (Otavalo, Ecuador) 9: 83-88.

1981. The Full Extent of the Field: A Commentary on the ‘New Cultural Geography’ in Latin America, in Geographic Research in Latin America: Benchmark 1980, Proceedings of the Conference of Latin Americanist Geographers 8: 217-224.

*1982. Prehistoric Flood Management on the Peruvian Coast: Reinterpreting the ‘Sunken Fields’ of Chilca, American Antiquity 47: 144-154.

1983. Reply to Richard T. Smith, American Antiquity 48: 150-151.

1985. (With R. Ryder) Aspectos del Origen, Morfología, y Funcion de los Camellones en el Altiplano de Quito, Cultura (Quito), 8 (23): 205-222 (A Spanish translation of 1983, Aspects of the Origin…, under Chapters)

1986. Una Perspectiva de la Irrigación en los Andes del Norte, América Indígena 46: 349-356.

1987. Regimen de Inundaciones en la Costa Peruana Prehispánica: Reinterpretación de los Campos Hundidos de Chilca, Historica (Lima, Peru), XI(2): 163-179. (a Spanish translation of 1982, Prehistoric Flood Management).

1987. (With D. Guillet, D. L. Browman, T. N. D'Altroy, R. C. Hunt, T. F. Lynch, W. P. Mitchell, A. Oliver-Smith, J. R. Parsons, J. Quilter, J. E. Sherbondy and J. Treacy) Terracing and Irrigation in the Peruvian Highlands [and Comments and Reply], Current Anthropology 28: 409-430.

1987. Riego Precolonial en la Sierra Norte, Ecuador Debate (Quito) 14: 17-45.

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1988. (With W. Denevan) Ecología de la Agricultura Prehistórica de los Pántanos en Algunos Valles del Ecuador, Sarance (Otavalo, Ecuador) 12: 37-64. (A modified Spanish translation of 1985, The Use of Wetlands…)

1988. Geografía Lingüística y Cultural del Perú, Anthropológica (Peru) 6: 285-308.

1990. (With T.J. Riley, R. Edging, J. Rossen, G.F. Carter, M.J. O’Brien, and K.H. Scherwin) Cultigens in Prehistoric Eastern North America [and Comments and Reply], Current Anthropology 31:525-541.

1992. Cultural and Historical Geography of the Andes, Benchmark 1990, Yearbook of the Conference of Latin Americanist Geographers 17/18: 165-175.

1993. (With S. Atran, A.F. Chase, S.L. Fedick, H. McKillop, J. Marcus, N.B. Schwartz, and M.C. Webb) Itza Maya Tropical Agro-Forestry [and Comments and Replies], Current Anthropology 34:633-700.

1998. Geography at the University of Texas at Austin: A Departmental History, The Southwestern Geographer 2: 95-123.

*2003. (With P. Herlihy). Maps of, by, and for the Peoples of Latin America, in Participatory Mapping of Indigenous Lands in Latin America, special issue of Human Organization. 62(4): 303-314.

2005. (With W. Doolittle). Terry G. Jordan-Bychkov, 1938-2003, Annals of the Association of American Geographers 95(2): 462-470.

2010. The Andes: Personal Reflections on Cultural Change, 1977-2010, Journal of Cultural Geography 27:307-316.

*2015. Mapping Flower Plantations in the Equatorial High Andes, Journal of Latin American Geography 14(3):229-244. (October).

2016. In Memorium: Karl Butzer, Latin Americanist Geographer. Journal of Latin American Geography 15(2):167-171.

*2017. Mountain Agriculture for Global Markets: The Case of Greenhouse Floriculture in Ecuador. Annals of the American Association of Geographers 107(2) (March 2017): 511-519. DOI: 10.1080/24694452.2016.1203282. Published online: via http://www.tandfonline.com/eprint/prbXNYTGQN7SDFg7Zezh/ful.

2018. Ecología humana. AINKAA, Revista de Estudiantes de Ciencia Política, 2(3) (Jan-June 2018). Medellin: Universidad Nacional de Colombia. Translation of Knapp (2007) by John Jairo Alzate Alvarez. https://cienciashumanasyeconomicas.medellin.unal.edu.co/Boletin-2018-01/4_Human_ecology.pdf

*2019. Trajectories of Personal Archiving: Practical and Ethical Considerations. Geographical Review Special Issue: Fieldwork in Geography. Online version February 8, 2019. doi: 10.1111/gere.12339.

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https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1111/gere.12339. Print Version of Record forthcoming 2020.

*2020. Benchmarking and Beyond: CLAG’s Role in Evaluating Research Agendas 1970-2020, Journal of Latin American Geography 19(1): 38-45. Special Issue: 50 Years of the Conference of Latin American Geography.

Chapters

1983. (With R. Ryder) Aspects of the Origin, Morphology, and Function of Ridged Fields in the Quito Altiplano, Ecuador, in Drained Field Agriculture in Central and South America, J. P. Darch, ed., pp. 201-220. Oxford: B.A.R. International Series 189. Reprinted (no date) (with Roy Ryder) Aspects of the Origin, Morphology and Function of Ridged Fields in the Quito Altiplano, Ecuador, Offprint Series Number 271, Institute of Latin American Studies, The University of Texas at Austin.

1985. (With W. Denevan) The Use of Wetlands in the Prehistoric Economy of the Northern Ecuadorian Highlands, in Prehistoric Intensive Agriculture in the Tropics, I. S. Farrington, ed., pp. 185-207. Oxford: BAR International Series 232.

1987. (With D. Preston) Evidence of Prehistoric Ditched Fields on Sloping Land in Northern Highland Ecuador, in The Ecology and Archaeology of Prehispanic Agricultural Fields in the Central Andes, W. Denevan, K. Mathewson and G. Knapp, ed., pp. 403-424. Oxford: BAR International Series 359.

1988. Introduction (to Part Two), Chapter 10 in Human Impact on Mountains, N. Allan, G. Knapp and C. Stadel, eds., pp. 129-132. Totowa, New Jersey: Rowman and Littlefield.

1988. (With R.E. Bravo, L. Cañadas, W. Estrada, T. Hodges, A Ravelo, A. Planchuelo-Ravelo, O. Rovere, T. Solis, P. Yugcha, M.L. Parry, T.R. Carter, N.T. Konijn), The Effects of Climatic Variation on Agriculture in the Central Sierra of Ecuador, in The Impact of Climatic Variations on Agriculture. Volume 2: Assessments in Semi-Arid Regions. M. L. Parry, T. R. Carter and N. T. Konijn, eds., pp. 383-493. Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers.

1988. (With L. Cañadas) Introduction: Vulnerability to Climatic Variations, in The Effects of Climatic Variation on Agriculture in the Central Sierra of Ecuador, in The Impact of Climatic Variations on Agriculture. Volume 2: Assessments in Semi-Arid Regions. M. L. Parry, T. R. Carter and N. T. Konijn, eds., pp. 389-398. Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers.

1988. (With O. Rovere) Selection of Climatic Scenarios, in The Effects of Climatic Variation on Agriculture in the Central Sierra of Ecuador, in The Impact of Climatic Variations on Agriculture. Volume 2: Assessments in Semi-Arid Regions. M. L. Parry, T. R. Carter and N. T. Konijn, eds., pp. 399-412. Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers.

1988. (With L. Cañadas, T. Salcedo, and R. Bravo) The Vulnerability of Indigenous Farming Systems to Climatic Variations, in The Effects of Climatic Variation on Agriculture in the Central Sierra of Ecuador, in The Efffects of Climatic Variations on

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Agriculture. Volume 2: Assessments in Semi-Arid Regions. M. L. Parry, T. R. Carter and N. T. Konijn, eds., pp. 413-428. Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers.

1988. The Effects of Variations in Mean Temperatures and Frost Risk, in The Effects of Climatic Variation on Agriculture in the Central Sierra of Ecuador, in The Impact of Climatic Variations on Agriculture. Volume 2: Assessments in Semi-Arid Regions, M. L. Parry, T. R. Carter and N. T. Konijn, editors., pp. 443-460. Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers.

1988. (With L. Cañadas) Conclusions and Implications for Policies of Rural Development, in The Effects of Climatic Variation on Agriculture in the Central Sierra of Ecuador, in The Impact of Climatic Variations on Agriculture, Volume 2, Assessments in Semi-Arid Regions, M. L. Parry, T. R. Carter and N. T. Konijn, eds., pp. 485-488. Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers.

1995. Tecnología e intensificación agrícola en los Andes Ecuatoriales Pre-Hispánicos, in Area Septentrional Andina Norte: Arqueología y Ethnohistoria, Jose Echeverria and Maria Victoria Uribe, editors, pp. 317-333. Quito: Banco Central del Ecuador.

1997. The State is the Great Forgetter: Rexroth and Goodman as Antecedents of Cultural Ecology, Political Ecology, and the New Cultural Geography. Published online by The Anarchist Library at: http://theanarchistlibrary.org/library/gregory-knapp-the-state-is-the-great-forgetter (link valid August 31, 2016).

1999. (With P. Mothes) Quilotoa Ash and Human Settlements in the Equatorial Andes, pp. 139-155 in Actividad Volcánica y Pueblos Precolombinos en el Ecuador, Patricia Mothes, Coordinator. Quito: Ediciones Abya Yala.

2002. Introduction, in Latin America in the Twenty-First Century: Challenges and Solutions. Gregory Knapp, editor, Conference of Latin Americanist Geographers and University of Texas Press. (Yearbook of Conference of Latin Americanist Geographers), pp. vii-x.

2002. (With P. Herlihy) Mapping the Landscape of Identity, in Latin America in the Twenty-First Century: Challenges and Solutions. Gregory Knapp, editor. Conference of Latin Americanist Geographers and University of Texas Press. (Yearbook of Conference of Latin Americanist Geographers), pp. 251-268.

2007. The Legacy of European Colonialism, in The Physical Geography of South America, edited by T. Veblen, K. Young, and A. Orme, pp 279-288, Oxford University Press.

2011. Ethnic Mapping, in Mapping Latin America: A Cartographic Reader edited by Jordana Dym and Karl Offen, University of Chicago Press, pp 283-287.

2018. Mountain Agriculture for Global Markets: The Case of Greenhouse Floriculture in Ecuador, pp. 274- 282 in Mark Fonstad, ed., Mountains: Physical, Human-Environmental, and Sociocultural Dynamics, Routledge. (Republication of article originally published in the Annals of the AAG).

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2019. The changing Kichwa Language Map in Ecuador, in Stanley Brunn and Roland Kehrein, eds., Handbook of The Changing World Language Map. Springer, Cham. Online October 19, 2018, printed version forthcoming May, 2019. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-73400-2_51-1.

2019. Strategically Relevant Andean Environments, Chapter 1 in Linda J. Seligmann and Kathleen S. Fine-Dare, eds., The Andean World, Routledge Worlds Series, Routledge, pp. 17-28.

2020. Being a Student of Bill Denevan, in A. WinklerPrins and K. Mathewson (eds.), Forest, Field, and Fallow: William M. Denevan on Cultural and Historical Ecology. Springer. Accepted by publisher, publication anticipated mid 2020.

Invited, submitted, revision accepted. Kenneth Rexroth and Paul Goodman: Poets, Writers, Anarchists and Political Ecologists, in Simon Springer and Maleea Acker, eds. Anarchist Political Ecology. Volume 2, Natures of Emancipation, ed. by Martin Locret-Collet. PM Press. Submission to publisher anticipated late 2019 or early 2020.

