Bailly, A.
, and W. Coffey. 1994. Regional science in crisis: A plea for a more open and relevant approach. Papers of Regional Science Association73: 3-14.
2.
Berg, L.1993. Between modernism and postmodernism. Progress in Human Geography17: 490-507.
3.
Bowlby, S.
, J. Lewis, L. McDowell, and J. Foord. 1990. The geography of gender. In New Models in Geography Vol. 2. eds. R. Peet and N. Thrift, London: Unwin Hyman.
4.
Buttimer, A.1976. Grasping the dynamism of lifeworld. Annals of the Association of American Geographers66: 277-292.
5.
Clark, G.
, and M. Dear.1984. State apparatus: Structures and languages of legitimacy. Boston: Allen and Unwin.
6.
Duncan, S.1979. Qualitative change in human geography: An introduction. Geoforum10: 1-4.
7.
Duncan, J.
, and D. Ley. 1982. Structural Marxism and human geography. Annals of the Association of American Geographers72: 30-59.
8.
Eyles, J.1981. Why geography cannot be Marxist: Towards an understanding of lived experience. Environment and Planning A13: 1371-1388.
9.
Fainstein, S.1991. Promoting economic development: Urban planning in the United States and Great Britain. Journal of the American Planning Association57: 22-33.
10.
Fincher, R.1987. Space, class and political processes: The social relations of the local state. Progress in Human Geography11: 496-515.
11.
Giddens, A.1981. A contemporary critique of historical materialism. Berkeley: University of California Press.
12.
Giddens, A.1984. The constitution of society: Outline of the theory of structuration. Berkeley: University of California Press.
13.
Gregory, D.1981. Human agency and human geography. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers6: 1-18.
14.
Gregory, D.1982. Solid geometry: Notes on the recovery of spatial structure. In A Search for Common Ground. eds. P. Gould and G. Olsson. London: Pion.
15.
Hagerstrand, T.1970. What about people in regional science?Papers of the Regional Science Association24: 7-21.
16.
Hanson, S.1992. Geography and feminism: Worlds of collision?Annals of the Association of American Geographers82: 569-586.
17.
Harrison, B.1992. Industrial districts: Old wine in new bottles?Regional Studies26: 469-485.
18.
Harvey, D.1989a. The condition of postmodernity. Oxford: Basil Blackwell.
19.
Harvey, D.1989b. From managerialism to entrepreneurialism: The transformation in urban governance in late capitalism. Geografiska Annaler71: 3-17.
20.
Isserman, A. M.1993. Lost in space? On the history, status, and future of regional science. Review of Regional Studies23: 1-50.
21.
Isserman, A. M.1995. The history, status, and future of regional science: An American perspective. International Regional Science Review17, 3: 249-296.
22.
Jones, J. P. III
, W. Natter, and T. Schatzki. 1993. Postmodern contentions: Epochs, politics, space. New York: Guilford.
23.
Jones, J. P. III
, and R. Hanham. 1995. Contingency, realism, and the expansion methods. Geographical Analysis27: 115-120.
24.
Leitner, H.1990. Cities in pursuit of economic growth: The local state as entrepreneur. Political Geography Quarterly9: 146-170.
25.
Marden, P.1992. The deconstructionist tendencies of postmodern geographies: A compelling logic?Progress in Human Geography16: 41-57.
26.
McDowell, L.1991. Life without father and Ford: The new gender order of post-Fordism. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers16: 400-449.
27.
Peet, R.
, and N. Thrift, eds. 1990. New models in geography: The political economy perspective. Vols. 1, 2. London: Unwin Hyman.
28.
Pred, A.1984. Place as historically contingent process: Structuration and the time-geography of becoming places. Annals of the Association of American Geographers74: 279-297.
29.
Sayer, A.1984 (2nd Edition 1992). Method in social science: A realist approach. London: Routledge.
30.
Sayer, A.1993. Postmodernist thought in geography: A realist view. Antipode25: 320-344.
31.
Scott, A.1983. Location and linkage systems: A survey and reassessment. Annals of Regional Science17: 1-39.
32.
Scott, A.1986. Industrialization and urbanization: A geographical agenda. Annals of the Association of American Geographers76: 25-37.
33.
Scott, A.1988. Metropolis: From the division of labor to urban form. Berkeley: University of California Press.
34.
Scott, A.
, and M. Storper. 1987. High technology industry and regional development: A theoretical critique and reconstruction. International Social Science Journal112: 215-232.
35.
Smith, S.1984. Practicing humanistic geography. Annals of the Association of American Geographers74: 353-374.
Storper, M.1985. The spatial and temporal constitution of social action: A critical reading of Giddens. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space3: 407-424.
38.
Storper, M.
, and R. Walker. 1989. The capitalist imperative: Territory, technology, and industrial growth. Oxford: Basil Blackwell.
39.
Thrift, N.1983. On the determination of social action in space and time. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space1: 23-57.
40.
Tiebout, C.1956. A pure theory of local expenditures. Journal of Political Economy64: 416-424.
41.
Warf, B.1986. Ideology, everyday life, and emancipatory phenomenology. Antipode18: 268-283.
42.
Warf, B.1993. Post-modernism and the localities debate: Ontological questions and epistemological implications. Tijdschrift voor Economische en Sociale Geografie84: 162-168.