Political Geography
(Ch. 6)
Week 12 Lecture
GEOG 129 Human Geography: Resources, Development
and Society
1 April, 2025
Notices
Reflection on Geopolitics and India-Pakistan geopolitical tension
Feedback on Essay Two later this week
Final Exam - April 17, 12.00noon
Official course evaluation (SEI) - March 29 – April 10
Office Hours:
Mine: Thursday, 11-12noon
Dina: Wednesday 11.30 - 12.00
Megan: Friday 2.30 - 3.00pm
Tutorial Prep
1. Select a country, region or territory in which there is a boundary
ownership dispute. Outline the reasons for the dispute. How might
the dispute be resolved? Come to class prepared to discuss your
particular case.
2. Using the link below, read Walter Kemp’s article on Canada’s foreign
policy and answer the following questions:
a) What in the article do you agree with?
b) What in the article do you disagree with?
c) To what extent do you think Kemp’s ‘nice’ proposal will resonate
with average Canadians? What is the relevance of the proposal
today?
https://policyoptions.irpp.org/magazines/september-2023/canada-is-lo
Notices
Next Tuesday: Class overview, wrap-up & final exam prep
Courses by me next session
GEOG 280: Development
Geography (Geographies of
the Global South)
The course examines contemporary debates
in development geography, engaging core
concepts and theories. Students will
critically examine the economic,
environmental, cultural and political
dynamics shaping life experiences in the
Global South, touching on topics such as
governance, markets, resource conflicts,
urbanization, climate change, conservation,
and decolonization.
Courses by me next session
GEOG 233: Climate Change
and Society
Climate Change and Society introduces
students to the major climate change themes,
concepts and debates, taking a critical
approach to climate change as a
fundamentally social, cultural and political
problem – in addition to being a physical
environmental problem. The course combines
a range of teaching resources and learning
approaches to foster critical thinking, reflexive
engagement, local-global connections and
attention to issues of justice.
Courses by me next session
GEOG 445/ ANTH 445: Political
Ecology
…a critical, interdisciplinary approach to power,
marginality, conflict and social justice across scales of
human-environment interactions. It asks how unequal
access to resources, uneven patterns and impacts of
environmental change, and the dominance of particular
environmental ideas and practices are all linked to
political-economic structures and the struggles over
knowledge, meaning and representation. Drawing on
topics such as conservation, disasters, Indigenous
environments, resource conflicts, climate change, and the
non-human species, it examines cases across Canada, the
Global North and South
Other Geography Courses next Session
GEOG 250: Introduction to Urban Geography
GEOG 353: Geographies of Migration and Settlement
GEOG 354: Urban Canada: Growth, Form, and Structure
GEOG/GWST 426: Queer Geographies
GEOG 454: Geography of Housing
GEOG 438: Learning in Place: Exploring Community in British Columbia
GEOG 474: Qualitative Research in Human Geography
GEOG 480: Advanced Seminar in Critical Geography
Other Geography Courses next Session
GEOG 257: Seeing our World: An Introduction to Visual Geographies
GEOG 217: Geographies of British Columbia
GEOG 255: Space and Culture
GEOG 270: Introduction to Cartography and Mapmaking
GEOG 351: Urban Social Geography
GEOG 359: Culture, Space, and Politics
GEOG 451: Urban Planning
GEOG 458: Population Geography
Notices
Official course evaluation
(SEI)-- March 29 - April 10
SEI Time
Questions
Image: Pixabay
Outline
Intro
Understanding states
External state relations: Geopolitics
Internal state relations: State (in)stability
Grouping of States
The Role of the State
Elections
Outline
Explain concepts such as state, nation-state, nationalism, and multi
national state
Discuss exploration, colonialism and decolonization
Demonstrate an understanding of geopolitics and critical geopolitics
Discuss intersection of nation and state in Africa and Europe
Outline key issues in the groupings of states and the roles of the state
Discuss the importance of geography in elections
Demonstrate an appreciation of the geography of war and
peacemaking
Grouping of States
Grouping of States
Integration of states
Two divergent trends characterize the political world
Contra instability and secession of groups, new states
States are converging into regions
(supranational
sovereignties)
Various motivations & degrees of integration
(cf. regional integration under globalization)
EU is the most advanced form of integration
Grouping of States
Example: EU and membership
Antidote
to extreme nationalism
post WWII
To counter two major threat states?
One economic threat, the other military
threat
28 members until Brexit
Exclusive,
Shared and Supporting
competences
Sovereignty in this case?
Source:
Grouping of States
Multiple
state
groupings
even within
the EU
Source: wikipedia
Grouping of States
In groups
Think about the video and other contexts in which
sovereignty remains a central concept (e.g. the current
context of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine).
