KATHARYNE MITCHELL

Department of Geography, Smith Hall, Box 353550

University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195

Tel. 206 543-1494; email:

EDUCATION

Doctor of Philosophy in Geography, University of California at Berkeley, 1993.

Master of Arts in Geography, University of California at Berkeley, 1989.

Bachelor of Arts in Art and Archaeology cum laude, Princeton University, 1983.

PROFESSIONAL POSITIONS

Chair, Department of Geography, University of Washington, 2008-2013.

Simpson Professor in the Public Humanities, 2004-2007.

Professor, Department of Geography, University of Washington, 2004-

Associate Professor, Department of Geography, University of Washington, 1998-2004.

Visiting Professor, St. Catherine’s College, University of Oxford, 2000-2001.

Visiting Professor, Hertford College, University of Oxford, 2000-2001.

Director of Canadian Studies, 1998-1999.

Adjunct Faculty: Women Studies, 1993-

Assistant Professor, Department of Geography, University of Washington, 1993-1998.

Lecturer, Department of English, Tunghai University, Taichung,Taiwan, 1983-1985.

HONORS, FELLOWSHIPS, AWARDS

Fellow, John Simon Guggenheim Foundation, 2016-2017.

Fellow, Brocher Foundation, Geneva, Switzerland, 2016.

Fellow, Academy of Finland Centre of Excellence, 2014-2019.

National Council for Geographic Education, Journal of Geography Best Content Article, 2013. With Sarah Elwood.

Distinguished Edward J. Taaffe Lecture in Human Geography, Ohio State University, 2012.

Fellow, Isaac Manasseh Meyer, National University of Singapore, 2011.

Fellow, Whiteley Center at Friday Harbor Labs, 2011, 2012, 2013.

Simpson Professorof the Public Humanities, 2004-2007.

Fellowship offered: Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences at Stanford University. Awarded January, 2002.Declined in order to conduct MacArthur-fundedresearch in France.

Visiting Professor, St. Catherine’s College, Oxford, 2000.

Visiting Professor, Hertford College, Oxford, 2000-2001.

Junior Faculty Mentoring Award, University of Washington, 1996.

Fellowship offered: Izaak Walton Killam Postdoctoral grant at the University of British Columbia. Awarded April, 1993.Declinedin order to take tenure-track position at the University of Washington.

Council of Graduate Schools’ University Microfilms’ International Dissertation Prize Nominee, 1993.

Fellow, University of California Regents, UC Berkeley, 1992-1993.

Fellow, Graduate Opportunity Research, UC Berkeley, 1986-1987.

Fellow, Sidney Gamble Princeton-in-Asia, Princeton University, 1983-1985.

RESEARCH GRANTS

Principal Investigator, John Simon Guggenheim Foundation, “Spaces of Sanctuary,” $50,000.

Principal Investigator, Royalty Research Fund, 2016-2017, “Spaces of Sanctuary,” $39,738.

Principal Investigator, Walter C. Simpson Center for the Humanities, 2016-2017, with Megan Carney and Ricardo Gomez: “Migration and the Spaces of Sanctuary,” Collaboration Studio Grant, $24,558.

Principal Investigator, Brocher Foundation, Fall, 2016, with Matthew Sparke: “New Biosecurity Technologies, Biological Citizenship, and European Migration,” two-month residency, Geneva, Switzerland.

Principal Investigator, Department of Geography, 2014-2015, “Curriculum Transformation: Undergraduate Course Development Initiative,” $2,500.

Principal Investigator, Spencer Foundation, Strategic Initiative on Civic Learning and Civic Action, 2009-2013, with Sarah Elwood: “Mapping Youth Journeys: From Place-Based Learning to Active Citizenship,” $316,000.

Principal Investigator, National Science Foundation, GRS,2009-2011, Doctoral Dissertation Improvement Grant: “Returning to the South: Building the New South Sudan.” Co-PI Leonie Newhouse, University of Washington, $11,400.

Principal Investigator, National Geographic Education Foundation, 2009-2010, with Sarah Elwood: “Mapping Youth Journeys Project,” $50,000.

Principal Investigator, Walter C. Simpson Center for the Humanities, 2004-2007: “Reclaiming Childhood,” $300,000.

Co-PI, Walter C. Simpson Center for the Humanities, 2006-2007, with Katherine Beckett: “Discourses of Banishment, States of Exception and Spaces of Exclusion,” $11,500.

