Michael Brown & Claire Rasmussen 2010 "Bestiality and the queering of the human animal," Society and Space, forthcoming.
Michael Brown, 2009 "Public Health as urban politics, urban geography: Venereal biopower in Seattle 1943-1983," Urban Geography, 30, pp. 1-29.
Michael Brown & Matthew Wilson 2009 "Ten years (on)ward," Social & Cultural Geography, 10, pp 1-8.
Michael Brown & Larry Knopp (2008) “Queering the map: the productive tensions of colliding epistemologies,” Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 98, pp. 40-58.
Michael Brown (2008) “Working political geography though social movement theory: The case of gay and lesbian Seattle,” in K. Cox, M. Low & J. Robinson, eds. The Handbook of Political Geography (London: Sage), pp. 353-377.
Michael Brown & Larry Knopp (2007) “From sexuality and space to queer geography,” Omosapiens, 2 pp. 163-167.
Michael Brown (2007) “Counting on queer geography,” in K. Browne, G. Brown & J. Lim eds. Geographies of Sexualities (London, Ashgate), pp. 206-214.
Richard Morrill, Larry Knopp, & Michael Brown (2007) “Anomalies in Red and Blue: Exceptionalism in American electoral geography, Political Geography 26, 525-553.
Michael Brown (2006) “Sexual citizenship, political obligation, and disease ecology in gay Seattle, Political Geography, 25, pp. 874-898.
Michael Brown & Larry Knopp (2006) “Places or polygons: governmentality and sexuality in The Gay & Lesbian Atlas, Population, Space, and Place, 12, 223-242..
Michael Brown (2006) “A geographer reads Geography Club: Spatial metaphor and metonymy in sexual/textual space,” Cultural Geographies 14, p. 313-339.
Claire Rasmussen & Michael Brown(2005) “The
body politic as spatial metaphor,” Citizenship Studies, 9, pp.
469-484.
Michael Brown, Larry Knopp & Richard Morrill
(2005) “The
culture wars as urban electoral politics: sexuality, race, and class in Tacoma,” Washington, Political
Geography, 24, pp. 267-291.
Michael Brown
(2005) “Letter
to Engin,” Political
Geography, 24, pp. 361-364
Michael Brown
(2004) “Geography,” in
C. Summers ed. GLBTQ: An Encyclopedia of Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, Transgender,
and Queer Culture , http://www.glbtq.com.
Michael Brown
(2004) “Between neoliberalism and cultural conservatism, spatial divisions and
multiplications of hospice labor,” Gender, Place and Culture:
A Journal of Feminist Geography, 11, pp. 67-82.
Michael Brown 2004 “Claiming Space: An Historical Geography of Lesbian and Gay Seattle.” Map With the Northwest Lesbian & Gay History Museum Project. Seattle, WA: Girlie Press.
Michael Brown & Lynn Staeheli
(2003) “Are
we there yet?” Feminist political geography, Gender, Place and
Culture: A Journal of Feminist Geography, 10, pp. 247-255.
Larry Knopp & Michael Brown(2003) “Queer
diffusions,” Society and Space, 21, pp. 409-424.
Lynn Staeheli & Michael Brown (2003) “Where
has welfare gone?” Editorial, Special issue on the political
geographies of care, Environment & Planning A,
35, pp. 771-777.
Michael Brown
2003 “Hospice
and the spatial paradoxes of terminal care,” Environment & Planning
A, 35, pp. 833-851.
Claire Rasmussen & Michael Brown (2002), "Amidst political theory and geography: radical democratic citizenship," in E. Engin and B. Turner eds. Handbook of Citizenship Studies, (London: Sage), pp. 294-327.
Michael Brown & Larry Knopp (2002) “Queer Cultural Geographies: We're Here! We're Queer! We're Over There, Too!,” in K. Anderson, M. Domosh, & S. Pile eds. The Handbook of Cultural Geography (London: Sage), pp.460-481.
Michael Brown & Travis Colton
2001 “Dying
epistemologies: an analysis of home death and its critique,” Environment
and Planning A, 33, 799-821.
1999 “Reconceptualizing
public and private in urban regime theory: governance in AIDS politics,” International
Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 3,
pp. 45-69.
Michael Brown (1999) “Travelling through the closet,” in J. Duncan & D. Gregory, eds., Writes of Passage: Reading Travel Writing (London: Routledge), 185-199.
Michael Brown (1997) “Radical politics out of place: the curious case of ACT UP Vancouver, in S. Pile & M. Keith, eds., Geographies of Resistance, (London: Routledge), pp. 152-167.
Michael Brown (1997) “The cultural saliency of radical democracy: moments from the AIDS Quilt, Ecumene, 4, pp. 27-45.
Michael Brown (1995), “Ironies of distance: an ongoing critique of the geographies of AIDS,” Society and Space 13, pp. 159-183. also reprinted in: Michael Brown (1997) “Ironies of distance,” in T. Barnes & D. Gregory, eds. Reading Human Geography: The Poetics and Politics of Inquiry (London: Arnold), pp. 461-489.
Michael Brown (1995), “Sex, scale, and the ‘New Urban Politics’: HIV-Prevention Strategies from Yaletown, Vancouver,” in D. Bell and G. Valentine Eds. Mapping Desire: Geographies of Sexualities (London: Routledge) pp.245-263.
Michael Brown (1994), “The work of city politics: citizenship through employment in the local response to AIDS,” Environment and Planning A, 26, pp. 873-894.
Michael Brown (1992), “The possibility of local autonomy,” Urban Geography, 13, pp. 257-279.
William Meyer & Michael Brown (1989), “Locational conflict in a nineteenth-century city,” Political Geography Quarterly, 8, pp. 107-122.