Most downloaded papers 

The papers listed below are the thirty research papers downloaded most often from the Environment and Planning D: Society and Space website in the last twelve months. The papers are ranked in order of their popularity, such that the paper ranked 1 has been downloaded most often. The list is updated monthly, with statistics based upon a rolling twelve-month period. The figure in parentheses is the year in which the paper was published in print.

1 Towards a politics of mobility (2010)
Tim Cresswell
2 Parallel lives? Challenging discourses of British Muslim self-segregation (2006)
Deborah Phillips
3 Authoritarian governance, power, and the politics of rescaling (2000)
Erik Swyngedouw
4 Geography's empire: histories of geographical knowledge (1992)
F Driver
5 The city as assemblage: dwelling and urban space (2011)
Colin McFarlane
6 Cultural hegemony and the race-definition process in Chinatown, Vancouver: 1880 - 1980 (1988)
K J Anderson
7 The nature of gender: work, gender, and environment (2006)
Andrea Nightingale
8 Embodying neoliberalism: economy, culture, and the politics of fat (2006)
Julie Guthman, Melanie DuPuis
9 Mobile publics: beyond the network perspective (2004)
Mimi Sheller
10 Governmentality, calculation, territory (2007)
Stuart Elden
11 Becoming and being hopeful: towards a theory of affect (2006)
Ben Anderson
12 Urban wild things: a cosmopolitical experiment (2005)
Steve Hinchliffe, Matthew B Kearnes, Monica Degen, Sarah Whatmore
13 Facing airport security: affect, biopolitics, and the preemptive securitisation of the mobile body (2009)
Peter Adey
14 Cast in stone: monuments, geography, and nationalism (1995)
Nuala Johnson
15 Selling nature to save it? Biodiversity and green developmentalism (1999)
Kathleen McAfee
16 Lifeworld Inc—and what to do about it (2011)
Nigel Thrift
17 'Connected' presence: the emergence of a new repertoire for managing social relationships in a changing communication technoscape (2004)
Christian Licoppe
18 Depths and folds: on landscape and the gazing subject (2006)
John Wylie
19 The nature that capital can see: science, state, and market in the commodification of ecosystem services (2006)
Morgan M Robertson
20 It's showtime: on the workplace geographies of display in a restaurant in southeast England (1994)
Philip Crang
21 Passenger mobilities: affective atmospheres and the sociality of public transport (2010)
David Bissell
22 Inhuman/nonhuman/human: actor-network theory and the prospects for a nondualistic and symmetrical perspective on nature and society (1997)
Jonathan Murdoch
23 Angels and devils: moral landscapes of childhood (1996)
Gill Valentine
24 How (not) to be governed: Foucault, critique, and the political (2010)
Louisa Cadman
25 Deconcentration by demolition: public housing, poverty, and urban policy (2002)
Jeff Crump
26 American exceptionalism, visual effects, and the post-9/11 cinematic superhero boom (2011)
Jason Dittmer
27 Performativity and the event: enacting a philosophy of difference (2000)
John-David Dewsbury
28 Towards an understanding of the gender division of urban space (1983)
L McDowell
29 Between fixity and motion: accumulation, territorial organization, and the historical geography of spatial scales (1998)
Neil Brenner
30 "Cracking the canyon with the awesome foursome": representations of adventure tourism in New Zealand (1998)
Paul Cloke, Harvey C Perkins