Alderman, D.H.2004: Channing Cope and the making of a miracle vine. The Geographical Review94, 157-77.
2.
Baker, L.E.2004: Tending cultural landscapes and food citizenship in Toronto's community gardens. The Geographical Review94, 305-25.
3.
Bardsley, D.K. and Edwards-Jones, G.2007: Invasive species policy and climate change: social perceptions of environmental change in the Mediterranean . Environmental Science and Policy10, 230-42.
4.
Bian, L.2007: Object-oriented representation of environmental phenomena: is everything best represented as an object? Annals of the Association of American Geographers97, 267-81.
5.
Blay-Palmer A. and Donald B.2006: A tale of three tomatoes: the new food economy in Toronto, Canada. Economic Geography82, 383-402.
6.
Blondel, J.2006: The `design' of Mediterranean landscapes: a millennial story of humans and ecological systems during the historic period. Human Ecology34, 713-29.
7.
Blunt, A.2007: Cultural geographies of migration: mobility, transnationality and diaspora. Progress in Human Geography31, 684-94.
8.
Blute, M.2008: Cultural ecology. In Pearsall, D.M., editor, Encyclopedia of archaeology, New York: Academic Press, 1059-66.
9.
Carney, J.2001: Black rice: the African origins of rice cultivation in the Americas. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
10.
Christie, M.E., editor 2004: People, places and gardens. The Geographical Review (special issue) 94(3).
11.
Clarke, N., Cloke, P., Barnett, C. and Malpass, A.2008: The spaces and ethics of organic food. Journal of Rural Studies, in press, DOI: 10.1016/ j.jrurstud.2007.12.008.
12.
Cloke, P. and Pawson, E.2008: Memorial trees and treescape memories. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space26, 107-22.
13.
Comaroff, J. and Comaroff, J.L.2001: Naturing the nation: aliens, apocalypse and the postcolonial state. Journal of Southern African Studies27, 627-51.
14.
Cook, I.2004: Follow the thing: papaya. Antipode36, 642-64.
15.
Cook, I. et al. 2006: Geographies of food: following. Progress in Human Geography30, 655-66.
16.
Coombes, B.2007: Postcolonial conservation and Kiekie harvests at Morere New Zealand - abstracting indigenous knowledge from indigenous politics. Geographical Research45, 186-93.
17.
Coulson, J.2004: Geographical knowledges in the Ecuadorian flower industry . In Hughes, A. and Reimer, S., editors, Geographies of commodity chains, London: Routledge.
18.
Crosby, A.W.1972: The Columbian exchange: biological and cultural consequences of 1492. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press.
19.
- 1986: Ecological imperialism: the biological expansion of Europe, 900-1900. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
20.
Dahlberg, F.1981: Woman the gatherer. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.
21.
Denham, T.P.2007: Early to mid-Holocene plant exploitation in New Guinea: towards a contingent interpretation of agriculture. In Denham, T.P., Iriarte, J. and Vrydaghs, L., editors, Rethinking agriculture: archaeological and ethnoarchaeological perspectives, Walnut Creek, CA: Left Coast Press.
22.
de Sousa, I. and Busch, L.1998: Networks and agricultural development: the case of soybean production and consumption in Brazil. Rural Sociology63, 349-71.
23.
Dickau, R., Ranere, A.J. and Cooke, R.G.2007: Starch grain evidence for the preceramic dispersals of maize and root crops into tropical dry and humid forests of Panama. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences104, 3651-56.
24.
Domene, E. and Sauri, D.2007: Urbanization and class-produced natures: vegetable gardens in the Barcelona Metropolitan Region. Geoforum38, 287-98.
25.
Donald, P.F.2004: Biodiversity impacts of some agricultural commodity production systems. Conservation Biology18, 17-37.
26.
Doolittle, W.E.2004: Gardens are us, we are nature: transcending antiquity and modernity. The Geographical Review94, 391-404.
27.
Ellen, R.1998: Palms and the prototypicality of trees: some questions concerning assumptions in the comparative study of categories and labels. In Rival, L., editor, The social life of trees, Oxford: Berg.
28.
Emperaire, L. and Peroni, N.2007: Traditional management of agrobiodiversity in Brazil: a case study of Manioc. Human Ecology35, 761-68.
29.
