State politically organized territory recognized by the international community. Must contain

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Political Geography

State politically organized territory recognized by the international community. Must contain» 1) a permanent population» 2) a defined territory,» 3) a functioning government and economic system Nation tightly knit group of people who feel a belonging to a cultural community, share a common history (stateless nations no national territory; Kurds, Palestinians)

Evolution of the Nation-State Treaty of Westphalia (1648) sets legal precedent for national sovereignty states have the right to make decisions for themselves Doctrine of nationalism, creates supreme loyalty to our people Colonialism rose from European countries seeking wealth and often disregarded local sovereignty

Territorial Morphology: Size not always an advantage U.S. = yes (resources, relative location) U.S. = no (large heterogeneous population, size and long borders create challenges) Microstates - Liechtenstein, Luxembourg, Monaco Relative location - situation Resources exceptions: Congo (resource-rich but unable to use for own benefit); Switzerland & Japan (few resources, but in economic cores) Global Activity Singapore has access to many trade routes

Singapore: Microstate but wealthy

Shape Compact distance from geometric center is similar Elongated a.k.a. attenuated Fragmented two or more separate pieces Perforated territory completely surrounds that of another state Protruded a.k.a. prorupt; have a protruded area that extends from a more compact core

Evolution of Boundaries Boundary a vertical plane that cuts through the subsoil & airspace (even outer space) Definition legal document or treaty drawn up to specify actual points in the landscape Delimitation cartographers put the boundary on the map Demarcation boundary is actually marked on the ground w/ wall, fence, posts, Types of Boundaries Geometric straight-line, unrelated to physical or cultural landscape, lat & long (US/Canada) Physical-political (natural-political) conform to physiologic features (Rio Grande: US/Mexico; Pyrenees: Spain/France)

Boundary Disputes Definitional focus on legal language (e.g. median line of a river: water levels may vary) Locational definition is not in dispute, the interpretation is; allows mapmakers to delimit boundaries in various ways Operational neighbors differ over the way the boundary should function (migration, smuggling) Allocational disputes over rights to natural resources (gas, oil, water) Almost all boundary disputes today are operational or allocational.

Major area of dispute w/ Iraq in 1990s Relative Location of Kuwait

Colonialism has changed the global order of politics; often creating unequal cultural and economic relations

Core-Periphery Model World Systems Analysis (Immanuel Wallerstein) view the world as an interlocked system of states Core economically dominant states Periphery developing states; have little autonomy or influence Semi-periphery middle; keeps the world from being polarized into two extremes The world must be seen as a system of interlinking parts; ties political and economic geography together

World Incomes

Geopolitics: Heartland Theory: Halford Mackinder (Br) Heart of Eurasia resource-rich, land-based pivot area - military focus is the army Rimland Theory: Nicholas Spykman (US) Eurasian rim, not heart focus on the navy The US does not fit into either theory

Mackinder s Heartland Theory & Spykman s Rimland Theory

Cities in political geography Capital city pol. nerve center, seat of gov t, center of nat. life, & nat. headquarters Forward capital capital city moved for a nat. objective; culture, disputed territory, Primate city By far the largest city; most expressive of culture, may be capital: Mexico City, Paris, Jakarta, (many countries don t have: e.g. US)

Paris, Fr. Ouagadougou, B.F. Mexico City, Mex. Jakarta, Indo.

Unitary state nation-state w/ highly centralized gov t, central authority exerts power equally over its territory (UK, Fr) Federal state central gov t represents various entities w/in a nation-state, allows entities to retain some power (Canada, US) Electoral geography: US 435 seats in House, after 1990 census, gov t instructed States to develop majority-minority districts Gerrymandering redistricting for advantage; 1812 Gov. Gerry of Massachusetts (salamander-looking dist.)

Gerrymander Florida s 3 rd Cong. Dist. - 1990 310,000 African-Americans 240,000 whites 16,000 Hispanics

Tarrant County Below the State Boundaries

Local self-government (municipalities) Southlake Tarrant County white = Fort Worth yellow= unincorporated

Centripetal Forces promote unity Charismatic leaders, external threats (Iraq) Nationalism religion, education, national ideology, Centrifugal Forces divisive forces Internal religious, linguistic, ethnic, or ideological differences Tribalism people identify more w/ their local affiliation than with their country

Supranationalism: Venture involving three or more states for pol. (UN), econ. (EU), mil. (NATO) and/or cultural (African Union) objectives Benelux first multinational union; no tariffs, quotas, licenses; joined EEC later

BeNeLux

Members of the European Union (EU)

United Nations established after WWII (much more successful than the League of Nations); 193 members inc. South Sudan UNPO unrepresented people (53 members); Tibetans, Kurds, Australian Aborigines, Not a world gov t, no standing army

Truman Proclamation (1945) had claimed natural resources up to continental shelf Argentina (in 1946) claimed water above UNCLOS (UN Convention on Law of Sea) signed by 157 states (not US) in 1982; territorial sea up to 12 naut. miles, EEZ (Exclusive Econ. Zone) up to 200 naut. miles (rights to nat. resources up to cont. shelf)

Median-line Principle: Drawing a boundary midway b/w two states coasts when terr. sea or EEZ conflict South China Sea area of major disputes; Spratly Is. (rich in oil, claimed by six states)

Devolution when regions within a state gain political strength and growing autonomy at the expense of the central gov t Ethnonationalism love for your nation Scotland voted in favor of greater autonomy, vote for total independence failed Spain Basque, Catalonia: 17 Autonomous Communities established Belgium Flemish (Dutch) vs. Walloon (Fr.) Yugoslavia six republics ; Dayton Accords (1995) split Bosnia b/w Serb Republic & Muslim-Croat Federation

Regions of devolution due to ethnonationalism Scotland, Belgium, and Bosnia

More causes of devolution Economic Spain Catalonia (industrially strong) Italy North (industrially strong) France Corsica (island) Brazil South (federal govt. misuse of taxes) Spatial - Distance, remoteness & peripheral location are allies of devolution

Devolutionary Pressures in Europe, 2002

More changes: Growing influence of religion religious fundamentalism vs. secularism, stereotypes (Islamic world vs. Judeo-Christian world) Antiquated boundary framework 21 st c. world w/ 19 th c. borders (most devolving movements occur in periphery of states) Rise of terrorism superpowers supplied allies w/ weapons during Cold War; increasing threat of nations w/ nukes, chemical & biological weapons, suicide missions = potential to unite or divide world Shatterbelts - region of the world in which there are problems with a large number of smaller nations leading to state problems.