Portrait of Dr. Colleen Crystal Myles

Dr. Colleen Crystal Myles

  • Professor at Dept of Geography & Environmntl Studies, College of Liberal Arts

Scholarly and Creative Works

2024

  • Queering Feminist Geography Collective, Kinkaid, E., & Myles, C. C. (n.d.). Queering Feminist Geography III: Allyship for queer/trans scholars. Gender, Place, and Culture.
  • Myles, C. C., Bosson, C. B., Lopez, M., Anguiano, N., & Roberts, M. (2024). Roadmap to Sustainability in Texas Wine: Comprehensive Report (Aug 2023-Dec 2024). Fredericksburg, TX, USA: Texas Wine Growers.
  • Myles, C. C. (2024, December 18). Wine in Texas: A Tiny Tour of Hill Country Fermented Landscapes. Retrieved from https://www.forbes.com/sites/colleencmyles/2024/12/18/wine-in-texas-a-tiny-tour-of-hill-country-fermented-landscapes/
  • Myles, C. C. (2024, December 17). An Afternoon At Tablas Creek, A Wine Sustainability Leader. Retrieved from https://www.forbes.com/sites/colleencmyles/2024/12/17/an-afternoon-at-tablas-creek-where-wine-sustainability-is--practiced/
  • Myles, C. C. (2024, October). Review of _From Terrain to Brain: Forays into the Many Sciences of Wine_. Gastronomica.
  • Myles, C. C. (2024, September 21). ‘Roadmap to Sustainability in Texas Wine’: An Overview and an invitation. Retrieved from https://texaswinegrowers.com/2024/09/21/roadmap-to-sustainability-in-texas-wine-an-overview-and-invitation/

