The Dictionary of Human Geography

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notions ofmasculinism, also legitimizes and
even glorifies the pursuit ofwar. (See also
military geography.) dg/sg

Suggested reading
Barnes and Farish (2006); Stahl (2006);
Woodward (2004).

military geography The study of geograph-
ies of military activities and operations.
Facilitating the military activities and oper-
ations of nation-states was central to the emer-
gence of modern geography as a formal
academic discipline. The enlistment of geog-
raphy in the service ofempirehas become a
commonplace of the history of geography (see
geography, history of), and the foundation
of the Royal Geographical Society in Britain in
1830, for example, was closely associated with
the desire to formalize geographical know-
ledge to be put to work in the extension and
management of the British Empire through
explorationand survey, often closely con-
nected with military personnel and military
objectives, and through the conduct of mili-
tary campaigns (Woodward, 2005). Some his-
torians point to the Franco-Prussian War of
1870–1 as a major spur to the institutiona-
lization of the discipline in europe: the
unexpected victory of the Prussian army was
attributed, in part, to its superior training
in geography. Across the Atlantic, a sub-
discipline identified as military geography
could trace its origins to the establishment of
schools of geography at military establish-
ments such as the US Military Academy at
West Point in the early nineteenth century.
These versions of military geography were
not onlyinstrumental(as one would expect)
but also largely descriptive, and they empha-
sized the use of geographical knowledge,
particularly location – viacartographyand
map reading– and physical terrain to facilit-
ate military operations. Perhaps the closest
connections between in-service military geog-
raphy and the academic discipline came
during the Second World War, when many
professional geographers collaborated in the
production of detailed regional geogra-
phies, for use in identifying targets and con-
ducting offensive campaigns (Clout and
Gosme, 2003; Barnes and Farish, 2006).
Geographical knowledge remained crucial to
the subsequent conduct of thecold war, and
its ‘hot’ campaigns in Indochina and elsewhere.
Much of the traditional function of regional
intelligence in the USA was contracted to
programmes in area studies rather than

geography, while the armed forces and intelli-
genceagencies(onbothsides)placedapremium
onsurveillancefrom air- and space-platforms,
and new technologies of remote sensing,
satellite photography and the like.
The repeated emphasis on regional know-
ledges and regional intelligence, even in more
sophisticated, space-sensing technical forms,
may seem to reduce military geography to
what Woodward (2005) calls a ‘largely a-
theoretical, descriptive regional geography’,
divorced from intellectual developments in
the academic discipline at large. There are
elements of truth in this, but two caveats are
crucial. First, the technical elaborations of
regional intelligence could be conceptual
ones too; Barnes and Farish (2006) identify a
series of vital connections between these seem-
ingly commonplace activities and the concep-
tual ferment of spatial science and the
quantitative revolution, and it is surely no
accident that the Office of Naval Research in
the USA took such a close (and often finan-
cial) interest in what might otherwise seem
remarkably abstract spatial modelling and
geographical research. Second, advanced mili-
taries (and the paramilitaries that they now
often find themselves fighting) have recog-
nized the need to think of what the US Army
now calls ‘battlespace’ as more than physical
terrain. Wars have always depended on the
visualizationof space, but ‘battlespace’ not
only has a much more complex geometry
than conventional battle fields or theatres of
war – it is no longer possible to make clear,
linear separations between fronts (even during
the First World War the front line decomposed
into a bewildering maze of trenches and
dugouts; contemporary conflicts transpose
these geometries to the large scale) – but it is
also increasingly understood as a human geog-
raphy. The Pentagon has become increasingly
preoccupied with urban warfare, which has
required the construction of new, militarized
models ofcitiesandurbanization, particu-
larly in the globalsouth, a development that
Graham (2009c; see also 2004a) calls ‘a new
military urbanism’, while the experience of
military occupation (seeoccupation, mili-
tary) and the revival of counterinsurgency in
the wake of the American-led invasions of
Afghanistan and Iraq has prompted the US
militarytoundertakeacultural turnof its
own in order to map ‘the human terrain’ in
ways that resonate, however awkwardly and
imperfectly, with contemporary developments
across the social sciences (Gregory, 2008b,
2009c).

Gregory / The Dictionary of Human Geography 9781405132879_4_M Final Proof page 465 1.4.2009 3:19pm

MILITARY GEOGRAPHY
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