The Dictionary of Human Geography

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Few have disagreed, for example, that every
pinpoint on the surface of the Earth is unique:
the problem lies in looking past the uniqueness
of mere points to say something of note about
geographically boundedassemblagesand dis-
tinctions and relations among assemblages
(see alsoidiographic). From this perspective,
the artefactuality of regions is not that they
are insubstantial (few geographers would claim
that they are pureabstractions) so much as
their definition demands disregarding certain
details. The region in this sense is a ‘way of
seeing’ that which exists, a device for organiz-
ing thought about the world; it is also, of
course, the focus ofregional geography.
The above ideas have given rise to a set
of specific terms used to describe regions of
different kinds (see Grigg, 1965).Formalor
uniform regionsare areas defined by one or
more of the features that occur within them;
for example, a region of Catalan-language spe-
akers or a mining region in some part of the
world where mining dominates the economy.
Formal/uniform regions are interpretive
devices that some geographers have used to
make sense of a fundamentally heterogeneous
world. There are no purely objective meas-
ures, therefore, that dictate what proportion
of Catalan speakers in an area make it a
Catalan-speaking region. Nor are there uni-
versally agreed criteria about what would
define a mining region – The proportion of
mine workers to non-mine workers? Income
generated by mining compared with non-
mining income? The land area covered by
mines? Criteria are set according to the pur-
poses of designating such a mining (or
Catalan-speaking) region at all. Thefunctional
ornodal regionis a geographically delimited
spatial system defined by the linkages binding
particular phenomena in that area. Which
phenomena? It depends on what kind of sys-
tem we are interesting in knowing about. The
paradigmatic example is the urban region, in
which there is posited a spatially delimited
network of transactions (e.g. trading) centring
on an urban core, or central place, and spread-
ing out into and functionally incorporating an
urban periphery or hinterland. (The func-
tional region bears a resemblance to the core
and periphery ofworld systems theory, and
shares some of its criticisms too.) A number of
other regional terms have been experimented
with, especially in the first half of the twentieth
century: single- and multiple-feature regions,
natural regions,cultural regions,genericandspe-
cific regions, and so on. Thegenealogyof the
region concept links it to related terms such as

the Frenchpays. Most of these terms are not
used with particular fervour any more, at least
not in a disciplining defining sense, but the
region nonetheless remains a core concept.
Certainly, it has played a central role in sutur-
ing the different realms ofhuman geography
andphysical geography. And it remains a
generative force in thegeographical imagin-
ation (Hart, 1982; Pudup, 1988; McGee,
1991; Paasi, 2003).
The region is also an embattled concept, as
Grigg (1965) pointed out several decades ago.
Features that may stand in geographical rela-
tion to each other rarely spatially co-vary
exactly. The grouping of different phenomena
together and the drawing of boundaries
around them are therefore by no means
obvious. (Althoughboundarymapping has
spawned a great deal of research, using the
quantifying tools of descriptive statistics,
factor analysis, and most recentlygeographic
information science.) There is the question
too of whether the region is too static a con-
cept, insufficiently attuned to change in the
world, and whether regions have been under-
stood too much in geographical isolation from
the world. Grigg took these criticisms to mean
that the region, especially its use bygeog-
raphy, needs always to be understood as a
means to an end and not an end in itself (cf.
Hartshorne, 1939). The point of ‘doing’ the
region is not ultimately to divide the world
intoregionsandrest content. It is rather, if
one wishes, to engage in classifying and
modelling geographical phenomena so as to
generate questions about their variability and
functioning with respect to other phenomena.
Indeed, for Grigg, whose essay appeared in a
seminal text of thequantitative revolution,
the regionisamodel.
In the 1980s and 1990s, some geographers
proposed to solve the problem of the region by
reframing the terms of study and ushering in
a ‘new regional geography’ (e.g. Pudup, 1988;
Thrift, 1994b; cf. Gregory, 1982). Spurred on
by an interest instructuration theory,social
theory,political economy and locality
studies, the goal was to see the region as a
medium and outcome of social practices and
relations of power that are operative at multiple
spatial and temporal scales, among which the
region might serve as a kind of fix. There was
also in the new regional geography an explicit
critique of an insufficiently spatialized social
theory and political economy. There has been
some debate as to whether the new regional
geography misconstrued the concept and uses
of the region during its heyday before the

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REGION
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