2023

  • Motherscholar Collective, Azim, K. A., Blank Jones, J. L., Campbell-Obaid, M., Eilert, M., Greene-Rooks, J. H., … Richardson, I. (2023). Collective Perspectives: The formation of a motherscholar pandemic research collaborative. In Scholars in COVID Times. Cornell University Press.
  • Motherscholar Collective, Blanks-Jones, J. L., Bielski, L. M., Cerdeña, J. P., Richardson, I., Coleman-King, C., … Brooks, T. (2023). Building a virtual village: Academic mothers*’ online social networking during COVID-19. In Academic Mothers Building Online Communities (pp. 277–300). Springer International Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-26665-2_17
  • Myles, C. C., Wiley, D., Furness, W., & Sturdivant, K. (2023). Brewing change: Exploring Social, Environmental, & Economic Advocacy in (Craft) Brewing in the United States. Annals of the American Association of Geographers. https://doi.org/10.1080/24694452.2022.2149462
  • Myles-Baltzly, C. C., Cripe, E. T., Richardson, I., Azim, K., Quaynor, L., & Eikert, M. (2023). Pushing boundaries and balance: Finding humanity in pandemic pedagogy. American Educational History Journal, (Breakthrough: From Pandemic Panic to Promising Practice). Retrieved from https://www.infoagepub.com/products/Breakthrough
  • Myles, C. C., Wiley, D. S. C., Vander Weil, B. P., & Watson, B. (2023). ‘Sober curious’ or ‘semi-sober’? An exploration of the moderation movement in the United States as ‘trendy teetotalism’ or ‘neo-temperance.’ In Geography of Beer (Volume 3).
  • Wiley, D. S. C., & Myles, C. C. (2023). Feminist Ferment: Media, digital geographies, and geopolitics surrounding womxn in the United States craft beer landscape. In Geography of Beer (Volume 3).
  • Motherscholar Collective, Alhassan, S. W., Azim, K. A., Blanks Jones, J. L., Bielski, L. M., Butterworth, M., … Richardson, I. (n.d.). Caught between a rock and a hot place: How motherscholars engage in individual, collective, or other (in)actions to address climate precarity. In Mothering in a Time of Climate Change Precarity.
  • Myles, C. C. (2023, December 19). What does equity in (fine) wine look like? Forbes.Com. Retrieved from https://www.forbes.com/sites/colleencmyles/2023/12/19/what-does-equity-in-fine-wine-look-like/
  • Myles, C. C. (2023, December 12). Court Of Master Sommeliers dispenses with Old/New World designations. Forbes.Com. Retrieved from https://www.forbes.com/sites/colleencmyles/2023/12/12/court-of-master-sommeliers-dispenses-with-oldnew-world-designations/
  • Myles, C. C. (2023, November 30). It’s about time to start thinking inside the box about wine. Forbes.Com. Retrieved from https://www.forbes.com/sites/colleencmyles/2023/11/30/its-about-time-to-start-thinking-inside-the-box-about-wine/
  • Myles, C. C. (2023, November 16). Holiday gift guide 2023: Out-of-the-box gift ideas for your wine lover. Forbes.Com. Retrieved from https://www.forbes.com/sites/colleencmyles/2023/11/16/holiday-gift-guide-2023-out-of-the-box-gift-ideas-for-your-wine-lover/
  • Myles, C. C. (2023, September 29). Wine, the ultimate message in a bottle. Forbes.Com. Retrieved from https://www.forbes.com/sites/colleencmyles/2023/09/29/wine-the-ultimate-message-in-a-bottle
  • Myles, C. C. (2023, September 22). Lies your wine is telling: What surprises are in your glass? Forbes.Com. Retrieved from https://www.forbes.com/sites/colleencmyles/2023/09/22/lies-your-wine-is-telling-you/
  • Myles, C. C. (2023, September 19). Brewing Change: Advocacy in Craft Brewing. The New Brewer. Retrieved from https://mydigitalpublication.com/publication/?i=802101&p=90&view=issueViewer
  • Myles, C. C. (2023, September 8). Wine gone woke (in the best way). Forbes.Com. Retrieved from https://www.forbes.com/sites/colleencmyles/2023/09/08/wine-gone-woke-in-the-best-way/
  • Myles, C. C. (2023, September 1). Why you like the wine you do. Forbes.Com. Retrieved from https://www.forbes.com/sites/colleencmyles/2023/09/01/why-you-like-the-wine-you-do/
  • Myles, C. C. (2023, May 19). Craft breweries are fermenting change, addressing local ills while serving local ales. Retrieved from https://theconversation.com/craft-breweries-are-fermenting-change-addressing-local-ills-while-serving-local-ales-201928

2022

  • Myles, C. C., Collins, K. G., & Townsend, C. G. (2022). Wine, deep in the heart of Texas. In Routledge Handbook of Wine and Culture, edited by S. Charters, M. Demossier, J. Dutton, G. Harding, D. Marks, J. Smith Maguire, and T. Unwin. United Kingdom: Taylor and Francis.
  • Tobias, M., & Myles, C. C. (2022). Wine, Culture, and Environment:  A Study of the Sierra (Nevada) Foothills American Viticultural Area. In Routledge Handbook of Wine and Culture (pp. 99–109). Routledge. https://doi.org/https://:doi.org/10.4324/9781003034711-15
  • Myles, C. C., Vander Weil, B., Wiley, D., & Watson, B. (2022). Representations of low(er)-alcohol (craft) beer in the United States, 14(23). https://doi.org/http://:doi.org/: 10.3390/nu14234952
  • Copler, C., Holtkamp, C., & Myles, C. C. (2022). A Place for Bourbon? A Geographical Analysis of Bourbon Production in the United States. Southeastern Geographer, 62(4), 339–359. https://doi.org/10.1353/sgo.2022.0037
  • Chantal, G., Furness, W., Myles, C. C., Wiley, D., & Collins, K. (2022). Fieldwork without the field: Navigating the ‘new normal’ world as qualitative, fermentation geographers. Frontiers in Sustainable Food Systems, 6, 1–17. https://doi.org/10.3389/fsufs.2022.750409
  • Myles, C. C., Townsend, C. G., & Collins, K. (2022). Texas in transition: Considering the production of grapes, wine, and place. Journal of Wine Research, 11(448), 1–16. https://doi.org/http://:doi.org 10.3390/socsci11100488
  • Myles-Baltzly, C. C. (2022). Inside the ‘bonkers bunker’: Reflections on somehow making an ‘impossible’ situation possible. American Educational History Journal, (Snapshots of History: Portraits of the 21st Century Pandemic [special issue]), 155–162.
  • Baltzly, V. B., & Myles, C. C. (2022). Pigs in Paradise: Local Happy People Raising (Happy, Local) Pigs? East Asian Journal of Philosophy, 1(2), 23–39. https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.19079/eajp.1.2.23