Principal Investigator, John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, 2003-2004: “Muslims into Frenchmen? Education, Citizenship and Security under the EU,” $53,000.

Principal Investigator, Curriculum Transformation Project, 2003-2004, with Kathie Friedman: “Migration/Identity: Teaching and Learning about Citizenship,” $10,000.

Principal Investigator, Walter C. Simpson Center for the Humanities, 2002-2003, with Walter Parker: “Citizenship Formation and Historical Memory in the Wake of 9/11,” $11,500.

Principal Investigator, Spencer Foundation, 2000-2001: “Transnationalism and the Challenges to Universalist Public Education: The Case of Muslim Schools in Britain,” $26,300.

Principal Investigator, Canadian Embassy Program Enhancement Grant, 2000-2001. Funding for the Canadian Studies Center at the University of Washington, $15,000.

Principal Investigator, Title VI Grant, Department of Education, 2000-2003. Area Studies Funding for Canadian Studies at the University of Washington. $730,182, plus $162,000 for linked FLAS fellowships.

Principal Investigator, National Academy of Education/Spencer Postdoctoral Fellowship, 1997-1999: “Education, Democracy and Citizenship in the Late Twentieth Century,” $40,000.

Principal Investigator, Department of Education grant to the Jackson School International Studies Center, 1997-2000: “Migration and the Culture of Community in the Northwest,” $7,500.

Co-PI, Ford Foundation Initiative, 1998-1999: “Revitalizing Area Studies,” $50,000.

Principal Investigator, Royalty Research Fund, 1996-1997: “Chinese Diasporas and the Spatial Politics of Chinatown,” $25,167.

Co-PI, Rockefeller Foundation Humanities Fellowships Institutional Grant 1996-1998: “Project for Critical Asian Studies.”

Co-PI, National Science Foundation, 1996-1997: “Curriculum Development Using New Information Technologies,” $40,000.

Principal Investigator, Pacific Cultural Foundation, Taipei, 1996: “Facing Capital: Urban Politics in Vancouver,” $3,000.

Principal Investigator, University of Washington CIBER Research and Curriculum Development, 1994: $2,000.

Principal Investigator, Humanities Graduate Research Grant, University of California at Berkeley, 1992: $1,500.

Principal Investigator Fulbright Institute of International Education, 1991: Doctoral Research, Hong Kong, $19,600.

Principal Investigator, Pacific Cultural Foundation, Taipei, 1990: Doctoral Research, Vancouver, $6,000.

Principal Investigator, U.C. Berkeley, Humanities Graduate Research Grant, 1988: $5,600.

Principal Investigator, U.C. Berkeley, Foreign Language and Area Studies Grant, 1987: University of International Business and Economics in Beijing, $3,200.

PUBLICATIONS

Books

Under contract

Mitchell, K., Jones, R. and Fluri, J. Handbook of Geographies of Migration, editors, Edward Elgar Press.

Current

Mitchell, K. 2008. Practising Public Scholarship: Experiences and Possibilities Beyond the Academy, editor, Oxford: Blackwell Publications.

Mitchell, K. 2004. Crossing the NeoLiberal Line: Pacific Rim Migration and the Metropolis, Philadelphia: Temple University Press.

Mitchell, K., Marston, S., and Katz, C. 2004. Life’s Work: Geographies of Social Reproduction editors, Oxford: Blackwell Publications.

Agnew, J., Mitchell, K., and Toal, G. 2003. A Companion Guide to Political Geography, editors, Oxford: Blackwell Publications.

Castells, M., Bornstein, L., Mitchell, K., Skinner, R., and Stowsky, J. 1988. The State and Technology Policy: A Comparative Analysis of the U.S. Strategic Defense Initiative. Berkeley Round Table on the International Economy, WP37.

Guest EditedJournals

Mitchell, K. and Kallio, K. 2017. Guest editors Geopolitics, “Spaces of the Geosocial.” 22, 1, forthcoming.

Kallio, K. and Mitchell, K. 2016. Guest editors Global Networks, “Transnational Lived Citizenship.” 16, 3.

Elwood, S. and Mitchell, K. 2015. Guest editors Cultural Geographies, “Technology, Memory, and Collective Knowing,”22, 1.

Mitchell, K., Marston, S., and Katz, C. 2003. Guest editors Antipode, “Geographies of Social Reproduction,” 35, 3.

Mitchell, K.1997. Guest editor Antipode, “Geography and Transnational Discourse,”29, 2.