Ericksen, P.J.2008: Conceptualizing food systems for global environmental change research. Global Environmental Change18, 234-45.
30.
Fagan, B.2005: Globalization, the WTO and the Australia-Philippines `banana war'. In Fold, N. and Pritchard, B. editors, Cross-continental food chains, London: Routledge.
31.
- 2006: `Bananas in chains'? Reflections on global commodity chains and labour movement regulatory initiatives. Employment Relations Record6, 31-46.
32.
Farley, K.A.2007: Grasslands to tree plantations: forest transition in the Andes of Ecuador. Annals of the Association of American Geographers97, 755-71.
33.
Feinberg, B.2003: The devil's book of culture. History, mushrooms and caves in southern Mexico. Austin, TX: University of Texas Press.
34.
Fischer, E. and Benson, P.2006: Broccoli and desire. Global connections and Maya struggles in postwar Guatemala. Palo Alto, CA: Stanford University Press.
35.
Fold, N.2004: Spilling the beans on a tough nut. In Hughes, A. and Reimer, S. , editors, Geographies of commodity chains, London: Routledge.
36.
Foster, J. and Sandberg, L.A.2004: Friends or foe? Invasive species and public green space in Toronto. The Geographical Review94, 178-98.
37.
Freidberg, S.2004: French beans and food scares. Culture and commerce in an anxious age. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
38.
- 2005 : French bean for the masses: a modern historical geography of food in Burkina Faso. In Watson, J.L. and Caldwell, M.L., editors, The cultural politics of food and eating, Malden, MA: Blackwell, 21-41.
39.
Galt, R.E.2008: Pesticides in export and domestic agriculture: reconsidering market orientation and pesticide use in Costa Rica. Geoforum39, 1378-92.
40.
Graham, S. and Connell, J.2006: Nurturing relationships: the gardens of Greek and Vietnamese migrants in Marrickville, Sydney. Australian Geographer37, 375-94.
41.
Groning, G. and Wolschke-Bulmahn, J.2003: The native plant enthusiasm: ecological panacea or xenophobia? Landscape Research28, 75-88.
42.
Guthman, J.2004: Agrarian dreams: the paradox of organic farming in California . Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.
43.
Hanson, J. and Bell, M.2007: Harvest trails in Australia: patterns of seasonal migration in the fruit and vegetable industry. Journal of Rural Studies23, 101-17.
44.
Harvey, M., Quilley, S. and Beynon, H.2002: Exploring the tomato. Transformations of nature, society and economy. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar.
45.
Head, L.2007: Cultural ecology: the problematic human and the terms of engagement. Progress in Human Geography31, 837-46.
46.
Head, L. and Muir, P.2004: Nativeness, invasiveness and nation inAustralian plants. The Geographical Review94, 199-217.
47.
- 2006: Suburban life and the boundaries of nature: resilience and rupture in Australian backyard gardens. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers NS51, 505-24.
48.
- 2007: Backyard. Nature and culture in suburban Australia. Wollongong: University of Wollongong Press.
49.
Henderson, S., Dawson, T.P. and Whittaker, R.J.2006: Progress in invasive plants research. Progress in Physical Geography30, 25-46.
50.
Heynen, N., Perkins, H.A. and Roy, P.2006: The political ecology of uneven urban green space: the impact of political economy on race and ethnicity in producing environmental inequality in Milwaukee. Urban Affairs Review42, 3-25.
51.
Hitchings, R.2003: People, plants and performance: on actor network theory and the material pleasures of the private garden. Social and Cultural Geography4, 99-112.
52.
- 2007: How awkward encounters could influence the future form of many gardens. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers NS32, 363-76.
53.
Hitchings, R. and Jones, V.2004: Living with plants and the exploration of botanical encounter within human geographic research practice. Ethics, Place and Environment7, 3-18.
54.
Hodder, I.2007: Çatalhöyük in the context of the Middle Eastern Neolithic . Annual Review of Anthropology36, 105-20.
55.
Howard, T.F.2002: The onion landscape of Georgia. The Geographical Review92, 452-59.
56.
Ingram, M.2007: Biology and beyond: the science of `back to nature' farming in the United States. Annals of the Association of American Geographers97, 298-312.
57.
Isaacman, A.1996: Cotton is the mother of poverty. London : James Currey Ltd.
