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radical geography

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Title: radical geography


1
radical geography
  • part five critical cartography / critical GIS

2
geography and the Cold War legacy
  • The Second World War marked an epochal change
    in the relation of geographers to war and the
    military. The military had long utilized the
    skills of geographers, but from World War II the
    relation changed at least in the United States,
    and the military began less drawing upon existing
    geographical knowledge than directing a new kind
    that was increasingly formal, instrumental, and
    model driven.
  • Mathematical modeling has left its mark on many
    disciplines, and is now a relatively unquestioned
    part of how science works. As economist Paul
    Krugman said, "To be taken seriously an idea has
    to be something you can model.
  • Trevor Barnes, Geographys Underworld

3
geography and the Cold War legacy
  • -- classical "received view" philosophy of
    science models are superfluous they don't add
    to axioms, laws, and theories (the goal of
    science) because they possess the same deductive
    structure as the theory to which they correspond.
    "Models did not add to explanation, but were
    merely parasitic upon existing axioms, laws and
    theories.
  • -- Another view says that models don't just
    describe or help explain the world, but they also
    intervene, changing it (the rational choice model
    justified Jeffrey Sachs's shock therapy for
    Russia, structural adjustment policies in the
    third world, etc.)
  • -- it wasn't only the bomb that was constructed
    post WW2 / a whole assemblage was required, which
    includes not only mathematical modeling across
    the social sciences too -- "After the bomb is
    built, and even dropped, the assemblage remains.
    War continues."

4
geography and the Cold War legacy
  • Basically, this whole assemblage that was
    constructed during the cold war has one goal to
    beat an enemy.
  • Geographers began building models that were
    directly Cold War-related (modeling a new highway
    system to get people out of Seattle if the
    Russians dropped nukes on it) and beyond (models
    to study the spatial organisation of land use,
    differences in urban rent, predict demand for
    transportation at urban sites, etc.)
  • The military-industrial complex still affects
    how geography is done today

5
thinking critically / maps and power
  • "Under what circumstances is a map authored?"
    (Jeremy Crampton)
  • "Maps are active they actively construct
    knowledge, they exercise power and they can be a
    powerful means of promoting social change."
    (Crampton Krygier, in An Introduction to
    Critical Cartography, 2006)
  • Are all maps political? Can there be such a
    thing as a neutral map?

6
thinking critically / maps and power
  • Check out this really long sentence by Wood
    Krygier
  • In effect, the map is actually a system of
    propositions (a proposition is a statement
    affirming or denying the existence of something),
    an argument about existence and if it started
    with paddy fields and long fields and manor lands
    and with the states these made up and the world
    these states composed, or wanted to imagine,
    wanted everyone to imagine they composed, the
    map has gone on to a long career rich in the
    affirmation of the existence of a bewildering
    variety of things, some whose existence we
    continue to affirm (e.g., all the nation-states
    we have mentioned), some we have come to deny
    (the island-continent of California, the
    Northwest Passage, the open polar sea, etc.),
    but, in any case, things very hard to imagine
    without the creative intercession of the map
    (geologic strata, frontal weather systems, the
    hole in the ozone, etc.). (forthcoming article,
    2009)
  • i.e., Maps dont simply describe reality, they
    create it

7
thinking critically / maps and power
  • Critical geographers should start from the
    premise that maps are rooted in and essential to
    power and knowledge ... with the understanding
    that mapmaking acts to codify, to legitimate,
    and to promote the world views which are
    prevalent in different periods and places
    (Harris Hazen)

8
thinking critically / maps and power
  • What actors, resources, or social relations
    enabled a particular map to be produced?
  • What relations does a particular map enable the
    reader to see?
  • Or, otherwise stated, what relations of power and
    partiality does the map itself produce?
  • Applied to conservation, these insights open
    several critical avenues for exploration.
  • For instance, how does mapping suggest that
    certain spaces can, or should, be protected for
    conservation?
  • How does the relative mappability of different
    areas or landscapes encourage the protection of
    certain features over others?
  • How do maps allow readers to imagine certain
    spaces as uninhabited and appropriate for
    protection, or already successfully protected?
  • -- Hazen Harris, 2006