Papers

1987. Linguistic and Cultural Geography of Contemporary Peru. Texas Papers on Latin America 87-13. Austin: Institute of Latin American Studies, University of Texas, Austin.

1989. Potential Ethnic Territories: Mapping Linguistic Data from Modern Andean Censuses. Texas Papers on Latin America 89-13. Austin: Institute of Latin American Studies, University of Texas at Austin.

Bibliographic Essays

1985. Cultural Ecology, in A Geographical Bibliography for American Libraries, C. Harris, ed., pp. 130-134. Washington, D.C.: Association of American Geographers.

2012. Geography: Western South America, pp. 162-177 in Handbook of Latin American Studies: No. 67: Social Sciences, edited by Tracy North and Katherine D. McCann. Austin: University of Texas Press.

2014. Geography: Western South America, pp. 154-169 in Handbook of Latin American Studies: No. 69: Social Sciences, edited by Tracy North and Katherine D. McCann. Austin: University of Texas Press.

2016. Geography: Western South America, pp. 157-169 in Handbook of Latin American Studies: No. 71: Social Sciences, edited by Tracy North and Katherine D. McCann. Austin: University of Texas Press.

2019. Geography: Western South America, pp. 144-158 in Handbook of Latin American Studies: No. 73: Social Sciences, edited by Tracy North and Katherine D. McCann, University of Texas Press.

Invited, submitted (2020). Geography: Western South America, in Handbook of Latin American Studies: No. 75: Social Sciences, edited by Tracy North and Katherine D.

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McCann, University of Texas Press.

Articles in Encyclopedias and Handbooks (Selected)

1991ff. (With H. Pozo Velez, Murdo MacLeod) Ecuador, in Encyclopedia Britannica, Chicago: Encyclopedia Britannica, Inc., 17:951-960.

1993ff. (with Gino Germani), “South America: The People,” in Encyclopedia Britannica, Chicago: Encyclopedia Britannica, Inc., 27: 595-599, 632.

1993ff. “Andes Mountains,” in World Book Encyclopedia, A:453-454. Chicago: World Book Publishing.

1997ff. South America: The Andean Region, Encyclopedia Americana. Grolier Online http://ea.grolier.com/article?id=0363530-00 (good through October 20, 2010).

2001. Latin American Studies: Geography, in International Encyclopedia of the Social & Behavioral Sciences 12: 8403-8407. Editors-in-chief Neil J. Smelser, Paul B. Baltes. Amsterdam and New York: Elsevier.

2004. Ecuador, in Encyclopedia of World Environmental History, Shepard Krech III, John R. McNeill, and Carolyn Merchant, eds., 1:416-418. Berkshire Publishing Group, Routledge.

2007. Ecuador, Encyclopedia of Environment and Society, edited by Paul Robbins, Vol. 2, p. 539. Thousand Oaks, California: Sage Publications.

2007. Human Ecology, Encyclopedia of Environment and Society, edited by Paul Robbins, Vol. 3, pp. 880-884. Thousand Oaks, California: Sage Publications.

2017. Human Ecology, The International Encyclopedia of Geography: People, the Earth, Environment, and Technology, edited by Douglas Richardson, Noel Castree, Michael E. Goodchild, Aubrey Kobayashi, Weidong Liu, and Richard A. Marston, pp. 3392-3400. John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. DOI: 10.1002/9781118786352.wbieg0477.

2018. Human Ecology, International Encyclopedia of Geography, edited by D. Richardson, N. Castree, M. F. Goodchild, A. Kobayashi, W. Liu and R. A. Marston. Second revised edition (29 March 2018). One of thirty articles selected for updates in this edition. https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/9781118786352.wbieg0477.pub2 DOI:10.1002/9781118786352.wbieg0477.pub2

Book Reviews in Professional Journals

1984. Irrigation Horticulture in Highland Guatemala: The Tablón System of Panajachel, K. Mathewson, Boulder: Westview Press, 1984; Journal of Historical Geography 10: 312-313.

1985. Time Resources, Society, and Ecology: Volume I: Preindustrial Societies, T. Carlstein, London: George Allen and Unwin, 1982; Economic Geography 61: 104-105.

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1985. Pulltrouser Swamp: Ancient Maya Habitat, Agriculture, and Settlement in Northern Belize, B. L. Turner II and P. Harrison, Austin: University of Texas Press, 1983; Geographical Review 75: 368-370.

1985. The Ecosystem Concept in Anthropology, E. Moran, ed., Boulder: Westview Press, 1984; The Professional Geographer 37: 242.

1985. Advances in Abandoned Settlement Analysis: Application to Prehistoric Anthrosols in Colombia, South America, R. Eidt, Milwaukee: Center for Latin America, University of Wisconsin, 1984; Geographical Review 75: 370-372.

1989. Landscape and Culture: Geographical and Archaeological Perspectives, J. M. Wagstaff, ed., Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1987; Economic Geography 65: 91-93.

1990. The Keepers of Water and Earth: Mexican Rural Social Organization and Irrigation, K. I. Enge and S. Whiteford, Austin: University of Texas Press, 1989; The Americas 47(2): 256-258.

1991. Observing the Economy, C.A. Gregory and J.C. Altman, London and New York: Routledge, 1989; Economic Geography 67: 159-161.

1993. Ancient Road Networks and Settlement Hierarchies in the New World, C. D. Trombold, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1991; The Professional Geographer 45: 124-125.

1993. Our Daily Bread: The Peasant Question and Family Farming in the Colombian Andes, N. Reinhardt, Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1988; Mountain Research and Development 13: 379-380.

1994. Smallholders, Householders: Farm Families and the Ecology of Intensive, Sustainable Agriculture, R. M. Netting, Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1993; Annals of the Association of American Geographers 84: 314-317.

1996 Cultural Economies Past and Present, R.H. Halperin, Austin: University of Texas Press; The Professional Geographer 48(1):115-116.

1996. Las Chacras de Coporaque: Andeneria y Riego en el Valle del Colca, J. M. Treacy, Lima: Instituto de Estudios Peruanos; Annals of the Association of American Geographers 86 (4): 786-788.

1997. Changing Fortunes: Biodiversity and Peasant Livelihood in the Peruvian Andes, K. Zimmerer, Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1996; Geographical Review 87(4): 568-569.

1999. Tiwanaku and its Hinterland: Archaeology and Paleoecology of an Andean Civilization Volume 1: Agroecology, A. Kolata et al., Washington DC: Smithsonian Institution Press; Geoarchaeology 14(1):94-96.

2004. Lines in the Water: Nature and Culture at Lake Titicaca, B. Orlove, Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 2002; Mountain Research and Development

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24 (3): 274-275.

2004. Imaging the Andes: Shifting Margins of a Marginal World, T. Salman and A. Zoomies (eds.), Amsterdam: Aksant (CEDLA Latin American Studies 91), 2003; The Americas 61 (2): 319-320.

2007. Latin America: Regions and People, R. Kent; Journal of Latin American Geography 6(1): 202-203.

2010. Ethno- and Historical Geographic Studies in Latin America: Essays Honoring William V. Davidson, P. Herlihy, K. Mathewson, and C. Revels, eds., Baton Rouge: Geoscience Publications, Department of Geography and Anthropology, Louisiana State University, 2008; Journal of Latin American Geography 9(2): 176-178.

2010. Measuring the New World: Enlightenment Science and South America, N. Safier, Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press, 2008; Geographical Review 100:122-123.

2010. Aftershocks: Earthquakes and Popular Politics in Latin America, J. Buchenau and L. Johnson, eds, Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 2009; The Americas 67: 137-138.

2011. “Comments,” In the Shadow of Melting Glaciers: Climate Change and Andean Society, M. Carey, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2010; H-Environment Roundtable Reviews 1(4): 15-18. URL: https://networks.h-net.org/system/files/contributed-files/env-roundtable-1-4.pdf

2013. Curiosity, Inquiry and the Geographical Imagination, D. Gade, New York: Peter Lang, 2011; The AAG Review of Books, 1:1, 13-15. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/2325548X.2013.785742

2013. Mobilizing Ethnic Identity in the Andes: A Study of Ecuador and Peru, L. Glidden, Lanham: Lexington Books, 2011; Bulletin of Latin American Research 32(4):517-518.

2014. Guano and the Opening of the Pacific World: A Global Ecological History, G. Cushman, New York: Cambridge University Press, 2013; Journal of Historical Geography 45:135-136.

2015. The Incas, Second Edition, T. D’Altroy, Chichester: Wiley-Blackwell, 2015; Journal of Latin American Geography 14(2): 205-206.

2017. Spell of The Urubamba: Anthropogeographical Essays on an Andean Valley in Space and Time, D. Gade, Springer, 2015; Geographical Review 107(3): e37-e39. DOI: 10.1111/gere.12189. http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/gere.12189/abstract

2020. Life in Oil: Cofán Survival in the Petroleum Fields of Amazonia. M.L. Cepek, University of Texas Press, 2018; Bulletin of Latin American Research (submitted).

Creative Works

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2016. Five Poems to Better Understand Our World. Catalyst: A Natural Sciences Council Publication, September 6, 2016. http://utcatalyst.org/blog/2016/09/06/five-poems?rq=knapp (Last accessed March 26, 2018).

Other Publications

1985. Geography and Research Manpower Needs for Latin America and the Caribbean, Latin American Studies Association Forum 16: 19-21.

1986. Frontier Expansion in Amazonia, M. Schmink and C. S. Wood, eds. (review), Gainesville: University of Florida Press; Institute of Latin American Studies Newsletter (Austin) 12-13.

1986. Maps and Day 6: El Bajío, Michoacán, North-South Bajío Transect, pp. 6, 13-15, 65-87, in Terry Jordan, Compiler, Field Notebook, 1986 Field Excursion to Mexico, March 22-30, 1986. Department of Geography, University of Texas at Austin.

1987. Chorlavi-San Pablo (Ecuador). Field trip guide, UNEP/UNU/IIASA, May 20.

1988. (Compiler). Field Notebook. 1988 Field Excursion to Mexico, Department of Geography, University of Texas, March 17-26 1988.

1989. (With Kathleen Schroeder). Austin-Querétaro Excursion Guide, 1989 Conference of Latin Americanist Geographers. Austin: Department of Geography, University of Texas at Austin, in collaboration with the Instituto Tecnológico y de Estudios Superiores de Monterrey, Campus Querétaro, and the Universidad Autónoma de Querétaro.

1990. Austin-Auburn Field Guide October 21-30, 1990. Seminar in Regional Geography Austin, Department of Geography, University of Texas at Austin. (Geography 380). Academic Printing Service.

1991. Field Trip Guide, GRG 374, Spring 1991. Frontiers in Geography class, Department of Geography, University of Texas at Austin (30 pages).

1991. (Translator). Juan Fidel Zorrilla, New Santander and the Integration of the Mexican Northeast, Paper distributed at the symposium, Cultural Adaptation at the Edge of the Spanish Empire: A Northern View, Austin, Texas, February 22-23, 1991.

1991. (Translator). Martha Rodriguez Garcia, Archives of Coahuila: Resources for Study of Cultural Adaptation, Paper distributed at the symposium, “Cultural Adaptation at the Edge of the Spanish Empire: A Northern View, Austin, Texas, February 22-23, 1991.

