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Table of Contents

January 01, 2021; Volume 40,Issue 1

Editor’s Introduction

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    Editor’s Introduction
    Katherine Melcher
    Landscape Journal, January 2021, 40 (1) iv; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/lj.40.1.iv
    Katherine Melcher
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About This Issue

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    About This Issue
    Katherine Melcher
    Landscape Journal, January 2021, 40 (1) v-vi; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/lj.40.1.v
    Katherine Melcher
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Peer-Reviewed Articles

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    “Separate but Equal?” Understanding Gender Differences in Urban Park Usage and Its Implications for Gender-Inclusive Design
    Yiwei Huang and N. Claire Napawan
    Landscape Journal, January 2021, 40 (1) 1-16; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/lj.40.1.1
    Yiwei Huang
    Yiwei Huang is Assistant Professor of landscape architecture at Purdue University. Her research focuses on participatory design and planning methods, therapeutic and edible landscape in cities, and the health and everyday geography of traditionally marginalized urban communities.
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    N. Claire Napawan
    N. Claire Napawan is Associate Professor of landscape architecture and environmental design in the Department of Human Ecology at the University of California, Davis. Her research uses co-design methodologies to increase community’s resilience for underrepresented populations.
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    Proximity of Urban Farms to Contaminated Sites in Baltimore, Maryland
    Isabel Shargo, Jonathan Hall, Ashley Deng, Niya Khanjar, Camryn Edwards, Isabelle Berman, Joseph Galarraga and Sacoby Wilson
    Landscape Journal, January 2021, 40 (1) 17-33; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/lj.40.1.17
    Isabel Shargo
    Isabel Shargo is an environmental health professional with experience working in a wide range of public health topics, including health communication, community health assessments, environmental justice, and population health. She is passionate about using and mobilizing data to improve public health. She has conducted analyses using GIS, Tableau, and SAS to characterize and investigate environmental and health issues of concern. She has also worked in the public and private sectors to implement and maintain sustainable performance improvement strategies. She holds her bachelor’s of science in environmental science and master’s of public health, specializing in environmental health.
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    Jonathan Hall
    Jonathan Hall is a master’s of public policy graduate from the University of Maryland-College Park specializing in environmental policy. He uses GIS to inform public policy with spatial solutions. He is interested in resource sustainability, pollution, and environmental health. He has done work for the Global Environmental Fund attempting to map tree loss and mercury pollution in relation to gold mining.
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    Ashley Deng
    Ashley Deng is a second year public health science student and Banneker Key scholar at the University of Maryland-College Park. She currently conducts research in the Community Engagement, Environmental Justice, and Health (CEEJH) laboratory under Dr. Wilson. Her research interests lie in environmental justice, kinesiology, women’s health, and infectious disease.
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    Niya Khanjar
    Niya Khanjar is a second-year engineering student at the University of Maryland-College Park. She is majoring in bioengineering, with a minor in sustainability studies. She has worked in the CEEJH laboratory under Dr. Wilson as an undergraduate research assistant since June 2020.
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    Camryn Edwards
    Camryn Edwards is a senior at the University of Maryland-College Park majoring in public health science with a minor in Black women’s studies. Her previous research experience centers around the effect of residential reentry programs on the mental health of formerly incarcerated women.
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    Isabelle Berman
    Isabelle Berman is a member of the CEEJH laboratory. Isabelle has worked for Montgomery County, Maryland’s Department of Environmental Protection, studying local stream ecology data and community engagement in climate change.
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    Joseph Galarraga
    Joseph Galarraga holds a master’s of public health degree with a concentration in health equity from the University of Maryland School of Public Health, Health Policy and Management department. He is a faculty assistant with the CEEJH laboratory. His research interests include housing and health, community development, environmental health, and health disparities.
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    Sacoby Wilson
    Sacoby Wilson is Associate Professor and Director of the CEEJH laboratory at the Maryland Institute for Applied Environmental Health, School of Public Health, University of Maryland-College Park. He has 20 years of experience performing community-engaged research including community-based participatory research, crowd science, and citizen science on environmental justice and health topics in the mid-Atlantic region, Carolinas, Deep South, and the Gulf Coast. He is on the board of the Citizen Science Association, former board member for Community Campus Partnerships for Health, and a member of the National Environmental Justice Advisory Council.
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    New Urbanism and the Hazard Transect Overlay District: Improving the Integration of Disaster Resilience and Design in Coastal Areas
    Gavin Smith, Allison Anderson and David Perkes
    Landscape Journal, January 2021, 40 (1) 35-47; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/lj.40.1.35
    Gavin Smith
    Gavin Smith is Professor in the Department of Landscape Architecture and Environmental Planning at North Carolina State University. His research focuses on hazard mitigation, disaster recovery, and climate change adaptation and the integration of research and practice through deep community engagement. He has written the text Planning for Post-Disaster Recovery: A Review of the United States Disaster Assistance Framework () and served as the coeditor of Adapting to Climate Chance: Lessons from Natural Hazards Planning () as well as writing numerous peer-reviewed journal articles, book chapters, and practice-oriented reports.
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    Allison Anderson
    Allison Anderson is an architect who leads the firm unabridged Architecture, which has established a practice dedicated to civic and sustainable design within fragile coastal environments. Allison earned a master’s of architecture degree from the University of Texas, where she was awarded the President’s Fellowship, and a bachelor’s of architecture degree from the University of Southern California. She has been a licensed architect since 1991. Allison has taught architecture at the University of Texas and Louisiana State University and was the Favrot Visiting Chair in Architecture at Tulane University.
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    David Perkes
    David Perkes is an architect and Professor at Mississippi State University. He is the founding director of the Gulf Coast Community Design Studio, a professional outreach program of the College of Architecture, Art & Design that was established after Hurricane Katrina to provide planning and architectural design support to help rebuild the Mississippi Gulf Coast.
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    Homelessness in the Public Landscape: A Typology of Informal Infrastructure
    Cory Parker
    Landscape Journal, January 2021, 40 (1) 49-66; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/lj.40.1.49
    Cory Parker
    Cory Parker researches homeless communities of West Coast cities while instructing students in landscape architecture at the University of California, Davis. He is a 2019–2020 Faculty Fellow of Design for Spatial Justice at the University of Oregon. He completed a PhD in Geography at UC Davis with a dissertation on homeless mobility. Prior to that, he practiced landscape architecture in Seattle for 18 years.
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Book Reviews