Peer Reviewed Journal Articles and Book Chapters

Accepted and forthcoming

Mitchell, K. 2017. Metrics Millennium: Social Impact Investing and the Measurement of Value. Comparative European Politics 15, 3.

Mitchell, K. 2017. Education and the Constitution of Youth in the Neoliberal Era. In Aitken, S. and Skelton, T. eds., Theories and Concepts: Youth and Young People, Vol. 1 of Skelton, T. (ed.) Geographies of Children and Young People. Berlin: Springer.

Current publications

Mitchell, K. 2017. Factivism: A New Configuration of Humanitarian Reason.Geopolitics 22,1: doi/full/10.1080/14650045.2016.1185606.

Gordon, E., Elwood, S. and Mitchell, K. 2016. Critical Spatial Learning: Participatory Mapping, Spatial Histories, and Youth Civic Engagement. Children’s Geographies14, 5, 558-572.

Mitchell, K. 2016. Celebrity Humanitarianism, Transnational Emotion, and the Rise of Neoliberal Citizenship. Global Networks 16, 3, 288-306.

Kallio, K. and Mitchell, K. 2016. Re-Spatializing Transnational Citizenship. Global Networks 16, 3, 259-267.

Mitchell, K. and MacFarlane, K. 2016. Crime and the Global City: Migration, Borders, and the Pre-Criminal. In Oxford Handbooks Online.New York: Oxford University Press.

Mitchell, K. 2016. Neoliberalism and Citizenship. In Springer, S. ed. Handbook of Neoliberalism. New York: Routledge, Chapter 10.

Mitchell, K. and Lizotte, C. 2016. Governing through Failure: Philanthropy, Neoliberalism, and Education Reform in Seattle. In Brady, M. and Lippert, R. eds., Governing Practices: Neoliberalism and the Ethnographic Imaginary. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 221-244.

Mitchell, K. and Sparke, M. 2016. The New Washington Consensus: Millennial Philanthropy and the Making of Global Market Subjects. Antipode 48, 3, 724-749.

Mitchell, K. and Elwood, S. 2015. Countermapping for Social Justice. In Kallio, K. and Mills, S. eds., Politics, Citizenship and Rights, Vol. 7 of Skelton, T. (ed.) Geographies of Children and Young People. Springer: Berlin, 207-223.

Mitchell, K. 2015. It’s TIME: The Cultural Politics of Memory in the Current Moment of Danger, in H. Merrill and L. Hoffman (eds.) Spaces of Danger: Culture and Power in the Everyday, University of Georgia Press, 21-37.

Mitchell, K. and Elwood, S. 2015. Intergenerational Mapping and the Cultural Politics of Memory. In Hakli, J. and Kallio, K. eds., The Beginning of Politics: Youthful Political Agency in Everyday Life. Routledge/Taylor&Francis, 33-52.

Katz, C., Marston, S., and Mitchell, K. 2015. Demanding Life’s Work. In K. Strauss and K. Meehan eds., Precarious Worlds: Contested Geographies of Social Reproduction, University of Georgia Press, 174-188.

Elwood, S. and Mitchell, K. 2015. Technology, Memory, and Collective Knowing.Cultural Geographies 22, 1, 147-154.

Mitchell, K. and Lizotte, C. 2014. The Grassroots and the Gift: Moral Authority, American Philanthropy, and Activism in Education. Foucault Studies 18, 66-89.

Mitchell, K. 2014. Difference. In, Lee, R., Castree, N., Kitchin, R., Lawson, V., Paasi, A., Philo, C., Radcliffe, S., Roberts, S.M. and Withers, C. (eds.) The SAGE Handbook of Progress in Human Geography. SAGE, 69-93.

Elwood, S. and Mitchell, K. 2013. Another Politics is Possible: Neogeographies, Visual Spatial Tactics and Political Formation. Cartographica 48, 4, 275-292.

Mitchell, K. and Elwood, S. 2013. Intergenerational Mapping and the Cultural Politics of Memory. Space and Polity 17, 2, 33-52.

Mitchell, K. and Elwood, S. 2012. Mapping Children's Politics: The Promise of Articulation and the Limits of Nonrepresentational Theory. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 30, 5, 788-804.

Mitchell, K. and Elwood, S. 2012. Engaging Students through Mapping Local History. Journal of Geography 111, 4, 148-157.

