Top Banner
An Introduction to Political Geography
38

An Introduction to Political Geography. Political Culture Political cultures vary Political ideas vs. religion or language Theocracies Territoriality.

Dec 19, 2015

Download

Documents

Carmel Watkins
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: An Introduction to Political Geography. Political Culture  Political cultures vary  Political ideas vs. religion or language  Theocracies  Territoriality.

An Introduction toPolitical Geography

Page 2: An Introduction to Political Geography. Political Culture  Political cultures vary  Political ideas vs. religion or language  Theocracies  Territoriality.
Page 3: An Introduction to Political Geography. Political Culture  Political cultures vary  Political ideas vs. religion or language  Theocracies  Territoriality.

Political Culture

Political cultures vary Political ideas vs. religion or language Theocracies

Territoriality Key element of political culture

Page 4: An Introduction to Political Geography. Political Culture  Political cultures vary  Political ideas vs. religion or language  Theocracies  Territoriality.

State and Nation

Terminology “State” vs. “country” A nation may be larger than a state

Nation has historic, ethnic and often linguistic and religious connotations

Stateless nations

Page 5: An Introduction to Political Geography. Political Culture  Political cultures vary  Political ideas vs. religion or language  Theocracies  Territoriality.
Page 6: An Introduction to Political Geography. Political Culture  Political cultures vary  Political ideas vs. religion or language  Theocracies  Territoriality.

Rise of the Modern State

The European model The Norman invasion & out of “Dark Age” Thirty Years’ War treaties

The Renaissance Mercantilism & religious wars Money vs. land

Page 7: An Introduction to Political Geography. Political Culture  Political cultures vary  Political ideas vs. religion or language  Theocracies  Territoriality.

The Nation-State

Some democratic, some autocratic, and some parliamentary democracies Sovereignty remained with the nation—the people

European control Creation of “nation states” Are there real nation states?

Internal cultural diversity Heterogeneous states can share “national spirit”

Emotional commitment to the state and for what it stands e.g., Confederation Helvetica

Page 8: An Introduction to Political Geography. Political Culture  Political cultures vary  Political ideas vs. religion or language  Theocracies  Territoriality.

Spatial Characteristics of States

Physical and cultural properties Size and population Needs legitimacy Boundaries: centripetal or centrifugal forces Four main features of the European model:

1. Clearly defined territory

2. Substantial population

3. Certain types of organizational structures

4. Some power

Page 9: An Introduction to Political Geography. Political Culture  Political cultures vary  Political ideas vs. religion or language  Theocracies  Territoriality.

Territory

Territorial morphology Size, shape, and relative location Present opportunities and challenges

Size Large vs. small states

Shape Compact Fragmented Elongated Protruded Perforated

Page 10: An Introduction to Political Geography. Political Culture  Political cultures vary  Political ideas vs. religion or language  Theocracies  Territoriality.
Page 11: An Introduction to Political Geography. Political Culture  Political cultures vary  Political ideas vs. religion or language  Theocracies  Territoriality.

Territory

Relative location Landlocked countries Exclaves and enclaves

Page 12: An Introduction to Political Geography. Political Culture  Political cultures vary  Political ideas vs. religion or language  Theocracies  Territoriality.

Paraguay

Itaipu Dam

Page 13: An Introduction to Political Geography. Political Culture  Political cultures vary  Political ideas vs. religion or language  Theocracies  Territoriality.

Lesotho: an enclave

Kaliningrad: an exclave

Page 14: An Introduction to Political Geography. Political Culture  Political cultures vary  Political ideas vs. religion or language  Theocracies  Territoriality.

Land Boundaries

International boundaries Have a vertical plane cutting through the rocks

below, and the airspace above

Page 15: An Introduction to Political Geography. Political Culture  Political cultures vary  Political ideas vs. religion or language  Theocracies  Territoriality.
Page 16: An Introduction to Political Geography. Political Culture  Political cultures vary  Political ideas vs. religion or language  Theocracies  Territoriality.

Land Boundaries

How do we get boundaries? Three steps of boundary evolution

Define it Exact location established, via treaty-like legal

documents, describing (absolute or relative) actual points

Delimit it Officially put on a map, by a cartographer

Demarcate it Actual ground markers—fences, pillars, walls, etc.—if

desired Not all boundaries are demarcated

Page 17: An Introduction to Political Geography. Political Culture  Political cultures vary  Political ideas vs. religion or language  Theocracies  Territoriality.
Page 18: An Introduction to Political Geography. Political Culture  Political cultures vary  Political ideas vs. religion or language  Theocracies  Territoriality.
Page 19: An Introduction to Political Geography. Political Culture  Political cultures vary  Political ideas vs. religion or language  Theocracies  Territoriality.

Land Boundaries Types of boundaries

Geometric boundary Straight-line boundaries Totally unrelated to any aspects of physical or cultural

landscapes

Physical-political boundary or natural-political boundary Outlined by a physiographic landscape features (river,

mountain ridge, etc.) Convenient, but nature & meaning might change over time

Cultural-political boundary Formerly “anthropogenic” boundaries Mark breaks in the human landscape

Page 20: An Introduction to Political Geography. Political Culture  Political cultures vary  Political ideas vs. religion or language  Theocracies  Territoriality.

