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POWER
QUICK-WRITE




                  Some
               examples of
                  power
   2 mins:
 ungraded -
for your own
  purposes
WHAT IS POWER?

                           Census   Vancouver
                           Canada      Sun
                                                  ‘War
               Protest
                                                against
                group
                                                 terror’


    Judicial
                                                           Dieting
   execution



  Ethnic                                                    Taking an
cleansing                      Power                        SFU class
AMBIGUITIES

                 Where does
  What is                       How does it
                 power come
  power?                         operate?
                   from?


 Is power       What does it    Where do we
distinctive?     feel like?      locate it?


                        What are the
        Is power only
                        geographies
         repressive?
                         of power?
CONCEPTIONS OF POWER




Instrumental              Associational




Representational           Dispersed
INSTRUMENTAL POWER

¡  Rober t Dahl: A has power
    over B when A can get B to
    do something that they
    would not otherwise have
    done.

¡  The power of A can be
    measured by the response
    of B

¡  D a h l , R A ( 1 9 5 8 ) ‘ A c r i t i q u e o f t h e r u l i n g
    e l i t e m o d e l ’ A m . P o l . S c i . R e v. 5 2 ,
    463-469
INSTRUMENTAL POWER - CHARACTERISTICS

¡ I ndividually centred
   and dyadic (cf.
   institutions,
   ‘structures’)
¡ Z ero-sum: A wins, B
   loses
¡ I ntentionality : B is
   conscious of the
   power of A
¡ V isible, measurable
HOBBES’ LEVIATHAN

         ¡ Social contract theory
         ¡ Power centralized in the
            sovereign state to
            ensure freedom.
         ¡ Sovereign has absolute
            power.
         ¡ Power imagined as top-
            down
INSTRUMENTAL POWER -
              IMPLICIT CHARACTERISTICS

¡  Power is a thing,
    possessed by
    individuals
¡  Or, Power is a
    relational ef fect, not a
    thing.
INSTRUMENTAL POWER -
IMPLICIT CHARACTERISTICS




        ¡  Power is locatable.
INSTRUMENTAL POWER -
       IMPLICIT CHARACTERISTICS
¡ P ower and resources
   are easily confused.
¡ R esources are the
   media through which
   power is exercised
¡ H obbes’ ‘marks of
   sovereignty’ are
   distinct from the
   sovereign: military
¡ P uissance/pouvoir
ASSOCIATIONAL POWER

¡ Talcott Parsons:
   critical of zero-sum
   power in which a fixed
   amount of power is
   distributed among
   participants.
¡ Argued for a collective
   dimension to power:
   persons can join
   together to enhance
   their power: power can
   be produced and be
   productive.
ASSOCIATIONAL POWER - REFINEMENT

¡ Power produced
   through the action of
   people or institutions
   pooling their resources
   to secure certain
   outcomes
¡ Not ‘power over’, but
   ‘power with’
¡ Not power as a thing,
   but power as a medium
¡ Power is ‘in the
   moment’
HANNAH ARENDT

       ¡ ‘ mutual action’
       ¡ P ower as positive
          force à power as a
          facility
       ¡ ‘ public spaces’
          where alliances are
          formed, groups come
          together to move a
          similar set of goals
POSTMODERN POWER

Representational power   Dispersed power
SPATIAL REPRESENTATION AND POWER

¡  Instrumental and associational
    conceptions tend to emphasize
    practice; Overlooks the impor tance
    of representation to power
¡  Tuathail: ‘ Geo-power’:
    representations of space that
    justify or sustain prevailing power
    relations.
¡  Por trayals of people, places,
    institutions, and things; how we
    understand the world
¡  Spatial representation as
    sustaining prevailing forms of
    power.
POLITICAL REPRESENTATION

             George W. Bush’s ‘Axis
             of Evil’ speech (January
             2002).
DISPERSED POWER

¡  Opposes only top-down model of
    power (held by the power ful,
    exercised over others)
¡  Power is per vasive and
    omnipresent: ‘capillar y’ model of
    power
¡  Power is not ‘outside’ us but a
    means by which we make ourselves
    up.
¡  Power as imminent—the routine
    deployment of techniques—spatial,
    organizational, classificator y,
    representational, ethical—that seek
    to mould the conduct of specific
    groups or individuals, and, above
    all, limit their possible range of
    actions. (Allen 2003: 67).


                                          Foucault on self care.
DISPERSED POWER

¡  Rule through freedom
¡  Self-government
¡  Government of conduct at a distance
WHAT IS POWER?

