Title: Geography 202 section 502
1Geography 202 section 502
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Peter J. Hugill, and to Geography 202 - For all course policies, dates etc. see course
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21. Diversity amid Globalization
- World Regions Demographics
- Cultures Geopolitics Economies
3Five Hegemonies in 500 years
- (1) Portugal-mid 1500s
- (2) Holland-mid1600s
- (3) Britain I-mid 1700s (ended 1776)
- (4) Britain II-mid 1800s (1815-83)
- (5) USA-mid 1900s (1945-73)
- (6) USA II???
4Two Types of Diversity
- Diversity over Space--what geographers call
areal differentiation or, why different world
regions differ (culture history). - Diversity over Time--or, the past is not a
perfect guide to the future (although we should
not ignore it!) Much of the success of leaders
such as FDR Churchill came from knowing
history--failure of Hitler and Lenin for thinking
they could reinvent it.
5The Twelve World Regions (115)
6World Regions
- What defines a region?
- Part physical, part human geography
- Physical regions at this scale largely defined by
plate tectonics - Some physical regions climatic, others based on
vegetation--at sub-tectonic level - Part economic, part cultural geography
- Part legal, part illegal trade
- Part political (internal), part geopolitical
(external)
7World Trade Organization (110)
8World Trade Organization
- WTO Single most powerful NGO
- Nation-States increasingly have ceded power to
supra-national political organizations (EU, NATO)
NGOs - NGOs date to new nationalism of late 1800s,
needed to manage resources across state
boundaries (time zones came first!) - World increasingly a mosaic of NGOs
- Reflects legal component of world-economy
9The Global Drug Trade (16)
10Global Illicit Trade/Terrorism
- Reflects that component of world-economy operated
by non-state actors - Slavery, prostitution, drugs, pornography were
legal in past. Middle class nation-states made
them increasingly illegal - Terrorism is a response to the emergence of the
nation-state - Slavery, prostitution, drugs, pornography,
terrorism are downsides of globalization (but
getting rid of globalization wont make them go
away since there is demand/support for them!)
11Defining the Region the Metageography of World
Regions
- Physical Characteristics
- Areally Compact
- Common Geological History
- Common Climate
- Common Vegetation
- Human Characteristics
- Common History
- Common Economic Activity
- Common Language
- Common Religion
- Common Political System
- Common Geopolitics
12World Population (122)
13World Population
- Two regions dominate world population map China
India - Global population currently 6 billion and rising
fast - Almost all rise is in less-developed world
- Traditional model of control through economic
development
14Demographic Indicators (Table 11, 3rd edn.)
15Demographic Indicators (Table 11, 4th edn.)
16Demographic Indicators
- Main problem TFR (number of children per female)
- TFR controlled by of fertile females cultural
habits of reproduction--these last vary VERY
widely - Wests habits are delayed marriage, strong female
control over decision to reproduce - TFR of 2 would maintain population as is in very
long term
17Population Pyramids (125)
18Population Pyramids
- Classic pyramid that of Nigeria. High
dependency ratio in 0-14 age categories, with
high infant mortality - Slow or no growth pyramids have different
dependency ratio, 65 and up - BUT, elderly provide indirect economic benefits
(caring for grandchildren, as volunteers etc.) - In developed countries people 65 and up still
consume heavily, which drives economy, especially
medical services.
19Demographic Transition (126)
20Demographic Transition
- Main flaws are is that is modeled on western
experience, assumes economic development - Overall, death rates fall first as various
conditions improve. Birth rates fall later.
Population moves from one phase of stability to
another, but numbers increase greatly. Health
care unimportant until Stage 4 - Stage 2 crudely depicted--really a two (or more)
stage process - 2 (A) reduction in deaths from better food
supply, sometimes because of more productive
agriculture, but ALWAYS because of better
transportation--most famines highly localized
crop failures - 2 (B) reduction in deaths from better public
health, in particular separating water supplies
from human waste, thus preventing such killers as
cholera - Stage 3 birth rate reduces mostly because of
education of women - Stage 4 main increase in life expectancy from
improvements in health care. Birth rate
variations from war and social forces.
