Kate Coddington

962 total citations
28 papers, 595 citations indexed

About

Kate Coddington is a scholar working on Sociology and Political Science, General Health Professions and Geography, Planning and Development. According to data from OpenAlex, Kate Coddington has authored 28 papers receiving a total of 595 indexed citations (citations by other indexed papers that have themselves been cited), including 24 papers in Sociology and Political Science, 7 papers in General Health Professions and 6 papers in Geography, Planning and Development. Recurrent topics in Kate Coddington's work include Migration, Refugees, and Integration (15 papers), Migration and Labor Dynamics (7 papers) and Qualitative Research Methods and Ethics (6 papers). Kate Coddington is often cited by papers focused on Migration, Refugees, and Integration (15 papers), Migration and Labor Dynamics (7 papers) and Qualitative Research Methods and Ethics (6 papers). Kate Coddington collaborates with scholars based in United States, United Kingdom and Canada. Kate Coddington's co-authors include Alison Mountz, Jenna M. Loyd, Lauren Martin, Deirdre Conlon, Jill M. Williams, Sarah Banks, Caroline Lenette, Tina Cook, Caitlin Nunn and Katie N. Smith and has published in prestigious journals such as SHILAP Revista de lepidopterología, Progress in Human Geography and Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers.

In The Last Decade

Kate Coddington

26 papers receiving 554 citations

Peers — A (Enhanced Table)

Peers by citation overlap · career bar shows stage (early→late) cites · hero ref

Name h Career Trend Papers Cites
Kate Coddington United States 12 478 164 132 73 62 28 595
Arshad Isakjee United Kingdom 11 537 1.1× 175 1.1× 87 0.7× 120 1.6× 69 1.1× 23 661
Nancy Hiemstra United States 13 634 1.3× 213 1.3× 109 0.8× 89 1.2× 46 0.7× 25 720
Deirdre Conlon United States 13 651 1.4× 198 1.2× 184 1.4× 85 1.2× 37 0.6× 23 747
Andrew Burridge United Kingdom 13 516 1.1× 144 0.9× 138 1.0× 123 1.7× 65 1.0× 30 639
Jennifer Turner United Kingdom 14 434 0.9× 111 0.7× 215 1.6× 56 0.8× 91 1.5× 41 603
Georgie Wemyss United Kingdom 8 413 0.9× 127 0.8× 117 0.9× 146 2.0× 15 0.2× 16 516
Heath Cabot United States 10 487 1.0× 164 1.0× 59 0.4× 147 2.0× 21 0.3× 17 615
Carsten Bagge Laustsen Denmark 11 506 1.1× 60 0.4× 56 0.4× 188 2.6× 46 0.7× 42 658
Melanie Griffiths United Kingdom 13 723 1.5× 333 2.0× 199 1.5× 137 1.9× 17 0.3× 29 877
Jeremy Slack United States 15 521 1.1× 263 1.6× 87 0.7× 73 1.0× 30 0.5× 35 623

Countries citing papers authored by Kate Coddington

Since Specialization
Citations

This map shows the geographic impact of Kate Coddington's research. It shows the number of citations coming from papers published by authors working in each country. You can also color the map by specialization and compare the number of citations received by Kate Coddington with the expected number of citations based on a country's size and research output (numbers larger than one mean the country cites Kate Coddington more than expected).

Fields of papers citing papers by Kate Coddington

Since Specialization
Physical SciencesHealth SciencesLife SciencesSocial Sciences

This network shows the impact of papers produced by Kate Coddington. Nodes represent research fields, and links connect fields that are likely to share authors. Colored nodes show fields that tend to cite the papers produced by Kate Coddington. The network helps show where Kate Coddington may publish in the future.

Co-authorship network of co-authors of Kate Coddington

This figure shows the co-authorship network connecting the top 25 collaborators of Kate Coddington. A scholar is included among the top collaborators of Kate Coddington based on the total number of citations received by their joint publications. Widths of edges represent the number of papers authors have co-authored together. Node borders signify the number of papers an author published with Kate Coddington. Kate Coddington is excluded from the visualization to improve readability, since they are connected to all nodes in the network.

