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GEOG2400 SPRING 2002 THE GEOGRAPHY OF WORLD DEVELOPMENT

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Title: GEOG2400 SPRING 2002 THE GEOGRAPHY OF WORLD DEVELOPMENT


1
GEOG2400 SPRING 2002 THE GEOGRAPHY OF WORLD
DEVELOPMENT
  • CLASS 3
  • Geography and Development

Element 3 Sophomore GE Cluster Global Wealth,
Poverty and Inequality
2
Factors in Development
  • Why are some nations rich and others poor?
  • Why are some nations strong and others weak?
  • How much of todays world reflects the influence
    of geographic phenomena - climate, location,
    spatial relationships, topography, tectonics,
    etc?
  • What role has history played - political systems,
    war and conflict, social systems, technological
    sophistication, leadership?
  • How do these factors affect progress of nations
    today?
  • What is the relationship between natural resource
    endowments and economic development?
  • Clearly this is all very complex and requires
    careful thought.

3
Environmental Determinism
  • Natural, environmental factors clearly play
    important roles in how a given community,
    society, nation develops - historically and
    today.
  • They encourage technological development to
    overcome adversities and exploit potentials (good
    side).
  • They impose costs and set back progress if
    adversities cannot easily be managed or
    controlled (bad side).
  • Example Hurricanes in Central America Mitch is
    thought to have set back Honduras development by
    15 years (impacts on infrastructure, export crop
    plantations, debt recovery, etc.)

4
Climate
  • Geographically heterogeneous depending on
    latitude/longitude, maritime or continental
    location, elevation above sea level, etc.
  • A key factor in human development - human
    responses to climate extremes, floods/droughts,
    wet seasons/dry seasons, summer/winter, etc.
    helped determine cultural traits, development of
    agriculture, settlement patterns, social
    organization, and so forth.
  • Key factors include climatic controls on the
    availability of food water, productivity of
    agriculture, effects of heat/humidity, exposure
    to disease insect pests, impact of hazards, etc.

5
Average temperatures vary tremendously
6
Rainfall can limit agricultural potential without
storage and irrigation
7
Certain areas experience extreme heat
8
The tropics stay warm and sunny
9
Geology
  • Along with climate, determines the availability
    and character of lands (topography) and soils,
    the nature and abundance of minerals and ores,
    the nature and abundance of fossil fuels, and so
    forth.
  • Geology also governs risks of natural disasters
    and sensitivity to change - earthquakes, soil
    erosion, etc. (check the seismic monitor at IRIS
    - http//www.iris.washington.edu/seismic/60_2040_1
    _8.html.)

10
Topography determines whereand how you can live
(this is the San Fernando Valley as seen by NASA)
11
Depending on the character of the land, its
climate and soils, we can produce dramatic
environmental effects over time see the
evidence of soil erosion on the turbidity of the
Persian Gulf (Photo from NASA)0
12
Location
  • Aside from the climatic implications, where
    nations are located has played a key role in
    determining how they have developed.
  • Many (e.g. Diamond) believe that Western Europes
    central location with respect to the Middle
    East/North Africa and the Far East played a key
    role in why Europe came to be the dominant region
    in the second half of the last millenium.
  • By virtue of its location, Europe became the
    mixing ground for all the independently developed
    ideas and technologies brought in over the land
    and then the sea routes from distant lands.
  • Geography became important in the Cold War/post
    Cold War periods and frequently determined who
    got US/USSR support in the form of loans, grants,
    development assistance, etc . (http//www.cnn.com/
    SPECIALS/cold.war/kbank/maps/).

13
Early Explorations Predominantly came from the
Mediterranean crossroads
Source Worldbook.com
14
A huge proportion of Asia and Africa was already
known to Europe by the 1300s
Source Worldbook.com
15
Resources
  • We can think in terms of raw material resources,
    human resources and knowledge/technology
    resources.
  • Similar material resources may be found in many
    different locations/nations (http//www.geohive.co
    m/global/ec_natres.php).
  • However the human potential to exploit them, and
    the knowledge and technology used in that
    exploitation can and will differ greatly.
  • Resources are not static - their character and
    uses have changed through time as a result of
    human actions.
  • Many resources are mobile - they can be imported
    (by force or payment) - note that this includes
    human resources.
  • Many countries are dependent on one or two
    resources and are very vulnerable to competition
    and substitution.

16
Many national economics rely heavily on food
production and its export
17
Technology Has Been Key
  • Technology/Information may have originated in one
    place but over time it has often been improved
    and perfected in another, providing great
    advantage and fueling/facilitating additional
    development for the innovator.
  • Gunpowder - invented by the Chinese, it was the
    Europeans who perfected the weapons that
    harnessed its power and thus gained military
    supremacy.
  • Paper and printing - again, invented by the
    Chinese, it was the Europeans who figured out how
    to build a movable-type printing press and thus
    begin the process of universal education.

18
Political/social organization
  • How important has social organization been?
  • Difficult to draw hard and fast rules but in
    different times and places it has been critical
    at a variety of scales - local, national and
    regional.
  • Different sub-cultures have chosen to value
    material wealth over spiritual wealth, or to
    adopt a sedentary lifestyle over a nomadic one.
  • Different nations have chosen free markets over
    centralized/command economies.
  • Different regions have developed monolithically
    (imperial empires) or in a more fragmented form
    (sovereign nation states) e.g. China and Europe.

19
Key Steps to Development
  • Those nations who have achieved high economic
    status today have generally successfully passed
    through
  • Demographic transition
  • Transitioning from high birth/high death (45/40)
    to low-birth/low death rate (11/10).
  • Demographic transformation
  • Transitioning from a predominantly agrarian/rural
    to an industrial/urban society.
  • Economic transition
  • Transitioning from a predominantly raw
    materials-based economy to a more diversified
    manufacturing and services economy.

20
The Demographic Transition
(source Wright Nebel, 2002)
21
Regional Demographic Progress
(source Wright Nebel, 2002)
22
Taking Off Economically
  • Has needed strong central government.
  • Has needed capitalists/risk takers to invest in
    manufacturing and trade.
  • Has needed reinvestment of a large portion of
    current income into capital development.
  • Has needed raw materials (or cheap access to
    them) to exploit (and export).
  • Has needed key industries to develop able to add
    value to raw materials and trigger raw material
    processing (upstream) and manufacturing and
    service industries (downstream) growth.
  • Has needed application of modern technology to
    all sectors of society.

23
Contemporary Obstacles
  • Social systems prolonging high birth rates (30),
    low death rates (10) - prevents closing of
    demographic gap, leads to rapid population
    growth, and a relatively small of economically
    active persons.
  • Structural dominance in global markets - the
    richer countries use their political and economic
    power to set the rules governing international
    trade, boosting their interests, often at the
    expense of the poorer nations.
  • Heavy debt burdens - governments must direct
    capital to interest payments, not
    growth-producing investments.

24
Bursting populations outstrip economic growth
(source Wright Nebel, 2002)
25
Interesting Reading
  • Two books touch quite well on the topic of why
    the world has developed the way it has and the
    role that geography played in establishing the
    current world order.
  • Guns, Germs and Steel Jarred Diamond.
  • The Wealth and Poverty of Nations David Landes.
  • Please read the hand-outs from each and feel
    motivated to get the complete books for some
    reading around the subject.
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