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Types of Boundaries

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Example: Pakistan from India in 1947. ... Physical easy to see, so they often make good boundaries. Examples: Mountains, Deserts, and rivers. Cultural ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Types of Boundaries


1
Types of Boundaries
  • Frontier geographic zone where no state
    exercises power.
  • Example France and England fought over frontier
    areas in NA in the French and Indian War.
  • All but disappeared from the earth, with only
    Antarctica and the Arabian Peninsula left with
    significant neutral zone areas.

2
Types of Boundaries
  • Boundaries can be categorized into two types
  • Physical easy to see, so they often make good
    boundaries. Examples Mountains, Deserts, and
    rivers.
  • Cultural ethnic differences, especially those
    based on language and/or religion. Example
    Pakistan from India in 1947.

3
Federal Unitary Systems
  • States may be categorized into three types
    according to their internal geographic
    distribution of power
  • Unitary System one that concentrates all
    policymaking powers in one central geographic
    place.
  • Nation-state evolved in Europe democracy had
    not yet developed governments ruled by force.
  • Most European govts highly centralized.
  • As a result, most European govts today remain
    unitary states.

4
Federal Unitary Systems
  • Confederal System spreads power among many
    sub-units (such as states), and has a weak
    central govt.
  • Most attempts have not lasted.
  • Modern govt. of Switzerland has very strong
    sub-govts., and comes as close to a modern
    confederation as exists.
  • Failed confederation US under the Articles

5
Federal Unitary Systems
  • Federal System divides the power between the
    central government and the sub-units.
  • Developed in several colonial areas, including
    the US, Canada, and Australia.
  • Possible b/c the cultures were new, no single
    cities dominated the new countries, and in all
    three examples, the land space is large, setting
    the stage for the development of regional govts.
  • Allows for diverse needs and preferences, but
    also features a central govt. that is strong
    enough to keep countries from falling apart.

6
Political Systems
  • All political systems fall on a continuum from
    the most concentrated amount of power to the
    least.
  • Most countries have unitary systems, although
    some are experimenting with devolution the
    transfer of some important powers from central
    govts. to sub-govts.

Confederal Systems
Unitary Systems
Federal Systems
7
Centripetal vs. Centrifugal
  • Both forces affects all nation-states.
  • Centripetal forces bind together the people of
    a state, giving it strength.
  • One of most powerful is nationalism identities
    based on nationhood.
  • Centrifugal forces destabilize the govt. and
    encourage the country to fall apart.
  • A country that is not well-organized or governed
    stands to lose the loyalty of its citizens.

8
Gerrymandering
  • Named after Elbridge Gerry Governor of
    Massachusetts 1812
  • Approved of a redistricting map that gave the
    Democratic-Republicans a disadvantage.
  • Redistricting map resembled a salamander for
    Federalist boundary.
  • Newspaper Call it a Gerrymander!

9
Gerrymandering
  • Wasted Vote spreads opposition supporters
    across many districts but in the minority.
  • Excess Vote concentrates opposition supporters
    into a few districts.
  • Stacked Vote links distant areas of like-minded
    voters through oddly shaped boundaries.
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