The Dictionary of Human Geography

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been continued byglobalizationtheorists –
is close attention to the ways in which these
new industrial spaces (including high-tech
spaces in Indian cities such as Bangalore and
Hyderabad) are linked to international capital
and consumermarketsby firms such as IBM,
Hewlett-Packard and Sony. NIDL theorists
largely discounted the domestic bases of in-
dustrial success in the Asian Tiger economies
and important policy differences between
them. They were ahead of the game, however,
in recognizing some of the global shifts set in
motion by the restructuring of capitalism as it
moved into an era ofneo-liberalismand dee-
peningtime__space compression. sco

Suggested reading
Dicken (2003); Schatz and Venables (2000).

new town A planned town in an area that
previously lacked a substantial urban settle-
ment. Although such planned settlements
can be found throughout history, the term
was first widely used after passage of the
BritishNew Towns Act 1946. The New Town
movement there, based on the earliergarden
citymovement and the concept ofneigh-
bourhood units, stimulated the creation of a
number of new settlements, most of them out-
side London, designed to limit urbansprawl
and protect agricultural land (seegreen belt),
to decentralize population and economic ac-
tivity and to contribute to rehousing policies
necessitated by bothslumclearance ininner
citiesand the destruction of much housing
during the Second World War. The first of
those towns was Stevenage, with ten being
created between 1946 and 1950. Eventually,
28 were designated and built, including major
cities such as Milton Keynes, which incorpor-
ated several small existing towns.
The model set in the UK has been widely
adopted over the past 60 years, and there are
New Towns in a large number of countries.
Although the utopian ideals of many of the
movement’s originators have not been met –
notably with regard to the creation of relatively
self-contained communities – most new
towns represent relatively high standards of
housing and urban design. rj

Suggested reading
Hardy (1991); Osborn (1977); Stein (1966).

NGO The acronym for Non-Governmental
Organizations – not-for-profit voluntary asso-
ciations that seek to act for the public good.
The term covers a variety of bodies from

international agencies with large professional
staffs to small groups of unpaid volunteers.
Their functions are diverse and include cam-
paigning, humanitarian relief, development
work, social welfare, cultural activities and
conservation. Many provide services and
programmes on behalf of governments and
intergovernmental organizations and some
have become highly dependent on government
financial support. According to some accounts
they operate in the space between thestate
and the private sector and are sometimes mis-
leadingly regarded as synonymous withcivil
society. jpa

Suggested reading
Townsend, Porter and Mawdsley (2004).

NIMBY The acronym for ‘Not-In-My-Back-
Yard’, an attitude adopted by individuals
resisting the siting of a source of perceived
negativeexternalities(such as shelters for
the homeless (seehomelessness) and those
recently released fromprison) close to their
homes, and campaigning for it to be located
elsewhere (cf.zone of dependence). rj

nodal region Aregionwhose defining char-
acteristic is the links between its component
parts and one or more focal points. Nodal (or
functional) regions are usually defined using
flow data, as in the definition ofhinterlands:
they form the core of Haggett’s (1965)loca-
tional analysisschema. rj

nomadism A livelihood – including hunter–
gathering, pastoralism, begging and com-
merce – that involves the intra-annual move-
ments of families (or other social production
units), necessitating the displacement of
their dwelling(s). During the nineteenth and
early twentieth centuries, the term was used
more indiscriminately to refer to any livelihood
associated with intra-annual humanmobility.
Nomadism has historically elicited both fascin-
ation and revulsion (negative connotations of
the terms shiftless, rootless, vagabond, vagrant,
itinerant etc.) within Westernculture and
science(see alsomigrancy). Cultural evolu-
tionists have seen it as a primitive cultural trait,
while environmental determinists and cultural
ecologists have portrayed it as a feature inhibit-
ing the development of complex, hierarchical
political systems (seecultural ecology;en-
vironmental determinism). Reflecting this
history, nomadism incorrectly conjures upes-
sentialistnotions of wandering and livelihood

Gregory / The Dictionary of Human Geography 9781405132879_4_N Final Proof page 501 31.3.2009 3:13pm Compositor Name: ARaju

NOMADISM
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