States or Countries, Nations, Stateless Nations, and Nation-States.

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States or Countries, States or Countries, Nations, Stateless Nations, Stateless Nations, and Nation- Nations, and Nation- States States

Transcript of States or Countries, Nations, Stateless Nations, and Nation-States.

Page 1: States or Countries, Nations, Stateless Nations, and Nation-States.

States or Countries,States or Countries,Nations, Stateless Nations, and Nations, Stateless Nations, and

Nation-StatesNation-States

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StateStateState – a politically organized territory with a permanent

population, a defined territory, and a government. To be a state, an entity must be recognized as such by other states. Exceptions: Colonies and Protectorates

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The StateThe State• A state provides services for

its citizens.• It demands taxes• It demands adherence to the

laws.• It demands military service• Periods of adversity can

increase a sense of nationalism-but can backfire

• A state is possible only if a national attitude or emotional attachment to the state develops.

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NationsNations• Nation – a culturally defined group of people with a

shared past and a common future who relate to a territory and have political goals.

• People construct nations to make sense of themselves.

• Nations are “imagined communities” -Benedict Anderson

• imagined = you will never meet all the people in your nation

• community = you see yourself as part of it

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Stateless NationsStateless Nations• Sovereignty-complete control

over a territory’s political & military affairs. Some nations do not have their own state-this can lead to conflict.

• Palestinians are the most well known example-a stateless nation in conflict with Israel over territory.

• Kurds-about 20 million people live in Kurdistan-which covers 6 states-since the 1991 Iraq War-Kurdish Security Zone has been virtually independent.

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Multinational State – A state with more than one nation.Slobadan Milosevic, leader of Serbia launched 4 Balkan Wars that killed 250,000 & left 2.5 million homeless

The Former Yugoslavia

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Multistate Nation – Multistate Nation – A nation with more than one state.

Transylvania – homeland for both Romanians and Hungarians.

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Defining the Nation-StateDefining the Nation-State

• A Nation should have– A single language– A common history– A similar ethnic

background– Unity from a common

political system.

• Cultural homogeneity not as important as “national spirit” or emotional commitment to the state.

• A Nation-State has:– Clearly delineated

territory– Substantial population– Well-organized

government– Shared political and

cultural history– Emotional ties to

institutions or political systems or an ideology.

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European European Boundary Boundary ChangesChanges

Fig. 8-13: Twentieth-century boundary changes in Europe, 1914 to 2003. Germany’s boundaries changed after each world war and the collapse of the Soviet Union.

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Defining the Nation-StateDefining the Nation-State

• The Four Pillars of Nationalism;– A population that

considers itself a nation– A substantial and well-

defined territory– A well-developed

organization– A measure of economic,

political and military power.

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Origins and Diffusion of the Origins and Diffusion of the Modern StateModern State

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Nation-StateNation-State• Earliest rulers “regnum” ruled over a

group of followers-not fixed territories.

• Medieval concept of the Nation-State began with the Roman Catholic Church-that created “dominium” rule over a defined territory.

• Merovingian Kings 5th-8th cent. Called themselves “Kings of the Franks”, later Capetian Dynasty 10th - 14th cent. Called themselves “Kings of France”.

• Rise of the modern nation-state saw the development of distinctive territory.

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Rise of the Modern StateRise of the Modern State• European Model of the

state diffused from Ancient Greece & Rome.

• Middle Ages-fragmentation, on mainland, Dynastic rule & strong leaders led to greater national cohesion, Norman invasion ended the fragmentation of England.

• Muslim invasion repelled. New technology-horseshoe, stirrup, horse collar, wheel barrow & wind mill introduced.

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Rise of the Modern StateRise of the Modern State• Renaissance-political

nationalism & economic nationalism in the form of mercantilism developed-concept of diplomacy developed in Italy.

• Mercantilism-states should acquire wealth through-colonization, plunder, protection of home industries & markets, a favorable balance of trade.

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Rise of the Modern StateRise of the Modern State• Reformation-brought a

religious split Roman Catholic versus Protestant-led to a series of wars. Monarchies benefited from the Church’s loss of political power.

• Age of Absolutism-emerged with Louis XIV of France as a prime example. Monarchies became the focal point of national awareness-ended regionalism and aristocratic local control

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Rise of the Modern StateRise of the Modern State• Powerful dynasties-

Habsburgs, Bourbons, Tudors & Stuarts struggled for power.

• Thirty Years’ War began as a religious struggle-but ended as state & dynastic struggle for control of Europe.

• Peace of Westphalia 1648 ended the war-created defined boundaries & guarantees of security-Modern Europe emerged.

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The states we perceive as “natural” and “always existing” are relatively recent phenomena.

In 1648, Europe was divided into dozens of small territories.

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Rise of the Modern StateRise of the Modern State• The French Revolution of

1789 was the first major political upheaval in Europe.

• It was followed by the Napoleonic Wars that spread the Enlightenment ideas of equality and the French concept of nationalism.

