The Dictionary of Human Geography

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thought was curiously coincident with
women’s successes in demanding a voice
based onsexandgender(see Nicholson,
1989). In any case, a number of concepts
and debates withinfeminist geographiesare
intimately tied to the rise of post-structuralism
(seealterity;body;difference;essential-
ism;identity;positionality;subjectivity).
The above thinkers have an aversion to
metaphysical or ontological speculation, and
so it has been said that, in their tradition of
theorizing, epistemology trumps ontology
(Dixon and Jones, 1998). But Deleuze
(1994) never refrained from attempting to
develop a thoroughgoing post-structuralist
philosophy that incorporated ontology.
Central to this – and what makes it possible
to consider Deleuze a post-structuralist – was
his rejection of all conceptions of the world
that relied upon transcendental or ideal
objects, such as essences (see alsominor the-
ory: see Katz, 1996). Instead, he describes an
immanent universe of force andaffect, one
that organizes itself according to the matter
(literally) at hand. Thus, things in the world
do not correspond to a set of ideal forms, but
are instead singular products of continuous
material differentiation. Thought – by its very
nature, but particularly so undermodernity–
retrofits objects and relations into categories
and orders of similitude, and thus keeps the
thinker at a conceptual distance from the ‘pure
difference’ expressed by the material world. As
his is an approach that often has more in com-
mon withcomplexity theorythandialect-
ics, Deleuze too has been controversial among
some post-structuralists and many Marxists.
Together with his colleague Fe ́lix Guattari
(see Deleuze and Guattari, 1987), he devel-
oped a rich spatial vocabulary populated with
concepts such asassemblage,nomadology,
rhizome, (de)territorialization, smooth and
striated spaces, and the like (Bonta and
Protevi, 2004; see also Doel, 1999). kwo/jpj

Suggested readings
Bonta and Protevi (2004); Butler (1990);
Crampton and Elden (2007); Doel (1999); Fou-
cault (1980); Harrison (2006); Murdoch (2006).

poverty A much-contested term that sug-
gests a state of welfare/illfare in which a person
cannot function in one or more respects as a
capable human being. Poverty is not a term
that is easily defined. In so-called ‘poor’ or
‘developing’ countries, attempts are often
made to define poverty in ‘absolute’ or nutri-
tional terms. The official definitions and

measurements of poverty used in India high-
light some of the complexities and challenges
associated with this category. The
Government of India tracks the number of
people in the country who cannot purchase
enoughcommoditiesto ensure that they get
on average 2,400 calories per day in rural areas
or 2,100 calories per day in urban areas. These
are aggregate figures that are collected at the
householdlevel by thecensusauthorities or
by officers of the National Sample Survey.
Attempts are also made to count the number
of women orchildrenin absolute poverty, or
people in female-headed households or those
over 60. The Indian government maintains
that the head-count ratio of people living
below the poverty line has halved since
1973–4, coming down from about 55 per cent
of the population to about 26 per cent of the
population in 1999–2000. This still amounted
to more than 260 million people. Independent
scholars have challenged the India’s govern-
ment data and generally put the 2000 figure
at 300–350 million people.
About one in five people who suffer from
absolute poverty live in India, despite recent
progress there. Rates of poverty are higher for
females than for males. It has also been esti-
mated (Sen, 1990) that more than 100 million
women are ‘missing’ in Southasiaand China
as a result of gendered social practices before
and after birth (female abortion and infanti-
cide, male preference in feeding and health
care). Yet it is Sub-Saharanafricathat gener-
ally comes to mind when discussion in
Northern countries turns to absolute poverty.
It is here that Jeffrey Sachs, the American
economist and adviser to Ban Ki-Moon at
the United Nations, has demanded action to
secure ‘the end of poverty in our lifetime’.
Sachs (2005) has called for the elimination of
what he calls ‘extreme poverty’ by 2025. He
wants the US government to impose a 5 per
cent income tax surcharge on Americans earn-
ing more than $200,000 per annum. This will
generate over half of the $70–80 billion per
year that he reckons is necessary to kick-start
economic growth in the poorest countries.
The remaining funds must come from other
richer countries. Such concerted spending,
Sachs argues, can ensure that the first
Millennium Development Goal is met – the
UN-agreed target of halving between 1990
and 2015 the proportion of people whose
income is less than one US dollar a day. It
might also eliminate extreme poverty and
hungerby 2025, particularly if increasedaid
spending is directed not only towards

Gregory / The Dictionary of Human Geography 9781405132879_4_P Final Proof page 573 1.4.2009 3:20pm

POVERTY
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