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Human Geography: Places
   and Regions in Global
        Context, 5e
Chapter 2: The Changing Global Context
   Paul L. Knox & Sallie A. Marston
   PowerPoint Author: Keith M. Bell
Overview
This chapter further describes the process of globalization and introduces the
idea of a world-system in which all countries participate. This world-system is
divided into core, semiperipheral, and peripheral regions based on each
region’s place within the world-system. The chapter begins by looking at the
state of the world before 1500, when the world-system did not yet exist. The
middle part of the chapter explains how the world-system came into being,
especially due to innovations in industrial production and in transportation and
communications technology. The final part of the chapter describes the current
situation and proposes a division of the world’s population into Fast and Slow
worlds, based on contrasting lifestyles and levels of living.
Students should be aware of the existence of the world-system and the
function of its core, semiperipheral, and peripheral components. The students
should understand how the world system came into being, and why Europe
was the initial core region, which later came to include the United States and
Japan. Students should further realize that life in the United States—a core
region—is very different from life in semiperipheral and peripheral countries.
Chapter Objectives
• The objectives of this chapter are to
  illustrate:
  – Geographic expansion, integration, and
    change
  – Industrialization and geographic change
  – Forces that organize the periphery
  – The fast world and the slow world
Chapter Outline
•   The Premodern World (p. 42)           •   Contemporary Globalization (p.
    –   Hearth areas                          68)
    –   Growth of early empires                – Causes and consequences of
    –   Early geographic knowledge               globalization
    –   Geography of the Premodern             – Outcomes of globalization
        world                                  – Jihad vs. McWorld
•   Mapping a New World                        – Opposition to globalization
    Geography (p. 48)                     •   Conclusion (p. 78)
    – Cartography and exploration
    – Core, semiperiphery, and
      periphery
    – Beginnings of modern geography
    – Industrialization in core regions
    – Internal development in core
      regions
    – International division of labor
    – Imperialism
    – The Third World and
      neocolonialism
Geography Matters
• 2.1 Geography Matters—Early Geographic Knowledge (p. 46)
   – Ancient Greek and Roman development of geographical knowledge
• 2.2 Geography Matters—Geography and Exploration (p. 50)
   – The European Age of Discovery and its global impacts
• 2.3 Geography Matters—The Foundations of Modern
  Geography (p. 54)
   – Immanuel Kant, Alexander von Humboldt, Karl Ritter, Friedrich Ratzel,
     and other founders of modern geography
• 2.4 Geography Matters—World Leadership Cycles (p. 60)
   – The historical rise of Portuguese, Dutch, British, and American global
     hegemony
• 2.5 Geography Matters—Commodity Chains (p. 70)
   – How commodity production is organized, especially in the global
     garment industry
The Changing Global Context
The modern world-system has evolved through
                   several distinctive stages.

        The new technologies of the Industrial
     Revolution created a new global economic
                                       system.

 Places and regions are part of a world-system
     that has been created by the processes of
      private economic competition and political
                                   competition.

   The world-system is highly structured and is
       characterized by three tiers: core, semi-
            peripheral, and peripheral regions.

The growth of the core regions could take place
    only with the foodstuffs, raw materials, and
        markets provided by colonization of the
                                      periphery.

    Successive technological innovations have
           transformed regional geographies.

   Globalization has intensified the differences
between the core and the periphery, creating a
                                   digital divide.
Hearth Areas: Old and New Worlds
•   The essential foundation for an
    informed human geography is an
    ability to understand that places
    and regions constantly change:
    all geography is historical
    geography.
•   Systematically differentiated
    human geographies began with
    minisystems, or societies with
    a single cultural base and a
    reciprocal social economy.
•   Carl O. Sauer noted that
    agricultural breakthroughs could
    only occur in certain
    geographical settings: plentiful
    natural food supplies, diversified
    terrain, and rich/moist soils.
Minisystems
•   A transition to food-producing
    minisystems had several
    implications for the long-term
    evolution of the world’s
    geographies:
     – It allowed much higher
       population densities.
     – It brought about a change in
       social organization.
     – It allowed some specialization
       in non-agricultural crafts.
     – Specialization led to the
       beginnings of barter and trade
       between communities,
       sometimes over substantial
       distances.
The Growth of
       Early Empires
A world-empire is a group of
  minisystems that have been
       absorbed into a common
political system while retaining
      their fundamental cultural
                    differences.