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    Parks and Recreation System Planning: A New Approach for Creating Sustainable, Resilient Communities
    Diane Kuehn
    Landscape Journal, January 2021, 40 (1) 67-68; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/lj.40.1.67
    Diane Kuehn
    Diane Kuehn is Associate Professor of Outdoor Recreation and Tourism at the State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry.
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    Accidental Wilderness: The Origins and Ecology of Toronto’s Tommy Thompson Park
    Richard C. Smardon
    Landscape Journal, January 2021, 40 (1) 68-69; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/lj.40.1.68
    Richard C. Smardon
    Richard C. Smardon is SUNY Distinguished Service Professor Emeritus at SUNY-College of Environmental Science and Forestry.
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    Conflict Landscapes: An Archaeology of the International Brigades in the Spanish Civil War
    Antonino Crisà
    Landscape Journal, January 2021, 40 (1) 69-71; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/lj.40.1.69
    Antonino Crisà
    Antonino “Nino” Crisa is an archaeologist, historian, and numismatist, currently Marie Curie Skłodowska Research Fellow at Ghent University (Belgium). He is mainly interested in Italian archaeology, cultural heritage studies, numismatics, history of collecting, and coin circulation. He previously worked as a research fellow at the University of Warwick, exploring token production in ancient Sicily (2016–19). Crisà has been trained at the University of Milan (BA 2004, MA 2007) and Leicester (2012–16) where he earned his PhD archaeology and worked as a classics teaching assistant. As a field archaeologist, he has excavated in Sicily, Sardinia, northern Italy, and Syria (Palmyra).
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    The Invention of Public Space: Designing for Inclusion in Lindsay’s New York
    Richard S. Hawks
    Landscape Journal, January 2021, 40 (1) 71-72; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/lj.40.1.71
    Richard S. Hawks
    Richard S. Hawks, FASLA, FCELA, is SUNY Distinguished Service Professor Emeritus at the Department of Landscape Architecture, State University of New York, Syracuse. Hawks retired in 2017 after 40 years on the faculty and 25 years as the chair of the department. He was the codirector of the National Endowment for the Arts’ Your Town, A Citizen’s Institute for Rural Design from 1991 to 2012. His current research addresses New York City’s response to climate change. Hawks earned a bachelor’s degree in landscape architecture from SUNY ESF and master’s in landscape architecture from the Graduate School of Design, Harvard University.
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In this issue

Landscape Journal: 40 (1)
Landscape Journal
Vol. 40, Issue 1
1 Jan 2021
  • Table of Contents
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