• 1830 and 1848 another wave of revolutions swept over Europe

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European Colonialism & the European Colonialism & the Diffusion of the Nation-State ModelDiffusion of the Nation-State Model

• Colonialism -a physical action in which one state takes over control of another, taking over the government and ruling the territory as its own.

Two Waves of European Colonialism:

1500 - 1825

1825 - 1975

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Dominant Colonial Influences, 1550-1950

This map shows the dominant influence, as some places were colonized by more than one power in this time period.

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Geographic Characteristics of Geographic Characteristics of StatesStates

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Geographic Characteristics of StatesGeographic Characteristics of StatesStates vary greatly in………• Size-some huge like Russia 6.6 m. sq. miles, others large

with 3 m. sq. miles like US, China, Brazil, Canada-some are microstates-Vatican, Monaco, Andorra, Grenada.

• Shape-some are compact while other are elongated or fragmented.

• Demography-some have huge populations like China’s 1.3 billion or tiny like Iceland with 250,000.

• Organization-monarchy, democratic, dictatorship, theocratic.

• Resources-natural and skilled population• Development-subsistence to tertiary• Power-both economic and military

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Territory Territory MorphologyMorphology

• Territorial Morphology-shape, size & relative location of a state.

• Compact-distance from the geographic center does not vary greatly.

• Fragmented-consisting of 2 or more separate pieces divided by water or other territory.

• Elongated-long & thin states.

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• Prorupted-states that are nearly compact, but have a narrow extension.

• Perforated-having another state lie within ones territory.

• Exclave-an outlier of a state located within another.

• Enclave-the counterpart of exclave-it lies within a country and is independent or ruled by another country.

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India: The Tin Bigha CorridorIndia: The Tin Bigha Corridor

Fig. 8-7: The Tin Bigha corridor fragmented two sections of the country of Bangladesh. When it was leased to Bangladesh, a section of India was fragmented.

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Landlocked CountriesLandlocked Countries• Landlocked states have a serious disadvantage in trade and

access to resources.• Africa has more landlocked states than any other continent.

Sahel is poorly linked to the coastal ports; Uganda linked by rail; Zimbabwe access via South African and Mozambique ports; Rwanda & Burundi the world’s most isolated states; Zambia & Malawi have poor connections.

• Asia-Mongolia & Nepal are landlocked with rough terrain, great distances and limited communication, Afghanistan, Kazakhstan, Azerbaijan, Armenia & Georgia.

• South America-Bolivia and Paraguay-lost coastline in war• Europe-Austria, Switzerland, Czech Republic, Slovakia,

Moldova, Belarus and Bosnia

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Landlocked StatesLandlocked States

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Fig. 8-6: Southern, central, and eastern Africa include states that are compact, elongated, prorupted, fragmented, and perforated.

African African StatesStates

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Land BoundariesLand Boundaries• Not just a line, but also a

vertical plane that cuts through subsoil, rocks and the airspace above-coal, gas & oil reserves often cross these lines.

• Belgium, Germany & Netherlands argued over coal seams & natural gas reserves.

• Kuwait Oil drilling prompted the 1991 Gulf War (Rumaylah Reserve)

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Land BoundariesLand Boundaries

• 3 Stage Evolution of Boundaries:

• definition-a document is created that indicates exact landmarks;

• delimitation-cartographers place the boundary on the map;

• demarcation-boundary markers such as steel posts or concrete pillars, fences or wall marks the boundary

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Types of BoundariesTypes of Boundaries• Geometric-straight line

boundary such as US-Canada or many in Africa.

• Physical or Natural-Political Boundary-river, crest of a mountain range or some other physical landmark

• Cultural or Anthro-Geographic Boundary-breaks in the human landscape, such as most of Europe’s boundaries

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Aozou Strip: A Geometric BoundaryAozou Strip: A Geometric Boundary

Fig. 8-9: The straight boundary between Libya and Chad was drawn by European powers, and the strip is the subject of controversy between the two countries.

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Left-the Demilitarized Zone between North Korea & South Korea is heavily defended by both sidesBottom left-the US-Canadian border is the longest undefended border in the world.Bottom right-the Rio Grande forms the border between Mexico and the United States which is porous enough to allow million of illegal immigrants.

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Genetic Boundary ClassificationGenetic Boundary Classification• Richard Hartshorne, a leading political geographer

developed this classification system;• Antecedent Boundary-physical landscape defined the

boundary well before human habitation-Malaysia-Indonesian boundary on Borneo is sparsely settled.

• Subsequent Boundary-Vietnam-China border results from a long period of modification.

• Superimposed-forcibly drawn boundary that cuts across a unified cultural boundary-New Guinea-Indonesia West Irian & Papua New Guinea in the East.

• Relict boundary no longer serves its purpose, but the imprint is still evident in the landscape-Vietnam-North South boundary, West and East Germany boundary, especially in Berlin.

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