The Dictionary of Human Geography

(nextflipdebug2) #1

the brink of exceeding the Earth’scarrying
capacityand precipitating widespread social
and ecologicalcrisis. Although the report
looked at resources in addition to those dir-
ectly related to agricultural production, its
argument was essentially a Malthusian one
(seemalthusian model). It was an important
milestoneinthedevelopmentofneo-Malthusian
trends in modern environmentalism, such as a
concern with the ‘population bomb’, as well as
an impetus towards calls for a ‘steady-state
economy’ and the development of the field of
environmental economics.
Belief in absolute limits to economic growth
based on material scarcity, and the politics
that follow from such a position, constituted
a direct challenge to the Promethean views of
human activity arguably shared by neo-clas-
sical economics and classical Marxism, both
of which denied the necessity of such absolute
material limits to human productivity. In
geography, David Harvey (1974a) and others
strongly criticized resurgent neo-Malthusian
models for overlooking issues of distribution,
justice, scale, changes in technology and prod-
uctivity, and other factors that would compli-
cate or undermine their predictions. A
significant amount of geographical work over
the subsequent several decades has essentially
reproduced and elaborated this debate in vari-
ous arenas. Perhaps the most notable example
is the rapid growth of scholarship centred on
the concept ofenvironmental security. This
literature is constituted largely by debates be-
tween dominant neo-Malthusian views, which
continue to articulate theories of how demo-
graphically fuelled conflicts over increasingly
scarce natural resources will produce escalat-
ing violence and geopolitical instability (see
resource wars), and more critical voices,
which continue to insist on attention to the
social causes, contexts, and complexities of
such scenarios (see Dalby, 2004).
Other work in geography, though, has revis-
ited the question of natural limits with increas-
ing theoretical nuance, moving beyond the
simple rejection of it in much of the Marxist
tradition. Theorists of natural resource indus-
tries in particular have begun to take nature’s
materiality seriously by attempting to under-
stand not only the constraints, but also the
affordances and surprises, that biophysical sys-
tems present to human activities in specific
circumstances, developing concepts such as
appropriationism, substitutionism, eco-regu-
lation, hybridity, and the formal versus the
real subsumption of nature to capital (see
Boyd, Prudham and Schurman, 2001). Nat-


ural ‘limits’ are thus increasingly understood
and investigated as differentially malleable
conditions of possibility for particular forms
of human activity, rather than as absolute
and universal barriers. Such a perspective has
proved compatible with recognition of the ne-
cessarily political and social character of any
claims about natural limits, as emphasized in
the literature on social constructionism. jm

Suggested reading
Benton (1989); Boyd, Prudham and Schurman
(2001).

linear programming Atypeofoptimization
modelused to find the optimal solution to a
wide variety of economic, business and geo-
graphical problems, such as the minimum total
transport cost of shipping goods through a geo-
graphicalnetwork.Optimizationmodelshavean
objective function(thequantitytobeminimized
ormaximized)andasetofconstraintsthatdefine
thepossibilitiesandrequirements(limitsonsup-
ply, demand requirements, route character-
istics). In linear programming both the
objective function and the constraints are linear
functions and this makes solution fast and easy,
even for very large problems. Thetransporta-
tion problemis a special form that has many
geographical applications. lwh

Suggested reading
Greenberg (1978); Killen (1979, 1983).

linkages The contacts and flows of informa-
tion and/or materials between two or more
individuals. The term is widely used in both
industrial geographyand the geography of
servicesto indicate inter-firm interdepend-
ence and its effects on location choice (see
agglomeration). A firm’s linkages can be
divided into: (1) backward, which provide
goods and services for its production activities;
(2)forward, links with customers purchasing
its products; and (3)sideways, interactions
with other firms involved in the same pro-
cesses. Membership of such networks in
increasingly seen as crucial to success and
survival for a firm, especially a small firm.
(See alsointegration). rj

literature Although the meanings of this
term have varied widely, two have been of
special interest to geographers: (a) imaginative
writing, especially that deemed to be of espe-
cially high quality or status by a critical estab-
lishment; and (b) published scholarly work on
a particular topic.

Gregory / The Dictionary of Human Geography 9781405132879_4_L Final Proof page 419 31.3.2009 2:44pm

LITERATURE
Free download pdf