All Works

20 of 20 papers shown
1.
Bennett, Mia M., Kate Coddington, Deirdre Conlon, et al.. (2024). WITHDRAWN: Making spaces for debate in the digital age. Political Geography. 117. 103266–103266.
2.
Coddington, Kate & Jill M. Williams. (2024). Feminist Periscoping and Feminist Data Visualization: Strategies for Analyzing and Disseminating Messy Data. The Professional Geographer. 76(4). 458–466.
3.
Williams, Jill M. & Kate Coddington. (2023). Transnational Affective Circuitry: Public Information Campaigns, Affective Governmentality, and Border Enforcement. Annals of the American Association of Geographers. 113(10). 2376–2391. 4 indexed citations
4.
Coddington, Kate & Jill M. Williams. (2022). Relational enforcement: The family and the expanding scope of border enforcement. Progress in Human Geography. 46(2). 590–604. 10 indexed citations
5.
Coddington, Kate. (2021). For political geographies of fertilities. Environment and Planning C Politics and Space. 39(8). 1675–1691. 11 indexed citations
6.
Coddington, Kate. (2021). The everyday erosion of refugee claims: Representations of the Rohingya in Thailand. Social & Cultural Geography. 24(2). 274–291. 2 indexed citations
7.
Coddington, Kate. (2020). Incompatible with life: Embodied borders, migrant fertility, and the UK’s ‘hostile environment’. Environment and Planning C Politics and Space. 39(8). 1711–1724. 13 indexed citations
8.
Coddington, Kate. (2020). Producing Thailand as a transit country: borders, advocacy, and destitution. Mobilities. 15(4). 588–603. 8 indexed citations
9.
Coddington, Kate, Deirdre Conlon, & Lauren Martin. (2020). Destitution Economies: Circuits of Value in Asylum, Refugee, and Migration Control. Annals of the American Association of Geographers. 110(5). 1425–1444. 46 indexed citations
10.
Lenette, Caroline, et al.. (2019). Brushed under the carpet: Examining the complexities of participatory research. SHILAP Revista de lepidopterología. 3(2). 41 indexed citations
11.
Coddington, Kate. (2018). The slow violence of life without cash: borders, state restrictions, and exclusion in the U.K. and Australia ⋆. Geographical Review. 109(4). 527–543. 20 indexed citations
12.
Coddington, Kate, et al.. (2017). On trauma, geography, and mobility: Towards geographies of trauma. Emotion, space and society. 24. 52–56. 43 indexed citations
13.
Coddington, Kate, et al.. (2017). Generative spaces: intimacy, activism and teaching feminist geographies. Gender Place & Culture. 24(5). 661–673. 8 indexed citations
14.
Coddington, Kate. (2016). Voice Under Scrutiny: Feminist Methods, Anticolonial Responses, and New Methodological Tools. The Professional Geographer. 69(2). 314–320. 47 indexed citations
15.
Coddington, Kate. (2015). The ‘entrepreneurial spirit’:Exxon Valdezand nature tourism development in Seward, Alaska. Tourism Geographies. 17(3). 482–497. 4 indexed citations
16.
Coddington, Kate. (2014). Geographies of containment: Logics of enclosure in Aboriginal and asylum seeker policies in Australia's Northern Territory. 3 indexed citations
17.
Coddington, Kate & Alison Mountz. (2014). Countering isolation with the use of technology: how asylum-seeking detainees on islands in the Indian Ocean use social media to transcend their confinement. Journal of the Indian Ocean Region. 10(1). 97–112. 11 indexed citations
18.
Coddington, Kate, et al.. (2012). EMBODIED POSSIBILITIES, SOVEREIGN GEOGRAPHIES AND ISLAND DETENTION Negotiating the ‘right to have rights ’ on Guam, Lampedusa and Christmas Island. Durham Research Online (Durham University). 10 indexed citations
19.
Mountz, Alison, et al.. (2012). Conceptualizing detention. Progress in Human Geography. 37(4). 522–541. 181 indexed citations
20.
Coddington, Kate. (2011). Spectral geographies: haunting and everyday state practices in colonial and present-day Alaska. Social & Cultural Geography. 12(7). 743–756. 34 indexed citations

Rankless uses publication and citation data sourced from OpenAlex, an open and comprehensive bibliographic database. While OpenAlex provides broad and valuable coverage of the global research landscape, it—like all bibliographic datasets—has inherent limitations. These include incomplete records, variations in author disambiguation, differences in journal indexing, and delays in data updates. As a result, some metrics and network relationships displayed in Rankless may not fully capture the entirety of a scholar's output or impact.

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