1991. (Translator). Maria Isabel Monroy de Marti, The Archives of San Luis Potosí and their Relevance for the History of the Northern Frontier of New Spain, Paper distributed at the symposium, Cultural Adaptation at the Edge of the Spanish Empire: A Northern View, Austin, Texas, February 22-23, 1991.

1992. Cultural and Biological Change in Mexico and Texas, pp. 98-104 in Memorias, Encuentro Internacional Sobre Adaptaciones Culturales y Cambios Ecológicos en el Norte de México y Texas, Pasado y Presente. Saltillo: Archivo Municipal de Saltillo.

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1992. Social and Cultural Impacts of Villano 3 and 4 Directional Well Development. Report submitted to Woodward-Clyde Consultants (Houston, Texas), and subsequently published online.

1992. (Editor) CLAG Communication 75 (December 1992). Conference of Latin Americanist Geographers.

1993. (Editor) CLAG Communication 76 (March - June 1993). Conference of Latin Americanist Geographers.

1993. (Editor) CLAG Communication 77 (September 1993) Conference of Latin Americanist Geographers.

1993. (Editor) CLAG Communication 78 (December 1993) Conference of Latin Americanist Geographers.

1993. “Border Symbolizes More than Division,” Austin American-Statesman, A19 (May 5). An op-ed in the “Mexico Focus” series.

1994. (Editor) CLAG Communication 79 (March 1994) Conference of Latin Americanist Geographers.

1994. (Editor) CLAG Communication 80/81 (June/Sept 1994) Conference of Latin Americanist Geographers.

1994. (Editor) CLAG Communication 82 (December 1994). Conference of Latin Americanist Geographers.

1999. Finding the Right Internship Opportunity, AAG Newsletter 35(11):13. Summary of EOCD/CoPS Sponsored Session, Career Development Strategies I: Learning the Game and Leveraging Internships, Honolulu Annual Meeting of the AAG.

1999. William M. Denevan: Winner of the 1998 Robert McC. Netting Award. Cultural Ecology Newsletter of the Association of American Geographers. Published online; currently (2015) at: https://capeaag.wordpress.com/cape-honors/william-m-denevan/

2004. (With Leo Zonn) University of Texas at Austin, Department of Geography and the Environment, AAG Newsletter 39(9): 14

2004. In Memorium: Terry Gordon Jordan-Bychkov, Memorial Resolution, University of Texas Faculty Council. Documents of the General Faculty, pp. 3678-3684. (Chair of memorial committee, with W Doolittle and R. Holz). Online at: https://www.utexas.edu/faculty/council/2004-2005/memorials/jordan/jordan.html

2016. Greg Knapp, geography professor, in UT Professors suggest four literary favorites for students. Daily Texan, February 11, p.8.

2016. In Memorium: David L. Huff, Memorial Resolution, University of Texas Faculty Council. Documents of the General Faculty, pp. 14176-14177. (Chair of memorial committee, with W. Doolittle and E. Cox).

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2017. In Memorium: Karl Wilhelm Butzer, Memorial Resolution, University of Texas Faculty Council. Documents of the General Faculty, pp. 15048-15049. (Chair of memorial committee, with W. Doolittle, T. Beach, and A. Rosen).

Professional Papers Published Online (currently Researchgate, Academia; previously author’s websites or distributed as photocopies)

1978. Sunken Terraces of Coastal Peru, paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the Association of American Geographers, New Orleans, April 10.

1979. Horticultural Foundations of Peruvian Maritime Civilization: Theory and Evidence, paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the Association of American Geographers, Philadelphia, April 25.

1982. Environmental Hazards and Prehistoric Responses: Agricultural Landforms of the Equatorial Andes, paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the Association of American Geographers, San Antonio, April 26.

1983. Andean Agricultural Technologies for the Valleys of Intermittent Rivers, presented (in absentia) at III Seminario Nacional de Hidrologia, Lima, Peru, September 30.

1984. Vertical Agricultural Differentiation in the Andes: A Result of Historical Adaptive Action, paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the Association of American Geographers, Washington, D.C., April.

1985. Multifunctional Field Demarcation in the Ecuadorian Andes, paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the Association of American Geographers, Detroit, April.

1985. Investigation of Relic Ditched Fields on Sloping Lands, Northern Highland Ecuador, paper presented at the 45 Congreso Internacional de Americanistas, Bogotá, July 1-7.

1986. In Search of Early Canals in the Equatorial Andes, paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the Association of American Geographers, Minneapolis, May 6.

1987. Irrigation and Culture History in the Equatorial Andes, paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology (read in absentia by Karen Stothert). May 8.

1988. The Cultural Map of Latin America, paper presented at the Primer Congreso Internacional de Geografia de las Americas - IV Congreso Nacional de Geografía, Lima, February 23.

1988. Irrigation and the Molding of the North Ecuadorian Quichua Domain, paper presented at symposium on Canal Irrigation and Water Control Systems in the Andes, 46th International Congress of Americanists, Amsterdam, Netherlands, July 4-8.

1990. Andean Anthrosols and Erosion: Modeling Outcomes of Intensification, paper presented and distributed at the Annual Meeting of the Association of American Geographers, Toronto.

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1991. Recursive Definitions of Ethnicity, paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the Association of American Geographers, Miami.

1991. Soil and People in Andean History, invited lecture, Panel on Historical Perspectives on Environmental Destruction in Latin America, Annual Meeting of Latin American Studies Association, Washington, DC.

1994. Endangered Cultural Landscapes of the Equatorial Andes, paper presented at Annual Meeting of the Association of American Geographers, San Francisco.

1996. Ethnoterritoriality in Highland Ecuador, paper presented at the Meeting of the Conference of Latin Americanist Geographers, Tegucigalpa, January 3-8.

1996. Identity, Ethnoterritorialism, and Lifeways in Highland Ecuador, paper presented at Annual Meeting of the Association of American Geographers, Charlotte NC.

1997. The State is the Great Forgetter: Rexroth and Goodman as Antecedents of Cultural Ecology, Political Ecology, and the New Cultural Geography, paper presented at Annual Meeting, Association of American Geographers, Fort Worth. Published online by The Anarchist Library at: http://theanarchistlibrary.org/library/gregory-knapp-the-state-is-the-great-forgetter (link valid August 31, 2016).

1999. Discontinuities and Disorder in the Andes, paper presented at Annual Meeting, Association of American Geographers, Honolulu, Hawaii.

2004. New Religious Communities and Spaces in Ecuador: The Latter-Day Saints, paper presented at Annual Meeting of the Association of American Geographers, Philadelphia.

2005. Cultural Ecology in the 21st Century, paper presented at Annual Meeting of the Association of American Geographers, Denver.

2010. Recent Climate Regimes in the Equatorial Andes, paper presented at Encuentro del Conference of Latin Americanist Geographers (CLAG), Bogotá.

2014. Incorporating Historical Political Ecology in Broader Contexts of Nature, Society and Adaptation, paper presented at Annual Meeting of the Association of American Geographers, Tampa.

2016. From Acequias to Inca Bath to Grist Mill to Landscapes of Sustainability: 600 years in Guachalá, paper presented at Annual Meeting of the Association of American Geographers, San Francisco.

2018. Modernizing Mountains: Continued Adaptive Change in Flowerscapes in the Andes, paper presented at Annual Meeting of the Association of American Geographers, New Orleans.

Published Abstracts from Professional Meetings

1978. The Sunken Terraces of Coastal Peru, AAG Program Abstracts, New Orleans, 148.

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1979. Horticultural Foundations of Peruvian Maritime Civilization: Theory and Evidence, AAG Program Abstracts, Philadelphia, 217-218.

1982. Environmental Hazards and Prehistoric Responses: Agricultural Landforms of the Equatorial Andes, AAG Program Abstracts, San Antonio, 25.

1984. Vertical Agricultural Differentiation in the Andes: A Result of Historical Adaptive Action, AAG Program Abstracts, Washington, 187.

1984 Aspects of the Origin, Morphology and Function of Raised Fields in the Quito Altiplano, Ecuador, Past and Present in the Americas: A Compendium of Recent Studies, Manchester: Manchester University Press, 106-107.

1985. Investigation of Relic Ditched Fields on Sloping Lands, Northern Highland Ecuador, 45 Congreso Internacional de Americanistas, 1-7 Julio 1985: Libro de Resumenes, Bogotá: Universidad de los Andes, 253.

1985. Multifunctional Field Demarcation in the Ecuadorian Andes, AAG Program Abstracts, Detroit, section 163.

1986. In Search of Early Canals in the Equatorial Andes, AAG ‘86 Twin Cities: Abstracts, Minneapolis, section 215.

1987. Irrigation and Culture History in the Equatorial Andes, Program and Abstracts of the Society for American Archaeology, 88 (read in absentia by Karen Stothert)

1988. The Cultural Map of Latin America, Primer Congreso Internacional de Geografia de las Americas - IV Congreso Nacional de Geografía, 22-27 February 1988: Reglamento-Programa-Resumenes. Lima: Sociedad Geográfica de Lima, 85.

This paper was also abstracted in 1989, Nicole Bernex de Falen, El Primer Congreso Internacional de Geografia de las Americas, Espacio y Desarollo (Lima), Año 1 Número 1: 108.

1988. Climate Impacts on Mountain Agriculture, Program and Abstracts, Association of American Geographers, 99.

1989. The Americas at the End of Colonial Rule, Program and Abstracts, 1989 Conference of Latin Americanist Geographers, Queretaro, Mexico, 18-29 May 1989, Austin: Department of Geography, University of Texas, 55.

This paper was also abstracted in Southwestern Mission Research Center Newsletter 25 (86), March 1991.

1990. Potential Ethnic Territories: Mapping Linguistic Data from Modern Andean Censuses, abstracted in ‘Cultural Map of Spanish America’ Conference, Institute of Latin American Studies, University of Texas, March 23, 1990 [relocated from cancelled 1989 Latin American Studies Association Meeting], Latin American Population History Bulletin, Number 17 (Spring 1990), 12.

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1990. Andean Anthrosols and Erosion: Modeling Outcomes of Intensification, AAG Annual Meeting, Program and Abstracts, Toronto, 125.

1990. Latin Americanist Research and Southwest Geographers into the 1990s, Program and Abstracts, Southwest Division Association of American Geographers 1990 Annual Meeting, Austin: Department of Geography, University of Texas, 42.

1991. Recursive Definitions of Ethnicity, Abstracts, The Association of American Geographers, 1991 Annual Meeting, Miami, Florida, 105.

1992. Nature and People in Highland Ecuador, Abstracts, The Association of American Geographers 1992 Annual Meeting, San Diego.

1994. Endangered Cultural Landscapes of the Equatorial Andes, Abstracts, Association of American Geographers 90th Annual Meeting, San Francisco.

1996. Identity, Ethnoterritorialism, and Lifeways in Highland Ecuador, Abstracts, Association of American Geographers 92nd Annual Meeting, Charlotte NC, 156.

1997. The State is the Great Forgetter: Rexroth and Goodman as Antecedents of Cultural Ecology, Political Ecology, and the New Cultural Geography, Abstracts, Association of American Geographers 93d Annual Meeting, Fort Worth, 139.