2021

  • Myles, C. C., Tobias, M., & McKinnon, I. (2021). ‘A big fish in a small pond’: How Arizona wine country was made. In Agritourism, Wine Tourism, Craft Beer Tourism: Local Responses to peripherality through tourism niches. California, United States.
  • Myles, C. C. (2021). T is for Taste. In Musings: An abecedary of Food, Feminism, and Fermentation (pp. 80–83). fff: food feminism fermentation. Retrieved from www.bitly.com/fff-musings-2021-spreads
  • Mothersholar Collective, Myles, C. C., Ho, H. K., Richardson, I., Greene-Rooks, J. H., Azim, K. A., … Lim, S. R. (2021). Transformative collaborations during COVID-19: How a research collective can reduce work-life conflict for motherscholars. International Perspectives in Psychology: Research, Practice, Consultation, 10(4), 197–214. https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.1027/2157-3891/a000029
  • Myles, C. C., & Baltzly, V. B. (2021). Enacting Interdisciplinarity: Lessons from Crafting a Multi-dimensional, Experiential Field Study. The Geography Teacher, 18(3–4), 101–106. https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.1080/19338341.2021.1939099
  • Myles, C. C. (2021, July 20). For some craft beer drinkers, less can mean more. Retrieved from https://theconversation.com/for-some-craft-beer-drinkers-less-can-mean-more-163631.
  • Myles-Baltzy, C. C. (2021). Welp, what a year. Medium.com. Retrieved from https://fermentedlands.medium.com/welp-what-a-year-503e9115bfdd
  • Myles-Baltzy, C. C. (2021). Lemonade. Medium.com. Retrieved from https://fermentedlands.medium.com/lemonade-aea98c628454

2020

  • Savelyev, A., Wiley, D., Myles, C. C., & Goff, P. (2020). Virtual Pub Crawl: Assessing the Utility of Social Media for Geographic Beer Research In The United States. Intervalla.
  • Ashford-Hanserd, S. N., Sarmiento, E. R., Myles, C. C., Roundtree, A. K., Hayton, M.-P. E., Ybarra, E., … Maleki, S. (2020). African American experiences in the historic Dunbar neighborhood in San Marcos, Texas: A case study of counter-life stories. Social Sciences, 9(10). https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci9100177
  • Myles, C. C. (2020). Fermented landscapes: Lively processes of socio-environmental transformation. Lincoln, NE, United States: University of Nebraska Press.
  • Myles, C. C., Goff, P., Wiley, D., & Savelyev, A. (2020). Low gravity on the rise: A sociocultural examination of low alcohol beer in the United States. In Geography of Beer, Part II. Springer.
  • Ashford-Hanserd, S. N., Sarmiento, E. R., Myles, C. C., Rayburn, S. W., Edward, Y., Theresa, C., … Williams, C. D. (2020). Reclaiming Dunbar: Black history, anti-gentrification, and community-engaged research in San Marcos, TX. endofaustin.com.
  • Furness, W., & Myles, C. C. (2020). Apples and actor-networks: Exploring apples as actors in English cider. In Fermented landscapes: Lively processes of socio-environmental transformation. Lincoln, NE, United States: University of Nebraska Press.
  • Myles, C. C., Holtkamp, C., McKinnon, I., Baltzly, V. B., & Coiner, C. (2020). “Booze as a Public Good? Considering how localized, craft fermentation industries make place for better or worse.” In Fermented landscapes: Lively processes of socio-environmental transformation. Lincoln, NE, USA: University of Nebraska Press.
  • Myles, C. C. (2020). Fermented landscapes: Considering the macro consequences of micro(be) processes of socio-environmental transformation. In Fermented landscapes: Lively processes of socio-environmental transformation. Lincoln, NE, United States: University of Nebraska Press.
  • Yarbrough, E., Myles, C. C., & Coiner, C. (2020). ‘Kombucha Culture’: An ethnography of fermentos in San Marcos, Texas. In Fermented landscapes: Lively processes of socio-environmental transformation. Lincoln, NE, United States: University of Nebraska Press.
  • Myles, C. C., Furness, W., & Malaki, S. (2020). On the future of “fermented landscapes” as a focus of study. In Fermented landscapes: Lively processes of socio-environmental transformation. Lincoln, NE, United States: University of Nebraska Press.

