The Dictionary of Human Geography

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include rivers, lakes, marshes, fens and peat-
lands, and intertidal and shallow-marine envir-
onments up (such as salt marshes and
mangroves). Wetlands are economically imp-
ortant as sources of fish, crops, grazing land
and other products, and provide criticalecosys-
temservices (World Resource Institute, 2005).
Key threats include dams,pollution,intro-
duced species, aquaculture, agriculture,urba-
nization and industrialization. The 1971
Ramsar Convention promotes theconserva-
tionand ‘wise use’ of wetlands as a contribu-
tion to achievingsustainable development.
There are over 1500 Wetlands of International
Importance, covering (129 million hectares)
(http://www.ramsar.org/). wma


whiteness Aracializedidentitythatisbound
up withpowerand privilege (see alsorace;
racialization). Although whiteness is a long-
established part of ageographical imagin-
ation, it has only been subject to critical scru-
tiny in recent years, particularly since the
1990s. Both within and beyond geography,
the power and privilege associated with white-
ness has underpinned its normalization and
assumed transparency, against which other
racializedidentitiesare perceived as visible,
different and/or inferior. But since the 1990s,
geographers and others working across the
humanities and social sciences have interro-
gatedwhiteness, white identities, and their
normative and naturalizing power (for an influ-
ential study, see Dyer, 1997). Rather than view
whiteness as a fixed andessentialistcategory,
geographers and others have traced more
complex and differentiated racializations that
are bound up withclass,ethnicity,gender
andsexuality, as shown by research on ‘poor
whites’ in the USA and South Africa; white-
ness, mixed descent and racial ‘passing’; the
gendered and sexualized commodification of
whiteness; and the ways in which the racializa-
tions of the white working class and the Irish,
for example, complicate assumptions about
white privilege. Geographers have explored
the power relations of whiteness and white
identities in relation to racist andanti-racist
politics; their spatial and temporal differenti-
ation; and their articulation within and through
both the disciplinary spaces of geography and
other spaces such as the street,suburb,town,
cityandnation(see, e.g., Bonnett, 2000;
McGuinness, 2002).
Both the normative power of whiteness
and critical studies of whiteness have their
own geographies. The emergence of ‘White
Studies’ in the late 1990s brought together


critical work across a wide range of disciplines,
and has been largely based in the USA (includ-
ing Delgado and Stefancic, 1997). Other
researchers have sought to widen comparative
and transnational research beyond what might
be termed ‘American whiteness studies’ (Ware
and Back, 2002, p. 14) by studying the power
relations and material effects of whiteness in a
wide range of different contexts. In his forceful
critique of multicultural Australia, for example,
Ghassan Hage (1998) analyses the ways in
which ‘fantasies of White supremacy’ have
shaped ideas about the nation. He considers
‘‘‘Whiteness’’ to be itself a fantasy position of
cultural dominance born out of the history of
European expansion’ (p. 20). Alastair Bonnett
(2000) analyses the ‘mythologies ofeuropean
whiteness’ in relation to two, connected pro-
cesses: first, ‘The development of non-
European (and non-racialised) white identities
and their marginalisation or erasure by an
increasingly hegemonic, European-identified,
racialised whiteness’ (p. 7); and, second, the
ways in which ‘the development of whiteness
as a racialised, fetishised and exclusively
European attribute produced a contradictory,
crisis-prone, identity’ (p. 8). Unlike work that
not only overlooks the importance of white
identities beyond the particularity of
European and/or Westernmodernity, but also
fails to interrogate this particularity, Bonnett
(2000) has studied whiteness and the meaning
of modernity inlatin americaand Japan.
Like other research that recognizes the
social constructionof ‘race’ andethnicity,
the critical study of whiteness in both histor-
ical and contemporary contexts has been con-
cerned with the risks of reifying whiteness and
its normative power. As Vron Ware and Les
Back explain, ‘For us it is impossible to separ-
ate the act of writing about whiteness from a
political project that involves not simply the
fight againstracism, but also an attack on the
very notion of race and the obstinate resilience
of racial identities – one of its most disastrous
consequences’ (2002, p. 2). ab

Suggested reading
Delgado and Stefancic (1997);Hage (1998);
McGuinness (2002); Ware and Back (2002).

wilderness A condition, usually applied to a
landscape, of being wild, out of human con-
trol, uncultivated and uninhabited. Wilderness
is a highly contentious term with a long history
of usage. As an uninhabited land, wilderness
has had both negative and positive value. Until
the late eighteenth century, Euro-Americans

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WHITENESS

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