Mitchell, K. and Elwood, S. 2012. From Redlining to Benevolent Societies: The Emancipatory Power of Spatial Thinking. Theory and Research in Social Education 40, 134-163.

Elwood, S. and Mitchell, K. 2012. Mapping Children's Politics: Spatial Stories, Dialogic Relations and Political Formation. Geografiska Annaler, Series B 94, 1, 1-15.

Mitchell, K. 2011. Cultural Geographies, in M. Brown and R. Morrill eds., Seattle Geographies.Seattle, University of Washington Press, pp. 165-182.With geography honors students.

Mitchell, K. 2011. Zero Tolerance, Imperialism, Dispossession, ACME, 10, 2, 293-312.

Mitchell, K. 2011. Marseille’s Not for Burning: Comparative Networks of Integration and Exclusion in Two French Cities, Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 101, 2, 404-423.

Mitchell, K. 2010. Ungoverned Space: Global Security and the Geopolitics of Broken Windows, Political Geography 29, 5, 289-297.

Mitchell, K. 2010. Pre-Black Futures, in N. Castree, P. Chatterton, N. Heynen, W. Larner, and M. Wright eds. The Point is To Change It: Geographies of Hope and Survival in an Age of Crisis. Oxford: Blackwell, pp. 239-261.

Mitchell, K. 2009. In Whose Interest? Transnational Capital and the Production of Multiculturalism in Canada. In S. Mookerjea, I. Szeman and G. Faurschou, eds., 2009. Canadian Cultural Studies: A Reader, Durham: Duke University Press, 344-365.

Mitchell, K. 2009. Pre-Black Futures, Antipode 41, S1, 239-261.

Mitchell, K. and Beckett, K. 2008. Securing the Global City: Crime, Consulting, Ratings and Risk, International Journal of Global Legal Studies 15, 1, 75-99.

Mitchell, K. and Parker, W. 2008. I Pledge Allegiance to…Flexible Citizenship and Shifting Scales of Belonging, Teacher’s College Record 110, 4, 775-804.

Mitchell, K. 2008. Becoming Political, in K. Mitchell ed., Practicing Public Scholarship: Experiences and Possibilities Beyond the Academy. Oxford: Blackwell, pp. 1-8.

Mitchell, K. 2008. Preface, in C. Jeffrey and J. Dyson eds.Telling Youth Stories. Philadelphia, Temple University Press, pp. 1-3.

Mitchell, K. 2008. Different Diasporas and the Hype of Hybridity. In H. Bauder, and S. Engel-Di Mauro, eds. 2008. Critical Geographies: A Collection of Readings, Kelowna, British Columbia, Canada: Praxis Press, 257-277. [Reprint]

Mitchell, K. 2007. Geographies of Identity: The Intimate Cosmopolitan, Progress in Human Geography 31, 5: 706-720.

Mitchell, K. 2006. Liberating the City: Between New York and New Orleans, Urban Geography 27, 8: 722-728.

Mitchell, K. 2006. Neoliberal Governmentality in the European Union: Education, Training and Technologies of Citizenship, Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 24, 2: 389-407.

Mitchell, K. 2006. What’s Left in Geography? Antipode 38, 2: 205-212.

Mitchell, K. 2006. Geographies of Identity: The New Exceptionalism, Progress in Human Geography 30, 1: 95-106.

Marston, S., and Mitchell, K., 2005. Citizens and the State: Contextualizing Citizenship Formation in Space and Time, in M. Low and C. Barnett eds., Spaces of Democracy. Sage Publications, pp. 124-144.

Gokariksel, B. and Mitchell, K. 2005. Veiling, Secularism and the Neoliberal Subject: National Narratives and Supranational Desires in Turkey and France, Global Networks 5, 2: 147-165.

Mitchell, K., 2005. Hybridity, in D. Atkinson, P. Jackson, D. Sibley, and N. Washbourne eds., Cultural Geography: A Critical Dictionary of Key Concepts. London: I.B. Tauris, pp. 188-194.

Mitchell, K. 2004. Geographies of Identity: Multiculturalism Unplugged, Progress in Human Geography 28, 5, 641-651.

Mitchell, K. 2004. Transnationalism in the Margins: Hegemony and the Shadow State, in P. Jackson ed., Transnational Spaces. New York: Routledge, pp. 122-146.

Mitchell, K., Marston, S., and Katz, C. 2004. Introduction, in K. Mitchell, S. Marston, and C. Katz, Life’s Work: Geographies of Social Reproduction, London: Blackwell, pp. 1-26.

