Barnes, T.1989: Place, space and theories of economic value: contextualism and essentialism in economic geography. Transactions, Institute of British Geographers14, 299-316.
2.
Berger, J. and Offe, C.1982: Functionalism versus rational choice?Theory and Society11, 521-26.
3.
Brewer, J.1989: The sinews of power: war, money and the English state , 1688-1783. London: Unwin Hyman.
4.
Bright, C. and Harding, S. , editors, 1984: State-making and social movements . Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.
5.
Chase-Dunn, C.1990: World-state formation: historical processes and emergent necessity. Political Geography Quarterly9, 108-30.
6.
Chouinard, V. and Fincher, R.1987: State formation in capitalist societies: a conjunctural approach. Antipode19, 329-52.
7.
Clark, G. and Dear, M.1984: State apparatus: structures and language of legitimacy . London: Allen and Unwin.
8.
Claval, P.1980: Centre/periphery and space: models of political geography . In Gottman, J., editor, Centre and periphery: spatial variations in politics, London: Sage, 63-71.
9.
Connell, R.1987: Gender and power. Oxford: Polity Press.
10.
Cooke, P.1989: Nation, space, modernity. In Peet, R. and Thrift, N., editors, New models in geography: the political-economy perspective, London: Unwin Hyman, Volume 1, 267-91.
11.
Corbridge, S.1986: Capitalist world development: a critique of radical development geography. London: Macmillan.
12.
Corrigan, P. and Sayer, D.1985: The great arch: English state formation as cultural revolution . Oxford: Basil Blackwell.
13.
Cotton, J.1989: Asian frontier nationalism: Owen Lattimore and the American policy debate. Manchester: Manchester University Press.
14.
Dalby, S.1990: American security discourse: the persistence of geopolitics . Political Geography Quarterly9, 171-88.
15.
Dandeker, C.1990: Surveillance, power and modernity: bureaucracy and discipline from 1770 to the present day. Oxford: Polity Press.
16.
Daniels, S.1988: The political iconography of woodland in later Georgian England. In Cosgrove, D. and Daniels, S., editors, The iconography of landscape , Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 43-82.
17.
Dodgshon, R.A.1987: The European past: social evolution and spatial order . London: Macmillan.
18.
Driver, F.1985: Theorising state structures. Environment and Planning A17, 263-73.
19.
— 1988: The historicity of human geography. Progress in Human Geography12, 497-506.
20.
— 1991: Tory radicalism? Ideology, strategy and locality in popular politics during the 1830s. Northern History27, in press.
21.
— 1992: Geography and power. In Burke, P., editor, Critical essays on Foucault, Godstone : Scolar Press.
22.
Duncan, S. and Goodwin, M.1988: The local state and uneven development. Oxford: Polity Press.
23.
Elster, J.1982: Marxism, functionalism and game theory. Theory and Society11, 453-82.
24.
Featherstone, M., editor, 1990: Global culture: nationalism, globalization and modernity. London: Sage.
25.
Fraser, N.1989: Unruly practices: power, discourse and gender in contemporary social theory. Oxford: Polity Press .
26.
Gamble, A.1988: The free economy and the strong state: the politics of Thatcherism. London: Macmillan.
27.
Giddens, A.1985: A Contemporary Critique of Historical Materialism, Volume 2: The nation-state and violence. Oxford: Polity Press.
28.
— 1990: The consequences of modernityStanford : Stanford University Press.
29.
Goody, J.1986: The logic of writing and the organisation of society. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
30.
Gottman, J.1973: The significance of territory. Charlottesville : University Press of Virginia.
31.
— 1975: The evolution of the concept of territory. Social Science Information14, 29-47.
32.
Gregory, D. and Ley, D., editors, 1988: Culture's geographies (theme issue), Environment and Planning D: Society and Space6, 115-228.
33.
Hall, J.1986a: Introduction. In Hall, J., editor, States in history, Oxford : Basil Blackwell, 1-21.
