De Lara, Juan D. Forthcoming. “Race, Algorithms, and the Work of Border Enforcement.” Information & Culture.
De Lara, Juan D. 2018. Inland Shift: Race, Space, and Capital in Inland Southern California. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press. https://www.ucpress.edu/book.php?isbn=9780520297395.
Pulido, Laura, and Juan De Lara. 2018. “Reimagining ‘Justice’ in Environmental Justice: Radical Ecologies, Decolonial Thought, and the Black Radical Tradition.” Environment and Planning E: Nature and Space, April, 2514848618770363. https://doi.org/10.1177/2514848618770363.
De Lara, Juan D. 2018. “‘This Port Is Killing People’: Sustainability Without Justice in the Neo-Keynesian Green City.” Annals of the American Association of Geographers, March.
Pastor, Manuel, Juan David De Lara, and Rachel Rosner. 2016. “Movements Matter: Immigrant Integration in Los Angeles.” In Unsettled Americans: Metropolitan Context and Civic Leadership for Immigrant Integration, edited by Manuel Pastor and John Mollenkopf. Ithaca, N.Y: Cornell University Press.
De Lara, Juan D. 2016. “The Last Suburb: Immigrant Integration in the Inland Empire.” In Unsettled Americans: Metropolitan Context and Civic Leadership for Immigrant Integration, edited by Manuel Pastor and John Mollenkopf, 136–62. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.
De Lara, Juan D., Ellen R. Reese, and Jason Struna. 2016. “Organizing Temporary, Subcontracted, and Immigrant Workers.” Labor Studies Journal 41 (4):309–32. https://doi.org/10.1177/0160449X16664415.
De Lara, Juan D. 2012. “The Walmart Model and the Human Cost of Our Low-Price Goods.” The Guardian, July 25, 2012. www.guardian.co.uk.
De Lara, Juan D. 2012. “Post City of Quartz Los Angeles.” Human Geography 5 (3):94–96.
De Lara, Juan D. 2012. “Goods Movement and Metropolitan Inequality.” In Cities, Regions and Flows, edited by Peter V. Hall and Markus Hesse, 75–91. London and New York: Routledge.
Matsuoka, Martha, Andrea Hricko, Robert Gottlieb, and Juan D. De Lara. 2011. “Global Trade Impacts: Addressing the Health, Social and Environmental Consequences of Moving International Freight through Our Communities.” Los Angeles: Occidental College and University of Southern California.
Delp, Linda, and Juan D. De Lara. 2002. “Confronting Trade Policies from the Bottom Up.” In Teaching for Change: Popular Education and the Labor Movement, edited by Miranda Outman-Kramer Linda Delp, 228–39. Los Angeles: UCLA Center for Labor Research and Education.