9
thinking critically / questions
10
thinking critically / questions
-- the map shows that the practice of
designating territories for conservation is
global in extent, suggesting the relevance of
analyses that consider the role of global
discourses and institutions in conservation
mappings -- the map invites evaluation of the
observable differences in percentage land area
dedicated to conservation nationally and
regionallyas expressed by differentiated color
values. For instance, the emphasis on
conservation in certain post-colonial contexts
raises questions about colonial legacies in which
contemporary conservation practices may be
embedded (see Neumann 1997). By contrast, the
degree of correspondence between conservation
territories and industrialized countries suggests
that conservation mappings may have more to do
with political or socio-economic conditions than
biodiversity requirements. In cases such as
Germany (26.9) or Switzerland (25.7) high
percentages of land protected may be more a
function of topography (e.g., mountainous areas),
economic development, or political viability to
designate land for recreation than biodiversity
needs per se.
11
thinking critically / questions
While this map readily suggests certain types of
interrogations, other critical evaluations are
minimized or foreclosed. For instance, the
choice of the global scale and the focus on land
area bypasses issues related to who manages these
protected areas, and towards what ends. Further,
representing conservation spaces as percentages
of national land area says nothing about which
areas are effective, or which mappings relate to
areas of high biodiversity or species endemism.
In a more general sense, this map can be read as
endorsing the idea that conservation territories
are comparable across contextsa questionable
endeavor given the importance of geographic and
species variabilities. ...it is provocative to
imagine what other types of maps could be
produced to complement standard representations,
especially possibilities that might enable
critical readings of conservation practice,
highlight the urgency of species losses, or
otherwise more readily convey power inequalities
common to conservation practice. (all from Hazen
Harris, Counter(mapping) for Conservation)
12
thinking critically / questions
  • For every map we encounter, we could ask
  • What does this map do?
  • Who created it? Why? How?
  • Who does it serve?
  • Try questioning these various maps

13
thinking critically / projections

14
thinking critically / projections

Arno Peters thought that the Mercator projection
gave a fully false picture, particularly
regarding the non-white-peopled lands...it
over-values the white man and distorts the
picture of the world to the advantage of the
colonial masters of the time -- in the
mid-1970s he championed this Peters projection
15
thinking critically / projections
16
map projections

17
countermapping
  • If maps are a technology of power, what can
    mapmakers do to question or subvert prevailing
    assumptions?
  • Countermapping is a term that implies "using
    mapping to overcome predominant power
    hierarchies, interspecies injustices, and other
    power effects." (Harris Hazen, 2006)
  • That is to say mapping can be used to challenge
    the dominant order.
  • We understand counter-mapping as any effort that
    fundamentally questions the assumptions or biases
    of cartographic conventions, that challenges
    predominant power effects of mapping, or that
    engages in mapping in ways that upset power
    relations. (Harris Hazen, 2006)
  • For example, if fishermen are using maps in ways
    that help them overharvest fish well, one could
    also create maps that would be used to identify
    where fish should be protected, and help with
    fish conservation.

18
countermapping
Countermapping is also used to help identify
indigenous boundaries...
19
countermapping
  • More indigenous territory has been claimed by
    maps than by guns. This assertion has its
    corollary more indigenous territory can be
    reclaimed and defended by maps than by guns.
    Whereas maps like guns must be accurate, they
    have the additional advantages that they are
    inexpensive, don't require a permit, can be
    openly carried and used, internationally
    neutralize the invader's one-sided legalistic
    claims, and can be duplicated and transmitted
    electronically which defies all borders, all
    pretexts, and all occupations. Bernard
    Nietschmann (1995)
  • There are real questions about whether you can
    use the master's mapping tools to re-map the
    master's house, so-to-speak we will return to
    this a bit later

20
Technology / GPS
  • a global network of between 24 and 32 satellites
    that was created by the US Department of Defense.
  • used by anyone with a GPS receiver that wants to
    obtain precise coordinates of a given location
    (airplanes, ships, military uses, civilian
    navigation, land surveying, mobile phones, etc.)
  • Although it was developed as military
    technology, Reagan made it available for civilian
    use in the early 1990s.
  • It used to be that the highest quality of signal
    was available just to the military, and civilian
    use was degraded, but this "Selective
    availability" was turned off in 2000, which
    increased the precision from about 100m to about
    20m.
  • Future satellites will not have this "selective
    ability" quality (the military has figured out
    how to jam GPS signals to "hostile forces"
    anyway).

21
Technology / GPS
  • China is planning a global system called Compass
    with 35 satellites
  • the EU European Space Agency is well underway
    with its civilian use GPS project called Galileo
  • Russia has a kind of run-down satellite network
    called GLONASS which India is helping bring
    up-to-date.

22
GPS cool or creepy?
  • GPS technology has the obvious potential for
    surveillance.
  • in 2001, a man sued a local car rental company in
    New Haven, CT, after it used GPS technology to
    track him, and then fined him 450 for speeding
    three times.
  • While describing why "tracking every move by
    satellite" is problematic, geographer Amy Propen
    invokes Foucault's description of "Panopticism"
  • In order to be exercised, this power had to be
    given the instrument of permanent, exhaustive,
    omnipresent surveillance, capable of making all
    visible, as long as it could itself remain
    invisible. It had to be like a faceless gaze that
    transformed the whole social body into a field of
    perception thousands of eyes posted everywhere,
    mobile attentions ever on the alert.
  • (Foucault, 1979) (qtd. By Propen, Critical GPS
    Towards a New Politics of Location)

23
Technology / GIS
  • GPS data is used in geographic Information
    Systems, or GIS
  • descriptive databases which are used to store /
    analyze / display spatial information in all
    kinds of ways (resource management, medical
    geography, urban planning, archaeology,
    marketing...)
  • Is GIS a value-neutral technology?

