Title: AP Human Geography Test Review
1AP Human Geography Test Review
2States
- State any area with a defined territory that
exercises its sovereign control over areas both
inside and outside its borders - Earth is divided into about 200 countries
(states) - In past 100 years, number of states has increased
by over 100 - Territorial Organization states organized into
a geographically based hierarchy of local
government agencies - Serve the functions of (1) efficiently delegating
administrative function in what may otherwise be
large and unwieldy area, (2) can allocate
resources through local agencies that may be more
in touch with the needs of the people in their
jurisdiction, and (3) usually give their local
territory some degree of autonomy (ability to
enact laws, police their lands, and tax local
citizens) - Commonwealth territory that has established a
mutual agreement with another state for the
benefit of both parties - Colony territory that is legally tied to a
sovereign state rather than being completely
independent - Control of the colony varies
- Colonialism effort by one country to establish
settlements and to impose its political,
economic, and cultural principles on a territory
3States - Colonies
- European states established colonies for 3
reasons - European missionaries established colonies to
promote Christianity - Colonies provided resources that helped the
economy of European states - European states considered the number of colonies
to be an indicator of relative power - Summarized as God, gold, and glory
- Imperialism control of territory already
occupied and organized by an indigenous society - United Kingdom had largest empire
- Sun never set on the British Empire
- Colonial practices of European states varied
- France attempted to assimilate colonies into
French culture not so successful - Britain created different government structures
and policies depending on the territory - Decentralized approach helped to protect diverse
cultures, local customs, and educational systems - Most colonies made peaceful transition to
independence - Nearly all in Pacific Ocean or Caribbean Sea
- Puerto Rico is most populous remaining colony
- Commonwealth of the United States
- 4 million residents
- Frances French Polynesia, Mayotte, and New
Caledonia the Netherlands Netherlands Antilles
and the United States Guam and U.S. Virgin
Islands are colonies with population between
100,000 and 300,000 - Least populated colony Pitcairn Island (United
Kingdom) 47 people
4States - Colonies
- Colonialism practice of establishing political
dominance over a people for economic, political,
and territorial gain - Organic Theory created by political geographer
Friedrich Ratzel - State was like a living entity that constantly
needed to grow to thrive states constantly need
new territory to meet the demands of their
ever-growing population - Religious Colonialism conducted by numerous
religions - Christianity and Islam
- Economic Colonialism- quest for wealth
- European colonists sought wealth (gold, furs,
etc.) - Colonies expected to provide resources for the
home country needed to sustain itself - Self-Determinism power of a people to establish
their own government the way that they see it - Former colonies would rather see chaotic
conditions ruled by member so their own country
than peaceful conditions ruled by colonial power
5Types of Empires
- The Land Empire involves conquest by force
- Armies attack, pillage, and plunder their way
through another land, taking resources by force - Ex. Spanish employed empire tactics in Mexico
- The Sea Empire used sea power to control area
- Settlements established along coast, and
excursions into the interior brought loot back to
these settlement, where ship would be waiting to
take resources back to home country - The Settlement Empire intended to stay long
time - Once settlement established, colonists sent
resources back to home country - Colony expected to become independent and
eventually pay back home country - Primarily used by the British and French
6States - Government
- Types of Government
- Unitary State places most power in the hands of
central government officials - Unitary government systems works best (in theory)
in nation-states with few internal cultural
differences - In reality, multinational states use unitary
systems so the values of on nationality can be
imposed on others - Some African countries (Rwanda, Ghana, and Kenya)
have done so on ethnic group could dominate
another - Eastern European countries used unitary systems
go promote the diffusion of Communist values - Federal State allocates strong power to units
of local government within the country - Governments bestow autonomous powers upon their
local territories - Local governments posses more authority to adopt
their own laws - Ability to empower different nationalities
especially if they live in different regions - Boundaries can be drawn by regional ethnicities
- More suitable for larger states national
capital may too remote to effectively govern - Size of federal states varies
- Larger states include Russia, Canada, India, and
U.S. - Belgium is federal state two cultural groups
- How to delegate authority in a federalist country
has crucial implications for everything from tax
collection , to the use of natural resources
7Electoral Geography
- Reapportionment (redistricting) Boundaries
separating legislative districts redrawn
periodically to ensure each district has
approximately same population - Boundaries of U.S. House of Representatives
redrawn every 10 years following the census - Most European countries use independent
commissions to redraw district boundaries - Most U.S. states use the state legislature
giving the political party in power to redraw
districts - Gerrymandering process of redrawing legislative
boundaries for the purpose of benefiting the
party in power - Three types of 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
8Gerrymandering Florida Georgia
Fig. 8-11 State legislature boundaries were
drawn to maximize the number of legislators for
Republicans in Florida and Democrats in Georgia.
9- Gerrymandering drawing voting districts to
benefit one group over another.
Majority-Minority districts drawn so that the
majority of the population in the district is
from the minority.
