POLITCAL GEOGRAPHY

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POLITCAL GEOGRAPHY. C8K1K2. What is Political Geography?. Political geography is concerned with the study of the way governments organize and administer space on Earth's surface, and especially the geographic dimensions of conflict. . Case Study: Changing Borders in Europe Lorraine GE or FR - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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POLITCAL GEOGRAPHY

C8K1K2

What is Political Geography?

• Political geography is concerned with the study of the way governments organize and administer space on Earth's surface. Especially areas of conflict.

Loraine & Alsace• Historically disputed

region.• Inhabited by Germanic

tribes.• 1670, Napoleon annexed

region• 1870, Prussia recaptured• 1918, France regain• WW2, Nazi annexed• 1945, returned to France

Russia & USSR

Objectives: Where are States Located?

• Problems of Defining States• Varying Size of States• Development of the State Concept

Problems of Defining States

• State/Country: political area ruled by an establish government that has control over its internal and foreign affairs (sovereignty).

• Rapid political change since 1940’s (50 vs 192 states)

Korea: One State or Two?

• Early 20th century/ Japanese colony

• After WWII: region split and occupied by US and USSR (38th NL) 1950 Korea War.

• 50 year stalemate

China & Taiwan

• 1949 Nationalist vs Communists. Both claim legitimate Chinese state.

• 1971: US finally recognizes mainland China as legitimate China, but supports and defends Taiwan.

China and South East Asia

Sahrawi Republic

• 1976 Spanish colony until Moroccan/ Mauritania independence.

• Most of Africa recognizes Polisario Front independent. Controls one fifth of the territory.

Polar Regions: Many Claims

• Antarctica is uninhabited but claimed by Argentina, Australia, Chile, France, New Zealand, Norway, and United Kingdom. Not universally recognized.

• 1959: Antarctic Treaty = research station but not military.

Varying Size of States

• Russia: Largest state 17.1 million km2

• Vatican: .44 km2• 2 dozen microstates

(smaller than 1000 km2)

Development of the State Concept• Ancient & Medieval States: organized

as city-states, kingdoms, empires, and tribes.

• Fertile Crescent: city-states: surrounded by walls

• Roman Empire: included 38 provinces• Kingdoms: large estates controlled by

lords/ kings• Colonies: territory that is legally tied

to a sovereign state• Colonialism/ Imperialism: state

controlling foreign lands politically, economically, and cultural principles. (promoted religion, extract resources/ tax, and extend power

British vs French Imperialism• Direct: assimilation of

culture. Use of French leaders to control political affairs.

• Indirect: varying gov. structures and policies for various territories. More autonomy of local culture.

• Post WWII: Most of Africa/ Asia became independent

• Today: 43 remaining colonies of indigenous pop.

K2: Why Do Boundaries Btw States Cause Problems?

• Shapes of States• Types of Boundaries• Boundaries Inside States

• Objectives

Shapes of States

• Why shapes matter? (controls boundaries with other states/ affects communication & conflict)

• Five Types: compact prorupted, elongated, fragmented, or perforated.

Five Basic Shapes of States

• Compact: evenly dispersed (circle) with central capital.

• Elongated: long and narrow• Prorupted: disrupted usually to

give access• Perforated: state completely

surrounded by another state• Fragmented: state interrupted 1)

by bodies of water. 2) by another state

• * Landlocked States: no direct outlet to sea/ ocean (mostly found in Africa

Types of Boundaries• Physical: desert,

mountain, water• Cultural: geometric

(straight lines) & differences such as language, ethnicity, religion

• Frontiers: space where no state exercises complete political control (Saudi & neighbors

Boundaries Inside States• Separate different

nationalities or ethnicities (self-determination within single state)

• Unitary state: most power in the hands of central government (France)

• France: 96 elected general council but it’s administrative head is a prefet (appointed by national gov. rather than local people)

Trend Toward Federal Government• Federal states: allocates

strong power to local government (USA)

• Poland: restructured from unitary to federal after collapse of communism.

• Electoral Geography: boundaries separating legislative districts.

• Gerrymandering: redrawn to benefit a particular group

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