The Dictionary of Human Geography

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states in which many functions traditionally
performed by the state are now the purview of
private companies or non-state institutions
(Ward, 2005b; seeprivatization). The result
is a reduction in central state power, as states
are not so much losing power as a result of
globalization but redefining their form and
function in a new climate of capital accumula-
tion (Sassen, 1996). cf

Suggested reading
Brenner, Jessop, Jones and MacLeod (2003);
Clark and Dear (1984); Painter (1995); Van
Creveld (1999).

state apparatus The interacting suite of
institutions and organizations through which
statepower is exercised. The state apparatus
serves three broad functions: manufacturing
social consensus; securing the conditions of
production by facilitating investment and the
reproduction of the labour force; and creating
social integration by promoting the welfare of
all social groups. The suite consists of manifold
institutions and organizations including the
police, thehealthservice, education, fiscal
regulation and elections. Neo-liberal policies
(seeneo-liberalism) have required changes
in the relative power of different institutions
to promoteeconomic growthat the expense
of welfare, with consequent geographies of
uneven life opportunities (Peck, 1996). cf

Suggested reading
Clark and Dear (1984).

state of nature This phrase featured
prominently in the writings of early liberal
political philosophers, including most fam-
ously Thomas Hobbes, John Locke, Baruch
(Benedictus) Spinoza and Jean-Jacques
Rousseau (see liberalism). All were con-
cerned with establishing in their own fashion
the moral basis ofgovernanceand a civil order
based in part on their assumptions about what
life in the state of nature was like. The phrase
points to a kind of reference point or natural
(universal) order from which to theorize about
the social (Barry, 1999), but it also marks a
boundary (imagined and real, historical and
geographical) between a condition of being in
or of nature to one of being outside of or apart
from nature. Emergence from this state of
nature, so these discourses suggest, establishes
the need for a ‘social contract’, while the par-
ticular character of the state of nature (benign,
violent etc.) also shapes the character of the
required social contract. When taken less

literally as a specific time or place, the state of
nature serves as a kind of imagined historical
geography corresponding to an anarchic soci-
ety, absent the rule oflawand without a mod-
ernstate(Smith, M., 2002b). However, the
phrase is also quite telling. It points on the one
hand to an emergent, modern (european) soci-
ety concerned with distinguishing and elevat-
ing itself in relation to prior and/or culturally
‘Othered’ non-European peoples of the time
(mid-seventeenth to early eighteenth centur-
ies), with disquieting implications vis-a`-vis
imperialism. At the same time, the phrase
points to a preoccupation with defining ‘mod-
ern’ society by separating people from nature,
presumably (and in Locke, for instance, quite
explicitly) legitimating the domination of
nature. In addition to the telos of temporal
progress, there are definite spatialities of
movement invoked here, not least from the
modern, colonizing core to the savage, pre-
modern periphery, as well as from the country
to the city (Whatmore, 2002a, esp. pp. 64–5;
Anderson, 2003: see alsomodernity;primi-
tivism). Contemporary attempts to rethink
nature/culturebinaries may be informed by
considerations of how and why this very binary
was considered by early liberals to be founda-
tional to modern societies, and how the same
binary is constitutive of the emergence of a
distinct body of ‘social’ theory (minus the
[human] body, of course!). sp

Suggested reading
Locke and Peardon (1952 [1690]).

stochastic process A mathematical–statistical
model in which a sequence or pattern of
outcomes is described and modelled in prob-
abilistic terms (Bartlett, 1955). A stochastic
process is one in which the outcomes are
not simply independent or random draws,
but aprocessthroughtimeor acrossspace
in which the outcome at one time-period or
location is in some way dependent on the out-
comes at previous time-periods or, for a spatial
stochastic process, in neighbouring locations.
Amarkov processis an elementary example
of such a process. Stochastic process models
have been used in spatial time-series analysis,
indiseasemodelling andepidemiologyand
inspatial econometrics. lwh

Suggested reading
Bennett (1979); Hepple (1974).

structural adjustment A series of economic
measures, often imposed on governments

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STATE APPARATUS
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