10Nation and Nation-State
- Nation Term encompassing all the citizens of a
state refer to tightly knit group of people
possessing bonds of language, ethnicity,
religion, and other shared cultural
attributes/identity - Many people becoming more loyal to their nation,
rather than their state - Ex. Al-Qaeda left behind loyalty to the states
in which they are citizens, pledging their
allegiance to Al-Qaeda forming a nation - Usually nations are located within the borders of
a state - Examples Koreans, Hmong, Kurds, Basques,
Flemish, Walloons, and Zulus - Many want their own state, but conflict can arise
with two nations competing a geographic area - Nation-State recognized political unit wherein
territorial state coincides with the area settled
by a certain group of people corresponds with
particular ethnicity that has been transformed
into a nationality - Examples Japan and Denmark
11Sovereignty
- Sovereignty ability of a state to regulate
their own internal and external affairs - Some continue to struggle with sovereignty
- Kurds one of largest nationalities in the world
without a state - Located in Turkey, northern Iran, and northern
Iraq with some in Armenia and Azerbaijan - Most Kurds have own language and practice Islam
- Basques independent group in Pyrenees Mountains
- Majority live in Spain with some in Andorra and
southwestern France - Basques have their own language (Euskara) and
desire to have their own nation-state called
Euskal Herria - Flemish live in the north of Belgium
- Official language is Flemish (Common Dutch) and
religion (Roman Catholic) - Distinct from Walloons in language (French) and
religion (Protestant) - Desire own nation-state called Flanders
- Zulu live in eastern South Africa
- Apartheid white minority ruled South Africa,
Zulus forced to occupy low status suffering
discrimination in all aspects of life - Zulus have their own language (isiZulu) desire to
have own homeland (KwaNdeebele) - Palestinians live in the West Bank, Gaza Strip,
and Golan Heights of Israel - Palestinians fled to other countries after Israel
created in 1948 - Most practice Islam, speak Arabic desire to
create state called Palestine
12Antarctica National Claims
Fig. 8-2 Antarctica is the only large land mass
that is not part of a state, but several
countries claim portions of it.
13Political Organization of Space
- Governments usually create organizations to
assist with their interactions with other
countries - Embassies offices represent U.S. interests to
the leadership of other countries - Ambassadors lead officials representing the
U.S. in other countries - Consulates secondary offices that usually deal
with economic issues as well as the granting of
visas to enter their home countries - Other political geography terms
- Satellite states under the control of the
Soviet Union created a cultural wall (Iron
Curtain) - Iron Curtain divided democratic, capitalist
Western Europe from totalitarian, communist
Eastern Europe - Shatterbelt regions regions caught up in the
conflict between two superpowers - Boundaries often changed Vietnam and Korea
- Buffer state country that lies between two
other states, but remains neutral in the conflict
between them - Mongolia between China and Soviet Union
- Supranational Organization separate entity
composed of three or more states that forge an
association and form an administrative structure
for mutual benefit in pursuit of shared goals
14Geopolitical Theories
- Heartland Theory Halford MacKinder wrote The
Geographical Pivot of History - Suggests that whoever owns Eastern Europe and
Western Asia has the political power and capital
to rule the world - Eastern Europe contained one of the richest
agricultural regions in the world sustain a
large population - Also contained abundant raw materials (coal)
needed to develop strong military and industrial
base - Adolph Hitler believed in this theory which is
why he attempted to invade/conquer Eastern Europe - Rimland Theory Nicholas Spykman wrote in The
Geography of Peace was known as the godfather
of containment - Believed in forming alliances is necessary to
keep Heartland in check (no individual country
could contain by itself - Rimland theory would control the sea
- Domino Theory adopted by U.S. in 1960s 1970s
- When one country experiences rebellion or
political disunity, other countries around it
will also experience turmoil as a result, leading
to a domino effect of political instability - Established in response to the communist
incursions that had been occurring around the
world - Irredentism the attempt by one country to
provoke coups or separatist movements in another
country
15Rimland Theory
Heartland Theory - Heartland is also known as
the pivot area
16Centripetal and Centrifugal Forces
- Centripetal Forces forces that tend to unite a
state - Includes strong national institutions, sense of
common history, and a reliance on strong central
government - Examples include flags, anthem, other acts of
patriotism - Centripetal forces can be positive and negative
- Positive when supporting or pulling a nation
together - Negative when nationalistic ideas place
individual nations above all others (usually with
militaristic regimes, power hungry leaders, and
racist ideologies) - Centrifugal Forces forces that pull a state
apart - Include ideas of regionalism, ethnic strife, and
territorial disputes - Include language, religion, ethnicity, and
ideology
17Political forces and Ideologies
- Balkanization political process by which a
state may break up into smaller countries - Occurs when enclaves develop with their own
ethnic identities, or when central governments
increasingly devolve administrative authority to
their constituent territories - Former Soviet Union, former Yugoslavia
- Devolution Giving up of power by the central or
federal government to the different regions of
the country - The process whereby regions within a state demand
and gain political strength and growing autonomy
at the expense of the central government - Devolutionary pressures result in increased
autonomy for a region. If strong enough, these
devolutionary pressures may result in complete
balkanization - Supranationalism method of extending state
borders through the assistance and/or
establishment of other organizations to further
economic and/or political cooperation - Ex. European Union (EU)
- United into one organized unit for the purpose of
increasing individual strength through collective
efforts - Democratization transition to a more democratic
political government - Existence of competitive election that are free,
regular, and fair - Three waves of democratization
18Ethnocultural Devolutionary Movements
- Eastern Europe -
- Devolutionary forces since the fall of communism
19Immanuel Wallersteins World-Systems Theory
- The world economy has one market and a global
division of labor. - Although the world has multiple states, almost
everything takes place within the context of the
world economy. - The world economy has a three-tier structure.
- Construction of the World Economy
- Capitalism people, corporations, and states
produce goods and services and exchange them in
the world market, with the goal of achieving
profit. - Commodification the process of placing a price
on a good and then buying, selling, and trading
the good. - Colonialism brought the world into the world
economy, setting up an interdependent global
economy.
20Three Tier Structure
Core Processes that incorporate higher levels of
education, higher salaries, and more technology
Generate more wealth in the world economy
Periphery Processes that incorporate lower
levels of education, lower salaries, and less
technology Generate less wealth in the world
economy
Semi-periphery Places where core and periphery
processes are both occurring. Places that are
exploited by the core but then exploit the
periphery. Serves as a buffer between core and
periphery
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