The Dictionary of Human Geography

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RS data can be ambiguous, requiring careful
interpretation.
One problem is that as RS signals pass
through (for example) cloud cover and the
atmosphere the signals are degraded. Second,
although commercial satellites now offer very
precise imagery (1–5 m resolution), if these
are unavailable and if an object is smaller than
the resolution offered by the sensor, then its
spectral properties will be mixed with others
around. Third, objects can be obscured by
others above; for example, vegetation below a
tree canopy.
In any case, human geographers may be less
interested in land coverper seand more con-
cerned withland use, or the social meaning
given toplaces. A spectral signature is a co-
production ofnatureandscience; the way in
which places are constructed and used is
infused with social praxis and signification.
There is no necessary one-to-one relationship
between the science and social science.
However, an interesting development
within RS has been to use methods ofimage
classification that incorporate geographical
thinking. Standard methods ofclassification
generally are probability based (and Bayesian,
notably the maximum likelihood approach:
seebayesian analysis). If it is known (from
direct evidence) where various land cover
types are located on some parts of the RS
image, then it is possible to extrapolate and
determine that the spectral signatures of
other parts of the image more likely indicate
one land cover type than any other. A more
geographical approach is to classify pixels
within the context of what is around them; to
extract information about spatial configur-
ations and associations that may say more
about the land function than an aspatial ana-
lysis of land cover alone. Such techniques
include space syntax (related to graph
theory). rh

Suggested reading
Campbell (2002); Hillier and Hanson (1989);
Lillesand, Kiefer and Chipman (2003).

rent Formally defined, rent is any payment
to afactor of productionover and above
that necessary to keep it in its present use.
While any factor of production can potentially
accrue rent it is the analysis of only one factor


  • land – that dominates the discussion of rent
    withingeography. This is partly because the
    payment for land is pure rent (a consequence
    of the fact that land costs nothing to produce,
    and not the case for other factors), and partly


because land is bound to location, thus lend-
ing itself to geographical analysis.
Rent is the price of land, and because land is
differentiated by both quality and location,
each land plot will have a different rent level.
Two quite different approaches have been
deployed to explain differential land rents.
The orthodox view ofneo-classical econom-
icstreats land as any othercommodity, with
rents set by forces of supply and demand. Rent
is determined as in a giant auction, with
rational buyers and sellers of land meeting
to haggle over price. Those plots of land with
characteristics most demanded given the avail-
able supply will fetch the highest rents, and in
the process determine land use. In contrast,
marxist economicsemphasizes thepowerof
different social classes in determining rent
levels. While land characteristics play a role
in setting rent, they are always subordinate to
a set of wider social relations characterizing
capitalism around the inequality of power
and resource ownership. Without inclusion
of this larger context, no analysis of rent is
complete.
Both traditions have provided analyses of
the role of land rent within explicitly geog-
raphical settings. The von thu

..
nen model
is the best known within the neo-classical
tradition (Chisholm, 1979). Assuming that
agricultural crops are cultivated at varying
distances around a town, which is also the
sole market, a competitive bidding process
among farmers results in plots of land closer
to the town centre receiving differentially
higher rents than those farther away. In this
case, the spatial pattern of land rents is
explained by differential savings intransport
coststhat allow farmers closer to the town to
bid higher rents than farmers farther out.
Rents are thus set by the supply and demand
for plots of land differentiated by location.
The von Thu ̈nen model has also been
extended to explain rents within the city.
William Alonso’s bid-rent approach (see
alonso model) draws upon differential trans-
portation costs ofcommutingalong incomes
to explain urban land rents and residential
land-use patterns.
The Marxist approach to rent is most asso-
ciated with writings by David Harvey (1999
[1982]) and Neil Smith (2008 [1984]).
Harvey draws directly on Marx’s categories
of absolute and monopoly rent to stress the
role ofclasspower in determining rent levels.
Landowners use their clout either to restrict
investmentin the case ofabsolute rent,orto
constrain the supply of land in the case of

Gregory / The Dictionary of Human Geography 9781405132879_4_R-new Final Proof page 644 2.4.2009 9:12pm

RENT
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