1997. Caidas de Ceniza y Asentamientos Humanos en los Andes Ecuatorianos: El Caso del Quilotoa, (with P. Mothes), Libro de Resumenes, 49th International Congress of Americanists, July 7-11, 1997, Quito, Pontifica Universidad Catolica del Ecuador, 1:289.

1997. Camellones, Volcanes, y Cambios Agrícolas en la Sierra Ecuatoriana, 1100-1600 AD, Programa y Resumenes, International Congress of the Conference of Latin Americanist Geographers, July 20-23, 1997, Lima, Pontifica Universidad Catolica del Peru, 76.

1998. Raised Field Abandonment in the High Andes, Abstracts of the1998 Annual Meeting, Association of American Geographers, Boston (CD-ROM).

1998. Using the Web in Teaching the Geography of Latin America: an Example from the University of Texas at Austin, Abstracts of the 1998 Meeting, Conference of Latin Americanist Geographers, Santa Fe, New Mexico, September 28-30.

1998. Geography at the University of Texas at Austin, Program, SWAAG Annual Meeting, October 29-31, 1998, Baton Rouge: Department of Geography and Anthropology, Louisiana State University.

1999. Discontinuities and Disorder in the Andes, Abstracts of the 1999 Annual Meeting, Association of American Geographers, Honolulu, Hawaii (CD-ROM).

2000. Adapting Geography to Evolving Cultures in the Mountain West of the Americas, Abstracts, 29th International Geographical Congress, Seoul, Korea, p. 252.

2000. New Strategically Relevant Environments in Latin America, Abstracts, 22d

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International Congress of the Latin American Studies Association, Miami.

2001. Benchmarks and Discourses, Comunicaciones Resumenes/Abstracts, Conference of Latin Americanist Geographers, Benicassim (Castelló), Spain, p. 19.

2004. New Religious Communities and Spaces in Ecuador: The Latter-Day Saints, 2004 Abstracts Volume, Association of American Geographers, Philadelphia Pennsylvania, p. 238.

2004. Geography and Religion in Ecuador, Abstracts, Conference of Latin Americanist Geographers, Antigua, Guatemala, p. 26.

2005 . Cultural Ecology in the 21st Century, Abstracts of the Annual Meeting of the Association of American Geographers, Denver, Colorado. (online at http://meridian.aag.org/callforpapers/program/AbstractDetail.cfm?AbstractID=1311).

2006. (with P. Mothes and M. Hall) Significance of Quilotoa Ash Fall (800 yBP) at Archaeological Sites in North-Central Ecuador, Abstracts Volume, Fourth Conference Cities on Volcanoes, 23-27 January, 2006, IAVCEI, Quito, Ecuador, 174-175.

2007. Greenhouse Floriculture: Aspects of an Agricultural Revolution in the Equatorial Andes, Abstracts of the Annual Meeting of the Association of American Geographers, San Francisco. (online at http://meridian.aag.org/callforpapers/program/AbstractDetail.cfm?AbstractID=11400).

2008. Strange Partners: Irrigation Political Landscapes, Smallholders, and Modernization in the Equatorial Andes, Abstracts of the Annual Meeting of the Association of American Geographers, Boston, MA. (online at http://meridian.aag.org/callforpapers/program/AbstractDetail.cfm?AbstractID=18994).

2010. Ecuador and the Andes: Three Decades, Abstracts of the Annual Meeting of the Association of American Geographers, Washington, D.C., (online at http://communicate.aag.org/eseries/aag_org/program/AbstractDetail.cfm?AbstractID=27265).

2010. Recent Climate Regimes in the Equatorial Andes. Encuentro del Conference of Latin Americanist Geographers (CLAG), Bogotá, Mayo 26-28 de 2010, Bogotá: Universidad de los Andes, 22.

2014. Mapping Flowers in the Equatorial Andes, Abstracts Conference of Latin Americanist Geographers, Panama City, Panama.

2014. Incorporating Historical Political Ecology in Broader Contexts of Nature, Society and Adaptation, Abstracts 2014 Annual Meeting of the Association of American Geographers, Tampa, (online at http://meridian.aag.org/callforpapers/program/AbstractDetail.cfm?AbstractID=55685).

2015. Elisabeth Butzer's Contributions to Geography: A Digital Archival Journey. Abstracts 2015 Annual Meeting of the Association of American Geographers, Chicago,. (online at http://meridian.aag.org/callforpapers/program/AbstractDetail.cfm?

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AbstractID=61603).

2016. From Acequias to Inca Bath to Grist Mill to Landscapes of Sustainability: 600 years in Guachalá. Abstracts 2016 Annual Meeting of the Association of American Geographers, San Francisco (online at http://meridian.aag.org/callforpapers/program/AbstractDetail.cfm?AbstractID=69420)

2017 Ecuador’s Changing Quichua Geography. Abstracts Conference of Latin Americanist Geographers, New Orleans.

2017 Persisting Ethnolinguistic Identities: An Ecuadorian Case Study in Homage to Karl and Elisabeth Butzer. Abstracts 2017 Annual Meeting of the American Association of Geographers, Boston. (online at http://meridian.aag.org/callforpapers/program/AbstractDetail.cfm?AbstractID=78352).

2018. Modernizing Mountains: Continued Adaptive Change in Flowerscapes in the Andes. Abstracts 2018 Annual Meeting of the American Association of Geographers (online at https://aag.secure-abstracts.com/AAG%20Annual%20Meeting%202018/abstracts-gallery/12940).

2018. Grounding Sustainability Studies: Integrating Students, Agents, and Research in Ecuador. Abstracts 35th Conference of Latin Americanist Geographers, San José, Costa Rica, p. 33.

2018. Sustainable Geographies: Multiple Actors and Change in the Rural Equatorial Andes. Sustainability and Development Conference, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, November 9-11. Abstract online at https://umsustdev.org/sdc-participants/

2019. Trajectories of Personal Archiving: Discovering, Preserving, and Making Available Diverse Data Resources in Faculty Research. Abstracts 2019 Annual Meeting of the American Association of Geographers.

Invited lectures and conference presentations (not including those in list of abstracts)

1978. Productivity and stability of sunken garden agriculture at Chilca, Peru, 18th Annual Meeting, Institute of Andean Studies, Berkeley, California, January 6.

1980. Pre-Columbian Flood Control on the Peruvian Coast: the Embanked Fields of Chilca, 8th Annual Midwest Conference on Amazonian and Andean Archaeology and Ethnohistory, Madison, February 30.

1982. Small-Farm Technologies for Andean Wetlands, invited lecture, Department of Geography, University of Delaware, May 17.

1982. Aspects of the Origin, Morphology, and Function of Ridged Fields in the Quito Altiplano, Ecuador, International Congress of Americanists, Manchester, England, September 4-10, 1982 (paper presented in absentia by William Denevan).

1983. Ecology, Technology and Change in the Andes. Department of Geography Bag

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Lunch Lecture, University of Wisconsin-Madison, November 30.

1983. Andean Agricultural Technologies for the Valleys of the Intermittent Rivers, III Seminar on Hydrology, Lima, Peru, September 26-30 (paper presented in absentia).

1984. Swamps, Slopes and Adaptation in the Equatorial Andes. Department of Geography, University of Texas at Austin, January 23.

1984. Prehistoric Raised Fields of Highland Ecuador: Agronomic Functions and Economic Significance, Twelfth Annual Midwest Conference on Andean and Amazonian Archeology and Ethnohistory, Urbana-Champaign, Illinois, February 26.

1985. Recent Research on Prehistoric Settlement and Subsistence in Northern Ecuador, 25th Annual Meeting of Institute of Andean Studies, University of California, Berkeley, January 4-5, 1985.

1985. Agricultural Responses to Risk of Frost and Frost-Drought Combination: A Case Study, UNU/UNEP/IIASA Climate Impact Project Case Study in Ecuador Meeting, Quito, Ecuador, January 21-24.

1985. The Challenge of Andean Geography, invited lecture, Department of Geography, University of California at Berkeley, March 14.

1985. Impact of Variations in Mean Temperature and Frost Incidence on Agriculture, Assessment of Climate Impacts on Agriculture, Task Force Meeting, IIASA, Vienna, Austria, April 1-5.

1985. Along Andean Canals: Peasant Technology and Change in Highland Ecuador. Geography Faculty Colloquium, University of Texas, November 1.

1986. The Upper Limit of Cultivation in the Andes: Sensitivity to Climate Change, 64th Annual Meeting of the Southwestern Social Science Association, held in conjunction with the Meeting of the Southwestern Association of American Geographers, San Antonio, March 21.

1986. Opening Remarks, and A View from the Northern Andes, presented at Appropriate and Paleo-Technologies in the Andes: An Evaluation, symposium sponsored by the Institute of Latin American Studies and the Department of Anthropology, Austin, Texas, April 1-3.

1986. Ecuador and Peru, lecture at Austin, Texas Chapter of International Good Neighbor Council, May 16.

1987. Analisis de los Cambios Climaticos, Relaciones entre Clima y Cultivos, and Conclusiones, papers presented at Proyecto Impactos Climaticos: Reunion de Divulgacion de los Resultados Caso Ecuador, UNEP-UNU-IIASA, Chorlavi, Ecuador, May 18-20.

1987. Geografia Historica y Cultural, lecture at Department of Geography, University of Chile, Santiago, June.

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1987. Agricultura de Chacras Hundidas, Seminario Sobre Tecnologias Tradicionales, Primera Reunion, Cieneguilla, Peru, August 5-7. (Paper presented in absentia).

1987. South American Notebook, University of Texas Department of Geography Colloquium Series, December 2.

1988. Irrigation and the Molding of the North Ecuadorian Quichua Domain, symposium on Canal Irrigation and Water Control Systems in the Andes, 46 International Congress of Americanists, Amsterdam, Netherlands, July 4-8.

1988. Latin America, invited lecture, Texas Alliance for Geographic Education Meeting, Austin, October 15.

1988. Ending Hunger on the International Level, invited talk, Workshop, Symposium on Strategies for Ending Hunger, Co-Sponsored by B’nai B’rith Hillel Foundation at the University of Texas, Students for Ending Hunger, The Capital Area Food bank, St. Edwards University, and UNICEF, Ballroom of the Texas Union, Austin, November 17.

1989. Introductory Comments: Cultural and Ecological Configurations of the Spanish Empire at the End of Colonial Rule, presented at the symposium, Cultural Adaptation at the Edge of the Spanish Empire: A Northern View, Institute of Latin American Studies, University of Texas at Austin, April 14-15.

1990. Introductory Comments and Welcome, Eighteenth Century Censuses and the Cultural Geography of the Spanish Empire: Sources and Interpretation, and Final Remarks, presented at the symposium, Cultural Adaptation at the Edge of the Spanish Empire, Institute of Texan Cultures, San Antonio, Texas, February 16-17.

1991. Soil and People in Andean History, invited lecture, Panel on Historical Perspectives on Environmental Destruction in Latin America, Annual Meeting of Latin American Studies Association, Washington, DC, April 6.1991. Parks and People in the Equatorial Andes, Wednesday Meetings in Geography Series, September 25..1992. Introductory Comments, presented at the symposium, Cultural Adaptation and Ecological Change in Northern Mexico and Texas, Saltillo, Mexico, May.

1992. The Columbus Discovery: Impact on Indigenous Peoples, Wesley Foundation Student Forum, University of Texas at Austin, October 12.

