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Published byNorman Cole Modified over 9 years ago
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Globalization Key Issue: Why are different places similar?
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GLOBALIZATION Definition: force or process that involves the entire world and results in making something worldwide in scope. The scale of the world is SHRINKING!! People are able to share ideas, objects, and innovations faster than ever!! Example: Internet, TV, Cell phones, Planes DID YOU KNOW DID YOU KNOW DID YOU KNOW
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The Pre-modern World 1 st agricultural revolution Involved a transition from hunter-gather groups to agricultural-based minisystems Began in Neolithic Period Between 9000- 7000 B.C.E. Key developments: slash- and-burn agriculture Needed certain geo settings Aka: Hearth Areas Main Hearth Regions Middle East Fertile crescent Tigris and Euphrates River South Asia Ganges Plain Brahmaputra, Indus, and Irrawaddy rivers China Huang He River/ Valley Americas Mesoamerica Arizona/ New Mexico Andes Implications Allowed high pop densities Change in social organization Specialization Barter and trade emerged
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Early Empires World-empire: Group of mini-systems that have been absorbed into a common political system Wealth flows from producer class to elite through taxes or tributes Best know, longest lasting: Egypt Greece China Byzantium Rome
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Early Empires Brought two new elements to the evolution of the world’s geographies Colonization Colonization Physical settlement in a new territory of people from a colonizing state Law of diminishing returns Clearest example: Rome Also led to developments in Geography Urbanization Towns and cities became essential as centers of administration for early world- empires Gave rise to monumental capitals Most successful world- empires Greece Rome Size and sophistication
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Geography of the Pre-Modern World 1400 C.E. Dominant Centers China Northern India Ottoman Empire All linked by Silk Road Capitalism Major regions of world connected by trade Emerging centers of Capitalism Port cities Traders began to to organize the production of agricultural specialties, textiles, and craft products in their respective hinterlands Hinterland: sphere of economic influence
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Geography of the Pre-Modern World Geographic Knowledge Between 500- 1400 C.E. Geo knowledge expands thanks to Chinese and Islamic scholars Chinese maps were most accurate at time Thanks to Chinese sailors Centers of scholarship Baghdad, Damascus, Cairo, and Granada Surviving Roman and Greek works translated into Arabic Used Chinese cartography and geographical writings Hajj created demand for travel guidebooks
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An Interdependent World Geography Exploration began to be seen as an important way of opening up opportunities for trade and economic expansion World-system emerged Definition: an inter-dependent system of countries linked by political and economic competition Term coined by Immanuel Wallerstein Core and Periphery Western Europe became the core region of the world- system that had penetrated and incorporated significant portions of the rest of the world Not external areas Periphery Countries that were dependent on Europe Territories occupied and labor system exploited
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Core and Periphery in the New World System Thanks to industrial revolution, capitalism truly became a global system that reached almost every part of the world Human geographies recast were recast with a more interdependent dynamic New transportation technologies led to external colonization and imperialism
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Wallerstein’s World-Systems The three tiers Core Dominate trade, control most advanced technologies, and have high levels of productivity within diversified economies Semi- Periphery Exploit periphery but are still exploited by Core Periphery Dependent trading relationships Undeveloped or narrowly specialized economies
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Organizing the Periphery Growth and internal development of core regions would not have taken place without goods and markets provided by periphery Early 1900s led to colonization Logic behind colonization was economic International Division of Labor Definition: involves the specialization of different people, regions and countries in certain kinds of economic activities Led to specializations based on core countries needs Example: Cotton in India Copper in Chile Sugar in Caribbean
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Imperialism Late 19 th century Britain was dominant power Other notable countries scrambling for global influence as well Japan, Germany, U.S., France, Netherlands Countries “preemptively” expanded and denying other countries colonies Africa most affected Carved up in 34 years Also pacific islands Impact Immediate and profound Almost rendered completely dependent on European and North American capital, shipping, news and communications Also dependent on cultural products i.e. religion, education Led to Ethnocentrism and Environmental Determinism
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Ethnocentrism Attitude that one’s race and culture are superior to others Environmental Determinism A doctrine holding that human activities are shaped and constrained by the environment 19 th / 20 th century assumption that the physical attributes of geographical settings are the root not only of people’s physical differences but also in people’s economic vitality, cultural activities, and social structures
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The Third World Imperial World disintegrated after WWII U.S. emerged as new hegemonic power “1 st world” Soviet Union and China seen as “2 nd world” withdrawn from Capitalism 1950s Many old European colonies sought independence Violent often By 1960s process more smooth New creation of “Third World” Politically independent states Didn’t always align with 1 st or 2 nd world countries Dependent, economically, on core
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Neocolonialism New independent states struggled after 1960s to be free of dependence Old system broke down, new complex system emerged Neocolonialism Definition: economic and political strategies by which powerful states in core economies indirectly maintain or extend their influence over other areas and people No more direct rule Commercial imperialism Giant corporations grew within core countries, became so big = transnational
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