Association of Graduate Careers Advisory Services (AGCAS): 1985: Response to the government's Green Paper: The development of higher education into the 1990s, AGCAS, Director: Dr Bernard Kingston, The University, Sheffield.
2.
BennettR. J.1985: Quantification and relevance. In JohnstonR. J., editor, 1985, London: Methuen.
3.
BookchinM.1980: Towards an ecological society. Montreal: Black Rose Books.
4.
BowlesS.GintisH.1976: Schooling in capitalist America. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul.
5.
BoysonR.1980: Speech to Royal Vetinary College, London. Reported in The Times Higher Educational Supplement, 3 October 1980.
6.
BradleyP.1983: Underdevelopment and physical geography: Bias and relevance in the Sahel. In CannonT.ForbesM.MacKieJ., editors, Society and nature: Socialist perspectives on the relationship between human and physical geography, London: Union of Socialist Geographers.
7.
BrownE.1975: The content and relationship of physical geography. Geographical Journal141, 35–48.
8.
BrunsdenD.1985: Geomorphology in the service of society. In JohnstonR., editor, 1985, London: Methuen.
9.
ButzerK. W.1964: Environment and archaeology. London: Methuen.
10.
ButzerK. W., 1982: Archaeology as human ecology. Cambridge: CUP.
11.
BurtonI.KatesR. W.WhiteG. F.1978: The environment as hazard. New York: Oxford University Press.
12.
CapraF.1982: The turning point. London: Wildwood House.
13.
CapraF.SpretnakC.1984: Green politics. London: Hutchinson.
14.
CarhartJ.OrrellK.WilsonB.1986: A summary of the available draft or approved mode 1 GCSE geography syllabuses. Update of OrrellK.WilsonR., editors, GCSE syllabuses: The choice is yours, Sheffield: The Geographical Association.
15.
ChorleyR. J.KatesR. W.1969: Introduction to ChorleyR.J., editor, Water, earth and man, London: Methuen.
16.
Confederation of British Industries1980: Evidence to the House of Commons Select Committee on Education, Science and the Arts.
17.
CookeR. U.1978: Terra firma: Geomorphology in higher education. Journal of Geography in Higher Education2 (2), 113–5.
18.
CookeR. U., 1985: Applied geomorphology. In KentA., editor, Perspectives on a changing geography, London: The Geographical Association, 36–47.
19.
CookeR. U.BrunsdenD.DoornkampJ. C.JonesD. K. C.1982: Urban geomorphology in drylands. Oxford: OUP.
20.
CookeR. U.DoornkampJ. C.1974: Geomorphology in environmental management. Oxford: OUP.
21.
CrossJ.1986: If you have a history degree, the boss will love you for your mind. The Guardian, 11 February 1986.
22.
DoornkampJ. C.1979: Response to ‘Whither geomorphology?’ Area11 (4), 307–309.
23.
DouglasI.1983: The urban environment. London: Edward Arnold.
24.
DouglasI., 1987: Too many third-year options? Journal of Geography in Higher Education10 (2), 191–5.
25.
HurstM. Eliot1985: Geography has neither existence nor future. In JohnstonR., editor, 1985, London: Methuen.
26.
GoudieA.1981: The human impact: Man's role in environmental change. Oxford: Basil Blackwell.
27.
GouldP.1973: The open geographic curriculum. In ChorleyR. J., editor, Directions in geography, London: Methuen.
28.
GouldP., 1985: Will geographic self-reflection make you blind? In JohnstonR., editor, London: Methuen.
29.
GregoryK. J.1985: The nature of physical geography. London: Edward Arnold.
30.
GregoryK. J.WallingD. E. editors, 1979: Man and environmental process. London: Dawson.
31.
HaighM.1985: Geography and general systems theory: Philosophical homologies and current practice. Geoforum16 (2), 191–203.
32.
HalesM.1982: Science or society? London: Channel Four/Pan Books.
33.
HancockD.1986: The future of (geography in) higher education. Presentation to the annual conference of the Institute of British Geographers, Reading, 9 January.
34.
HarrisK.1979: Education and knowledge. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul.
35.
HarveyD.1974: What kind of geography for what kind of public policy? Transactions, Institute of British Geographers63, 18–24.
