The Dictionary of Human Geography

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haunt contemporary culture (Torgovnick,
1991), and its tropes continue to be mobilized
inmoderntourismandthequestforthe‘exotic’.
Indeed, Li (2006) contends that it continues to
be a powerful if hidden presence in critical theo-
rizations that ostensibly seek to expose the
ethnocentrismof the West. ‘In order for the
westto reflect,’ he concludes, ‘the savage must
dance’ (Li, 2006, p. 223). dg

Suggested reading
Staszak (2004).

principal components analysis (pca) A stat-
istical procedure for transforming a data mat-
rix so that variables in the new matrix are
uncorrelated. Unlikefactor analysis(with
which it is often confused/treated synonym-
ously), there are as many variables (termed
‘components’) in the transformed as in the
original matrix. Component loadings and
scores are interpreted as are those derived
from factor analyses, and component matrices
can also be rotated. The pca procedure has
been widely used in human geography: (a) to
identify groups of interrelated variables
inductively; (b) to simplify a data set by
removing redundant information; (c) to
reorganize a data set in order to eliminate
collinearity; and (d) to test hypotheses.
(See alsofactorial ecology.) rj

Suggested reading
Johnston (1978).

prisoner’s dilemma An application ofgame
theory that illustrates the benefits of co-
operative behaviour in certain situations and
has been deployed to suggest a rationale for
thestate.
In the game’s classic version (see Rapoport
and Chammah, 1965), two men are arrested
on charges of both car theft and armed rob-
bery. The first offence can be readily proven,
but the other cannot; convictions for the latter
will only be obtained if one of the men con-
fesses and implicates the other. The suspects
know that if they both stay silent they will be
found guilty of theft and serve a short prison
sentence (one year); they also know that if
both are found guilty of the armed robbery
they will serve eight years. They are interro-
gated separately and not allowed to consult,
let alone collude. Each is offered the deal that
if he confesses to the robbery, resulting in the
accomplice being found guilty, he will be freed
and the accomplice will get ten years. The four
options are set out in the following matrix:.

The first figure in each cell indicates Suspect
A’s punishment if that option is chosen by
them both, and the second indicates
Suspect’s B punishment. Thus if neither con-
fesses to the robbery, each serves one year in
prison; if A confesses and B does not, however,
then A will be freed and B will serve ten years.
For each, the best option is to confess, because
if either remains silent and the other confesses,
he will get ten years’ imprisonment. Neither
dare stay silent for fear that the other will not.
If the two could collude, or could guarantee
that the accomplice would stay silent, then the
optimal solution is for both to remain silent – a
one-year sentence. But because neither can
guarantee the other’s choice, each selects a
sub-optimal outcome and gets an eight-year
sentence.
The dilemma has been used as ametaphor
not only to illustrate that selfish behaviour
may not be in an individual’s best interests,
but also that it is not in a person’s interests to
act unselfishly if everybody else takes the self-
ish option, particularly in issues regarding
resource use and resource management
(cf.tragedy of the commons). In most situ-
ations involving more than a small number of
actors, it is argued, unselfish behaviour can
only be guaranteed if enforced by an external
authority, such as the state, which exists to
promote both the collective and the individual
good – although there are many situations
(some illustrated by more complex versions
of the prisoner’s dilemma game – such as the
iterated prisoner’s dilemma, in which the
‘game’ is played many times: see Axelrod,
1984) in which co-operation is sensible and
can promote the collective good without state
involvement. rj

Suggested reading
Barrett (2003); Laver (1997); Poundstone
(1992).

prisons Segregative institutions designed to
punish, typically for criminal offences. Prisons
are usually strictly regulated and tightly sur-
veyed environments, to which offenders are
confined for varying lengths of time, and
sometimes for life. Often referred to as ‘peni-
tentiaries’ or ‘correctional institutions’,

Suspect B

Not confess Confess
Suspect A Not confess 1,1 10,0
Confess 0,10 8,8

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PRINCIPAL COMPONENTS ANALYSIS (PCA)
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