2019

  • McKinnon, I., Hurley, P. T., Myles, C. C., Maccaroni, M., & Filan, T. (2019). Uneven urban metabolisms: toward an integrative (ex)urban political ecology of sustainability in and around the city. Urban Geography, 40(3), 352–377. https://doi.org/10.1080/02723638.2017.1388733
  • Myles, C. C., & Filan, T. R. (2019). Making (a) place: wine, society and environment in California’s Sierra Nevada foothills. Regional Studies, Regional Science, 6(1), 157–167. https://doi.org/10.1080/21681376.2019.1575764
  • Myles, C. C., & Filan, T. (2019). Making (a) place: Wine, society, and environment in California’s Sierra Nevada Foothills. Regional Studies, Regional Science.

2018

  • Myles, C. C., & Breen, J. (2018). (Micro)movements and microbrew: On craft beer, tourism trails, and material transformation(s) in the city. In C. Kline, S. Slocum, & C. Cavaliere (Eds.), Beers, Ciders and Spirits: Craft Beverages and Tourism in the U.S. New York, NY: Palgrave.
  • Senese, D., Randelli, F., Hull, J., & Myles, C. C. (2018). Drinking in the good life: Tourism mobilities and the slow movement in wine country. In M. Clancy (Ed.), Slow Tourism, Food and Cities: Pace and the Search for the ‘Good Life.’ New York, NY: Routledge.

2017

  • McKinnon, I., Hurley, P., Myles, C. C., Maccaroni, M., & Filan, T. (2017). Uneven urban metabolisms: Toward an integrative (ex)urban political ecology of sustainability in and around the city. Urban Geography, 1–26.
  • Myles, C. C., & Filan, T. (2017). Boom-and-Bust: (Hi)stories of Landscape Production and Consumption in California’s Sierra Nevada Foothills. Poylmath, 7(2), 76–89.
  • Nox, R., & Hiner, C. C. (2017). Wildfire mitigation behavior on single family residential properties near Balcones Canyonlands Preserve wildlands in Austin, Texas. Journal of Applied Geography, 87, 222–233.
  • Myles, C. C., Senese, D., & de Renzis Sonnino, C. (2017). Food systems, sustainability, and experiential educational tourism in Tuscany, Italy: Interrogating rural/urban metabolisms on the edge.
  • Myles, C. C., Furness, W., & Wolf, G. (2017). Apples, actor-networks, and fermented landscapes: Considering apples as actors in places of change.