Urbanization: Towns and cities
became essential as centers of
         administration, military
  garrisons, and as theological
      centers for ruling classes.
    Greek colonies and the
       extent of the Roman
                        Empire
     Colonization: The physical
 settlement in a new territory of
people from a colonizing state;
an indirect consequence of the
        operation of the law of
        diminishing returns .
Early Geographic Knowledge
             •   Greek scholars developed the idea
                 that places embody fundamental
                 relationships between people and the
                 natural environment, and that the
                 study of geography provides the best
                 way of addressing the
                 interdependencies between places
                 and between people and nature.
                  – Mathematics & Astronomy
                  – Philosophy & Humans
                  – Regional Approach
             •   The Romans were less interested than
                 the Greeks in the scholastic and
                 philosophical aspects of geography,
                 though they did appreciate
                 geographical knowledge as an aid to
                 conquest, colonization, and political
                 control.
The Geography of the Pre-modern World
•   The generalized framework of
    human geographies in the Old
    World as they existed around
    A.D. 1400 are characteristically
    important:
     – Harsher environments in
       continental interiors were still
       characterized by isolated,
       subsistence-level, kin-ordered
       hunting-and-gathering
       minisystems.
     – The dry belt of steppes and
       desert margins was a
       continuous zone of kin-
       ordered pastoral minisystems.
     – The hearths of sedentary
       agricultural production
       extended in a discontinuous
       arc from Morocco to China,
       with two main outliers.
The Silk Road




The dominant centers of global civilization were China, northern India (both
of them hydraulic variants of world-empires), and the Ottoman Empire of
the eastern Mediterranean. They were all linked by the Silk Road, a series
of overland trade routes between China and Mediterranean Europe.
The European Age of Discovery




Cartography is the name given to the system of
practical and theoretical knowledge about making
distinctive visual representations of Earth’s surface in
the form of maps.
The Foundations of Modern
       Geography
          •   Kant, von Humboldt, Ritter, and
              Ratzel were German scholars
              who wanted to move geography
              away from straightforward
              descriptions of Earth.
          •   They wanted explanations and
              generalizations about the
              relationships of different
              phenomena within and among
              particular places.
          •   Kant saw human activities heavily
              influenced by physical geography.
          •   Von Humboldt emphasized the
              mutual causation among species
              and their physical environment.
          •   Ethnocentrism and Masculinism
          •   Environmental determinism
Technology and Economic
          Development
The Industrial Revolution at the end of the eighteenth century was driven
by a technology system based on water power and steam engines,
cotton textiles, ironworking, river transportation systems, and canals.
Each new technology system opens new geographic frontiers and
rewrites the geography of economic development, shifting the balance of
advantages between regions.
Europe: Three      •   1790–1850: based on the
   Waves of             initial cluster of industrial
                        technologies (steam engines,
Industrialization       cotton textiles, and
                        ironworking); was very
                        localized
                    •   1858–1870: involved the
                        diffusion of industrialization to
                        most of the rest of Britain and
                        to parts of northwest Europe,
                        particularly the coalfields of
                        northern France, Belgium,
                        and Germany
                    •   1870–1914: a further
                        industrialization of the
                        geography of Europe as yet
                        another cluster of
                        technologies imposed
                        different needs and created
                        new opportunities
New World System: Core-Periphery
• Capitalism truly became a global system with the new
  production and transportation technologies of the
  Industrial Revolution.
• New transportation technologies triggered successive
  phases of geographic expansion, allowing for internal
  development as well as for external colonization and
  imperialism.
   – Core Regions: dominate trade, control the most advanced
     technologies, and have high levels of productivity within
     diversified economies
   – Peripheral Regions: dependent and disadvantageous
     trading relationships by primitive or obsolescent
     technologies; undeveloped or narrowly specialized
     economies with low levels of productivity
   – Semiperipheral Regions: able to exploit peripheral regions
     but are themselves exploited and dominated by core
The World-System: 1800
The World System: 1900
The World System: 2000




