Past surveys have revealed that the large-scale distribution of galaxies in the universe is far from random: it is highly structured over a vast range of scales. Surveys being currently undertaken and being planned for the next decades will provide a wealth of information about this structure. The ultimate goal must be not only to describe galaxy clustering as it is now, but also to explain how this arose as a consequence of evolutionary processes acting on the initial conditions that we see in the cosmic microwave background anisotropy data. In order to achieve this we need to build mathematically quantifiable descriptions of cosmic structure. Identifying where scaling laws apply and the nature of those scaling laws is an important part of...