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Human Geography By James Rubenstein

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Title: Human Geography By James Rubenstein


1
Human Geography By James Rubenstein
  • Chapter 7
  • Key Issue 2
  • Why Have Ethnicities Been Transformed into
    Nationalities?

2
Nationality
  • The identity with a group of people who share
    legal attachment and personal allegiance to a
    particular country.
  • It comes from the Latin word nasci, which means
    to have been born.

3
Ethnicity vs. Nationality
  • People of the same ethnicity share religion,
    language, and material culture.
  • In the U.S., nationality is generally kept
    reasonably distinct from ethnicity and race in
    common usage.

4
Ethnicity
  • Groups identified by distinct ancestry and
    cultural traditions.

5
The Quebecois In Canada
  • French Canadians, or Quebecois, share language,
    religion, and other cultural traditions that are
    distinctly different from the Anglo-Canadians.
  • The Quebecois form a distinct ethnicity within
    the Canadian nationality or a second nationality.

6
Rise of Nationalities
  • Descendants of 19th century immigrants to the
    U.S. from Central and Eastern Europe identify
    themselves by ethnicity rather than by
    nationality.
  • U.S. officials recorded the nationality of
    immigrants, but immigrants considered ethnicity
    more important.

7
  • The U.S. forged a nation out of a collection of
    ethnic groups.

8
  • To be an American meant believing in the
    "unalienable rights" of "life, liberty, and the
    pursuit of happiness."

9
Self Determination
  • The concept that ethnicities have the right to
    govern themselves.

10
  • During the 19th and 20th centuries, political
    leaders have attempted to organize Earths
    surface into a collection of nation-states.

11
Nation-State
  • A state whose territory corresponds to that
    occupied by a particular ethnicity that has been
    transformed into a nationality.

12
  • The territory of a state rarely corresponds
    precisely to the territory occupied by an
    ethnicity.

13
Nation-States in Europe
  • During the 19th century, ethnicities were
    transformed into nationalities throughout Europe
  • Most of Western Europe was made up of
    nation-states by 1900.
  • Following World War I, many European boundaries
    were redrawn according to the principle of
    nation-states.

14
  • During the 1930s, Nazi Germany claimed that all
    German-speaking parts of Europe constituted one
    nationality and should be unified into one state.

15
Denmark No Perfect Nation-States
  • The territory occupied by the Danish ethnicity
    closely corresponds to the state of Denmark.
  • The southern boundary with Germany does not
    divide Danish and German nationalities precisely.

16
Denmarks Territories
  • Denmark controls two territories in the Atlantic
    Ocean that do not share Danish cultural
    characteristics-the Faeroe Islands and Greenland.

17
Greenland
  • Denmark controls Greenland, which is the worlds
    largest island.
  • Only 13 are considered Danish.
  • In 1979 Greenlanders received more authority to
    control their own domestic affairs.
  • One decision was to change all place names in
    Greenland from Danish to the local Inuit
    language.

18
  • Greenlands new name is Kalaallit Nunaat.

19
Nationalism
  • The loyalty and devotion to a nationality.

20
Nationalism
  • A nationality must hold the loyalty of its
    citizens to survive.
  • Nationalism typically promotes a sense of
    national consciousness that exalts one nation
    above all others.
  • Mass media is the most effective means of
    fostering nationalism.

21
  • Most countries regard an independent source of
    news as more of a risk than a benefit to the
    stability of their government.

22
  • States foster nationalism by promoting symbols of
    the nation-state, such as
  • Flags and
  • Songs

23
Centripetal Force
  • An attitude that tends to unify people and
    enhance support for a state.
  • The word centripetal means directed toward the
    center.

24
Centrifugal Force
  • Means to spread out from the center.

25
Multiethnic States
  • A state that contains more than one ethnicity.
  • Belgium is a nation divided among Dutch-speaking
    Flemish and French-speaking Wallons.

26
Multinational States
  • A state that contains more than one ethnicity
    with traditions of self-determination that agree
  • to coexist peacefully by recognizing each other
    as distinct nationalities such as the United
    Kingdom.

27
The United Kingdom
  • A multinational state, the United Kingdom
    contains four main nationalities England,
    Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland.
  • Today the four nationalities hold little
    independent political power, although Scotland
    and Wales now have separately elected governments.

