Navigating Regions, Nations, and Empires

REGION

A large land area that may encompass portions of a country or extend over several countries, characterized by distinctive topographical features and economic experiences

NATION

A large land area where people live under the rule of a national government, united by common history, culture, and/or language

EMPIRE

A set of nations, regions, and territories controlled by a single ruler

Connected through relations of dominance and subordination

SoCIAL (SYSTEM) DYNAMICS

The way social units change, especially the ways they get larger (through military conquest, economic colonization, immigration, etc.) and change internally as a result

Conflict

Results from...

Inequalities of power, wealth, and influence

Ecological, cultural, and social differences

Control

Competing sources include...

Control from the local government and ruling class inside a territorial unit

Control from core nations outside the territorial unit

War

Openly declared armed conflict between nations or between groups within a nation

Terrorism

A type of warfare involving the calculated use of unexpected, shocking, and unlawful violence against civilians and symbolic targets

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WORLD-SYSTEMS THEORY

The international system is organized on capitalist principles, producing a global division of labour and system of stratification (Wallerstein)

Core States

Rich, powerful, and independent industrialized nations, representing the dominant states in the world

Often accused of imperialism—the exercise of political / economic control by one state over another

Semi-Peripheral States

Industrial or semiindustrial nations that, though prosperous, are often economically / politically dependent on core states (e.g. Canada)

Staples Approach

Reliance on extractive industries makes some Canadian regions dominant over others, and the whole country subject to the dominance of other countries (Innis)

Peripheral States

Less-developed, relatively poor nations that are subject to manipulation or direct control by core states

Dependency Theory

Developing states have failed to achieve adequate levels of development because of their neocolonial dependence on the advanced capitalist world

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globalization

Development of a single world market, with increased interdependence among the economies / societies of the world

Cultural Globalization

Sharing / melding of the beliefs, understandings, institutions, and artifacts that define a nation in contrast to others

Policy diffusion

Certain social / economic policies have spread from advanced industrial nations to developing nations (e.g. women’s rights, privatization)

Compensation Thesis

State governments strengthen domestic social programs (e.g. welfare) to create economic stability in the face of globalization

neoliberalism

Economic / political ideology that supports free-market capitalism by reducing barriers to trade among nations

Ideology

System of ideas and ideals, especially one that forms the basis of a state’s political or economic policy

State

A nation operating as an organized political unit under a central government

Efficiency Thesis

Globalization forces governments to prioritize efficiency, thereby reducing social programs

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NAMES WORTH KNOWING

Harold Innis (1894–1952) introduced the staples approach, noting that Canada’s reliance on the export of natural resources makes some regions of the country dominant over others, and subjects the economy to the turbulence of international markets.

Andre Gunder Frank (1929–2005) was a proponent of dependency theory, arguing that developing nations of the periphery could achieve growth only by cutting ties with capitalist societies and pursuing independent socialist development strategies.

Immanuel Wallerstein (b. 1930) developed the world-systems theory that divides the world’s nations into core, peripheral, and semi-peripheral states.

Saskia Sassen (b. 1949) analyzes globalization and immigration, and introduced the term global cities to describe cities that have a significant impact on global affairs.

Subhadra Channa (b. 1951) argues that the “modernization project” offered many people in less-developed countries false hope, and suggests that modernization in India must occur without reference to Western values.