@article{boone_2015, title={Disembodied voices, embodied places: Mobile technology, enabling discourse, and interpreting place}, volume={142}, ISSN={["1872-6062"]}, DOI={10.1016/j.landurbplan.2015.07.005}, abstractNote={Abstract This paper pursues the research question how can asset mapping using mobile technology impact the discursive planning environment affecting a cultural landscape? This paper examines this through the review of a case study entitled Cellphone Diaries. It features the work of African American community residents who participated in asset mapping using smartphones and created self-authored digital videos recording their memories of people, places, and events occurring in John Chavis Memorial Park. The park, located one mile southeast of the center of Raleigh, North Carolina and situated in the heart of Raleigh's largest historically African American community. The park was undergoing significant changes that the community interpreted as the loss of significant cultural landscape features. Through Cellphone Diaries, community residents created videos that were examined using discourse analysis, linked to an online map, and disseminated as a catalog of community perceptions of the meaning of the park. The location of their narratives on spatial maps produced a geographically referenced interpretive tool highlighting previously undocumented people, places, and events important to the community. The paper argues that the use of mobile technology constitutes a critical visualization approach that affected the park planning discourse by enabling community people to create material products (videos and maps) that positioned their narratives in multiple discourses beyond the immediate planning context. The larger influence of these expanded positions, including through media and arts community outlets, increased the power of their narratives to affect change in the park planning process.}, journal={LANDSCAPE AND URBAN PLANNING}, author={Boone, Kofi}, year={2015}, month={Oct}, pages={235–242} } @article{javellana_bounds_brouillette_buescher_dierks_hamerlinck_iversen_stevens_kaelin_caldwell_et al._2015, title={Landscapes of justice: Redefining the prison environment}, volume={105}, number={10}, journal={Landscape Architecture}, author={Javellana, A. and Bounds, T. and Brouillette, J. and Buescher, T. and Dierks, M. and Hamerlinck, K. and Iversen, L. and Stevens, J. and Kaelin, J. and Caldwell, J. and et al.}, year={2015}, pages={78-} } @article{boone_kline_johnson_milburn_rieder_2013, title={Development of Visitor Identity through Study Abroad in Ghana}, volume={15}, ISSN={["1470-1340"]}, DOI={10.1080/14616688.2012.680979}, abstractNote={Abstract During the summers of 2006–2009, groups of U.S. college students completed a cross-disciplinary study abroad experience in Ghana, West Africa, entitled ‘Landscapes in Ecotourism.’ Beyond topical issues of community landscape design and sustainable tourism development, broad themes were explored including (a) cultural awareness of Ghana and Africa, (b) the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade (TAST), and (c) the concept of African Diaspora. This study sought to understand how the students’ sense of their own identity was impacted by being in Ghana, as a result of the activities undertaken in the study abroad course. Specifically, the students provided reflections on their ideas about race and heritage, their understanding of the TAST, and their perception of the African Diaspora. In most cases, the students noted an increased knowledge on these subjects through studying these topics in a Ghanaian spatial and cultural context. Additionally, they offered thoughtful reflection on issues of gender, race, class, and religion in Ghana, and while contrasting it with their own American experience, their own self-perception/self-identity was impacted through an expanded view of these constructs and how they play out in various socioeconomic and cultural contexts. The findings, particularly the distinct reflections of the African-American and Caucasian students, assist in understanding the interpretation of visitors’ internal responses to an international destination; in this case, a destination enshrined in a history of racial atrocities central to the nation's legacy has the potential to create tensions or transitions of identity in visitors as they situate their own lives in the sociohistorical context of their new surroundings.}, number={3}, journal={TOURISM GEOGRAPHIES}, author={Boone, Kofi and Kline, Carol and Johnson, Laura and Milburn, Lee-Anne and Rieder, Kathleen}, year={2013}, month={Aug}, pages={470–493} } @misc{boone_2008, title={Design for ecological democracy}, volume={23}, number={1}, journal={Journal of Planning Literature}, author={Boone, K.}, year={2008}, pages={37–38} }