1. How should we understand sovereignty of states?
2. How important is state sovereignty?
3. What are the limits of sovereignty?
Grouping of States
The Role of the State
The Role of the State
Governing populations: Forms of government
Democracy
Monarchy
Oligarchy
Dictatorship
Fascism
Anarchism
Maoism
The Role of the State
Source: corporate finance institute
The Role of the State
Socialism and Capitalism
Human nature & ‘The Good’: freedom through the
marketplace, growth through competition
Socialand economic system in which the means,
process and profit from production are privately
controlled by few capitalist individuals & companies,
and not by the people whose labour and time are
enrolled … from early 17th century British merchants doing foreign
trade, 18th century Industrial Revolution
The Role of the State
Socialism and Capitalism
Some basis in basic commodity exchange and
more recent philosophies
Basedon continuous ‘capital accumulation’
which drives the pursuit of profit: Money –
Commodity – Money
Competitive markets, price system, private
property, property rights recognition, voluntary
exchange, and wage labor
The Role of the State
Socialism and Capitalism
Assumes people are naturally
competitive, seeking self-
interest
Different
forms: e.g.
competitive, organized and
disorganized
Source: corporate finance institute
Contradictions of capital and
its discontents?
Difference between capitalism and
The Role of the State
Socialism and Capitalism
Human nature & ‘The Good’: individuals live
and work in cooperation not isolation, all
products are thus social, and benefits are
socialized
economic system in which the whole
community of people — not just bosses or
private companies — control the means of
production equally…
The Role of the State
Socialism and Capitalism
Assumes humans are naturally cooperative
Human creativity and ‘free individualities’ are
best expressed where unhindered by ‘material
scarcity, coercive social institutions, and necessary
labour time’
Seeks an egalitarian society run by all or
democratically elected representatives in the
interest of all
The Role of the State
Socialism and Capitalism
Various philosophical foundations
Longhistory of socialist & communist
economies across the world
Earlier
on in newly decolonized countries
across Asia and Africa countries? Why?
Failures, contradictions and discontents?
Difference between socialism and communism?
Today:
US, UK, Germany -- capitalist
states
Nordic countries, Canada –
combine capitalist and
socialist elements
Cuba, China, Vietnam and
some countries of Latin
America align more with
socialism
Think, pair, share
Is there a difference between the theory and
the practice of these two systems? How?
Should we understand the practice of
capitalism and socialism as two polar
opposites or as a continuum?
Geography in Elections
Geography in Elections
Geographers’
interest in
elections: role of
space and
boundaries,
temporalities
and variations in
voting pattern
Geography in Elections
Electoral
districts as ‘meaningful spatial unit in a
human geographic context’ e.g. relatively
homogenous population
Orelectoral districts should be as diverse as
possible
The number of voters in each district should be
as close to equal as possible
Electoral districts should be continuous
Geography in Elections
Manipulating
boundaries, creating
electoral biases
Gerrymandering:
reconstituting
boundaries of
electoral districts to
favour certain
parties/interests
Massachusetts
Source: Mercier and Norton
Governor in 1812,
Geography in Elections
Congressional districts in
Mississippi showing
percentage of Black voters.
a.) Pre-1966 showing one
Black majority district; b.)
post-1966 showing
deliberate redistricting that
made all the districts Black
Geography in Elections
Election and place
Where people live shapes how they vote, in addition to class;
implications?
Ron Johnston, elections geography
Sectional effect – differences in local and regional political culture
Environmental effects – social issues e.g. unemployment,
incumbency
Campaign effects – vote switching in safer seats, long-established
parties win marginals
Contextual effects – social contacts such as neighbors, coworkers
etc.
War and Peace
War and Peace
War and peace became philosophies in European thought in
the 18th century, with the rise of capitalism and nationalism
Systematic programs of war-making and peace,
military/defence expenditure and research
From territorial wars of states to ideological wars beginning
after 1918
From global (European?) wars to relatively local wars after
1945
1945 and the UN’s role in conflict resolution, intervention in
war, and adjudication in war crimes (ICJ’s ICC)
The Role of the State: War and Peace
War and Peace
Categories of conflict
1. Traditional conflicts between states
2. Independence movements against foreign domination
or occupation
3. Secession conflicts
4. Civil wars seeking regime change
5. Action against states that support terrorism?
War and Peace
Drivers of conflicts
Power: political and economic power, domination
Environment: natural resources <=> territory
Culture:
ethnic, religious and other cultural
variables
War and Peace
Civil Wars:
Less disruptive than interstate wars,
most common types of war in recent times
Assumptions about ethnic and religious hatred VS development
The role of natural resource
Cause displacement (refugee) and decimation (including
genocide)
Illicit activities flourish in conflict areas
Certain actors benefit from wars. E.g?
War and Peace
Read up on
Terrorism
Competing for resources
Geography of Nuclear Weapons
Our Geopolitical Future
Our Geopolitical Future
What are the
possibilities for the
world’s geopolitical
future?
1. Democracy and the
possibility of
perpetual peace?
(e.g. Fukuyama,
1992)
Our Geopolitical Future
What are the
possibilities for
the world’s
geopolitical
future?
2. Clash of
Civilizations?
(e.g. Huntington,
1993)
Our Geopolitical Future
What are the
possibilities for the
world’s geopolitical
future?
3. World Order or
Disorder?
End