The Dictionary of Human Geography

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have contributed to interdisciplinary
debates about the ‘queer tourism’ indus-
try and the differential positionings of
racial, sexual, gendered and national
subjects (Puar, 2002).
(5) Geographies of heterosexualities. These are
most evident in historical and contempor-
ary work onprostitutionthat has looked
at the role of moral representations, social
discoursesand practices in regulating sex
work (Hubbard, 1999). Geographical
writing based on psychoanalytic theory
has drawn on accounts of psychosexual
development, sexual differences and de-
sire, while also challenging the heterosex-
ism evident in the writing of authors such
as Lacan (seehomophobia and hetero-
sexism). There is growing interest in
heterosexuality as an institution through
which links between thebody, thehome
and the public sphere are produced and
negotiated (Little and Leyshon, 2003;
Robinson, Hockey and Meah, 2004;
see alsoheteronormativity).
(6) Critiques of the discipline. Geographers
working on sexuality share many of the
concerns of feminist geographers about
the masculinist, heteronormative and
disembodied heritage of the discipline,
and about the operation of power within
the academy. gv

Suggested reading
Bell and Valentine (1995); Binnie (2004); Brown
(2000).

shadow state A para-state apparatuscom-
prising voluntary, non-profit organizations pro-
viding a host of goods andservices. Although
the form of the shadow state varies over time
and between countries, it is commonly regu-
lated and subsidized by public funds, simultan-
eously creating the ability to provide services
whilecontrollingpoliticalactivism. Neo-liberal
policies (seeneo-liberalism) and decentraliza-
tion of thestatehave increased the role of the
shadow state in social service delivery and
communitydevelopment; provoking questions
about the implication of unequal access to the
shadow state for citizenship (Lake and
Newman, 2002),governanceandsocial just-
ice(DeVerteuil, Lee, and Wolch, 2002). cf

Suggested reading
Wolch (1990).

sharecropping A form of land tenure in
which the landowners’ returns take the form

of a share of the farmers’ produce rather than a
cash or farmrent. Sharecropping is also
known by the French asme ́tayage(Wells,
1984). Sharecropping arrangements involve
short-term contracts for the annual cycle of
production of a specific crop in which crop
raising is contracted out to labouringhouse-
holds, individuals or work gangs, who thereby
take on the large part of economic risks of
production. These arrangements have been
widely assumed to belong to the agricultural
past and interpreted asfeudalor pre-capital-
ist in nature (e.g. Marx, 1964), but they
remain significant in contemporary agricul-
ture, even in modern agriculture in, for
example, the USA. Sharecropping takes many
forms in different contexts, but all tend to be
associated with highly concentrated patterns
of landownership and exploitive labour rela-
tions; for example, in the cotton-growing
South of the USA between white landowners
and black farmers (Mann, 1984b), or between
landowners and Mexican migrant workers
in California’s strawberry industry (Wells,
1996). mw

shift-share model A technique for describ-
ing the relative importance of different
components of growth/decline in a regional
economy, widely used inregional science.
Growth may be due to aregionhaving a high
concentration of industries that are growing
nationally, for example; because of locational
shifts within certain industries towards that
region; or because of differential regional
trends within and across industries. Shift-
share analysis splits a region’s growth (in
employment, for example), relative to the
national norm, into: (a) a proportionality
shift, that proportion of the growth (decline)
associated with the concentration of relatively
fast(slow)-growing industrial sectors there;
and (b)a differential shift, that proportion ref-
lecting local trends that deviate from the
national. rj

Suggested reading
Armstrong and Taylor (1978).

shifting cultivation Minimally, shifting cul-
tivation is an agricultural system characterized
by a rotation of fields rather than of crops, by
discontinuous cropping in which periods of
fallowing are typically longer than periods
of cropping, and by the clearing of fields
(usually called swiddens) through the use of
slash-and-burn techniques. Known by a var-
iety of terms (including field-forest rotation,

Gregory / The Dictionary of Human Geography 9781405132879_4_S Final Proof page 681 1.4.2009 3:23pm

SHIFTING CULTIVATION
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