28
Multiethnic Problems
  • Ethnicities do not always find ways to live
    together peacefully.
  • In some cases, ethnicities compete in civil wars
    to dominate the national identity.
  • In other cases, problems result from confusion
    between ethnic identity and national identity.

29
Former Soviet Union
  • The worlds largest multinational state, was an
    especially prominent example until its collapse
    in the early 1990s.

30
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31
The 15 Republics
  • The republics that once constituted the Soviet
    Union are now independent countries.
  • The Soviet Unions 15 republics were based on
    the 15 largest ethnicities.
  • With the breakup, less numerous ethnicities are
    now divided among more than one state.

32
15 Independent States
  • The newly independent states consist of five
    groups,
  • 3 Baltic,
  • 3 European,
  • 5 Central Asian,
  • 3 Caucasus, and
  • Russia.

33
Baltic Nation-States
  • Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania had been
    independent countries between 1918 and 1940.
  • Lithuania most closely fits the definition of a
    nation-state 81 are ethnic Lithuanians.
  • These three countries have clear cultural
    differences and distinct historical traditions.

34
Baltic Nation-States
35
European Nation-States
  • To some extent, the republics of Belarus,
    Moldova, and Ukraine now qualify as
    nation-states.
  • Belarusian and Ukrainians became distinct
    ethnicities because they were isolated from the
    main body of Eastern Slavs--the Russians--during
    the 13th and 14th centuries.

36
European Nation-States
Crimean Peninsula
37
Crimean Peninsula
  • 2/3rds of the population are Russians.
  • Crimea voted to become independent of Ukraine.
  • The Soviet Union's largest fleets were stationed
    there.
  • Russia and the Ukraine agreed jointly maintain
    the naval base and ships at Sevastopol.

38
The Tartars
  • 166,000 Tatars have migrated to Crimea from
    Central Asia in recent years.
  • The Tatars once lived in the Crimea, but the
    Soviet leadership deported them to Central Asia.
  • The Tatars prefer to be governed by Ukraine.

39
Moldova
  • Moldavians are ethnically indistinguishable from
    Romanians.
  • In 1992, many Moldavians pushed for
    reunification with Romania, but it wasnt simple.
  • The Soviet government transferred a sliver of
    land from the east bank of the Dniestria to
    Moldova.

40
  • Inhabitants of east bank of the Dniester River
    are Ukrainian and Russian, who oppose Moldova's
    reunification with Romania.

41
Central Asian States
  • The five states in Central Asia carved out of
    the former Soviet Union display varying degrees
    of conformance to the principles of nation-state.
  • Together the five provide an important reminder
    that multinational states can be more peaceful
    than nation-states.

42
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43
Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan
  • 77 of Turkmenistan are Turkmen, with ethnic
    Turkmen are split between Turkmenistan and
    Russia.
  • 80 of Uzbekistan are Uzbek, with Uzbeks split
    between Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan.

44
Kyrgyzstan
  • 52 Kyrgyz, 18 Russian, and 13 Uzbek.
  • The Kyrgyz-Muslims who speak an Altaic
    language-resent the Russians for seizing the best
    farmland.

45
Kazakhstan
  • Twice as large as the other four Central Asian
    countries combined.
  • The country is divided almost evenly between
    Kazakhs and Russians, a recipe for conflict.
  • Kazakhstan has been peaceful, in part because it
    has a somewhat less depressed economy than its
    neighbors.

46
Tajikistan
  • 65 Tajik, 25 Uzbek, and only 3 Russian.
  • Suffers from a civil war among the Tajik people.
  • The civil war has been between Tajiks who are
    former Communists and an unusual alliance of
    Muslim fundamentalists and Western-oriented
    intellectuals.

47
Russia
  • Now the Largest Multinational State.
  • Officially recognizes the existence of 39
    nationalities, many of which are eager for
    independence.
  • Russia's ethnicities are clustered in two
    principal locations.

48
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49
Ethnicities in Russia
  • Ethnicities are clustered either in the center
    of Russia or on its borders.
  • Most were conquered by the Russians in the 16th
    century.
  • Independence movements among the ethnicities are
    flourishing.

50
Chechnya
  • Chechnya was brought under Russian control in
    the 1800s.
  • When the Soviet Union broke up, the Chechens
    declared independence.
  • If Chechnya gains independence other ethnicities
    will follow suit.
  • The region contains deposits of petroleum.

