The Dictionary of Human Geography

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concerns over supplies of minerals andoil
were part of its military planning. A large lit-
erature has documented the relationship
between fights to control resources andgeo-
politics, although it has also pointed out that
simple conflicts over resources are less fre-
quently a direct cause of warfare than simplis-
tic Malthusian assumptions of scarcity leading
to conflict usually suggest (Le Billon, 2004: cf.
malthusian model). The recent growth of the
global economy and the ability to substitute
and invent new materials in industrial pro-
cesses has substantially reduced the concern
with potentialwarsover many resources on
the large scale. However oil may yet turn out
to be the ‘resource war’ exception that proves
this rule.
Research in the 1990s gradually connected
resources with contemporary violence in
manystatesin the globalsouth. It became
clear that in many places in the developing
world where there were large supplies of
natural resources, there was also a prevalence
of violence, corruption and in some cases
outright warfare (Le Billon, 2005). Research
has now documented how this ‘resource curse’
distorts development by making the political
elites who control the resource rents hugely
wealthy, and in the process frequently stifles
national economic innovation. It also makes
clear that there are large incentives to fight to
control therentfromresourceextraction,
which, in the absence of a strong state and
available economic alternatives, frequently
fuels civil wars (Bannon and Collier, 2003).
At the largest scale, these matters are now of
concern in the discussion of global oil supplies
and the sometimes severely distorted political
structures of oil-exporting states, in particular
in themiddle east. This now directly connects
resource curse arguments with the traditional
geopolitical themes of ensuring supplies for
distant markets. In particular after the Iranian
revolution, and during the subsequent war
between Iraq and Iran in the 1980s, American
military power became increasingly involved in
the Gulf to control the flow of oil. This has
grown dramatically as a consequence of inva-
sion of Iraq in 2003, where the US policy in
the region is now directly tied to enforcing the
flow of oil, with all the potential this has for
further violent conflict (Klare, 2004). sd

Suggested reading
Klare (2004); Le Billon (2005).

restructuring Change(s) in and/or between
the constituent parts of a circuit ofsocial

reproduction, emanating from the dynamics
of the circuit itself or from contradictions and
crises within it.
Such changes may represent a response to
changed conditions induced, for example, by
time–space compression, technical change,
or conflicts between labour andcapitalin
the workplace, or transmitted through the
competitive conditions endemic tocapital-
ism. The inherently competitive social rela-
tions of capitalism generate a permanent
tendency to transformation or restructuring,
but the term has come to be more widely used
since the end of the long boom in the late
1960s and early 1970s (seecrisis;modern-
ity). For some, it is a process closely associ-
ated with the transition from onekondratieff
cycleto another or from oneregime of accu-
mulationto another or with the speed of the
circulation of capital and the increasingglob-
alizationof the world economic geography.
As such, restructuring may be thought to be
synonymous with development (Streeten,
1987), or at least with certain forms of devel-
opment. But it goes beyond that. Thus
Laurence Harris (1988, p. 10) points out that
although there is ‘no easy, obvious way to
distinguish structural from other changes in
the abstract. .. some periods seem to see
greater and more significant shifts than
others’. He identifies four such periods in the
UK since the early nineteenth century: the
1830s and 1840s; the 1880s and 1890s; the
1930s and 1940s; and the 1970s and 1980s.
But what marks these out as periods of
restructuring? Apart from certain specific and
system-wide components of changes (e.g.
those identified by Harris, 1988, pp. 11–14),
restructuring involves not just quantitative
change but pronounced qualitative transform-
ations of the ways in whichconsumption,
production and exchange take place and
relate to each other. Furthermore, as a set of
essentially qualitative changes operating on
the circuit of social reproduction, restructur-
ing necessarily involves transformations of the
conditions in which such circuits create and
find their conditions of existence.
At an extreme of structural change, such as
occurred in the transformation of the former
state socialist societies during the late 1980s
(see post-socialism), the social relations
through which the dynamic, direction and
mode of evaluation of social reproduction are
shaped are themselves transformed and the
circuit of social reproduction comes to operate
on completely different principles, often asso-
ciated with profound economic disruption and

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RESTRUCTURING
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