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SELECTED PUBLICATIONS

Coastal human-environment interactions

Crawford, T., A. Salahuddin, S. Curtis, A. Ahmed, T. Allen, D. Bradley, A. Mishra, A. Mukherji, & K. Premalal. (2013). Scoping workshop: human responses to catastrophic monsoon events in South Asia: designing a spatially explicit model in low-lying coastal areas. APN Science Bulletin March Issue 3: 125-27.

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Crawford, T., D. Marcucci, & A. Bennett. (2013). Impacts of residential development on vegetation cover for a remote coastal barrier in the Outer Banks of North Carolina, USA. Journal of Coastal Conservation 17:431-33.

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Curtis, S., T.W. Crawford, & S.A. Lecce. (2007). A comparison of TRMM to other basin-scale estimates of rainfall during the 1999 Hurricane Floyd flood. Natural Hazards 43: 187-198.

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Coastal human geographies

Crawford, T., D. Bradley, & D. Marcucci. (2013). Impacts of in-migration and coastal amenities on housing Growth in Coastal North Carolina, USA. Population, Space and Place 19: 223-38.

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Crawford, T., Bin, O., Landry, C., & J. Kruse. (2013). On the importance of time for GIS view measures and their use in hedonic property models. Transactions in GIS, 18:234-52.

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Bin, O., T.W. Crawford, J. Kruse, J., & C. Landry. (2008). Viewscapes and flood hazard: coastal housing market response to amenities and risk. Land Economics 84: 434-448.

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Crawford, T. W. (2007). Where does the coast sprawl the most? Trajectories of residential development and sprawl in coastal North Carolina, 1971-2000. Landscape and Urban Planning 83 (4), 294-307.

Geospatial applications to public health

Rahman, M.K., T. Crawford, & T. Schmidlin. (2017). Spatio-temporal analysis of road traffic accident fatality in Bangladesh integrating newspaper accounts and gridded population data. GeoJournal,doi:10.1007/s10708-017-9791-x.

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Crawford, T., S. Jilcott-Pitts, J. McGuirt, T. Keyserling, A. Ammerman. (2014). Conceptualizing and comparing neighborhood and activity space measures for food environment research. Health & Place, 30:215-25.

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Jilcott-Pitts, S., L. Carr, J. Brinkley, L. Byrd, T. Crawford, & J. Moore. (2013). Associations between neighborhood amenity density and health indicators among rural and urban youth. American Journal of Health Promotion, 28(1):e40-e43.

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Jilcott Pitts S.B., Q. Wu, J.T. McGuirt, T.W. Crawford, T.C. Keyserling, & A.S. Ammerman. (2013). Associations between access to farmers' markets and supermarkets, shopping patterns, fruit and vegetable consumption and health indicators among women of reproductive age in eastern North Carolina, USA. Public Health Nutrition, 16:1944-52.

CURRENT FUNDED RESEARCH

NSF-Geography & Spatial Sciences Program:  Coastal Erosion Vulnerabilities, Monsoon Dynamics, and Human Adaptive Response, Principal Investigator, 2017-2012, $405,868. NSF link.

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This project investigates coastal erosion in the Bangladesh delta, a major problem that threatens livelihoods for thousands of households.  I am working with a team to describe space-time patterns of shoreline change, link this change to monsoon precipitation, and understand using resilience and panarchy theory how population adapts to the challenge of coastal erosion.  Mixed methods included geospatial analysis and social science methods including a quantitative social survey, qualitative focus groups and key informant interviews.

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Partners include researchers from:  East Carolina University, Kansas State University and Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman Agricultural University (Bangladesh).

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Bicycle mobilities and culture

Boettge, B., D.M. Hall, & T. Crawford. (2017). Assessing the bicycle network in St. Louis: a place-based user-centered approach. Sustainability, 9, 241; doi:103390/su9020241.

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Crawford, T. (2015). Finding the Real America on the TransAmerica Bicycle Trail: landscape meaning of a contemporary secular pilgrimage. In, S. Brunn (Ed.) The Changing World Religion Map: Sacred Places, Identities, Practices and Politics, pp. 855-873. Springer.

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