The Dictionary of Human Geography

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computing power much more complex models
can be run, which continue to provide the
somewhat counter-intuitive result that segre-
gation is greater than people’s individual pref-
erences suggest (Fossett, 2006).
Agent-based modelling is widely used in the
social sciences – in, for example, modelling the
spread of diseases (cf.epidemiology), traffic-
generation, land use and land cover
change, thediffusionof ideas,migration,
crowding in small spaces and inter-firm com-
petition (see http://www.econ.iastate.edu/
tesfatsi/ace.htm). rj

Suggested reading
Batty (2005); Testfatsion and Judd (2006).

agglomeration The association of product-
ive activities in close proximity to one another.
Agglomeration typically gives rise toexternal
economiesassociated with the collective use of
theinfrastructure of transportation, com-
munication facilities and other services.
Historically, there has been a tendency for eco-
nomic activity to concentrate spatially, the large
markets associatedwithmetropolitanareasadd-
ing to the external cost advantages. Agglomer-
ation also facilitates the rapid circulation of
capital, commodities and labour. In some cir-
cumstances,decentralization may counter
agglomerative tendencies; for example, if land
costs and those associated with congestion in the
central area are very high. (See alsoeconomies
of scale;economies of scope.) dms

Suggested reading
Malmberg (1996); Scott (2006).

aggregate travel model A statement, often
expressed as an equation, that predicts some
aspect of travel (e.g. the number of trips or
travel mode) for units (e.g. individuals or
households) aggregated to small areas, often
called ‘traffic analysis zones’. The data are
collected and analysed for these zones, obscur-
ing differences that may exist within zones
and, because zones do not make travel de-
cisions, rendering impossible investigation of
decision-making processes underlying travel.
For example, number of trips generated by a
zone may be predicted as a function of the
zone’s average household income and average
number of vehicles per household. Aggregate
travel models have been fundamental to trans-
portation planning since the 1950s. sha

Suggested reading
Hanson (1995, esp. chs 1,4,5,6).

agrarian question The forms in which cap-
italist relations transform the agrarian sector,
and the political alliances, struggles and com-
promises that emerge around different trajec-
tories of agrarian change. The founding
theoretical text in studies of the agrarian ques-
tion is Karl Kautsky’sThe agrarian question,
first published 1899 (but not translated into
English until the 1980s). Kautsky’s focus on
the agrarian question in western Europe rested
on a striking paradox: agriculture (and the
rural) came to assume a political gravity pre-
cisely at a moment when its weight in the
economy was waning. Agriculture’s curious
political and strategic significance was framed
by two key processes: the first was the growth
and integration of a world market in agricul-
tural commodities (especiallystaples) and the
international competition that was its hand-
maiden; and the second was the birth and
extension into the countryside of various forms
of parliamentary democracy. International
competition in grains was driven not only by
the extension of the agriculturalfrontierin
the USA, in Argentina, in Russia and in east-
ern Europe (what Kautsky called the ‘col-
onies’ and the ‘Oriental despotisms’), but
also by improvements in long-distance ship-
ping, by changes in taste (e.g. from rye to
wheat) and by the inability of domestic grain
production to keep up with demand. As a
consequence of massive new supplies, grain
prices (and rents and profits) fell more or less
steadily from the mid-1870s to 1896 (Konig,
1994). It was precisely during the last quarter
of the nineteenth century when a series of
protectionist and tariffpolicies in France
(1885), Germany (1879) and elsewhere were
implemented to insulate the farming sector.
New World grain exports were but one expres-
sion of the headlong integration of world com-
modity and capital markets on a scale and with
an intensity then without precedent and, some
would suggest, unrivalled since that period.
Kautsky then devoted much time to the
Prussian Junkers and their efforts to protect
their farm interests. But in reality the structure
of protection only biased the composition of
production in favour of grains (and rye in
particular) grown on the East Elbian estates.
Tariffs provided limited insulation in the pro-
tectionist countries, while the likes of England,
The Netherlands and Denmark actually
adopted freetrade(Konig, 1994). Protection
did not, and could not, save landlordism but
was, rather, a limited buffer for a newly en-
franchised peasant agriculture threatened
by the world market. The competition from

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AGGLOMERATION
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