2016

  • Holtkamp, C., Shelton, T., Daly, G., Hiner, C., & Hagelman, R. (2016). Assessing Neolocalism in Microbreweries. Papers in Applied Geography, 2(1), 66–78. https://doi.org/10.1080/23754931.2015.1114514
  • Hiner, C. C. (2016). Beyond the edge and in between: (Re)conceptualizing the rural-urban interface as meaning-model-metaphor. The Professional Geographer, 68(4), 520–531.
  • McKinnon, I., & Hiner, C. C. (2016). Does the region still have relevance?: (Re)considering “regional” political ecology. Journal Political Ecology, 23, 115–122.
  • Rogers, C. M., & Hiner, C. C. (2016). Siting Urban Agriculture as a Green Infrastructure Strategy for Land Use Planning in Austin, Texas. Challenges in Sustainability, 4(1).
  • Hiner, C. C. (2016). “Chicken wars”, water fights, and other contested ecologies along the rural-urban interface in California’s Sierra Nevada foothills. Journal of Political Ecology, 23, 167–181.
  • Hiner, C. C. (2016). Divergent perspectives and contested ecologies: Challenges in environmental management along the rural-urban interface. In L. Taylor & P. T. Hurley (Eds.), A Comparative Political Ecology of Exurbia: Planning, Environmental Management, and Landscape Change (pp. 51–82). Verlag: Springer.
  • Hagelman, R., Mast, G., & Hiner, C. (2016). Where are the garden(er)s?: Examining gardener motivations and community garden participation-sheds in Austin, Texas. In J. Gatrell, R. Jensen, M. Patterson, & N. Hoalst-Pullen (Eds.), Urban sustainability: Praxis and place. Heidelberg: Springer.
  • Myles, C. C., Furness, W., Wolf, G., & Jenkins, A. (2016). Apples as actors: An actor-network approach to understanding fermented landscapes.
  • Myles, C. C. (2016). Metabolizing the rural, fermenting the landscape: Considering wine as a driver of social and environmental change along the rural-urban interface.
  • Myles, C. C. (2016). From the forgotten to the extreme: A look at “emerging” wine regions and other fermented landscapes in California, Arizona, and beyond.
  • Hiner, C., & Pevey, M. (2016). #craftbeer and the use of social media in the branding and marketing of “local” and/or “sustainable” fermented beverages.
  • Gimnich, D., & Hiner, C. (2016). Evaluating and improving wildfire evacuation in Austin, Texas through community engagement workshops.
  • Lopez, C., & Hiner, C. (2016). Back to the Garden Again: Examples from Texas.
  • Jenkins, A., & Hiner, C. (2016). Fruitful Findings in France: the rebellious regions of cider-making.
  • Myles, C. C., & Breen, J. (2016). (Micro)movements and microbrew: Craft beer and the transformation of (West) Sacramento, California into America’s Farm-to-Fork Capital. Beers, Ciders and Spirits: Craft Beverages and Tourism in the U.S.
  • Hiner, C. C. (2016). Divergent Perspectives and Contested Ecologies: Three Cases of Land-Use Change in Calaveras County, California. In A Comparative Political Ecology of Exurbia (pp. 51–82). Springer International Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-29462-9_3
  • Hagelman, R. R., Mast, G. S., & Hiner, C. C. (2016). Where Are the Garden(er)s? Examining Gardener Motivations and Community Garden Participation-Sheds in Austin, Texas. In Urban Sustainability: Policy and Praxis (pp. 135–152). Springer International Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-26218-5_9
  • Hiner, C. C. (2016). Beyond the Edge and in Between: (Re)conceptualizing the Rural–Urban Interface as Meaning–Model–Metaphor. The Professional Geographer, 68(4), 520–532. https://doi.org/10.1080/00330124.2016.1198264
  • Rogers, C. M., & Hiner, C. C. (2016). Siting Urban Agriculture as a Green Infrastructure Strategy for Land Use Planning in Austin, TX. Challenges in Sustainability, 4(1). https://doi.org/10.12924/cis2016.04010039
  • Holtkamp, C., Shelton, T., Daly, G., Hiner, C. C., & Hagelman, R. R. (2016). Assessing Neolocalism in Microbreweries. Papers in Applied Geography, 2(1), 66–78. https://doi.org/10.1080/23754931.2015.1114514