34.
— 1986b: States and economic development. In Hall, J., editor, States in history, Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 155-68.
35.
Hall, S.1988: The hard road to renewal: Thatcherism and the crisis of the Left. London: Verso.
36.
Harvey, D.1983: Owen Lattimore: a memoire. Antipode15, 3-11.
37.
— 1985: The geopolitics of capitalism. In Gregory, D. and Urry, J., editors, Social relations and spatial structures, London: Macmillan, 128-63.
38.
— 1987: The world-systems theory trap. Studies in Comparative International Development22, 42-7.
39.
Heffernan, M. and Gruffudd, P., editors, 1988: 'A land fit for heroes': essays in the human geography of inter-war Britain. Loughborough University, Department of Geography Occasional Paper No. 14.
Jackson, P.1989: Maps of meaning: an introduction to cultural geography . London: Unwin Hyman.
42.
Jessop, B.1982: The capitalist state: Marxist theories and methods. Oxford: Martin Robertson.
43.
— 1985: Nicos PoulantzasLondon: Macmillan.
44.
Johnston, R.J.1984: Marxist political economy, the state and political geography . Progress in Human Geography8, 473-92.
45.
— 1989: The state, political geography and geography. In Peet, R. and Thrift, N., editors, New models in geography: the political-economy perspective, London: Unwin Hyman , Volume 1, 292-309.
46.
Kearns, G.1988: History, geography and world-systems theory. Journal of Historical Geography14, 281-92.
47.
King, A.D.1990: Urbanism, colonialism and the world-economy. London: Routledge.
48.
Knox, P. and Agnew, J.1989: The geography of the world economy. London: Edward Arnold.
49.
Lattimore, O.1962: Studies in frontier history. London : Oxford University Press.
50.
Lipietz, A.1986: New tendencies in the international division of labour: regimes of accumulation and modes of regulation. In Scott, A. and Storper, M., editors, Production, work, territory, London: Allen and Unwin, 16-40.
51.
Lovering, J.1987: Militarism, capitalism and the nation-state. Society and Space5, 283-302.
52.
Mann, M.1984: The autonomous power of the state: its origins, mechanisms and results. Archives Europeenes de Sociologie25, 185-213.
53.
— 1986: The sources of social power, Volume 1Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
54.
Marston, S.1989: Adopted citizens: discourse and the production of meaning among nineteenth-century American urban immigrants. Transactions, Institute of British Geographers14, 435-45.
55.
Martin, R.1989: The reorganisation of regional theory: alternative perspectives on the changing capitalist economy. Geoforum20, 187-201.
Merquior, J.G.1986: Patterns of state-building in Brazil and Argentina. In Hall, J., editor, States in history , Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 264-88.
58.
Mohan, J., editor, 1989: The political geography of contemporary Britain. London: Macmillan.
59.
Mouzelis, N.1988: Sociology of development: reflections on the present crisis . Sociology22, 23-44.
60.
Nairn, T.1988: The enchanted glass: Britain and its monarchy. London: Radius.
61.
O'Brien, P.1984: Europe in the world economy. In Bull, H. and Watson, A., editors, The expansion of the international economy, Oxford: Clarendon Press, 43-60.
62.
Ogborne, M.1991: Local power and state regulation in nineteenth-century Britain. Paper read at the Annual Conference of the Institute of British Geographers, Sheffield.
63.
Paddison, R.1983: The fragmented state: the political geography of power . Oxford: Basil Blackwell.
64.
Peet, R.1989: Introduction: New models of the nation-state and politics . In Peet, R. and Thrift, N., editors, New models in geography: the political-economy perspective, London: Unwin Hyman , Volume 1, 257-65.
65.
Penrose, J.1990: Frisian nationalism: a response to cultural and political hegemony. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space8, 427-48.
66.
Pimlott, B.1989: Is the post-war consensus a myth?Contemporary Record2, 12-14.
67.