1992. Preserving Highland Ecuador [Frederic E. Church’s South American Landscapes and the North American Mind], invited lecture, Friday Forum, Department of Geography and Anthropology, Louisiana State University, November 20.

1993. Introductory Remarks, invited talk at symposium: At the Pass: Cultural Adaptation and Ecological Change in Northern Mexico and the American Southwest, University of Texas at El Paso, March 16-19.

1993. Global Environmental Issues, invited lecture at the Conference on Thinking Globally, Acting Locally: The United States in a Changing World, Co-sponsored by the

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League of Women Voters and the Lyndon Baines Johnson School of Public Affairs, University of Texas at Austin, March 27.

1993. Introductory Remarks, Symposium on Life on the Corridor: Cultural Adaptation and Ecological Impacts in Texas and Mexico, Austin, Texas, May 7-8, 1993.

1996. Ethnoterritoriality in Highland Ecuador. Presented at the Meeting of the Conference of Latin Americanist Geographers, Tegucigalpa, January 3-8.

1997. Insights Regarding Geography, invited lecture, Department of Geology, Baylor University, October 24.

1997. Prehistoric Agriculture and Environmental Change in the Andes: Implications for Andean Sustainability Today, Invited Colloquium, Department of Geography, University of Colorado, Boulder, October 31.

1998. Invited speaker, III International Symposium on Sustainable Mountain Development, Quito, Ecuador, December 9-14 (did not attend due to lack of funding).

1999. Ancient Cultures of Our World, Ancient Cultures of Our World Conference, University of Texas at Austin, June 29 - July 2, 1999.

2006. Management of Water Resources, a Current Problem in the Andes, invited paper presented at U.S. Student Regional Enrichment Seminar for the Andean Region, sponsored by the Fulbright Commission of Ecuador, Baños, Ecuador, April 27.

2006. Manejo de Agua en la sierra norte del Ecuador, invited plenary paper (ponencia magistral) presented at ¿Ciencias Sociales, Para Que?, first University Encounter, Pontifical Catholic University of Ecuador, Central University of Ecuador, Salesian Polytechnic University, Quito, Ecuador, May 31.

2006. Academic Matters: Fulbrighters Show the Road to Academic Success. Orientation Session for Fulbright Grantees, Quito, Ecuador, June 3.

2006. ¿Una revolución agrícola en los Andes de altura? Invited talk with reception, Fulbright Forum (Foro Fulbright), Quito, Ecuador, August 22.

2006. Under the Plastic: Agricultural Revolutions in the Equatorial Andes, Colloquium, Department of Geography and the Environment, University of Texas at Austin, September 8

2008. Christianity. Guest Lecture, Geography of Religion, University of Texas at Austin, February 20.

2009. Mapa de Grupos Indigenas (Ecuador, 1961), paper presented at meeting of Conference of Latin Americanist Geographers (CLAG), Grenada, Nicaragua, January 8.

2010. Una Revolucion Agricola en Los Andes de Altura?, invited lecture at the University of Puerto Rico, Rio Piedras, March 2010.

2010. Geographies of and In the Americas: Utopias, Dystopias, Models, and Adaptive

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Dynamics, Colloquium, Department of Geography and the Environment, University of Texas at Austin, April 23.

2011. Flowers in the Andes. Invited talk, Alpha Chi Hispanic Sorority, Austin. October.

2012. Geographic Factors in History. Guest Lecture, Foundations in International Relations and Global Studies, University of Texas at Austin, November 6.

2013. Hothouse Flowers: Inside Andean Rose Cultivation. LLILAS Alumni Happy Hour, Austin, March 20.

2013. Geography and Politics, Keynote speaker, Women Vote, Austin, May 13.

2013. New Rules of Chaos, for WISDOM; A Series of Self-Inspired Talks from the Faculty of UT Austin, sponsored by AISEC Austin (International Association of Students in Economic and Commercial Sciences)

2014. Roses of the Andes: History and Future of an Improbable Export, Invited Plenary speaker, Pan American Round Table of Austin, March 3.

2014. Popup Film Festival: The Future of Food- Geography Awareness Week with Dr. Knapp, Colloquium, Department of Geography and the Environment, University of Texas at Austin, November 21.

2015. Food, Invited Talk for Food Studies Project, undergraduate organization at the University of Texas at Austin, PHR 2.108, February 25.

2017. Education for Sustainability, Invited Lecture, including Honorarium and reimbursement of travel expenses, Korea National University of Education, declined due to schedule conflicts, January.

2018. Ecuador’s History, Biodiversity, and Cultural Diversity. Two invited Lectures, including Honorarium, for Fulbright-Hays Seminars Abroad Program Pre-Departure Orientation, Austin, Texas, July 16-17.

Invited Chair or Participant, Panels and Workshops not listed elsewhere

1997. Olaf Holm Colloquium, invited participant in a weeklong workshop on research possibilities on the Ecuadorian coast. $3,000 awarded by Central Bank of Ecuador, covering expenses for participation. July.

1997. Aguas que fluyen, aguas que gotean: las luchas por el control de recurso vital, discussant, symposium at 49th Congress of Americanists, Quito, Ecuador, July 7-11.

2000. Maps, Mapping, and Indigenous Peoples, panel at Meeting of the Conference of Latin Americanist Geographers, January 6-7, Austin.

2001. Geographies of Latin America: Problems, Progress, and Prospects, panel at AAG Annual Meeting, New York City, February 27 – March 4.

2001. Population and Cities in Latin America: The Research Frontier, research workshop,

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Population Research Center, September 22, Austin, Texas.

2002. Synthesis of Land Change Processes in Latin America, workshop at Arizona State University, 16-19 November (supported by National Science Foundation, International Geosphere-Biosphere Programme, International Human Dimensions Program on Global Environmental Change; all expenses paid)

2004. Indigenous Identity Politics and Technoscience, panelist at AAG Annual Meeting, Philadelphia, March 14-20.

2007. Human-Dimensions / Nature-Society Curricula, panelist at AAG Annual Meeting, San Francisco, April.

2008. Development and Economic Growth, Moderator, Institute of Latin American Studies Student Association Student Conference on Latin American Studies, Austin, Texas, February 9.

2010. Introduction, Closing Plenary, Institute of Latin American Studies Student Association Student Conference on Latin American Studies, Austin, Texas, February 6.

2010. Mapping Latin America, panelist at Annual Meeting, Association of American Geographers, Washington DC, April 16.

2010. Collapse, invited discussant at Annual Meeting, Association of American Geographers, Washington DC, April 15.

2011. Borders and Progress: The Making of the Brazilian Amazon, 1930-1945. Responder at The Institute for Historical Studies Workshop Series, Austin, April 4.

2004. Indigenous Identity Politics and Technoscience I: Chair, Paper Panel, Annual Meeting of the Association of American Geographers, Philadelphia, March 17.

2013. Environment. Moderator, Institute of Latin American Studies Student Association Student Conference on Latin American Studies, Austin, Texas, February 8.

2013. Geography in the Americas: Making the Most of Student Exchanges for Research and Study Abroad, invited panelist, Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, April 11, Los Angeles, Session proceedings posted at www.aag.org/galleries/guide/GeogAmericas2013POSTED.pdf

2014. Environmental Studies and Sustainable Development. Moderator, Institute of Latin American Studies Student Association Student Conference on Latin American Studies, Austin, Texas, February 28.

2015. Negotiating Development, Moderator, Institute of Latin American Studies Student Association Student Conference on Latin American Studies, Austin, Texas, February 26.

2015. Geography, Sustainability and the Green Campus, panelist at 2015 Annual Meeting of the Association of American Geographers, Chicago, April 24.

2016. Environmental Justice and Neocolonialism, Moderator, Institute of Latin American

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Studies Student Association Student Conference on Latin American Studies, Austin, Texas, March 4.

2016. Taco’bout Research Event, Invited Presenter, Liberal Arts Council, Austin, Texas, April 20.

2016. Gender, Power, and Participatory Hand-drawn Mapping in Agriculture and Natural Resource Research, Discussant at 2016 Annual Meeting of the Association of American Geographers, March 31.

2016. Taco’bout Research Event, Invited Presenter, Liberal Arts Council, Austin, Texas, November 10.

2017. A Panel to Remember Those We Have Lost, panelist at 2017 Meeting of the Conference of Latin Americanist Geographers, New Orleans, January 5.

2017. The Pedagogy of Karl W. Butzer: From Bonn to Madison, Chicago, Zurich, and Austin, Discussant at 2017 Annual Meeting of the American Association of Geographers, Boston, April 7.

2018. History of Geography 2: Major Themes in the History of Geography, Chair, at 2018 Annual Meeting of the American Association of Geographers, New Orleans, April 12.

2018. LiDAR Studies of Tropical Forest Physical Geography and Cultural Ecology Part 2, Discussant at 2018 Annual Meeting of the American Association of Geographers, New Orleans, April 11.

2018. Changing Landscapes and Livelihoods in Mountain Regions 1, Discussant at 2018 Annual Meeting of the American Association of Geographers, New Orleans, April 13.

2019. New Research Directions for Latin America: Responding to the Adams Challenge. Invited discussant, LLILAS, Austin, Texas, April 10.

Research cited on National Websites (recent)

2018. NASA Earth Observatory, Images of the Day: Greenhouses of Cayambe Valley. Personal communication and two articles cited. (February 15). https://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/IOTD/view.php?id=91720&eocn=home&eoci=iotd_readmore

Cited as Expert in Educational Publication (selected)

2008. Lambert Mark John. “The Expert Says,” p. 41 in The 10 Most Incredible Landforms. Rubicon Publishing / Scholastic.

Photography

2008. Three color photographs of sunken fields (hoyas) and totora reed boats, Huanchaco Peru, reproduced by permission on p. 209 in Eric Mollard and Annie Walter, Agricultures singuliers, Paris: Institut de recherche pour la développement.

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Webmaster

1995. Co-Founder and Co-Editor, EarthWorks, the first hypermedia geographical journal (with K. Foote and W. Doolittle). Currently offline, was at http://www.utexas.edu:80/depts/grg/eworks/eworks.html.

1997-2004. Department of Geography, University of Texas website; was at http://www.utexas.edu/depts/grg/ and (after July 4, 2003) at http://www.utexas.edu/cola/depts/geography/

2002-2004. Conference of Latin Americanist Geographers and AAG Latin American Specialty Group website; was at http://www.utexas.edu/depts/grg/clag/.

