The Dictionary of Human Geography

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more or less temporally specific’, and they
are ‘productive time–spaces which have to be
produced’ (Thrift, 1996).
Another thematic corresponds to episte-
mology. Several philosophical sources inform
these discussions. Central are Martin
Heidegger’s phenomenology and Ludwig
Wittgenstein’s ideas of language games, some-
how intertwining with Michel Foucault’s ideas
of historically constituted and spatially formed
‘power–knowledge’. But also important is
Karl Mannheim, a pioneer of the sociology
of knowledge, who was one of the first to treat
ideas as socially situated (Situationsgebunden).
Part of these ideas, often mediated through
Donna Haraway’s notion ofsituated know-
ledge, has induced a new understanding of
the production of geographical knowledge.
Knowledge production is seen as a practical
activity that literally takes place and intervenes
within specific contexts. Different versions of
contextual knowledge circulate, but what gen-
erally connects them is a rather modest atti-
tude towards the powers of theory (cf. Thrift,
1996). Theories are of course vital and indis-
pensable accounts, but at the same time they
are always limited and partial: they are marked
by the contexts from which they emerge and
the circumstances that they are intended to
meet.
Common to contextual approaches is their
reference to dynamic, connected time–spaces.
More recent contributions both accentuate
and develop this point. Schatzski (2002), for
example, in what he calls a ‘siteontology’,
connects to practice and human coexistence.
Social sites, in this account, are contexts where
‘practices and orders form an immense, shift-
ing, and transmogrifying mesh in which they
overlap, interweave, cohere, conflict, diverge,
scatter and enable as well as constrain each
other’. In another way, Massey (2005), with-
out using the term, opens to a radically
dynamic vision of contextuality. She discusses
space in terms of interrelations, heterogeneity
and process, and connects it to time through a
double determination as ‘discrete multiplicity’
and ‘dynamic simultaneity’. This allows for
a conception of different time–spaces (or con-
texts) as relational; as ever-shifting constella-
tions of trajectories, constructed out of their
interrelations and ‘throwntogetherness’. ks

Suggested reading
Massey (2005); Simonsen (1991); Thrift (1996).

contiguous zone A zone of special jurisdic-
tional purposes contiguous to theterritorial

sea, which a coastalstatemay claim up to
24 nautical miles from the baseline for meas-
uring the territorial sea. The coastal state may,
in such a zone, exercise the control necessary
to: (1) prevent infringement of its customs,
fiscal,immigrationor sanitarylawsand regu-
lations within its territory or territorial sea;
and (2) punish infringement of such laws and
regulations committed within its territory and
territorial sea (United Nations, 1983, Art. 33).
This enables foreign nationals to exercise
numerous prerogatives, including rights of
navigation, overflying, fishing, conducting
research and laying submarine cables. sch

Suggested reading
Valega (2001).

continental shelf The Third United Nations
Conference on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS
III) defines the continental shelf as ‘the natural
prolongation of the landterritoryto the outer
edge of the continental margin, or to a distance
of 200 nautical miles from the baselines from
which the breadth of theterritorial seais
measured’ (United Nations, 1983, Art. 76).
Where the continental margin extends beyond
200 nautical miles from the baseline, the coastal
statemust establish its outer edge with the
highly technical methods stipulated in Article
76 of the Convention. Thecoastalstateexercises
over the continental shelf ‘sovereign rights for
the purpose of exploring it and exploiting its
natural resources’ (United Nations, 1983,
Art. 77). sch

Suggested reading
Valega (1992).

continents Usually defined as ‘large, con-
tinuous, discrete masses of land’, the identifi-
cation of continents is both conventional and
contingent, because it is closely bound up with
the histories ofexploration,geographyand
geopolitics. Contemporaries divided the
Graeco-Roman world into three continents –
europe,asiaand ‘Libya’ (seeafrica) – but
as early as the fifth centurybceHerodotus
was puzzled ‘why three distinct women’s
names should be given to what is really a single
landmass’ (Lewis and Wigen, 1997, p. 22). In
medieval Europe, cosmographers and carto-
graphers retained this tripartite division but
saw the three as parts of a single ‘world island’,
orOrbis Terrarum. The European ‘discovery’
of theamericasfrom the late fifteenth century
followed by ‘the Great Southern Continent’ of
australia in the early seventeenth century

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