Mitchell, K. 2004. The Tradition of the End: Global Capitalism and the Contemporary Spaces of Apocalypse, in N. AlSayyad ed., The End of Tradition?New York: Routledge, pp. 45-62.

Mitchell, K. 2003. Conflicting Landscapes of Dwelling and Democracy in Canada, in S. Cairns ed., Building, Dwelling, Drifting: Architecture and Migrancy. New York: Routledge, pp. 142-163.

Agnew, J., Mitchell, K., and Toal, G. 2003. Introduction, in J. Agnew, K. Mitchell and G. Toal eds., A Companion to Political Geography, London: Blackwell, pp. 1-10.

Mitchell, K. 2003. Monuments, Memorials, and the Politics of Memory, Urban Geography 24, 5: 442-459.

Mitchell, K. 2003. Educating the National Citizen in Neoliberal Times: From the Multicultural Self to the Strategic Cosmopolitan, Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 28, 4: 387-403.

Mitchell, K., Marston, S., and Katz, C. 2003. Life’s Work: An Introduction, Review and Critique, Antipode 35, 3: 415-442.

Mitchell, K. 2002. Cultural Geographies of Transnationality, in K. Anderson, M. Domosh, and S. Pile eds., The Cultural Geography Handbook. London: Blackwell, pp. 74-87.

Mitchell, K. 2001. Education for Democratic Citizenship: Transnationalism, Multiculturalism and the Limits of Liberalism, Harvard Educational Review 71, 1: 51-78.

Mitchell, K. 2001. Transnational Migration, Neoliberalism, and the Rise of the Shadow State, Economy and Society30, 2: 165-189.

Mitchell, K. 2000. The Value of Academic Labor: What the Market has Wrought,” Environment and Planning A 32, 10: 1713-1718.

Mitchell, K. 2000. The Culture of Urban Space, Urban Geography 21, 5: 443-449.

Mitchell, K. 2000. Global Diasporas and Traditional Towns: Chinese Transnational Migration and the Redevelopment of Chinatown. Traditional Dwellings and Settlements Review 11, 11: 29-40.

Mitchell, K. and Olds, K. 2000. Chinese Business Networks and the Globalization of Property Markets in the Pacific Rim, in K. Olds and H. Yeung eds., The Globalization of Chinese Business Firms. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 147-173.

Mitchell, K. 1999. What’s Culture Got to Do With It? Urban Geography 207: 667-682.

Mitchell, K. 1999. Scholarship Means Dollarship, or Money in the Bank is the Best Tenure. Environment and PlanningA 313: 381-388.

Mitchell, K. 1999. Hong Kong Immigrants and the Question Of Democracy: Contemporary Struggles Over Urban Politics. In Vancouver, B.C., in G. Hamilton ed., Cosmopolitan Capitalists: Hong Kong and the Chinese Diaspora at the End of the 20th Century. Seattle: University of Washington Press, pp. 152-166.

Mitchell, K. 1999. Flexible Circulation in the Pacific Rim: Capitalism in Cultural Context. In J. Bryson, N. Henry, D. Keeble, and R. Martin eds., The Economic Geography Reader, N.Y.: John Wiley and Sons. [Reprint]

Mitchell, K. 1998. Reworking Democracy: Contemporary Immigration and Community Politics in Vancouver’s Chinatown. Political Geography 176: 729-750.

Mitchell, K. 1998. Lingua Franca. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 165: 505-508.

Mitchell, K. 1998. Fast Capital, Modernity, Race and the Monster House, in R. M. George ed., Burning Down the House: Recycling Domesticity. New York: Westview Press, pp. 187-212.

Mitchell, K. 1997. Transnational Subjects: Constituting the Cultural Citizen in The Era of Pacific Rim Capital, in A. Ong and D. Nonini eds., Ungrounded Empires: the Cultural Politics of Modern Chinese Transnationalism, New York: Routledge, pp. 228-258.

Mitchell, K. and Hammer, B. 1997. Ethnic Chinese Networks: A New Model? Hongkong Bank of Canada Papers on Asia, Vol. 3: 73-103.

Mitchell, K. 1997. Different Diasporas and the Hype of Hybridity. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 155: 533-553.

Mitchell, K. 1997. Conflicting Geographies of Democracy and the Public Sphere in Vancouver, B.C. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 222: 162-179.

