Stanford
NOVEMBER 26, 2009
About The Project
Partnerships and Collaborations
Andrew Mellon Foundation
The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation has provided funding to make the Spatial History Project possible and is also a consultant.

Centro de Pesquisa em História Social da Cultura (IFCH/UNICAMP)
Centro de Pesquisa em História Social da Cultura (IFCH/UNICAMP) is an equal partner in the Terrain of History project. This primary research team in Brazil is studying the spatial history of Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. They work in the conception, analysis, and publication of spatial-history research.

The Computer Graphics Lab at Stanford University
The Computer Graphics Lab at Stanford University is collaborating in all aspects of Tooling Up for Digital Histories.

James Green, Associate Professor
Brown University
James Green, an Associate Professor at Brown University, is an equal partner in the Terrain of History project and is developing detailed analyses of residents and businesses in a neighborhood around Praça da Constituição (Tiradentes).

InfoGraphics Lab
Department of Geography at the University of Oregon
The InfoGraphics Lab is providing database hosting and management of our ESRI ArcSDE geodatabases across all of our projects. With their expertise in cartography and design they are also advising our work in visualization and application development.

Robert McDonald
The Nature Conservancy
Robert McDonald of The Nature Conservancy is collaborating in all aspects of the Bay Area Conservation and Development research in the Critical Habitat project.

Ian Read, Assistant Professor
Soka University
Ian Read, an Assistant Professor at Soka University, is a research associate with the Terrain of History project. He is the lead principal investigator in Brazil for An Era of Epidemics.

University of Nebraska Lincoln
The University of Nebraska Lincoln is a collaborator with Professor White's Shaping the West research.

Kari Zimmerman, Ph.D. candidate
Stanford University
Kari Zimmerman, a Ph.D. candidate at Stanford University, is a research associate with the Terrain of History project. She's interested in the gender and spatial history of Rio de Janeiro.
kezimm@stanford.edu

Spatial History