Title: POLITICAL GEOGRAPHY
1POLITICAL GEOGRAPHY
2Objectives
- Distinguish Political Geography as a field of
Human Geography - Define the concept of state
- Describe the relationships and issues between
states and between nations and states
3What is Political Geo All About?
- Helps to explain the cultural physical factors
that underlie political unrest in the world - Studies political boundaries how weve carved
up earths surface (boundaries are artificial
geometric) - Govnt systems at all scales (natnl, state,
local) - How people have organized earths surface into
countries and alliances, reasons underlying these
arrangements, and conflicts that arise
4Intro
- 2 opposing but complementary perspectives _at_ PG
- Look _at_ impact of econ, cultural, and physical
geog on political systems (i.e. theocracies are
excellent ex. of culture imposed on politics) - Look at pol systems as driving force behind a
countrys econ and cultural systems (ex
political borders affect culture of N/S Korea)
5The STATE
- Country State
- fundamental unit of PG
- State area org into a political unit ruled by
an est govn't w/ control over its internal and
foreign affairs (state and country are synonymous)
6Sovereignty
- States have sovereignty independence from
control of its internal affairs by other states - What is the ultimate power over people in a
territory??? - No other country will stop it
7STATES NATIONS
- States may be composed of more than 1 nation but
every nation does not have their own state. - Nation group of people w/ common political
identity, culture, and history (like ethnicity) - Palestine people of nation w/ no state
- Ideal political boundaries nation states
- Cohesive pop w/ similar identities political
goals - ethnicity national boundaries coinciderare
8TYPE Definition Characteristics Examples
Nation-State
Multi-State Nation
Multi-Nation State
Stateless Nation
9Nations States- Examples
- Japan
- Nation-State
- Geog and pol isolation
- Canada Russia
- Multi-nation states
- geographically very large, w/ lots of people
10Relationships Between Nations States- Examples
- Arab nation extends across many states boundaries
in ME (i.e. pan Arabism) multi-state nation - Kurds multi-state nation
- also a
- stateless nation
- What is the
- US?
11Ethno-nationalism
- Occurs in multi-nation states
- A minority nation contained within a state
dominated by another nation - Strong feelings of being different from the
dominant nation - May lead to separatism/secession
- May lead to devolution transfer of powers from
a state to separate locations.
12Ethno-Nationalism Example
- Chechens in Russia terrorist attacks want
secession
13Irredentism
- Homeland spills into other statedesire to join
groups - Occurs in multi-state nations (groups spread out
across countries) - Ex Jews before Israel Serbs in
Austro-Hungarian empire WW I - Texas
14The United States of America
- In political geo, the term state does not refer
to the 50 regional governments with the US - Multi-state nation or Multi-nation state?
15It gets messy.
- Germany? Vietnam? Koreas? China/Taiwan?
- Raison detre reason for being
unifying/centripetal forces to unify a
peoplefosters patriotism (to the state) over
nationalism (to the nation) - Examples in US?
16Shatterbelt
- Shatterbelt - a region or group of states that
exists within a sphere of competition between
larger states - State boundaries drawn and redrawn multiple times
b/c of ethnic conflictYUGOSLAVIA - of states has increased.50 yrs ago only _at_ 50
states globally. As of 2003, 191 states. - Antarctica only large landmass on earth not
part of a state
17Bell Ringer
- What are the defining characteristics of a state?
- Why do you think political geographers are
interested in colonialismand de-colonization?
18Todays Objectives
- Describe the development of the state concept
- Define boundary and recognize different
boundary types. - Explain the different ways boundaries originate.
- Define morphology and recognize different
territorial types.
19Development of State Concept
- Arose in 18th c Europe.emphasized in American
and French revolutions - New questions about the power and legitimacy of
the state distinct from the people, or
nations, in the state
20Ancient States
- Previously earth was organized into
city-states-sovereign units that consisted of
town and surrounding countryside. - Originated in Mesopotamia
- Sometimes city-state would attack and control
another to build empire - ex Sumerians, Assyrians, Babylonians
21Early European States
- When Roman empire collapsed 5th C, Eur was broken
into large estates owned by competing kings and
nobles - 1100 - Powerful kings consolidated holdings
emerged to rule much of W. Eur (Eng, Spain,
France) - Early nation-states
22Colonies
- Colony territory legally tied to mother country
(not independent) - 1500s - great colonial era of W. hemisphere
(Spain, Portugal, France, Dutch, British carve up
New World) - Colonialism one country est settlements
imposes pol, econ, and cultural controls on
another territory. - Motives for colonization 3 Gs
23Imperialism
- 18th/19th C colonization of Africa and Asia
- Imperialism cultural econ dominance w/out
official govnt institutions - Conf of Berlin 1884 Euro powers meet in Berlin
divide Africa w/ artificial boundaries.results
in severe political problems ethnic violence
for years to come
24Conf of Berlin Scramble for Africa
- Superimposed
- borders
- that
- divided
- ethnicities or
- put groups
- together that
- didnt belong
25Colonial Practices
- France attempt to assimilate its colonies into
French culture - France 2nd largest
- Great Britain largest empire sun never sets on
British empire - Different gov. structures and policies for
various territories
26- Decolonization most African and Asian nations
gain ind in 20th C, esp after WW II. - Dangerous power vacuums left behind ethnic
violence
27Few Remaining Colonies
- Most remaining are islands in the Pacific or
Caribbean - Most populous Puerto Rico
- 4 million residents are citizens of the US
- They do not vote, nor do they have a voting
member of Congress
28Few Remaining Colonies
- Least populous Pitcairn Island
- Possessed by the UK
- In the South Pacific
- Its 47 people survive on 2 sq. miles by selling
fish and postage stamps to collectors
29Back to States
- Varying size of states.huge range
- Russia largest w/ 11 time zones (China, Canada,
U.S., Brazil, Australia all big) - Other extreme microstates extremely small
(ex Monaco is only 6 square miles, Vatican City,
etc.)
