The Dictionary of Human Geography

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1997). Academic subjects are reordering, with
inter- and trans-disciplinarity not merely
becoming fashionable but seen as prerequis-
ites to tackle more complex environmental
and societal issues (see especially the concept
and consequences of hybridity – Whatmore,
2002a). In this climate, it would seem obvious
that:
... widening the existing divide would be a
tragic mistake that would weaken the dis-
cipline at a time when ... society needs a
synthetic, coherent view of how humanity
uses and abuses the physical environment
... (Abler, Marcus and Olson, 1992,
p. 397)
Gregory (2005c), in perhaps the most com-
prehensive evaluation of the recent scope and
history of physical geography, provides a wel-
ter of optimistic scenarios for its engagement
to this task (see figure 3).
The recent identification of sustainability
science (Kates, Clark, Corell et al., 2001) is a
clear example of physical geography being
used to identify and coordinate trans-
discplinary agendas that respond to large-
scale, complex and hybrid environment–
society–development issues. The growing abil-
ity ofgisto move from the realms of a research
technology to practical application, particu-
larly when used in tandem with a vastly
increased information flow from a variety of
remote platforms spanning observations of the
human and biophysical world, would also
seem to make the case for the renewed pros-
pering of physical geography a compelling
one. Nonetheless, there are warning signals,

for while Gregory reiterates one of those crit-
ical attributes defining physical geography,
whose purpose:

. .. is to understand how the Earth’s phys-
ical environment is the basis for and is
affected by human activity. (Gregory,
2005, p. xxvii)
It is this emphasis that over a long period, has
so divided and, paradoxically, often down-
graded the subject outside particular ‘applied’
studies. Expectations are raised, to be disap-
pointed in the follow-through. Crucially, the
new millennium is a time when physical geog-
raphy conducted on the margins of, or away
from, the geographical arena is very strong. A
new scientific network devoted to Earth
systems science has developed, which claims
the same human–environment agenda, and
that may be better placed to take advantage
of wider intellectual and analytical advances,
and to fulfil societal needs (Pitman, 2005).
The natural claims of physical geography to
privilege as an environmental discipline thus
need to show an added value that transcends
that derived from the collected expertise of
others. It is, for example, quite possible to
view physical (and environmental) geog-
raphy) as smaller components in a very
broad, holistic science–environment frame-
work that claims much of the same intellec-
tual heritage and rationale as geography itself
(see figure 4).
Once more, then, the hunt is on for a dis-
tinctive way forward, and for a more robust
means of integrating physical geography into
geography and science as a whole. njc


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Gregory / The Dictionary of Human Geography 9781405132879_4_P Final Proof page 537 1.4.2009 3:20pm
PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY

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