The Case For Letting Malibu Burn

Article Properties
Citations
Title Journal Journal Categories Citations Publication Date
The political ecologies of fire: Recasting fire geographies in British Columbia, Canada

Environment and Planning E: Nature and Space
  • Geography. Anthropology. Recreation: Environmental sciences
  • Geography. Anthropology. Recreation
  • Social Sciences
2024
Post-disaster (im)mobility aspiration and capability formation: case study of Southern California wildfire

Population and Environment
  • Geography. Anthropology. Recreation: Environmental sciences
  • Social Sciences: Economic theory. Demography
  • Geography. Anthropology. Recreation: Environmental sciences
  • Social Sciences
2 2023
A tourist, not a god: Mike Davis, radical geographer

Human Geography 2023
The Economic Incidence of Wildfire Suppression in the United States

American Economic Journal: Applied Economics
  • Social Sciences: Commerce: Business
  • Social Sciences: Economic theory. Demography: Economics as a science
  • Social Sciences: Economic theory. Demography: Economics as a science
7 2023
Reading Rafael Chirbes’s Crematorio as a World-Ecological Text Bulletin of Contemporary Hispanic Studies 2022
Citations Analysis
The category Social Sciences 11 is the most commonly referenced area in studies that cite this article. The first research to cite this article was titled LOS ANGELES AFTER THE STORM: THE DIALECTIC OF ORDINARY DISASTER and was published in 1995. The most recent citation comes from a 2024 study titled The political ecologies of fire: Recasting fire geographies in British Columbia, Canada. This article reached its peak citation in 2023, with 3 citations. It has been cited in 19 different journals. Among related journals, the SSRN Electronic Journal cited this research the most, with 2 citations. The chart below illustrates the annual citation trends for this article.
Citations used this article by year