Reviews of Manuscripts for Professional Journals Annals of the AAG (1993, 2000, 2006, 2010, 2016)Area (2006, 2008)Bulletin of Latin American Research (2011, 2018)Cartographica (April 2016)Cogent Arts and Humanities (2015).Current Anthropology (1987, 1989, 1995, 1998, 2000, 2002, 2005)Environmental History (1996)Environment, Development and Sustainability (2006)Environment and History (2006)Geoforum (December 2014, 2016).Geographical Review (2005, 2012, 2012, 2017)Human Ecology (1997)International Third World Studies and Review (2006)Intersecciones en Antropología, (U. Nacional del Centro de la Prov. de Buenos Aires) (2013)Journal of Cultural Geography (2000, 2010)Journal of Historical Geography (1992, 1993, 2017)Journal of Historical Sociology (1997)Journal of Latin American Geography (2008, 2011, 2011, 2012, 2015 [twice])Journal of Latin American Studies (2010)Land Degradation and Development (2004)Latin American Research Review (1987, 2010, entire special issue)Landscape and Urban Planning (2014)Mountain Research and Development (1997)Norsk Geografisk Tidsskrift (Norwegian Journal of Geography, 2004)PLOS One (2016).Revista de Estudios Sociales (Bogotá, 2008)Revista del Instituto de Estudios Geográficos (Tucuman, Argentina, 2009, 2010, 2012)Student Journal of Latin American Studies (Austin, 2009)University of Texas Undergraduate Research Journal (Austin, 2005, 2010)Yearbook of the Conference of Latin Americanist Geographers (1988, 1989, 1990, 1998)

Reviews of Manuscripts and Proposals for Academic Presses

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Blackwell Press (2007)Guilford Press (1989, 2015)Rowman and Littlefield (2008)Springer (2016, 2017)University of Wisconsin Press (1999)University of Texas Press (1987,1988,1989,1990,1995, 2012)William C. Brown (1990)Reviews of Manuscripts for Conference Proceedings (recent)

Memorias del III Taller de Geoarqueología Latinoamericana (2016)

Reviews of Grant Applications, United States and Canada:Center for Field Research (1983)Environmental Protection Agency (1991)National Geographic Society (1993, 1998, 2005, 2008, 2017 [Nov.])National Science Foundation (1986, 1989, 1993, 1995, 1997, 1999, 2002, 2004, 2005 [3 proposals], 2006, 2009 [2 proposals], 2013, 2016, 2017 [Nov.])Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (2017)Wenner-Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research (1994)Reviews of University Programs, United States:

National Research Council Surveys of Research-Doctorate Program Quality (1993, 2007)

Austin Peay University (1998)Brigham Young University (1999)Oklahoma State University, proposed doctoral program (2002)

Reviews for Promotion and Tenure (including hiring with tenure):

Boston University, Michigan State University, Mississippi State University, Ohio University, Oklahoma State University, University of California at Santa Cruz, University of Denver, University of Colorado at Boulder, University of Kansas, University of New Mexico, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, University of Toronto, University of Wisconsin at Madison, Yale University.

Reviews for Faculty Grants or Honors:

University of Wisconsin at Madison, Hunter College of CUNY, and Louisiana State University.

Other International Service

2014. Invited expert contributor, “Regimes of Ethnicity: A Global Database of Ethnic Demography and Survey of State Policies on Ethnicity,” European Commission. One of three designated experts for Ecuador.

2019.  Expert Reviewer for the First Order Draft (FOD) of the Working Group II (WGII)

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Contribution to the IPCC Sixth Assessment Report. Ten suggested revisions provided for Chapter 12 (Central and South America) and Cross-Chapter 5 (Mountains).

Service, University of Texas at Austin

Department of Geography and the Environment:

1988-1992. Undergraduate Advisor and Honors Advisor. During this period the number of Geography majors increased by over 50 per cent, and the number of students with GPA over 3.5 doubled.

1996-2004. Department Chair. Managed 11 departmental hires and 7 promotion cases, increasing size of full time faculty from 13 to 17 lines. During this period the number of undergraduate majors in the Department doubled, and the number with GPA over 3.5 tripled. An average of 11 new graduate students accepted admission every year, maintaining an average graduate student population of 45. An average of 8.6 graduate students completed their degrees each year.

1997-2004. Department Webmaster, managing and editing web site.

1997-2003. Organizer, Departmental Colloquium Series

1997-2011. Co-organizer (with Kent Mathewson), Departmental Receptions, AAG Annual Meetings.

2003. Managed transfer of Urban Studies program to Geography Department and creation of new Urban Studies Major.

2003-2004. Manager, internal and external reviews for Southern Association of Colleges and Schools

2003-2005 Chair, Faculty Merit Committee.

2004. Initiated and managed change of departmental name to Department of Geography and the Environment.

2007-2009. Departmental Representative, Institutional Review Board

2007-2012. Graduate Advisor and Chair, Graduate Studies Committee, and Graduate Admissions and Awards Committee. During this period, 353 prospective graduate students applied, 93 were admitted, and 39 accepted the offers of admission, for an average of 8 new graduate students a year. During this same period the department awarded 33 graduate degrees.

2008-2010 Member, Faculty Merit Committee.

2008-2012. Managed assessment (TRACDAT) of graduate programs

2009. May. Acting Interim Chair, Department of Geography and the Environment, University of Texas at Austin (position offered by Dean on departmental recommendation, declined).

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2011-present. Member of Food and Farming Research Initiative

2012. July 13-28. Acting Interim Chair, Department of Geography and the Environment, University of Texas at Austin

2013-2014. Chair (June 2013-October 2014), Undergraduate Committee; managed TRACDAT assessment of undergraduate programs.

2013-present. Member, Undergraduate Committee.

2014-present. Assistant Graduate Advisor.

2016-present. Faculty Director, B.A. in Sustainability Studies, and Chair, Sustainability Studies Faculty Advisory Committee; managed TRACDAT assessment of program.

2018-present, Member, Graduate Admissions and Awards Committee.

School of Architecture:

1988-present. Affiliated faculty member, joint Community and Regional Planning / Latin American Studies program.

2015-present, Affiliated faculty, Sustainability Graduate Certificate.

College of Liberal Arts

2009-2018. Interviewed as Faculty Profile, Graduate School Handbook: Geography, Liberal Arts Career Services.

2016-2018 (December), member, COLA Student Affairs Committee

College of Natural Sciences

1994. Helped develop degree plan in Human Biology

2013-present. Member, Food and Society Certificate Committee

Environmental Science Institute (ESI):

1999. Co-author of ESI proposal approved by Provost

1999-2003. member of ESI Advisory Council

Graduate School:

2007-2012. Elected and appointed Chair, Graduate Studies Committee, Geography and the Environment

2009-2012. Member, Continuing Fellowship Committee.

2016- present. Affiliated Faculty, Graduate Portfolio Program in Native American and Indigenous Studies

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2016-present. Affiliated Faculty, Graduate Portfolio Program in Sustainability

International Office:

1990-1998. Member, IIE Fulbright Campus Screening Committee, University of Texas

2013-2014 and 1988-2002. Study Abroad Course and Grade Evaluator, Department of Geography and the Environment

2016. Hosted Fulbright students from Argentina in Geography of Latin America course, in support of the International Office’s Friends of Fulbright program.

2018. Member, Faculty-Led Study Abroad Proposal Review Committee

2018. Invited Speaker, Fulbright-Hays Seminars Abroad Program Pre Departure Orientation, July 16-18, 2018; ; provided orientation for teachers nationwide prior to their program in Ecuador, with participation from Ecuador's Fulbright Office Director.

International Relations and Global Studies

2019-present. Member, IRG Faculty Curriculum Committee.

Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center:

2004. Negotiated partnership with Department of Geography and the Environment, University of Texas (memo of understanding).

Lozano Long Institute of Latin American Studies:

1984-present. Affiliated faculty

1985-1986. Member, Advisory Committee

1985-1986. Chair, Andean Studies Committee

1987-1993. Chair, Culture and Environment (initially Culture and History) Working Group, organizing a series of symposia on Texas and Mexico

1996-2004. Fellow; participant in faculty breakfasts to share ideas.

2000-2001 and 1995-1996. Oversight of Master’s track in Environmental Resource Management.

2007-2008 and 1996-1997. Member, Mellon grant review committee.

2012-2013. Member, Graduate Fellowship Committee.

2016, 2015, 2004, 2003, 2000, 1998, 1997. Invited panel moderator, ILASSA student conferences.

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Native American and Indigenous Studies

2008-present. Affiliated faculty for graduate portfolio program and undergraduate certificate program.

Phi Beta Kappa, Alpha Chapter of Texas:

1989-1993, 1998-1999. Elected Member of Executive Council, Treasurer

1994-1995. Elected President (January 1994 - December 1995). In this capacity represented University at the triennial meetings in San Francisco in 1994.

Plan II:

2018, Session Moderator, Plan II Thesis Symposium

Population Research Center:

2004-present. Affiliated Faculty Member

2000. Advisor, program in Urbanization and Internal Migration in Developing Countries

Rapoport Center for Human Rights and Justice:

2013-present. Affiliated faculty.

Roden Scholar Case Study Competition

2013. Judge, Roden Scholars Case Study Competition: The “Live Better Mexico City” Project (March 2)

2015. Judge, Roden Scholars Case Study Competition

Sustainability Studies:

2013-2014. Member, Sustainability Studies Steering Committee. January 2013-August 2014,

2013-2014. Co-Chair, Sustainability Studies Steering Committee, August 2013-August 2014.

2014-2015. Lead author, BA in Sustainability Studies proposal, College of Liberal Arts.

2016-present. Faculty Director and Chair of Faculty Advisory Committee, Sustainability Studies.

Texas Interdisciplinary Plan (Colleges of Natural Sciences and Liberal Arts):

2010-2014. Member, Faculty Panel.

Undergraduate Studies, School of:

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Spring 2016, participant in assessment, Social and Behavioral Sciences Core Component.

Other University Service:

Served on committee to review Faculty Research Grants (1996-1999). Served on advisory committee to Dean Paul Woodruff in discussing possible Environmental Studies degree, April 25, 2007.

Advising and Related Student Service

1988-present. Sponsor and Faculty Advisor, Gamma Theta Upsilon Geography honors society, Department of Geography and the Environment

1988-1994. Honors Advisor, Department of Geography

1990-1998. Member, IIE Fulbright Campus Screening Committee, University of Texas

1991-1992. Faculty advisor, undergraduate Society for Conservation Biology, University of Texas.

2000-2005. Member of Faculty Panel for Bridging Disciplines program in Environment, University of Texas.

2003-present. Advisor, Sustainability Track (previously, Environmental Resource Management Track), Department of Geography and the Environment

2007-2012 and 1997-2003. Organized annual orientation sessions for new graduate students, Department of Geography and the Environment

2013-2014 and 1988-2002. Study Abroad Course and Grade Evaluator, Department of Geography and the Environment

2016. Hosted Fulbright students from Argentina in Geography of Latin America course, in support of the International Office’s Friends of Fulbright program.

2018. Member, Faculty-Led Study Abroad Proposal Committee, International Office.

Undergraduate Teaching

At University of Wisconsin-Madison (1982-4): World Regions, Environmental Studies: The Social Perspective, Maps and Air Photo Interpretation, Economic Geography.

At University of Minnesota-Twin Cities (1983): Latin America, Field Research.

At University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh (1984): World Regional Geography.

At University of Texas-Austin (1984-present):

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Introduction to Cultural and Historical Geography; Geography of Latin America; Geography of South America; Andes and Amazon; Contemporary Cultural Geography; Practicum: Internships in Applied Geography; Feast or Famine? Food Supplies in a Crowding World; Frontiers in Geography; Cultural Ecology; Nature, Society and Adaptation; Latin America: Environmental History and Sustainability; South America: Nature, Society and Sustainability.

Undergraduate Course-Instructor Survey Data, University of Texas, Austin

Average instructor rating, 4.4 on a scale of 5 (n=29 courses, 2009-2017).