Poulantzas, N.1973: Political power and social classes. London: Verso.
68.
Radcliffe, S.1990a: Ethnicity, patriarchy and incorporation into the nation: female migrants as domestic servants in Peru. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space8, 379-94.
69.
— 1990b: Marking the boundaries between the community, the state and history in the Andes. Journal of Latin American Studies22, 575-94.
70.
Raffestin, C.1980: Pour une géographie du pouvoir. Paris : Librairies Techniques.
71.
Robinson, J.1990: A perfect system of control? State power and native locations in South Africa. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space8, 135-62.
72.
Rose, G.1990: The struggle for political democracy: emancipation, gender and geography. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space8, 395-408.
73.
Saunders, P.1984: Rethinking local politics. In Boddy, M. and Fudge, C., editors, Local socialism? Labour councils and New Left alternatives, London: Macmillan, 22-48.
74.
Sayer, A.1984: Method in social science: a realist approach. London: Hutchinson.
75.
Sidaway, J. and Simon, D.1990: Spatial policies and uneven development in the 'Marxist-Leninist' states of the Third World. In Simon, D., editor, Third world regional development: a reappraisal, London: Paul Chapman, 24-38.
76.
Skocpol, T.1977: Wallerstein's world capitalist system. American Journal of Sociology82, 1075-90.
77.
— 1978: States and social revolutionsCambridge : Cambridge University Press.
78.
— 1985: Bringing the state back in. In Evans, P.B., editor, Bringing the state back in, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 3-37.
79.
Slater, D.1989: Peripheral capitalism and the regional problematic. In Peet, R. and Thrift, N., editors, New Models in geography: the political-economy perspective, London: Unwin Hyman , Volume 2, 267-94.
80.
Smith, A.D.1986: State-making and nation-building. In Hall, J., editor, States in history, Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 228-63.
81.
Smith, G., editor, 1990: The nationalities question in the SovietUnion. Harlow: Longman.
82.
Smith, S.J.1990: Social geography: patriarchy, racism, nationalism. Progress in Human Geography14, 261-71.
83.
Taylor, P.1989a: Britain's changing role in the world-economy. In Mohan, J., editor, The political geography of contemporary Britain, London: Macmillan, 18-34.
84.
— 1989b: Political geography: world-economy, nation-state and locality, second edition. London: Longman.
85.
— 1989c: The error of developmentalism in human geography. In Gregory, D. and Walford, R., editors, Horizons in human geography, London: Macmillan, 303-19.
86.
Tilly, C., editor, 1975: The formation of national states in western Europe. Princeton : Princeton University Press.
87.
— 1989: The geography of European statemaking and capitalism since 1500. In Genovese, E. and Hochberg, L., editors, Geographic perspectives in history, Oxford: Basil Blackwell , 158-81.
88.
Walker, R.1988: One world, many worlds: struggles for a just world peace . Boulder: Lynne Rienner.
89.
Wallace, I., 1990: The global economic system. London : Unwin Hyman.
90.
Wallerstein, I.1974: The modern world-system: capitalist agriculture and the origins of the European world-economy. London: Academic Press.
91.
— 1979: A world-system perspective on the social sciences. In Wallerstein, I., The capitalist world-system, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 152-64.
92.
— 1983: Historical capitalismLondon: Verso.
93.
— 1989: The modern world-system III: the second era of great expansion of the capitalist world-economy, 1730-1840s. London: Academic Press.
94.
Werner, F.1988: Political and social structures of the west, 300-1300 . In Baechler, J., Hall, J. and Mann, M., editors, Europe and the rise of capitalism, Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 169-84.
95.
Wolch, J. and Dear, M., editors, 1989: The power of geography. Unwin Hyman: London.
96.
Worsley, P.1980: One nation or three? A critique of the world-system theory of Immanuel Wallerstein. Socialist Register, 298-338.
97.
Zolberg, A.R.1981: Origins of the modem world system: a missing link. World Politics33, 253-81.