30Small vs. Big
- Small states easy to govern but hard to sustain
viable econ - Big states better chance of diverse resources
and econ and difficult to conquer b/c of size,
BUT transportation and government often diff
31Homework
- Read (review) Ch 7, p.217-223 and read Ch 8,
p.240-247 - Answer questions 1-22 in your Guided Reading
Packet, based on the chapter and todays notes
32BOUNDARIES
- Boundary a thin, imaginary, invisible line
marking states territory - Boundaries are ARTIFICIAL
- Based on
- Natural/physical features (mntns, river)
- Rivers can be problematic b/c they shift
- In a drought who gets the water? If oil spill
who cleans it up? - Meridian Line Principle boundary right down
middle of river - Ex Who owns the Potomac R?
33Boundaries - contd
- Ethnographic/Cultural lang, relig, etc.
- Geometric follow straight line that has nothing
to do with nature or culture (US/Canada line of
latitude)
34How Does a Boundary Start?(aka Boundary Origins)
- Subsequent Boundaries est. after pop has est.
itself follows existing social/cultural/ethnic
lines - Antecedent Boundaries boundary given to region
before population - Ex W boundary between US and Canada est by
treaty in 1846 when few people lived there
35- Superimposed Boundaries drawn after a pop has
been settled but ignores social, cultural, ethnic
lines - Ex colonialism in Africa
- Relic Boundaries boundaries that no longer exist
but you can still see effects - Ex east and west Germany/Berlin
36FRONTIERS
- Historically frontiers, not boundaries, separate
states. - Tangible geographic area
- Frontiers zone where no state exercises
complete political control
37Frontiers vs. Boundaries
- Frontiers are tangible, geographic areas
boundaries are invisible, imagined - Frontiers are a buffer zone of safety
boundaries are thin lines that bring people right
up to each other, increasing chances of dispute
38OCEANS
- Most highly contested frontier today who can
claim the sea its resources? - Law of the Sea - est in 1983
- Restricts territorial seas to 12 nautical miles
from shoreline, in which ships of other countries
have right of passage - EEZ Exclusive Econ Zone state has econ rights
to 200 nautical miles from shore - In this zone each state has the right to explore
and exploit natural resources in water, seabed,
and soil
39Territorial Morphology (Shapes of States)
- Shape controls the length of boundaries with
other states - 5 Basic Shapes
- Be aware the states can fit into more than 1
category! -
40- Compact State relatively round
- Efficient
- Easy communication
- Ex Poland
-
41- Prorupt State compact state w/ one large
projecting extension... often to get water access
- Ex Namibia
42- Elongated State
- long and narrow
- isolation of extremes,
- communication diff
- Ex Chile, Italy, Vietnam
43- Fragmented States territory broken up into
several discontinuous pieces - Ex Indonesia, Philippines (often islands, but
not always)
44Shapes of States
- Perforated States
- state that completely
- surrounds another
-
- S. Africa surrounds
- Lesotho
45Landlocked States Exclaves
- Landlocked States no outlet to seaBAD situation
makes you dependent on other state for sea
access/shipping/trade - Most landlocked states are in Africa 14
- Others in S. America, Europe, Asia
- Exclaves small, detached holdings that are
completely separate from the rest of the country
and lie within boundaries of another state - ex W. Berlin to W. Germany Kaliningrad
46Centrifugal V. Centripetal Forces
- Centrifugal Forces pull apart and lead to
dissolution - Ex. - tribes, ethnic strife, regionalism, lang
or relig diffYugoslavia, Czechoslovakia,
China-Taiwan, USSR, Basques in Spain, French in
Canada, etc. - Centripetal Forces unify, create common identity
natnl institutions, pledge, anthem, common
lang/relig, common external threats or big events
(9/11, Pearl Harbor, Eritrea, Cold War)
47Class Work Homework
- Classwork Territorial Morphology
- You may work with a partner
- Try to finish in class today
- Your HW reading will help
- Homework Read Info Sheets 1-4 and answer
questions 23-34 in your packet
48Todays Objectives
- Compare and contrast unitary and federal state
governments (boundaries and power relationships
within states). - Explain gerrymandering and its role in electoral
geography.