                           Census   Vancouver
                           Canada      Sun
                                                  ‘War
               Protest
                                                against
                group
                                                 terror’


    Judicial
                                                           Dieting
   execution



  Ethnic                                                    Taking an
cleansing                      Power                        SFU class

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GEOG 381 Slides: Power

  • 2. QUICK-WRITE Some examples of power 2 mins: ungraded - for your own purposes
  • 3. WHAT IS POWER? Census Vancouver Canada Sun ‘War Protest against group terror’ Judicial Dieting execution Ethnic Taking an cleansing Power SFU class
  • 4. AMBIGUITIES Where does What is How does it power come power? operate? from? Is power What does it Where do we distinctive? feel like? locate it? What are the Is power only geographies repressive? of power?
  • 5. CONCEPTIONS OF POWER Instrumental Associational Representational Dispersed
  • 6. INSTRUMENTAL POWER ¡  Rober t Dahl: A has power over B when A can get B to do something that they would not otherwise have done. ¡  The power of A can be measured by the response of B ¡  D a h l , R A ( 1 9 5 8 ) ‘ A c r i t i q u e o f t h e r u l i n g e l i t e m o d e l ’ A m . P o l . S c i . R e v. 5 2 , 463-469
  • 7. INSTRUMENTAL POWER - CHARACTERISTICS ¡ I ndividually centred and dyadic (cf. institutions, ‘structures’) ¡ Z ero-sum: A wins, B loses ¡ I ntentionality : B is conscious of the power of A ¡ V isible, measurable
  • 8. HOBBES’ LEVIATHAN ¡ Social contract theory ¡ Power centralized in the sovereign state to ensure freedom. ¡ Sovereign has absolute power. ¡ Power imagined as top- down
  • 9. INSTRUMENTAL POWER - IMPLICIT CHARACTERISTICS ¡  Power is a thing, possessed by individuals ¡  Or, Power is a relational ef fect, not a thing.
  • 10. INSTRUMENTAL POWER - IMPLICIT CHARACTERISTICS ¡  Power is locatable.
  • 11. INSTRUMENTAL POWER - IMPLICIT CHARACTERISTICS ¡ P ower and resources are easily confused. ¡ R esources are the media through which power is exercised ¡ H obbes’ ‘marks of sovereignty’ are distinct from the sovereign: military ¡ P uissance/pouvoir
  • 12. ASSOCIATIONAL POWER ¡ Talcott Parsons: critical of zero-sum power in which a fixed amount of power is distributed among participants. ¡ Argued for a collective dimension to power: persons can join together to enhance their power: power can be produced and be productive.
  • 13. ASSOCIATIONAL POWER - REFINEMENT ¡ Power produced through the action of people or institutions pooling their resources to secure certain outcomes ¡ Not ‘power over’, but ‘power with’ ¡ Not power as a thing, but power as a medium ¡ Power is ‘in the moment’
  • 14. HANNAH ARENDT ¡ ‘ mutual action’ ¡ P ower as positive force à power as a facility ¡ ‘ public spaces’ where alliances are formed, groups come together to move a similar set of goals
  • 16. SPATIAL REPRESENTATION AND POWER ¡  Instrumental and associational conceptions tend to emphasize practice; Overlooks the impor tance of representation to power ¡  Tuathail: ‘ Geo-power’: representations of space that justify or sustain prevailing power relations. ¡  Por trayals of people, places, institutions, and things; how we understand the world ¡  Spatial representation as sustaining prevailing forms of power.
  • 17. POLITICAL REPRESENTATION George W. Bush’s ‘Axis of Evil’ speech (January 2002).
  • 18. DISPERSED POWER ¡  Opposes only top-down model of power (held by the power ful, exercised over others) ¡  Power is per vasive and omnipresent: ‘capillar y’ model of power ¡  Power is not ‘outside’ us but a means by which we make ourselves up. ¡  Power as imminent—the routine deployment of techniques—spatial, organizational, classificator y, representational, ethical—that seek to mould the conduct of specific groups or individuals, and, above all, limit their possible range of actions. (Allen 2003: 67). Foucault on self care.
  • 19. DISPERSED POWER ¡  Rule through freedom ¡  Self-government ¡  Government of conduct at a distance
  • 20. WHAT IS POWER? Census Vancouver Canada Sun ‘War Protest against group terror’ Judicial Dieting execution Ethnic Taking an cleansing Power SFU class