58.
Izern, T.D.2007: A good servant but a tyrannous master: gorse in New Zealand . The Social Science Journal44, 179-86.
59.
Johnson, N.C.2007: Grand design(er)s: David Moore, natural theology and the Royal Botanic Gardens in Glasnevin, Dublin, 1838-1879. Cultural Geographies14, 29-55.
Jones, O. and Cloke, P.2002: Tree cultures. The place of trees and trees in their place . Oxford: Berg.
62.
Jordan, J.2007: The heirloom tomato as cultural object: investigating taste and space. Sociologia Ruralis47, 20-41.
63.
Klooster, D.2006: Environmental certification of forests in Mexico: the political ecology of a non-governmental market intervention. Annals of the Association of American Geographers96, 541-65.
64.
Kull, C.A. and Rangan, H.2008: Acacia exchanges: wattles, thorn trees, and the study of plant movements. Geoforum39, 1258-72.
65.
Leach, H.2002: Exotic natives and contrived wild gardens: the twentieth-century home garden. In Pawson, E. and Brooking, T., editors, Environmental histories of New Zealand, Melbourne: Oxford University Press, 214-32.
66.
Lee, R. and de Vore, I., editors 1968: Man the hunter. Chicago, IL: Aldine Publishing Co.
67.
Longhurst, R.2006: Plots, plants and paradoxes: contemporary domestic gardens in Aotearoa/New Zealand. Social and Cultural Geography7, 581-93.
68.
Lorimer, J.2007: Nonhuman charisma. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space25, 911-32.
69.
Mackey, B.G.2008: Boundaries, data and conservation. Journal of Biogeography35, 392-93.
70.
Mather, C. and Rowcroft, P.2004: Citrus, apartheid and the struggle to (re)present Outspan oranges. In Hughes, A. and Reimer, S. editors, Geographies of commodity chains, New York: Routledge.
71.
Matless, D.2001: Bodies made of grass made of earth made of bodies: organicism, diet and national health in mid-twentieth-century England. Journal of Historical Geography27, 355-76.
72.
McCann, J.C.2005: Maize and grace. Africa's encounter with a new world crop (1500-2000). Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
73.
McConville, C.2007: `Just sugar'? Food and landscape along Queensland's Sunshine Coast. In Kirkby, D. and Luckins, T., editors, Dining on turtles. Food, feasts and dining in history, New York: Palgrave Macmillan.
74.
Mintz, S.W.1985: Sweetness and power. The place of sugar in modern history . New York: Viking.
75.
Moore, H.L.1988: Feminism and anthropology. Cambridge : Polity Press.
76.
Ohnuki-Tierney, E.1993: Rice as self: Japanese identities through time. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
77.
Olwig, K.R.2003: Natives and aliens in the national landscape. Landscape Research28, 61-74.
78.
Parlee, B., Berkes, F. and Teetl'it Gwich'in Renewable Resources Council2006: Indigenous knowledge of ecological variability and commons management: a case study on berry harvesting from Northern Canada . Human Ecology34, 515-28.
79.
Perry, L., Dickau, R., Zarrillo, S., Holst, I., Pearsall, D.M., Piperno, D.R., Berman, M.J., Cooke, R.G., Rademaker, K., Ranere, A.J., Raymond, J.S., Sandweiss, D.H., Scaramelli, F., Tarble, K. and Zeidler, J.A.2007: Starch fossils and the domestication and dispersal of chili peppers (Capsicum spp. L.) in the Americas. Science315, 986-88.
80.
Philpott, S.M. and Dietsch, T.2003: Coffee and conservation: a global context and the value of farmer involvement. Conservation Biology17, 1844-46.
81.
Pollan, M.2001: The botany of desire: a plant's eye view of the world . Toronto: Random House.
82.
- 2006: The omnivore's dilemma: a natural history of four meals . New York: Penguin Press.
83.
Power, E.R.2005: Human-nature relations in suburban gardens. The Australian Geographer36, 39-53.
84.
Pritchard, B. and Burch, D.2003: Agri-food globalization in perspective: international restructuring in the processing tomato industry. Aldershot : Ashgate.
Richardson, D.M., Pysek, P., Simberloff, D., Rejmanek, M. and Mader, A.D.2008: Biological invasions - the widening debate: a response to Charles Warren. Progress in Human Geography32, 295-98.
