Author Detail

Stephen M. Wheeler (smwheeler@ucdavis.edu)

Publications (19 records):

Title Year Series
Shared & Equitable Micromobility in California: Recommendations for Public Agencies and NGOs from Expert Observers’ Perceptions 2023 Dissertation
Farmers Markets As Restorative Environments 2020 Journal Article
A Carbon-Neutral California: Social Ecology and Prospects for 2050 GHG Reduction 2017 Journal Article
Opportunities for Increased Greenhouse Gas Reductions from Farmland Conservation 2015 Journal Article
Response to Nico Larco’s Sustainable Urban Design Framework 2015 Journal Article
"Five Reasons Why Megaregional Planning Works Against Sustainability" chapter in Megaregions: Globalization’s New Urban Form? 2015 Journal Article
Built Landscapes of Metropolitan Regions: An International Typology 2015 Journal Article
The Impacts of Alternative Patterns of Urbanization on Greenhouse Gas Emissions in an Agricultural County 2013 Journal Article
Gold Country: The Politics of Landscape in Exurban El Dorado County, California 2012 Journal Article
West Village: Development of a New Ecological Neighborhood in Davis, California 2012 Journal Article
The Rise of the Postmodern Metropolis: Spatial Evolution of the Sacramento Metropolitan Region 2011 Journal Article
Case Study on Potential Agricultural Responses to Climate Change in a California Landscape 2011 Journal Article
A New Conception of Planning in the Era of Climate Change 2010 Journal Article
Planning for Sustainability, chapter in Local Planning: Contemporary Principles and Practice 2009 Journal Article
Shaken, Shrinking, Hot, Impoverished and Informal: Emerging Research Agendas in Planning 2009 Journal Article
Regions, Megaregions, and Sustainability 2009 Journal Article
“California’s Climate Change Planning: Policy Innovation and Structural Hurdles,” chapter 10 in Planning for Climate Change: Strategies for Mitigation and Adaptation 2009 Journal Article
The Evolution of Built Landscapes in Metropolitan Regions 2008 Journal Article
State and Municipal Climate Change Plans: The First Generation 2008 Journal Article