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Forsyth, A. (2000). Analyzing Public Space at a Metropolitan Scale: Notes on the Potential for Using GIS. Urban Geography, 21(2), 121-               147.

 

Jones, Karen R., & Wills, John. (2005). The Invention of the Park: Recreational Landscapes from the Garden of Eden to Disney's Magic

            Kingdom. Cambridge, UK: Polity.

 

Lindsey, G., Maraj, M., & Kuan, S. (2001). Access, Equity, and Urban Greenways: An Exploratory Investigation. The Professional                           Geographer, 53(3), 332-346. 

 

McCormack, G., Giles-Corti, B., Bulsara, M., & Pikora, T. (2006). Correlates of Distances Traveled to Use Recreational Facilities                             for Physical Activity Behaviors. International Journal of Recreation of Behavioral Nutritional & Physical Activity, 3(1), 18.

 

Nicholls, S. (2001).  Measuring the Accessibility and Equity of Public Parks: A Case Study Using GIS. Managing Leisure, 6, 201-219.

 

Slater, S., Pugach, O., Lin, W., Bontu, A. (2016). If You Build It Will They Come? Does Involving Community Groups In Playground                         Renovations Affect Park Utilization and Physical Activity? Environment and Behavior, 48(1), 246-265.

 

The Trust for Public Land. (2004). No Place to Play: A Comparative Analysis of Park Access in Seven Major Cities. San Francisco: The               Trust for Public Land. 

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United States Census Bureau. State and County Quickfacts: Pomona, California. Retrieved June 3, 2017,                                                                 from https://www.census.gov/quickfacts/

 

Wolch, J., Wilson, J.P., Fehrenbach, J. (2005). Parks and Park Funding in Los Angeles: An Equity-Mapping Analysis. Urban Geography,               26(1), 4-35. 

 

Young, T. (2004). Building San Francisco's Parks, 1850-1930. Baltimore: John Hopkins University Press. 

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