Mitchell, K. 1997. Transnational Discourse: Bringing Geography Back In. Antipode 292: 101-114.

Mitchell, K. 1996. In Whose Interest? Transnational Capital and the Production of Multiculturalism in Canada, in R. Wilson and W. Dissanayake eds., Global/Local: Cultural Production in Transnational Imagery, Durham: Duke University Press, pp. 219-251.

Mitchell, K. 1996. Visions of Vancouver: Ideology, Democracy and the Future of Urban Development. Urban Geography 176: 478-501.

Mitchell, K. 1995. Flexible Circulation in the Pacific Rim: Capitalism in Cultural Context. Economic Geography 714: 364-382.

Mitchell, K. 1995. The Hong Kong immigrant and the urban landscape, in R. Wilson and A. Dirlik eds., Asia/Pacific as Space of Cultural Production, Durham: Duke University Press, pp. 284-310.

Mitchell, K. 1994. APEC and the New Global Economy. Journal of Far Eastern Business 12: 80-85.

Mitchell, K. 1994. Zoning Controversies in Shaughnessy. Canada and Hong Kong Update Winter No. 11:11.

Mitchell, K. 1993. Multiculturalism, or the United Colors of Capitalism? Antipode 254: 263-294.

Mitchell, K. 1992. Work Authority in Industry: the Happy Demise of the Ideal Type. Comparative Studies in Society and History 344: 679-694.

Mitchell, K. 1988. Reflections of a Quality Inspector. The Chinese Business Review 151: 38-39.

Mitchell, K. 1988. The technological imperative in the Open Door Policy of the People’s Republic of China: Technological policy and the electronics industry. In M. Castells, L. Bornstein, K. Mitchell, R. Skinner and J. Stowsky, The State and Technology Policy: A Comparative Analysis of the U.S. Strategic Defense Initiative, Informatics Policy in Brazil, and Electronics Policy in China. Berkeley Round Table on the International Economy BRIE, WP37, pp. 143-231.

Peer Reviewed Encyclopedia and Dictionary Articles

Mitchell, K. 2016. Transnationalism. In Richardson, D., Castree, N., Goodchild, M., Liu, W., Kobayashi, A., and Marston, R. (eds.) The International Encyclopedia of Geography, Hoboken, NJ: Wiley-Blackwell, 5,000 words.

Mitchell, K. 2016. Multiculturalism. In Richardson, D., Castree, N., Goodchild, M., Liu, W., Kobayashi, A., and Marston, R. (eds.) The International Encyclopedia of Geography, Hoboken, NJ: Wiley-Blackwell, 5,000 words.

Mitchell, K. 2009. Citizenship, in R. Johnson et al, editors, The Dictionary of Human Geography. Oxford: Blackwell.

Mitchell, K. 2009. Communism, in R. Johnson et al, editors, The Dictionary of Human Geography. Oxford: Blackwell.

Mitchell, K. 2009. Local-Global, in R. Johnson et al, editors, The Dictionary of Human Geography. Oxford: Blackwell.

Mitchell, K. 2009. Localization, in R. Johnson et al, editors, The Dictionary of Human Geography. Oxford: Blackwell.

Mitchell, K. 2009. Pacific Rim, in R. Johnson et al, editors, The Dictionary of Human Geography. Oxford: Blackwell.

Mitchell, K. 2009. Transnationalism, in R. Johnson et al, editors, The Dictionary of Human Geography. Oxford: Blackwell.

Mitchell, K. 1999. Transnationalism, in R. Johnston and D. Gregory eds., The Dictionary of Human Geography. London: Blackwell.

Mitchell, K. 1999. Pacific Rim, in R. Johnston and D. Gregory eds., The Dictionary of Human Geography. London: Blackwell.

Review Essays, Book Forums, Op-Eds and Miscellaneous

Mitchell, K. 2016. Deciphering and Contesting the Ontological Power of an Idea and an Identity: A Forum onJoseph Massad’s Islam in Liberalism.Dialogues in Human Geography, doi: 10.1177/2043820616652984.

Review of Ash Amin, Land of Strangers for AAG Review of Books,2, 3, 2014, 108-111.

Review of John Western, Cosmopolitan Europe: Strasbourg a Self PortraitforAAG Review of Books,1, 3, 2013, 140-147.

Mitchell, K. 2011. Bodies that Matter: A Forum on Stuart Elden's Terror and Territory.Dialogues in Human Geography 1, 2, 247-262.