The Dictionary of Human Geography

(nextflipdebug2) #1

Comp. by: VPugazhenthi Stage : Revises1 ChapterID: 9781405132879_4_Q Date:31/
3/09 Time:19:14:08 Filepath:H:/00_Blackwell/00_3B2/Gregory-9781405132879/appln/
3B2/revises/9781405132879_4_Q.3d


much work on happiness shows that – to the
extent that it can be measured – it does not
increase above a certain threshold income:
people may be more content and live more
comfortable lives with higher incomes,
but they do not feel any happier (Layard,
2005). rj

quango An acronym for quasi-autono-
mous-non-governmentalorganizations. These
are established and financed by governments
to perform public functions in areas of policy
such as education and health care. Quango
members are appointed rather than elected,
and are drawn from private, public and third
sectors. Since the 1970s, quangos have grown
both numerically and in terms of the areas of
the world in which they can be found. This
growth reflects a general trend in national gov-
ernments changing how they govern, involving
new forms of organizations in their activities.
The incorporation of these organizations into
thestate apparatusraises issues of account-
ability,democracyand transparency in public
decision-making. kwa

Suggested reading
Ridley and Wilson (1995).

quantitative methods Mathematics has al-
ways been a foundation of geographical prac-
tices. For many centuries, it underpinned the
development ofcartography, providing the
techniques (notably geometrical and trigono-
metrical) deployed inmap-making – in estab-
lishing exact locations (increasingly through
the universally adopted graticule of latitude
and longitude and the national surveying sys-
tems based on that matrix) and in portraying
those locations in map form. With the latter,
for example, much effort was (and still is)
expended on the development ofmap projec-
tionswith which to portray a spherical reality
on to a two-dimensional surface. Increasingly,
however, this work has been separated from
academic geographical practices into separate
disciplines (such as geodesy).
Although, as with almost all changes within
a discipline, earlier exemplars can be identi-
fied, the post-1945 decades saw a major shift
in geographical practices associated with a
widespread adoption of quantitative methods
inhumanandphysical geography– a period
widely known as the discipline’squantitative
revolution and very much linked to the
adoption of an explicitly theoretical approach
to the discipline’s subject matter. This shift
was associated with scholars located at a

number of institutions, initially in the USA
and then also in the UK (Johnston and Sid-
away, 2004a), but the dominant core was lo-
cated at the Department of Geography in the
University of Washington, Seattle, in the early
to mid-1950s, when a number of graduate
students coalesced around two individuals –
Edward Ullman and, especially, William Gar-
rison. Their core concern was the application
and development oflocation theory(espe-
cially that based inneo-classical econom-
ics), with quantitative methods identified –
as in other social sciences, notably economics
and sociology at the time – as a means of both
expressing theories in a formal language and
empirically testinghypotheses.
These two core activities drew on different
quantitativemethodologies: the expression
oftheoriesinvolved mathematical argumen-
tation and representation (includingmodel-
ling), whereas hypothesis-testing used
statistical procedures, expressing the outcome
of empirical research in probabilistic terms. In
some cases, mathematical modelling preceded
empirical work, providing the formal basis for
hypothesis generation; in others, statistical an-
alysis was either based on more informal forms
of argument leading to some form of expected
empirical outcome, or involved exploration of
numerical data without any clear expectation
as to the likely outcome (cf.exploratory
data analysis). These two approaches (espe-
cially that involving statistical analysis) spread
rapidly through the 1960s and 1970s from the
core institutions in Seattle and other US
centres, alongside parallel and linked develop-
ments in the UK (Barnes, 2004b, 2008b;
Johnston,Fairbrother,Hoare,Hayesand
Jones, 2008): according to Burton (1963),
geography’s ‘quantitative revolution’ had suc-
ceeded by the early 1960s, although circum-
stantial evidence suggested that it never
dominated human geography (Wheeler, 2002).
Much of the mathematical modelling
underpinning quantitative work in human
geography has focused on either spatial pat-
terns – such as the distribution of settlements,
as incentral place theory–orspatial
interaction(notably various forms ofmigra-
tionand communication). The goal was to
express the subject matter under consideration
in mathematical terms. At the core of much
work on spatial interaction, for example, was
an analogy with Newton’s famous formula-
tion, which posited that the volume of inter-
action between two places was positively
related to some index of the generating cap-
acity at each place and negatively related to the

Gregory / The Dictionary of Human Geography 9781405132879_4_Q Final Proof page 607 31.3.2009 7:14pm Compositor Name: ARaju

QUANTITATIVE METHODS
Free download pdf