36.
HewittK. editor, 1983: Interpretations of calamity from the viewpoint of human ecology. Boston: George Allen and Unwin.
37.
HewittK.HareF. K.1973: Man and environment: Conceptual frameworks. Association of American Geographers Commission on College Geography, Resource Paper, 20, Washington DC: AAG.
38.
HuckleJ.1983: Geographical education: Reflection and action. Oxford: OUP, Chapter 10.
39.
HuckleJ., 1985: Geography and schooling. In JohnstonR., editor, 1985, London: Methuen.
40.
JohnstonR. J.1977: On geography and the organization of education. Journal of Geography in Higher Education1 (1), 5–12.
41.
JohnstonR. J., 1983a: Resource analysis, resource management, and the integration of physical and human geography. Progress in Physical Geography7, 127–46.
42.
JohnstonR. J., 1983b: Geography and geographers, Anglo-American human geography since 1945, second edition. London: Edward Arnold.
43.
JohnstonR. J., 1985: Introduction to JohnstonR.J., editor, The future of geography, London: Methuen.
44.
JohnstonR. J., 1986: On human geography. Oxford: Basil Blackwell. JonesD. K.C.
45.
JohnstonR. J., 1983: Environments of concern. Transactions, Institute of British Geographers8, 429–57.
46.
JosephK.1985: Speech to the annual conference of the Geographical Association, London, April.
47.
LeeR.GrayM.1986: Interview with Keith Clayton. Journal of Geography in Higher Education10 (1), 7–21.
48.
LindsayR.1984: Survey of employers of graduates from the modular degree course at Oxford Polytechnic: Oxford Polytechnic, Department of Social Studies.
49.
MaunderW. H.1970: The value of the weather. London: Methuen. NAB (National Advisory Body).
50.
MaunderW. H., 1986: Non-academic skills in higher education, Report 7/86.
51.
NewsonM. D.1975: Contribution to the discussion on Brown, E. The content and relationships of physical geography. Geographical Journal141, 35–48.
52.
OrmeA.1985: Understanding and predicting the physical world‘. In JohnstonR., editor, 1985, London: Methuen.
ParkerD. J.Penning-RowsellE. C.1980: Water planning in Britain. London: George Allen and Unwin.
55.
PepperD.1983: Bringing physical and human geographers together: Why is it so difficult? In CannonT.ForbesM.MacKieJ., editors, Society and nature: Socialist perspectives on the relationship between human and physical geography, London: Union of Socialist Geographers.
56.
PepperD., 1986: Why teach physical geography? Contemporary Issues in Geography and Education2 (2), 62–75.
57.
RichardsG.1983: Dialectics, nature and physical geography. In CannonT.ForbesM.MacKieJ., editors, Society and nature: Socialist perspectives on the relationships between human and physical geography, London: Union of Socialist Geographers.
58.
RoizenJ.JepsonM.1985: Degrees for jobs: Employers' expectations of higher education. Windsor: Society for Research into Higher Education.
59.
RoseS.KaminL. J.LewontinR. C.1984: Not in our genes: Biology, ideology and human nature, Harmondsworth: Penguin.
60.
SackR.1980: Conception of space in social thought. London: MacMillan.
61.
SchumacherF.1973: Small is beautiful. London: Abacus Books. SCOEG (Standing Conference of Employers.of Graduates).
62.
SchumacherF., 1985: Survey of what employers look for in their graduate recruits. London: SCOEG.
63.
SimmonsI. G.CoxN. J.1985: Holistic and reductionist approaches to geography. In JohnstonR., editor, 1985, London: Methuen.
64.
SkolimowskiH.1981: Eco-philosophy. London: Marion Boyars.
65.
SugdenD. E.1979: Response to ‘Whither geomorphology?’ Area11 (4), 309–11.
66.
SugdenD.HamiltonP.1978: Teaching geomorphology at university. Journal of Geography in Higher Education2 (1), 14–22.
67.
UnwinT.1986: Attitudes towards geographers in the graduate labour market. Journal of Geography in Higher Education10 (2), 149–58.
68.
WilbanksT. J.LibbeeM.1979: Avoiding the demise of geography in the United States. Professional Geographer31 (1), 1–7.