2015

  • Hiner, C. C. (2015). (False) Dichotomies, political ideologies, and preferences for environmental management along the rural-urban interface in Calaveras County, California. Journal of Applied Geography, 65(C), 13–27. https://doi.org/doi:10.1016/j.apgeog.2015.10.001
  • Hiner, C. C. (2015). (False) Dichotomies, political ideologies, and preferences for environmental management along the rural-urban interface in Calaveras County, California. Applied Geography, 65, 13–27. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apgeog.2015.10.001
  • Hiner, C. C., McKinnon, I., & Breen, J. (2015). Local food and bridging values and place along the rural-urban interface. Southwest American Association of Geographers (SWAAG), Nov 4-7, 2015, San Antonio, TX.
  • Rogers, C., & Hiner, C. C. (2015). Siting Urban Agriculture as a Green Infrastructure Strategy. Southwest American Association of Geographers (SWAAG).
  • Rosa, G., & Hiner, C. C. (2015). Tamed Fungus: A colorful history of black truffles in Prigord, France. Southwest American Association of Geographers (SWAAG).
  • Hiner, C. C., & Baca, E. (2015). The Ganges River: Symbology, Sustainability, and the Confluence of Cultural and Fluvial Connectivity. Southwest American Association of Geographers (SWAAG).
  • Gimnich, D., & Hiner, C. C. (2015). Wildfire Evacuation Model for the City of Austin and Travis County, Texas. Southwest American Association of Geographers (SWAAG).
  • Hiner, C. C. (2015). Making (a) place: Wine and the production and consumption of landscape in the Sierra Nevada Foothills. Eighth Quadrennial Conference of British, Canadian, and American Rural Geographers.
  • Hiner, C. (2015). Beyond the edge and in between: (Re)conceptualizing the rural-urban interface as meaning-model-metaphor. Annual Meeting of the Association of American Geographers (AAG).
  • Hiner, C., & Filan, T. (2015). Boom and bust: Histories of landscape production and consumption in the Sierra Nevada foothills of California. Annual Meeting of the Association of American Geographers (AAG).
  • Holtkamp, C., Daly, G., Hiner, C. C., & Shelton, T. (2015). How local is your beer?: Assessing neo-localism via microbreweries and developing a toolset for further application. Annual Meeting of the Association of American Geographers (AAG).
  • Nox, R., & Hiner, C. C. (2015). Wildfire Mitigation Behavior on Single Family Residential Properties near Balcones Canyonlands Preserve Wildlands in Austin, Texas. Annual Meeting of the Association of American Geographers (AAG).
  • Hiner, C. C. (2015). Locating the “local”: The role of food and beverages in place-making. Dimensions of Political Ecology (DOPE) Conference.

2014

  • Hiner, C. C. (2014). “Been-heres vs. come-heres” and other identities and ideologies along the rural–urban interface: A comparative case study in Calaveras County, California. Land Use Policy, 41(0), 70–83.
  • Myles, C. C., Townsend, C., & Lavy, B. (2014). Harm J. de Blij’s 1983 Wine: A Geographic Appreciation. Progress in Physical Geography, (38), 674–684.
  • Myles, C. C. (2014). Framing ‘Foothills in Flux’: Considering wine and the consumption and production of landscapes in the Sierra Nevada foothills of California.
  • Myles, C. C. (2014). The ‘chicken wars’ and other contested ecologies: A political ecology of environmental conflict and landscape change along the rural-urban interface.
  • Myles, C. C. (2014). Contested ecologies, species of capital, and a spectrum of (in)visibility: Explanations and expectations of use and function along the rural-urban interface.
  • Hiner, C. C. (2014). “Been-heres vs. come-heres” and other identities and ideologies along the rural–urban interface: A comparative case study in Calaveras County, California. Land Use Policy, 41, 70–83. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.landusepol.2014.05.001

2013

  • Myles, C. C. (2013). Form, function, & friction: Ideology and environment along the rural-urban interface.
  • Myles, C. C. (2013). Ideologies in practice: Perspectives of environmental management and theorizing the rural-urban interface.
  • Myles, C. C. (2013). Beyond the edge and in between: Re-conceptualizing the rural-urban interface as meaning-model-metaphor.

