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offshore financial centres of Bermuda and the
Cayman Islands emphasizes how the stabiliza-
tion of such centres relies upon their capacity to
be trusted as regulatory landscapes. Trust is
here defined as ‘relatively stable expectations
about the actions of others, a particular level
of the subjective probability with which an
actor assesses whether one or more actors,
with whom cooperation is envisaged, will also
cooperate’ (Hudson, 1998, p. 918).
Parallel concerns have shaped studies of the
geographies of scientific knowledge, where the
capacity for knowledge to be credible is con-
nected to the capacity of scientists, including
geographers, to be trusted. Livingstone dis-
cusses the ‘techniques of trust’ that developed
in connection with geographical travel (2003c,
pp. 147–71). Historical geographies ofsci-
encein general, and of geographical science
in particular, have connected trust to issue of
classandgender, following Shapin’s studies
of science in seventeenth-century England
(Shapin, 1994), where a particular sense of
gentlemanly civility was shown to be central
to the emergence of scientificculture. Sub-
sequently, Shapin (1998) directly addressed
thespatialityof the trust relationship in the
production and validation ofscience, includ-
ing the finding of ‘means to bring distant
things near’, and the ways in which ‘those
who have not seen these things know them
by trusting those who have, or by trusting
those who have trusted those who have’ (Sha-
pin, 1998, p. 8). Driver’s studies of cultures of
explorationandempirehave shown how the
trustworthiness and credibility of geographical
knowledge claims concerning distantregions
were shaped through institutions such as the
Royal Geographical Society, whether in their
production of published ‘Hints for Travellers’,
or their reception of the knowledge ‘brought
back’ fromafricaby figures such as Henry
Morton Stanley. In the latter case, lack of
trust in exploratory findings was bound up
with judgements concerning the character of
the explorer, with issues of ‘social standing,
scientific merit and moral legitimacy’ becom-
ing intertwined (Driver, 2001a, p. 129). The
geographies of trust also encompass the
questions of why geographers should be
trusted, why the discipline should have
credibility and who counts as a trustworthy
geographer. dmat
Suggested reading
Livingstone (2003c); Shapin (1994).
turf politics Political activity undertaken by
residents of aneighbourhoodto resist pro-
posed changes that are viewed as potentially
significant negative impacts upon the local
community and also to promote changes
that are perceived to carry potential positive
impacts. The activity is usually locally based
but is often oriented to the broader scales of
local orstategovernment (Ackerman, 1999).
Catalysing changes usually take the form of
development proposals (such as a new road),
demographic change (such as the influx of a
new ethnic group or social class) or investment
decisions (such as continued funding for
health facilities). cf
Suggested reading
Cox and McCarthy (1982).
Gregory / The Dictionary of Human Geography 9781405132879_4_T Final Proof page 778 31.3.2009 9:40pm Compositor Name: ARaju
TURF POLITICS