87.
Rival, L., editor 1998: The social life of trees. Anthropological perspectives on tree symbolism. Oxford: Berg.
88.
Robbins, P.2004: Comparing invasive networks: cultural and political biographies of invasive species. The Geographical Review94, 139-56.
89.
Robbins, P. and Sharp, J.T.2003: Producing and consuming chemicals: the moral economy of theAmerican lawn. Economic Geography79, 425-51.
90.
Russell-Smith, J., Djoeroemana, S., Maan, J. and Pandanga, P.2007: Rural livelihoods and burning practices in savanna landscapes of Nusa Tenggara Timur, eastern Indonesia. Human Ecology35, 345-59.
91.
Sheller, M.2005: The ethical banana: markets, migrants and the globalization of a fruit. Paper presented to the STS visiting Speaker Series: `Globalization in practice: science and technology studies (STS) perspectives on the everyday life of globalization', Said Business School, University of Oxford. Retrieved 21 May 2008 from http://www.sbs.ox.ac.uk/NR/rdonlyres/EE75C10F-5FAE4B8C-8620-FB353608F75B/953/MimiSheller.pdf
92.
Soleri, D. and Cleveland, D.A.2006: Transgenic maize and Mexican maize diversity: risky synergy ? Agriculture and Human Values23, 27-31.
93.
Sullivan, W.C., Kuo, F.E. and Depooter, S.F.2004: The fruit of urban nature: vital neighborhood spaces. Environment and Behaviour36, 678-99.
94.
Sundberg, J. and Kaserman, B.2007: Cactus carvings and desert defecations: embodying representations of border crossings in protected areas on the Mexico-US border. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space25, 727-44.
95.
Tabuti, J.R.S.2007: Status of non-cultivated food plants in Bulamogi County, Uganda. African Journal of Ecology45 (Supplement 1), 96-101.
96.
Takacs, D.1996: The idea of biodiversity. Baltimore , MD: The Johns Hopkins University Press.
97.
Trigger, D.2005: Native vs Exotic: cultural discourses about flora, fauna and belonging in Australia. In Kungolos, A. , Brebbia, C. and Beriatos, E., editors, Sustainable planning and development, The Sustainable World volume 6, Southampton : Wessex Institute of Technology Press, 1301-10.
98.
Trigger, D., Mulcock, J., Gaynor, A. and Toussaint, Y.2008: Ecological restoration, cultural preferences and the negotiation of `nativeness' in Australia. Geoforum39, 1273-83.
99.
Tubiello, F.N., Soussana, J.-F. and Howden, S.M.2007: Crop and pasture response to climate change. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences104, 19686-90.
100.
van Etten, J.2006: Molding maize: the shaping of a crop diversity landscape in the western highlands of Guatemala. Journal of Historical Geography32, 689-711.
101.
Vazquez-Garcia, V.2008: Gender, ethnicity, and economic status in plant management: uncultivated edible plants among the Nahuas and Popolucas of Veracruz, Mexico . Agriculture and Human Values25, 65-77.
102.
Warren, C.R.2007: Perspectives on the `alien' versus `native' species debate: a critique of concepts, language and practice. Progress in Human Geography31, 427-46.
103.
- 2008: Alien concepts: a response to Richardson et al. Progress in Human Geography32, 299-300.
104.
Watts, M.2005: Commodities. In Cloke, P., Crang P. and Goodwin, M., editors, Introducing human geographies , London: Arnold, 527-46.
Wiskerke, J.S.C.2003: On promising niches and constraining sociotechnical regimes: the case of Dutch wheat and bread. Environment and Planning A35, 428-49.
107.
Wolch, J.2007: Green urban worlds. Annals of the Association of American Geographers97, 373-84.
108.
Zabin, C.1997: USA-Mexico economic integration: labour relations and the organization of work in California and Baja California agriculture. Economic Geography73, 337-57.
109.
Zagorski, T., Kirkpatrick, J.B. and Stratford, E.2004: Gardens and the bush: gardeners' attitudes, garden types and invasives. Australian Geographical Studies42, 207-20.
110.
Zhang, Y., Hussain, A., Deng, J. and Letson, M.2007: Public attitudes towards urban trees and supporting urban tree programs. Environment and Behaviour39, 797-814.