AmorC. M. (2006). Arab–American Muslims’ home interiors in the US: Meanings, uses and communication. Journal of Interior Design, 32(1), 1–16.
3.
EsberG. S.Jr. (1987). Designing Apache homes with Apaches. In ShirleyR. W. (Ed.), Anthropological praxis: Translating knowledge into action (pp. 187–196). Boulder, CO: Westview Press.
4.
FanS. (2014). Learning from Los Chinos: Chinese casino workers and the contested domestic landscape. In FanS. (Ed.), Suburbanisms: Casino urbanization, Chinatowns, and the contested American landscape (pp. 58–121). New London, CT: Lyman Allyn Art Museum.
5.
GoffmanE. (1959). The presentation of self in everyday life. Garden City, NY: Doubleday.
6.
HadjiyanniT. (2007). Bounded choices—Somali women constructing difference in Minnesota housing. Journal of Interior Design, 32(2), 17–27.
7.
HadjiyanniT. (2015). Transbodied Space—The home experiences of undocumented Mexicans in Minnessota. Space and Culture, 18(1), 81–97.
8.
HaydenD. (2002). Redesigning the American dream: The future of housing, work, and family life (2nd ed.). New York: W.W. Norton.
LawrenceD. L., & LowS. M. (1990). The built environment and spatial form. Annual Review of Anthropology, 19, 453–505.
11.
LeeE., & ParkN. (2011). Adapting to cultural differences in residential design: The case of Korean families visiting the United States. Journal of Interior Design, 36(2), 1–19.
12.
OkelyJ. (1983). The traveller–gypsies. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
13.
PaderE. J. (1993). Spatiality and social change: Domestic space use in Mexico and the United States. American Ethnologist, 20(1), 114–137.
14.
PaderE. J. (1994). Sociospatial relations of change: Rural Mexican women in urban California. In ChurchmanA. & AltmanI. (Eds.), Women and the environment (pp. 73–103). New York: Plenum Press.
15.
PaderE. J. (2002). Housing occupancy standards: Inscribing ethnicity and family relations on the land. The Journal of Architecture and Planning Research, 19(4), 300–318.
16.
PaderE. (2014). Restructuring immigrant workers’ housing: when does policy or design become discriminatory? In FanS. (Ed.), Suburbanisms: Casino urbanization, Chinatowns, and the contested American landscape. New London, CT: Lyman Allyn Art Museum.
17.
ReevesB. (2005). Making a house a home: Builder customizes homes to fit different cultures. DESIGNER/builder, 6, 28–30.
18.
SpainD. (1992). Gendered spaces. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press.
19.
SwentzellR. (1992). Conflicting landscape values: The Santa Clara pueblo and day school. Places, 7(1), 19–27.
20.
WrightG. (1981). Building the dream: A social history of housing in America (1st ed.). New York: Pantheon Books.