24
Technology / GIS
  • While many define GIS/computer cartography as
    tools, we recognize that tools implies
    something which can be put away and no longer
    have consequence in ones life until they are
    needed again. These mapping systems are
    technologies, something that we may choose to
    engage with but even if we decided to turn them
    off and go about our daily routine they will
    continue to have influence over our lives (Fox et
    al., 2005b).
  • Specifically, we define these technologies as a
    techno-science, a discipline where technology
    has become the embodiment of science (see
    Turnbull, 2000). These technologies modify and
    transform the worlds that are revealed through
    them, delivering apparent realities.
  • Johnson, Louis, Pramano Facing the
    Future Encouraging Critical Cartographic
    Literacies in Indigenous Communities

25
Technology / GIS
  • It is now possible to make educated guesses
    about any households political and religious
    views, as well as its shopping preferences. ...
    Indeed, what is most disturbing about this
    surveillance system beyond the fact that it is
    largely unregulatedis that it presumes a notion
    of closure, a view wherein there is a population
    of individuals, and where it is possible to
    obtain measurable knowledge about each. It
    implies a truly closed society.
  • (Amy Propen, qtg. Curry, 1995)

26
Technology / GIS
  • Geodemographics if you go to claritas.com/MyBest
    Segments, you can access geodemographic data for
    your zip code
  • Ex. 21021 (Franklin/Eutaw)
  • Bohemian Mix
  • Low-rise Living
  • Money Brains
  • Urban Achievers
  • Urban Elders

27
Technology / GIS
  • Bohemian Mix
  • A collection of mobile urbanites, Bohemian Mix
    represents the nation's most liberal lifestyles.
    Its residents are an ethnically diverse,
    progressive mix of young singles, couples, and
    families ranging from students to professionals.
    In their funky rowhouses and apartments, Bohemian
    Mixers are the early adopters who are quick to
    check out the latest movie, nightclub, laptop,
    and microbrew.
  • Social Group  Urban Uptown
  • Lifestage Group  Young Achievers
  • 2008 StatisticsUS Households 2,020,210 (1.76
    ) Median HH Income 54,237 
  • Lifestyle Traits
  • Eat at Au Bon Pain
  • Buy Spanish/Latin music
  • Read The Economist
  • Watch soccer
  • Audi A4

28
Technology / GIS
  • Low-rise Living
  • The most economically challenged urban segment,
    Low-Rise Living is known as a transient world for
    middle age, ethnically diverse singles and single
    parents. Home values are low--about half the
    national average--and even then less than a
    quarter of residents can afford to own real
    estate. Typically, the commercial base of
    Mom-and-Pop stores is struggling and in need of a
    renaissance.
  •   Social Group  Urban Cores
  •   Lifestage Group  Sustaining Families
  • 2008 StatisticsUS Households 1,610,086 (1.40
    )
  • Median HH Income 24,331 
  • Lifestyle Traits
  • Shop at Rite-Aid
  • Domestic travel by bus
  • Read Ebony
  • Watch BET
  • Drive van

29
Technology / GIS
  • The segmentation system enables targeting based
    on virtually any purchase and media behavior.
  • Purchase Behavior
  • Apparel
  • Appliances
  • Automotive
  • Communications
  • Consumer Package Goods
  • Financial Services
  • Home Furnishings
  • Media Usage
  • Travel

Media Behavior Television Cable
Internet Radio Newspapers
Magazines
30
technology / power to the people
  • In the last few years cartography has been
    slipping from the control of the powerful elites
    that have exercised dominance over it for several
    hundred years. These elitesthe great map houses
    of the west, the state, and to a lesser extent
    academicshave been challenged by two important
    developments. First, the actual business of
    mapmaking, of collecting spatial data and mapping
    it out, is passing out of the hands of the
    experts. The ability to make a map, even a
    stunning interactive 3D map, is now available to
    anyone with a home computer and an internet
    connection. (Jeremy Crampton John Krygier)
  • maps are not only made by geographical "experts"
    anymore.
  • New technology has enabled vast numbers of people
    to create or collaborate in mapmaking.
  • Terms for this phenomenon neogeography,
    volunteered cartographic information

31
empowering uses of GIS

32
empowering uses of GIS
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