2012

  • Galt, R., O’Sullivan, L., Beckett, J., & Myles, C. C. (2012). Community Supported Agriculture is thriving in the Central Valley. California Agriculture, 66(1), 8–14.
  • Myles, C. C. (2012). Re-conceptualizing the rural-urban interface: ‘Meaning, model and metaphor’ and the polarization of ideals and preferences for rural space.
  • Myles, C. C. (2012). Contested ecologies and ‘defining moments’: Examining the spectrum of (in)visibility in land use decision-making along the rural-urban interface.
  • Myles, C. C. (2012). Graduate Student Families – Understanding a Distinct Subpopulation of the Graduate Student Body. Office of Graduate Studies, University of California, Davis.
  • Galt, R. E., O’Sullivan, L., Beckett, J., & Hiner, C. C. (2012). Community Supported Agriculture is thriving in the Central Valley. California Agriculture, 66(1), 8–14. https://doi.org/10.3733/ca.v066n01p8

2011

  • Myles, C. C. (2011). Participation and capacity building in community visioning: NIMBYism and the politics of the rural-urban interface in Elk Grove, California. Journal of Rural and Community Development, 6(2), 104–123.
  • Myles, C. C. (2011). Imaginaries, ideologies and ‘defining moments’: Negotiating difference in land use debates along the rural-urban interface.
  • Myles, C. C. (2011). Legacies and Opportunities: Land Use Change in the Sierra Nevada.
  • Myles, C. C. (2011). A political ecology of exurban land use change: Competing imaginaries of rural life and divisive outcomes along the rural-urban interface.
  • Myles, C. C. (2011). A Political Ecology of the Rural-Urban Interface: ‘Unlikely Alliances’ and the Making of a New Sierra Nevada.
  • Myles, C. C. (2011). Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) in and around California’s Central Valley: Farm and Farmer Characteristics, Farm-Member Relationships, Economic Viability, Information Sources, and Emerging Issues. Agricultural Sustainability Institute, University of California, Davis. Retrieved from http://asi.ucdavis.edu/resources/publications/Galt%20et%20al%20%202011-CSA%20Report.pdf
  • Myles, C. C. (2011). Not in My Backyard (NIMBY). In H. Schiffman & P. Robbins (Eds.), Green Issues and Debates: An A-to-Z Guide. Volume 12, SAGE Reference Series on Green Society: Toward a Sustainable Future (Vol. 12). Thousand Oaks, California, U.S.A.: SAGE.
  • Hiner, C. C. (2011). Not in My Backyard (NIMBY). In Green Issues and Debates: An A-to-Z Guide. SAGE Publications, Inc. https://doi.org/10.4135/9781412975728.n84

2010

  • Myles, C. C. (2010). Building a Qualitative GIS: Using Mixed Methods to Capture Complex Realities.
  • Myles, C. C. (2010). ‘Defining’ Boundaries: Land Use and Negotiating Difference in Calaveras County, California.
  • Myles, C. C. (2010). Changing Landscapes, Shifting Values: Land Use Dynamics at the Rural-Urban Interface in Calaveras County, California.

2009

  • Nelson, A., Myles, C. C., & Rios, M. (2009). Connecting people, participation and place via action research: why? how? Area.
  • Nelson, A., Hiner, C., & Rios, M. (2009). Connecting people, participation and place via action research: why? how? Area, 41(3), 364–367. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1475-4762.2009.00902_2.x

2008

  • Myles, C. C. (2008). The Rural Visioning Project: Understanding Participation and Capacity Building.
  • Myles, C. C. (2008). Valley Springs Community Planning Baseline Report: From Community Plan to Community Vision: Progress Made and Recommendations for Future Action. California Communities Program, University of California, Davis.

2007

  • Myles, C. C. (2007). Negotiating the Rural-Urban Interface through Community Advocacy.