Notes
1 An analysis of articles published by US-based scholars in this journal would likely bare this relationship out as well—a majority of those papers are cultural geographic in orientation. Moreover, since 2007, fewer papers have been submitted and accepted from US-based academics to this journal than from those based in the UK (112 from the USA and 129 from the UK, which produced forty-two published papers by US-based scholars and fifty-four published papers by UK-based scholars). This doesn't seem like a severe difference until you consider the number of geography programs in the USA in relation to those in the UK.
2 I would like to thank an anonymous reviewer for pointing this out.