21Growth of World Cities (129)
22World Cities
- More than 50 world population now urban
- Historically cities only grew from rural-urban
migration (cities had high death rates) - Largest cities growing fastest, most from
continued massive rural-urban migration, part
from reproduction - Worlds fastest growing cities all in LDCs
- Megalopolis (developed world) versus megacity
(LDCs)
23The Main Measures of Culture
- Huntington (The Clash of Civilizations) suggests
there are two main measures of culture - Language
- Religion
- We can, of course, define others
24World Languages
- Most major world regions unlike our own. North
America has only three official languages (one
very minor), US only one - Most major world regions polyglot. Have multiple
official languages, spoken written - China relatively unusual in that, although
polyglot, has single official written language
25World Religions (138)
26World Religions
- World much more religiously homogenous than
linguistically - Four major religions dominate planet Buddhism,
Christianity, Hinduism, Islam - Of those only Christianity and Islam proselytize
heavily, have been see-sawing for world dominance
for past 600 years - Currently Christianity ahead, growing most by
conversion, Islam by reproduction.
27Nations without a State (142)
28Rise of the Nation-State
- Main organizing principle of world politics is
territorially bounded nation-state (NS) (true NS
should be ethnically homogenous--almost never is) - NS very recent idea idea of natural boundaries
first propounded in French Revolution - NS became powerful in late 1800s as old agrarian
societies collapsed. NS was buffer against
possessive individualism of laissez-faire
capitalism - Spread widely in New Nationalism of late 1800s
29Nations without States
- Ideal of NS became globally dominant only after
WWII, fall of most of old global empires, and
creation of UN - Full dominance of NS came w/fall of last empire,
the USSR - World is mosaic of nations, few of which
politically control states (i.e. a coherent
territory). Many are non-state actors embedded
(relatively) peacefully within nation-states. N.
American examples are PQ, Indian groups with
tribal territories, Mormons, Hispanics in US SW,
Nation of Islam etc. - Some non-state actors turn to violence to achieve
political control of territory establish a
state (e.g. IRA, Chechens, Kurds etc. etc.)
30Reasons for War (casus belli)
- Europe most war prone region of planet for last
2,000 years - Chinese warring states period ended 221 BC
- Three reasons for war in Europe
- (1) To force ones ideology on another
(traditionally in Europe wars of dynastic
succession or religion)--Hundred Years War
(1337-1453), Eighty Years War (1568-1648), Thirty
Years War (1618-1648). - (2) Possession of WMD (in current
terms!)--Grotiuss doctrine of pre-emptive strike
based on Drakes Corunna Raid of 1587 - (3) Violation of territorial integrity of
nation-state--only casus belli since 1648 because
of immense destruction of civilian populations in
Thirty Years War--at least 30 of population of
Germany killed. - From 1648 to c. 1916 western war was between
professional armies - after c. 1916 war again on civilians in west
(U-boats, air raids)
31The Colonial World 1914 (144)
32Colonial World
- Between 1800 1914 Europe, Russia, US expanded
from controlling 35 of earths surface to 84 - Less than 100 years ago, just before WWI, most of
world was a mosaic of nations embedded in 14
Empires, incl. that of US. Almost no modern
style nation-states existed - New Nationalism of late 1800s had huge impact
- World of 1914 overthrown by two world wars and
series of revolutionary shifts (to communism in
USSR, national socialism in Germany Japan,
democracy in US, social democracy in what has
become EU)
33Table 1.2 Development Indicators of the Largest
10 Countries, 3rd edn.
34Table 1.2 Development Indicators of the Largest
10 Countries, 4th edn.
35World GNI per capita (147)
36GNI/PPP per capita
- Table 12 shows Gross National Income per capita
as well as Purchasing Power Parity (GNI adjusted
for what things cost in real terms) - Omits EU, but EU only major world region close to
US (Eurostat does not aggregate across EU 25, but
EU overall has slightly larger share of world GNI
than US) - Note that China is highly unlikely to pose
serious economic challenge to US for foreseeable
future (30 years or so)
37Social Indicators (Table 13--folded into Table
12 in 4th edn.)
38Social indicators
- Main shift in West in last 50 years has been
marked reduction in discrimination against
females - Female labor force participation should be high
40 - Life expectancy for females should now exceed
that for men by several years--if not is strong
evidence of discrimination - Illiteracy rates should be roughly similar for
males and females