Current Interdisciplinary Listings and Flags:

Anthropology Cross List: Nature, Society and Adaptation

Bridging Disciplines Program: Environment and Sustainability: Geography of Latin America, Nature, Society and Adaptation, South America: Nature, Society and Sustainability

Bridging Disciplines Program: Social Entrepreneurship and Non-profits: Geography of Latin America

Bridging Disciplines Program: Social Inequality Health and Policy: Geography of Latin America

Ethics and Leadership Flag: Latin America: Environmental History and Sustainability; Nature, Society and Adaptation

Global Cultures Flag: Latin America: Environmental History and Sustainability; South America: Nature, Society and Sustainability; Geography of Latin America

International Relations and Global Studies Environmental Track: South America: Nature, Society and Sustainability

International Relations and Global Studies Study Abroad Requirement: South America: Nature, Society and Sustainability

Latin American Studies Cross List: Geography of Latin America, South America: Nature, Society and Sustainability, Latin America: Cultures, Environment and Development

Native American and Indigenous Studies, Graduate Portfolio: Latin America, Cultures, Environment and Development

Native American and Indigenous Studies, Undergraduate Certificate: Latin America: Environmental History and Sustainability, Geography of Latin America, South America, Nature, Society and Sustainability

Rapoport Center for Human Rights and Justice: Graduate Concentration in Human Rights & Latin American Studies: Latin America, Cultures, Environment and Development

Signature Course Requirement: Latin America: Environmental History and Sustainability

Social and Behavioral Sciences Core Requirement: Geography of Latin America

Sustainability Studies Capstone Requirement: South America: Nature, Society and Sustainability

Sustainability Studies Humanities and Social Sciences Foundation Requirement: Geography of Latin America

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Sustainability Studies Trajectories to Sustainability Thematic Concentration Requirement: Nature, Society and Adaptation

Sustainability Studies Sustainable Choices in a Diverse World Thematic Concentration Requirement: South America: Nature, Society and Sustainability

Writing Flag: Nature, Society and Adaptation

Undergraduate Guest Lectures (recent, selected)

2016. Polymathic Scholars Freshman Interest Group Seminar (February 24).

2019. Liberal Arts: Creating Academic Pathways (LA 101, November 5).

Faculty-Led Study Abroad Courses

1995, 1996, 2002, 2003. The English Landscape (1996) or Nature and Society (1995, 2002, 2003). Faculty led Summer Study Abroad course, Department of Geography. England, Wales and France, team taught with Paul English or Christopher Shane Davies.

2012, 2014, South America: Nature, Society and Sustainability. Faculty Led Summer Study Abroad course in Argentina, Department of Geography, Lozano Long Institute of Latin American Studies, and University of Texas International Office. Argentina. Recipient of $12,000 Scholarship allocation from the Rapoport International Endowment.

2015-2021. South America: Nature, Society and Sustainability. Faculty Led Maymester Study Abroad course in Ecuador, Department of Geography, Lozano Long Institute of Latin American Studies, and University of Texas International Office. Recipient of $12,000 Scholarship allocation from the Rapoport International Endowment (every year). Proposal to extend this course through summer 2021 was approved via competitive process by the Vice Provost.

Undergraduate Research Projects Supervised (recent)

2013-2014. De Souza, Tania. Undergraduate research assistant. Digital Archive of Latin Americanist Photography: Nature, Society, Adaptation and Sustainability 1977-2000. LLILAS Undergraduate Internships, August-May.

2014. Skillicorn, Alexa Torres. East Austin Food Project: Food, Identity and Black Youth. Bridging Disciplines Research Project, August-December.

2014-2015. De Souza, Tania Educational opportunities and choices in Latin America: Implications for development. Plan II Honors thesis project, August-May.

2015. Strutner, Maddy. Undergraduate research assistant. Bibliographic research, contributions to geography, Western South America. GRG 379K (Conference Course), January-May.

2015. McClure, Charlotte. Cultural, Environmental, and Economic Aspects of Small Farms in Texas in the 21st Century. Plan II Honors thesis project, January-December.

2015-2016. Miller, Kali. Human Ecology of the Campus Garden. Environmental Science Degree

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Program Capstone Research Experience. August-May.

2014-2016. Howard Jr., Thomas Wesley. Hybrid Space: An Analysis of Tourism in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico. Department of Geography Honors Project, August 2014 - May 2016.

2015-2016. Nazario, Jesús. The History of Modified Maize: From Introduction to Prohibition of GM Corn in Mexico. Mentor, McNair Scholar Final Research Paper, submitted September 15, 2016.

2016-2017. Jimenez, Paola. Undergraduate research assistant. Bibliographic research, contributions to geography, Western South America. University Leadership Network student. January-May.

2017-2018. Warner, Elizabeth. Plan II Honors thesis project on Campus Place-Making.

2018. Bucknall, Holly. Mentor, Bridging Disciplines Internship.

2018-2019. Shekarchi, Mina. Plan II Honors thesis project on success rates for student learning in sustainability education.

2019. Phlegar, Lucy. Undergraduate Research Apprentice, competitive award by College of Liberal Arts. Bibliographic research, contributions to geography, Western South America. Spring 2019.

2019-2020. In progress. Grace Einkauf. Urban Studies Honors Thesis Research, Examining the Physical Growth Process of Semi-Rural, Low Technology Communities. Recipient, Rapoport-King Thesis Scholarship.

Graduate Teaching at University of Texas

Cultural Ecology of Latin America; Latin America: Culture, Environment and Development; Issues in Geography; Culture and Development: Mountains (team taught with Barbara Brower); Issues and Research in Geography; Myth, Ritual, Place and Environment (team taught with Paul English); Landscape, Society and Meaning (team taught with Kenneth Foote and Karl Butzer).

Guest Lectures, Graduate Teaching (recent)

2014-2017. Guest lecturer, Mentoring, CRP 391D, Colloquium on Planning Issues, Bjorn Sletto.

2019. Guest lecturer, Ecuadorian Water management, ARC 696 / LAR 696, Advanced Architectural Design / Advanced Design Studio Speculations on Water: Infrastructure and Institution, David Heymann / Hope Hasbrouck. Seminar involving student field trip to Ecuador.

Graduate Student Field Trip Participation as Faculty

1986. Graduate Student Field Trip to Mexico (January 4-13).

1986. Co-leader, Graduate Student Field Trip to Queretaro, Mexico (March 22-29).

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1988. Graduate Student Field Course (GRG 380) to Queretaro, Mexico, to study ethnogeography and cultural landscapes (March 17-26).

1990. Leader, Graduate Student Field Trip to Auburn, Alabama, to study ethnic and racial landscapes and participate in Conference of Latin Americanist Geographers meeting (October 21-30)

1998. Co-leader, Graduate Student Field Trip to Baton Rouge, Louisiana to study cultural landscapes and participate in SWAAG meeting (October 28-October 31).

2007. Graduate Student Field Trip to Bryan, Texas to study cultural landscapes and participate in SWAAG meeting (November 1-4).

2009. Graduate Student Field Trip to Little Rock, Arkansas to study cultural landscapes and participate in SWAAG meeting (October 28-November 1, with Paul Hudson).

2010. Graduate Student Field Trip to Tahlequah, Oklahoma to study cultural landscapes and participate in SWAAG meeting (October 14-17).

2018. Graduate Student Field Trip to Baton Rouge, Louisiana to participate in SWAAG meeting (October 3-6, with William Doolittle).

2019. Graduate Student Field Trip to Fort Worth, Texas, to participate in SWAAG meeting (October 9-12, with William Doolittle).

PhD Dissertation Research Projects Supervised at the University of Texas (12, including 7 women)

1995. Salazar, Deborah Anne. Through Sickness and In Health: A Tropical Ethnoecology of Traditional Medicine Among the Pemon Indians of the Venezuelan Gran Sabana. Recipient of Fulbright-Hays Doctoral Dissertation Research Abroad Fellowship (1993-1994). Currently project manager, CableLabs Inc.

1999. Sundberg, Juanita. Conservation Encounters: NGOs, Local People,and Changing Cultural Landscapes. Recipient of Fulbright Institute of International Education Dissertation Research Grant (1996-1997). Currently Associate Professor, Department of Geography, University of British Columbia.

1999. Offen, Karl. The Miskitu Kingdom. Landscape and the Emergence of a Miskitu Ethnic Identity, Northeastern Nicaragua and Honduras, 1600-1800. Co-supervised by Karl Butzer. Recipient of Fulbright Institute of International Education Dissertation Research Grant (1995-1996). Currently Associate Professor, Environmental Studies, Oberlin College.

2003. Christie, Maria Elisa. Kitchenspace: Gendered Spaces for Cultural Reproduction, or, Nature in the Everyday Lives of Ordinary Women in Central Mexico. Recipient of FIPSE Trilateral, AAUW, and Bruton Fellowships. She is currently Program Director, Women in International Development at the Office of International Research, Education and Development,

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Virginia Tech.

2005. Kirkham, Stu. Valuing Invasives: Understanding The Merremia Peltata Invasion In Post-Colonial Samoa.  Co-supervised by William Doolittle. Recipient of Fulbright-Hays Doctoral Dissertation Research Abroad Fellowship (2002-2003), and a NSF Doctoral Dissertation Research Improvement Grant (2002-2003). He is currently Senior Environmental Planner, Caltrans, California.

2005. Brook, Mary. Re-scaling the Commons: Miskitu Indians, Forest Commodities, and Transnational Development Networks. Recipient of National Science Foundation Doctoral Dissertation Research Improvement Grant (2002-2003), Fulbright-Hays Doctoral Dissertation Research Abroad Fellowship (2002), and Lincoln Institute for Land Policy Dissertation Fellowship. She is currently Associate Professor, Geography and the Environment, University of Richmond.

2007. Salisbury, David S. Overcoming Marginality On The Margins: Mapping, Logging, And Coca In The Amazon Borderlands. Recipient of Fulbright-Hays Doctoral Dissertation Research Abroad Fellowship (2004). He is currently Associate Professor, Geography and the Environment, University of Richmond.

2007. Reed, Cyrus B.H. Liquid Discourses: Agricultural Water Use, Conservation and Conversations in the Conchos Basin, Chihuahua in a Time of Drought and Free Trade. Currently Conservation Director, Lone Star Chapter of Sierra Club, Austin.

2014. Avilés-Vázquez, Katia Raquel. Farming and Resistance: Survival Strategies of Smallholder Farmers in Puerto Rico. Recipient of Southern Sustainable Agriculture Research and Education (SARE) Graduate Student Grant (2008). Executive Director of the Puerto Rican National Model Forest and Lecturer, University of Puerto Rico – Rio Piedras.

2015. Schwartz, Gregory. Payment for Environmental Services in Costa Rica’s Osa Peninsula: A Feminist Political Ecology Perspective. He is currently a faculty member, Geography/Geology, Laney College.

2016. Jones, Natalie Lafaye. Eating While Young and Black: Food, Foodways, and Gentrification in Austin, Texas. She is co-founder, Food for Black Thought (FFBT), a community-based and participatory action research organization. Currently (2017-2020) a Culture of Health Leader with the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.

2017-present. Matamoros, Ruth. Project under development relating to Miskitu visions of land and resource use in Nicaragua. Co-supervised by Luis Carcamo-Huechante.

Invited External Participant, Doctoral Committees, Other Universities

2000. Perreault, Thomas A. Shifting ground: agrarian change, political mobilization, and identity construction among Quichua of the Alto Napo, Ecuadorian Amazonia. Department of Geography, University of Colorado at Boulder. Member of doctoral committee, attended dissertation defense in person. He is currently Associate Professor, Syracuse University.