51
Russians in Other States
  • Decades of Russian domination has left a deep
    reservoir of bitterness among other ethnicities
    once part of the Soviet Union.
  • Russian soldiers have remained stationed in
    other countries, in part because Russia cannot
    afford to re-house them.

52
Russians in Other States
  • Other ethnicities fear the Russians are trying
    to reassert dominance.
  • Russians claim that they are now subject to
    discrimination as minorities in countries that
    were once part of the Soviet Union.

53
  • Russians living in other countries of the former
    Soviet Union feel that they cannot migrate to
    Russia, because they have no jobs, homes, or land
    awaiting them there.

54
Turmoil in the Caucasus
  • The Caucasus region gets its name from the
    mountains that separate Russia from Azerbaijan
    and Georgia.
  • Home to several ethnicities, who have a complex
    set of grievances against each other in the
    region.
  • Every ethnicity wants to carve out a sovereign
    nation-state.

55
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56
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57
Azeris (or Azerbaijanis)
  • Azeris trace their roots to Turkish invaders in
    the 8th and 9th centuries.
  • An 1828 treaty allocated northern Azeri
    territory to Russia and southern Azeri territory
    to Persia (now Iran).

58
Azeris (or Azerbaijanis)
  • Azeris make up 90 of the country's total
    population.
  • Another 6 million Azeris are clustered in
    northwestern Iran.
  • Iran restricts teaching of the Azeri language.

59
Armenians
  • More than 3,000 years ago Armenians controlled
    an independent kingdom in the Caucasus.
  • During the late 19th and early 20th centuries,
    hundreds of thousands of Armenians were killed in
    a series of massacres organized by the Turks.

60
Armenians
  • Others were forced to migrate to Russia.
  • After World War I the allies created an
    independent state of Armenia, but it was soon
    swallowed by its neighbors.
  • Turkey and the Soviet Union divided Armenia.

61
Armenians
  • The Soviet portion became an independent country
    in 1991.
  • More than 90 of the population in Armenia are
    Armenians.
  • Armenians and Azeris have been at war with each
    other since 1988 over the boundaries between the
    two nationalities.

62
Georgians
  • The population is more diverse than that in
    Armenia and Azerbaijan.
  • The Abkhazians in the north want an independent
    state, while the Ossetians in the south want to
    rejoin Russia.

63
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64
Revival of Ethnic Identity
  • Ethnic identities never disappeared in Africa,
    where loyalty to tribe often remained more
    important than loyalty to the nationality.
  • Europeans thought that ethnicity was an
    insignificant relic, but were wrong.

65
Ethnicity and Communism
  • From 1945 until the early 1990s, attitudes toward
    communism and economic cooperation were more
    important political factors in Europe than the
    nation-state principle.

66
  • The Communist government of Bulgaria repressed
    cultural differences by banning the Turkish
    language and the practice of some Islamic
    religious rites ... to remove ... obstacles to
    unifying national support for the ideology of
    communism.

67
Ethnicity and Communism
  • The administrative structures of the former
    Soviet Union, Czechoslovakia, and Yugoslavia
    recognized the existence of ethnic groups.
  • Local governments were designed to coincide as
    closely as possible with the territory occupied
    by the most numerous ethnicities.

68
Rebirth of Nationalism in Eastern Europe
  • Breakup of the Soviet Union and Yugoslavia give
    more numerous ethnicities the opportunity to
    organize nation-states.
  • Less numerous ethnicities exist as minorities in
    multinational states, or divided among more than
    one of the new states.

69
Rebirth of Nationalism in Eastern Europe
  • Especially severe problems have occurred in the
    Balkans.
  • Bulgaria's Turkish minority pressed for more
    rights.
  • Minority ethnicities in the Soviet Union,
    Yugoslavia, and Czechoslovakia opposed the
    long-standing dominance of the more numerous
    ethnicities.

70
  • The relatively close coincidence between the
    boundaries of the Slovene ethnic group and the
    country of Slovenia has promoted the country's
    relative peace and stability, compared to other
    former Yugoslavian republics.

71
Rebirth of Nationalism in Eastern Europe
  • Sovereignty has brought difficulties in
    converting from Communist economic systems and
    fitting into the global economy.
  • But problems of economic reform are minor
    compared to the conflicts where nation-states
    could not be created.
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