49Government
- Most states org themselves into hierarchy of
local govnt agencies (territorial org).i.e.
state, county, city, school district, etc.
502 Types of Gov
- Federal (federalism) A form of internal
organization of a state that allocates most
powers to local govts or territories rather than
centrally controlling the entire country. - Smaller units than the state can make decisions
for themselves. - This serves several functions..
51Federalism
- Federalism.
- Enables more efficient administration, esp in
large states - Gives voters greater influence in political
processes - Allocates resources through local agencies that
are more in touch w/ needs of their jurisdiction - Local autonomy power to enact laws, tax
citizens, police land BUT disputes over who has
what power betwn state and nation can cause probs
(i.e. states rights Civil War)
522 Types of Gov
- Unitary In a unitary state, most power and
decisions are made by the central government for
the entire state. - Works best in..
- Shape
- Size
- MNS or N/S
- Other Purposes?
- Unitary states are less common now..why?
53Electoral Geography
- Subset of Political Geography ? elections and
voting - Geographic issues
- Drawing district boundaries for voting and
representation - Redrawing them as population and demographics
change - Geography politics ?
54VOTING
- Popular Vote all votes cast in all states
- Electoral College specific of electors from
each state proportional to states pop. Candidate
who wins state gets all the stets electoral votes - Reapportionment after census Congressional
districts redrawn - Gerrymandering purposefully drawing districts to
favor one party 3 types - Wasted vote
- Excess vote
- Stacked vote
55Gerrymandering
- Excess Vote, Wasted Vote, Stacked Vote?
56Classwork/Homework
- CW Begin Phase 1 of National Identity Project
- HW
- Read Info Sheet 5 and answer questions 35-38
(due tues 2/12) - Phase 2 On your own, read How nationalism is
symbolized and answer reflection questions. - Be ready for Phase 3 on Tues
57Todays Objectives
58International Political Geog
- 3 Theories of Intnl Political Org
- 1.) Late 19th C Friedrich Ratzel propose Organic
Theory which evolved into geopolitics nations
must expand land base to maintain vibrancy
countries that do not expand eventually
disintegrate - Ex Hitler
- or Napoleon
593 theories contd
- 2.) Heartland Theory dev by Sir Halford Mackinder
beginning in 20th C. Said great pivotal point of
all human hist was in N/central Asia (most
populous landmass on earth)who rules the
heartland rules the world - 3.) Rimland not heartland, but oceans most
valuable for power. Oceans provide avenue to
colonial conquest, not land
60International Alliances
- Intnl Organizations alliance of 2 or more
countries cooperate w/ each other w/out giving up
autonomy or self-determination - United Nations created after WW II to replace
League of Nations - Intnl peacekeeping
- Can pass econ sanctions
- UN peacekeeping troops voluntary
- 5 permanent members of Security Council veto
power China, France, Russia, UK, US
61UN Intnl Alliance
- UN Headquarters, NYC
- UN Logo
62Intnl Alliances contd
- Regional Alliances Economic
- NAFTA North American Free Trade Agreement - US,
Canada, MX econ ties and free trade - OPEC Organization of Petroleum Exporting
Countries Middle East and Venezuela.keep oil
process high
63Intnl Alliances contd
- Regional Alliances Military
- NATO North Atlantic Treaty Organization
created after WW II (US and W. Eur) agreement of
military cooperation against E.Eur/Comm/Warsaw
Pact. - After fall of Comm, NATO expanded membership to
much of E. Eurupe
64Supranational Organizations
- Like intnl org, but to some extent member nations
relinquish some level of state sovereignty in
favor of group interests (more binding) - EU (European Union) started
- 1958 w/ 6 countries,
- today over 20
- Free trade and econ
- cooperation
- Euro common currency
- Helped Eur become leading
- econ superpower
65EU Membership 500 million
people 27 countries
Countries shaded gray are candidates for EU
membership
66EU Facts
27
Member States
500 million
Combined population of EU Member States
7
Percent of worlds population
30
Percent of global GDP
Percent of combined worldwide Official Development
Assistance
56
67Confederations
- Confederations intnl org that brings several
autonomous states together for a common purpose - Ex CIS Commonwealth of Independent States
confederacy of ind states of former USSR whove
united b/c of common econ and admin needs - Ex Confederate States of America loose tie
68Changes in Intnl Alliances
- Cold War 1945-1989 East (USSR, Comm) Vs. West
(US, dem, capitalism) - Iron Curtain
- Domino Theory dominates foreign policy
- Since fall of Comm., alliances have shifted
dramatically. - Today division is N/S wealthy northern
hemisphere of MDCs, poorer S. hemisphere of LDC
69- The E-W divide of the Cold War was
ideological/political but the N-S divide today is
economic and the division/disparity is increasing - Future of nation-state is uncertain. Power being
drawn away from nation states to powerful intnl
corporations. Businesses crossing political
boundaries and pushing buttons of politics. (i.e
Blood Diamond)