2016. Holland, Timothy George. Land markets, migration, and forest conservation on an

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Amazonian frontier in San Martin, Peru. McGill University. As External Examiner, participated via email in formulating dissertation defense questions and evaluating answers. He is currently a post doc at University of California, Berkeley.

2019. Noroña Salcedo, Maria Belén. Redefining territories of oil extraction: Quichua adaptive strategies to secure livelihoods. Department of Geography, University of Oregon.

Member, Doctoral Committees, University of Texas (Other than Supervisor)

Geography

Sisimac Duchicela (in progress), Aaron Groth (in progress), Jonathan Lowell (2018), Kalli Doubleday (2018), Mary Polk (2016), Joshua Rudow (2016), Matthew LaFevor (2014), Isabel Solange Muñoz (2014), John Oswald (2013), Jennifer Lipton (2013), Julio Postigo Mac Dowall (2012), Matthew Fry (2008), Carlos Santiago Lopez (2008), Sarah Harris (2007), Margaret Kaluzny (2004), Catherine Hoover (2004), Jerry Bass (2004), Judith Dykes-Hoffman (2003), Maria Fadiman (2003), Paul Stangl (2001), Shannon Crum (2000), Philip Crossley (2000), Miguel Aguilar-Robledo (1999), Jennifer Helzer (1998), Michael Myers (1998), Christine Drennon (1998), Norman Johns (1996), Brian Swanland (1995), Andrew Sluyter (1995), Dean Lambert (1992), Robert Ricklis (1990).

Anthropology

Jennifer Burtner (2004), Steve Tomka (1994), David Brown (1992), Daniel Julien (1988).

Art History

Kimberly Jones (2010).

Latin American Studies

Jane Lyons (1996).

Music

Rodrigo Herrera (2000).

Sociology

Emily Spangenberg (in progress).

Master’s Theses and Report Projects Supervised at the University of Texas (31; including 18 women; * went on to earn Ph.D., ** with Knapp as Ph.D. supervisor)

1986. Mothes, Patricia Ann. Pimampiro's Canal: Adaptation and Infrastructure in Northern Ecuador. (Currently Volcanologist, Instituto Geofisico, Escuela Politecnica Nacional, Quito).

1990. *Crossley, Philip Lawrence. Back to the Future: Raised Fields and Agricultural Development in Latin America. [with Coffee and Agrarian Change in El Salvador and Colombia]. (Report, Latin American Studies, co supervised with Alan Knight). (Currently Faculty, Western Colorado University, Gunnison).

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1990. *Schroeder, Kathleen A. Señora Camino's Kitchen:.Cuisine as Strategy in the Sierra of Piura, partly funded by Tinker Grant (Professor, Appalachian State University). 

1991. Crownover, Joseph Allen. Reforestation as Cultural Adaptation in the Andean Highlands: The Case of Mospoto. (Latin American Studies). (Learning Manager, Shell Oil Company, Netherlands, among other positions).

1993. Vender, JoAnn Christine. Culture, Environment, and Rural Schools : Towards Locally Appropriate Primary Education in Highland Ecuador. (Coordinator, Undergraduate Advising and Alumni Relations, Department of Geography, Pennsylvania State University).

1994. *Perreault, Thomas Albert. Local Communities and Environmental Conservation: A Comparative Study in the Northern Ecuadorian Andes. (Associate Professor, Department of Geography, Syracuse University).

1994. **Sundberg, Juanita. NGO Landscapes, Conservation, and Communities in the Maya Biosphere Reserve, Peten, Guatemala. (Latin American Studies).  (Associate Professor, Department of Geography, University of British Columbia). See above for details on Ph.D.

1994. Sheedy, Brien Richard. Himalayan Ecotourism : Tourism Management in Nepal's Mountain Parks and Conservation Areas. Co-supervised by Barbara Brower. (Director of Outdoor Programs, Whitman College).

1995. Hammond, Edward Hopkins, III. A Business of Development? Bioprospectors, Indigenous People, and the Pharmaceutical Industry in Northeastern Peru (Latin American Studies). (Independent Researcher and Writer on infectious disease, biodiversity, agriculture, and intellectual property issues, Austin, Texas).

1995. Goldberg, Allison Jane. Oil, Indians, and the Amazon : Assumptions by United States Press. (Teacher, Alameda High School, California).

1996. Barsotti, Natasha Therese. The Steelband in Trinidad : Re-negotiating Identity and Sense of Place in a Contested New World Landscape. (Reporter, Daily Xtra, Vancouver).

1997. *Goett, Jennifer Allan. Waste and Resource: Two Garifuna Households on the North Coast of Honduras. (Latin American Studies). (Associate Professor, Comparative Cultures and Politics, Michigan State University).

1999. Korczynski, Michelle E. Visions of Violence [Media depictions of violence in Bogota, Colombia] (Latin American Studies). (Program Manager, Latin America, Iberia, and Scandinavia, Academic Travel Abroad, Inc., Washington, DC.)

1999. *Lipton, Jennifer K. Social Dimensions of Biological Corridors: The Talamanca Caribbean Biological Corridor, Costa Rica. (Faculty, Department of Geography, Central Washington University).

2000. Owen, Julie M. Central Idaho Public Lands Resource Management: Insider Outsider Perspectives on Rights to Use and Rights to Decision-Making. (Lead Environmental Scientist, Aquatic Weed Unit, California Department of Boating and Waterways.)

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2000. *Hanley, Lisa Marie. Urban Indigenous Identity: The Case of the Gahuijon in Quito. Ford Foundation Grant (co-PI G. Knapp). (Coordinator, IRENE-SEE Project at Zeppelin University, Friedrichshafen, Germany).

2000. Canright, David Michael. Counting Yankees : toward a cultural profile of the Pacific Northwest coast. Co-supervised by Terry Jordan.

2002. Pierce, Laura Nicole (Laura Pierce Carbonneau). The case of the comuneros and the cement baron : a critique of sustainable development and conservation in coastal Ecuador (Latin American Studies). (Creative Lead, Global Campaigns, Dell, Round Rock, Texas).

2003. *Fry, Matthew Joseph. Choices, Collectives, and Framing: An Analysis of the Role of Land Tenure on the Decision Making of the Bolivian Ava Guaranis. (Latin American Studies). (Assistant Professor, Department of Geography, University of North Texas).

2003. Maldonado, Oscar I. Biodiversity Conservation in Long-Inhabited Landscapes: Challenges and Opportunities for the Lake Atitlan Region, Guatemala. (Report). (Independent Consultant in Conservation Project Planning and Adaptive Management, Guatemala).

2004. Weesner, Amy Noelle, Indigenous Territoriality in Ecuador’s Amazon: Achuar Organizational Discourse and Territoriality. (Latin American Studies). (Senior Policy Advisor / Strategic Technology Support for United Nations field missions, New York).

2007. Noroña Salcedo, Maria Belén. Seizing the Lake: Tourism, Identity, and Power of the Indigenous People of Quilotoa (Latin American Studies). (PhD student in geography, University of Oregon)

2009. Riely, Andrew. Grass-fed Cattle Ranching in Texas: Characteristics and Motivations of Ranchers (Geography Faculty, The Cathedral School, Washington DC; PhD program in geography, Clark)

2010. McCown, Andrew. GM Soy Production and Small Farmer Resistance in San Pedro, Paraguay: Finding Space for Dialogue in an Overly-Politicized Agricultural Landscape Agricultural Development Foreign Service Officer with USAID (Bolivia, 2010-2013; Mali 2013-2016; Uganda 2016-2019)

2011. Victoria Stein, Nashielly. Developing the Rural Landscape: Sustainability Efforts through Women Home Gardens in a Yucatec Maya Community (Latin American Studies). (Associate Guide, Magnolia Montessori for All, Austin)

2012. Kelter Gehrig, Jonathan A. The last Llamero: Development and Livelihood Changes in the High Andes. [Bolivia]. (Senior Analyst at ISL Ventures, LLC, Oregon)

2012. Hershaw, Eva. De Sol a Sol: The Limits to Union Organizing in the Nontraditional Export Plantations of Northern Peru. (Latin American Studies). Co-supervised by Ariel Dulitzky. (Journalist, winner of a 2017 Science in Society Journalism Award from the National Association of Science Writers).

2014. Friday, Shayna. Selling Culture: Re-inventing the Past to Create a Future [Cusco, Peru]. (Latin American Studies). Training coordinator, Corning Life Sciences, Haarlem, Netherlands.

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2014. Leid, Leon Hoover. Llegó la Luz: A Case Study of the Impacts of Solar Voltaic Electricity in Las Balsas, Ecuador. (Latin American Studies) (Translator for software firm in Phoenix, Arizona).

2018. Fuchs, Sophie. Leydi’s World: A Feminist Commodity Chain Analysis of the Cut-Flower Industry and Its Women Workers in Cayambe, Ecuador. May, 2018. (Currently International Programs Coordinator, McCombs School of Business, University of Texas at Austin).

In progress. Nazario, Jesús. Genetically Modified Culture/Agriculture in Ahuelicán, Mexico. (Latin American Studies and Global Policy Studies).

Member, Master’s Committees, University of Texas at Austin (other than supervisor, since 1990)

Department of Geography

Jonathan Lowell (2013), Gavin Schwan (2013), Othoniel Vazquez-Dominguez (2011), Steven Shannon (2011), Joshua Rudow (2011), Carolina de la Rosa Tinco (2009), Ingrid Haeckel (2009), Thomas Barnett (2009), Gina Slinger (2001), Mark Bonta (1997), Karen Voelkening (1995), Michael Everett (1995), Amy Anderson (1994).

Department of Sociology

Ruijie Peng (2015)

Department of Anthropology

Simeon Floyd (2004)

Latin American Studies

Rosario de la Luz Rizzo-Lara (2012), Natalie Jones (2008), Jordan Erdos (1999), Matthew Beyers (1997)

Community and Regional Planning

Rich Roche (1993)

Undergraduate Honors Theses Supervised at the University of Texas (recent):

2015. De Souza, Tania Maria Lucas. Skilled Transnational Spaces: Networks, Identities and Trajectories of Latin American Chemical Engineers. Plan II Honors Program, May 2015.

2016. McClure, Charlotte. A Rebellious Persistence: Lifestyles and Motivations of Small-Scale Farmers in Texas. Plan II Honors Program, December 2015.

2016. Howard Jr., Thomas Wesley. Hybrid Space: An Analysis of Tourism in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico. Department of Geography and the Environment Honors Program, May 2016.

2018. Warner, Elizabeth. Campus Place-Making: Assessing the Intersection for Outdoor Campus Spaces and Sustainable Landscape Architecture to Create a Better Student Experience. Plan II

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Honors Program/ History, May 2018. Winner, Model Thesis Award.

2019. Shekarchi, Mina. Urban Nature and the Humanistic Geography of Austin and the Texas Colorado River. Plan II Honors Program, May 2019.

2019-2020. In progress. Grace Einkauf. Urban Studies Honors Thesis, Examining the Physical Growth Process of Semi-Rural, Low Technology Communities. to be completed May 2020. 2019-2020. Recipient, Rapoport-King Thesis Scholarship.

Gregory Knapp49