Land Boundaries

Origin-based classification Richard Hartshorne’s Genetic Boundary Classification

Antecedent boundary Existed before the cultural landscape emerged

Subsequent boundary Developed at the same time as the major elements of the cultural

landscape

Superimposed boundary Placed by powerful outsiders on a developed cultural landscape

Relic boundary Ceased to function, but its imprint is still on the cultural landscape

Frontiers A frontier is a zone of separation

Page 21: An Introduction to Political Geography. Political Culture  Political cultures vary  Political ideas vs. religion or language  Theocracies  Territoriality.
Page 22: An Introduction to Political Geography. Political Culture  Political cultures vary  Political ideas vs. religion or language  Theocracies  Territoriality.

Functions of Boundaries

“Walls” Limit state jurisdiction State symbols

Page 23: An Introduction to Political Geography. Political Culture  Political cultures vary  Political ideas vs. religion or language  Theocracies  Territoriality.

Functions of Boundaries

Internal boundaries For administrative purposes

Examples: United States or Canada

Some culturally divided countries have internal boundaries that do not show on a map

Page 24: An Introduction to Political Geography. Political Culture  Political cultures vary  Political ideas vs. religion or language  Theocracies  Territoriality.
Page 25: An Introduction to Political Geography. Political Culture  Political cultures vary  Political ideas vs. religion or language  Theocracies  Territoriality.

Functions of Boundaries

Boundary disputes Four principal forms of boundary disputes

Definitional Focus on the “legalese” of the agreement

Locational Focus on the delimitation and/or demarcation of the border

Operational Focus on neighbors who differ over the way their boundary

should function

Allocational Focus on resources that straddle neighbors

Page 26: An Introduction to Political Geography. Political Culture  Political cultures vary  Political ideas vs. religion or language  Theocracies  Territoriality.

STATE ORGANIZATION AND NATIONAL POWER

Page 27: An Introduction to Political Geography. Political Culture  Political cultures vary  Political ideas vs. religion or language  Theocracies  Territoriality.

Large-area Influenceson State Power

Colonialism

Page 28: An Introduction to Political Geography. Political Culture  Political cultures vary  Political ideas vs. religion or language  Theocracies  Territoriality.

Large-area Influenceson State Power

Economic dimensions of power Economic trends Understanding a country’s global economy World-System Analysis

View the world as an interlocked system of states Perspective ties political geography more closely to

economic geography

Page 29: An Introduction to Political Geography. Political Culture  Political cultures vary  Political ideas vs. religion or language  Theocracies  Territoriality.

Large-area Influenceson State Power

Geopolitics Freidrich Ratzel

Organic theory of State Development

Sir Halford Mackinder Heartland theory

“Those that rule the land, rule the world…”

Nicholas Spykman “Rimland”

Recent Developments

Page 30: An Introduction to Political Geography. Political Culture  Political cultures vary  Political ideas vs. religion or language  Theocracies  Territoriality.

The Character of State Territory

Population vs. territory size E.g., China Acquisition of colonial empires ½ world’s states < 5 million people Organizational capacity more important

Core areas Usually the original nucleus of a state Play an important role in a state's development No core area vs. Multicore states

E.g., Nigeria's three cores mark ethnic and cultural diverse areas of the state

Page 31: An Introduction to Political Geography. Political Culture  Political cultures vary  Political ideas vs. religion or language  Theocracies  Territoriality.
Page 32: An Introduction to Political Geography. Political Culture  Political cultures vary  Political ideas vs. religion or language  Theocracies  Territoriality.

The Character of State Territory

Capital cities Political nerve center Former colonies tried to imitate European model Primate cities

A capital city by far the largest and most economically influential

Common in agriculturally-dominant economies

Forward capitals Reunification and capitals

Page 33: An Introduction to Political Geography. Political Culture  Political cultures vary  Political ideas vs. religion or language  Theocracies  Territoriality.

Internal Political-Geographic Structure

All states confront divisive forces The needs of a well-functioning state

Clearly bounded territory with adequate infrastructure

Effective administrative framework, a productive core area, and a prominent capital

Page 34: An Introduction to Political Geography. Political Culture  Political cultures vary  Political ideas vs. religion or language  Theocracies  Territoriality.

Unitary & Federal Systems

Early European nation-states were unitary states The federal state arose in the New World Federalism accommodated regional interest by

vesting primary power in provinces Switzerland Location for a capital city challenging for

federations Britain and India Today’s divisive forces in Europe

Page 35: An Introduction to Political Geography. Political Culture  Political cultures vary  Political ideas vs. religion or language  Theocracies  Territoriality.

European reconstruction

Page 36: An Introduction to Political Geography. Political Culture  Political cultures vary  Political ideas vs. religion or language  Theocracies  Territoriality.

Internal Political-Geographic Structure

US Electoral patterns Electoral geographers Electoral geography

Gerrymander

Maps of voting patterns often produce surprises

Page 37: An Introduction to Political Geography. Political Culture  Political cultures vary  Political ideas vs. religion or language  Theocracies  Territoriality.

Forces ofFragmentation and Cohesion

Centripetal forces Centrifugal forces

Fidel Castro

Page 38: An Introduction to Political Geography. Political Culture  Political cultures vary  Political ideas vs. religion or language  Theocracies  Territoriality.

Discussion Questions

How do human feelings toward state territory affect the political climate?

The theatre of political geography has a very diverse cast, yet when it comes to people, it’s not as influential as language or religion. Why?