The Dictionary of Human Geography

(nextflipdebug2) #1

activating the disjunctures and displace-
ments between different voices and voca-
bularies, and so ensuring that theoretical
work is ‘relentlessly transformative’ and
elaborates ‘lines of escape’.
(2) There has been a parallel debate about
the capacity of any single theoretical sys-
tem to account for the world (cf.essen-
tialism; foundationalism). Many,
perhaps most, human geographers seem
to accept: (a) that no single theoretical
system can possibly ask all the interesting
questions or provide all the satisfying
answers; and (b) that most scholars ne-
cessarily work in the spaces between over-
lapping, often contending theoretical
systems, which redoubles the importance
of theoretical critique to clarify disson-
ances, reveal erasures and evaluate con-
sequences (Gregory, 1994, pp. 100–6).
But these nostrums have neither soothed
geographers’ anxieties nor dispelled their
ambitions. Much of the controversy at-
tached to Harvey’s historico-geographical
materialism, for example, centres on his
attempt to develop a totalizing critique
through what his critics see as the annex-
ation, incorporation and marginalization
of other politico-intellectual traditions
(Castree and Gregory, 2006). And while
few geographers have pursued the
Ariadne’s thread linking Humboldt’s
grand eighteenth-century vision of the
Cosmos to Chorley and Haggett’s
twentieth-century vision of a unified
field theory for Geography, there has
been considerable interest in theoretical
systems that trouble the divide between
the human sciences and the natural sci-
ences: for example,chaos theoryand
complexity theory. If Manson and
Sullivan (2006, p. 678) are right to de-
scribe complexity as ‘the grand theory to
end all grand theories’, perhaps Grand
Theory always rings twice.dg


Suggested reading
Curry (2006).


graph theory A branch of mathematics that
studies topological phenomena that can be
represented bynetworkdiagrams comprising
nodes and the links between them: the classic
pioneering work was that of Leonhard Euler
(1707–83) on the Ko ̈nigsberg bridge problem
(see http://www.contracosta.cc.ca.us/math/
konig.htm).topologyrefers to spatial connec-
tions and relationships that are unchanged


after distortion: for example, Canada has a
border with the USA regardless of which
datum andmap projectionsystem is used to
map the Earth. Graph theory was first deployed
by geographers in the study of a range of net-
work types – such as river systems and road
networks (Haggett and Chorley, 1969) – but
is widely deployed through the social sciences
to study the structure and functioning of a
range of social networks and how information
flows through them (a field known as socio-
metrics). (See alsooptimization.) rj

Suggested reading
Biggs, Lloyd and Wilson (1986).

gravity model A mathematical and statis-
ticalmodel used to represent many types
ofspatial interaction and flow patterns
inhuman geographyandregional science
(such asmigrationand commodity flows),
and subsequently extended for use as a plan-
ning tool. The original formulation, as devised
by members of thesocial physicsschool, was
based on an analogy with Newton’s equation
of gravitational force:

Gij¼gMiMj=dij^2 :

This can be interpreted as follows: the gravita-
tional force (Gjj) between two masses (Miand
Mj) is proportional to a gravitational constant
(g) and to the product of their masses (MiMj)
and inversely proportional to the square of the
distance between them (dij^2 ). The analogy for
migration was therefore given as

Fij¼gPiPj=dij^2 ,

where the migrant flow (F) fromitojwas
modelled as being proportional to the product
of their populations and inversely proportional
to the distance between them. In such an ap-
plication, the constantgwas empirically deter-
mined from the data set by simple arithmetic
methods. At a later stage the model was fitted
byregressionmethods in logarithmic form,
and bothgand the exponent for distance were
empirically determined by calibration. This
basic form of the model is unconstrained,
and empirical studies demonstrated that the
model fitted much better if origin and destin-
ation constraints (e.g. the total numbers of
people starting or ending in each region)
were incorporated. This was most effectively
developed by Alan Wilson in hisentropy-
maximizingformulation of the model, based
on an analogy with statistical physics rather

Gregory / The Dictionary of Human Geography 9781405132879_4_G Final Proof page 316 2.4.2009 6:30pm

GRAPH THEORY

Free download pdf