Many places around the globe are connected like
never before, leading to a backlash against
globalization or “Americanization” (e.g., Jihad vs.
McWorld).
The Manufacturing Belt of the United
                States
The cities of this region, already thriving industrial centers that were
well connected through the early railroad system, were ideally
placed to take advantage of a series of crucial shifts: telegraph
system, manufacturing technologies, railroad system. Specialization
required an increase in commodity flows.
Major Steamship Routes, in
            1920




The shipping routes reflect (1) the transatlantic trade between the bipolar
core regions of the world-system at the time, and (2) the colonial and imperial
relations between the world’s core economies and the periphery.
International Telegraph Network, in
                  1900




For Britain, submarine telegraph cables were the nervous system of its
empire. This enabled businesses to monitor and coordinate supply and
demand across vast distances on an hourly basis.
International
                     Division of Labor
•   The fundamental logic behind
    all colonization was economic.
     – Need for extended arena of trade.
     – Need for an arena supplying
       foodstuffs and raw materials in
       return for industrial goods of the
       core.
•   The outcome was an
    international division of labor:
     – where an established demand
       existed in the industrial core.
     – where colonies had a comparative
       advantage in specializations that
       did not duplicate or compete with
       the domestic suppliers within core
       countries.
The British Empire, late 1800s




Imperialism: The core countries engaged in preemptive geographic
expansion in order to protect their established interests and to limit the
opportunities of others.
Commodity Chains
             and Containerization




Commodity chains: producer-driven,
consumer-driven, and marketing
driven

Containerization revolutionized long-
distance transport of goods; wider
geographical scope and faster pace
Communication Flows and
           24-Hour Trading




In 2008, the fifth of the world’s population living in the highest-income
countries had 75 percent of world income, 83 percent of world export
market, and 76 percent of world telephone lines. The GDP of the 41
Heavily Indebted Poor Countries (567 million people) is less than the
wealth of the world’s seven richest individuals combined. They are
disaffected and disconnected. Is there spatial justice?
Contemporary Globalization
• Cultural anthropologist Arjun Appadurai described five
  kinds of cultural flows that contribute to global cultures:
   – Ethnoscapes: produced by flows of people including tourists,
     immigrants, refugees, exiles, and guest workers
   – Technoscapes: resulting from the diffusion of goods,
     technologies, and architectural styles
   – Finanscapes: produced by rapid flows of money in currency
     markets and stock exchanges
   – Mediascapes: images of the world produced by news agencies,
     magazines, television, and film
   – Ideoscapes: resulting from the diffusion of ideas and ideologies,
     concepts of human rights, democracy, welfare, and so on
Internal Development of the Core
                 Regions
The canal systems that opened up the interiors of Europe and
North America in the eighteenth century were initially dependant
on horse power. This photograph shows part of the Burgundy
canal in France.
World Leadership Cycles: Hegemony
                 •   The modern world-system has
                     so far experienced five full
                     leadership cycles.
                 •   Portuguese dominance:
                     Atlantic exploration, trade, and
                     plunder
                 •   Dutch dominance: fishing and
                     shipping industries, Dutch
                     West India Company
                 •   British dominance: overseas
                     trade and colonization, strong
                     navy, Nelson at Trafalgar,
                     Wellington at Waterloo
                 •   United States dominance:
                     economically dominant by
                     1920, hegemony in 1945,
                     credit crisis in 2008 threatens
                     U.S. leadership status
World Leadership Cycles: The United
                States
The United States was economically dominant within the world-
system by 1920 but did not achieve hegemonic power because of
a failure of political will, choosing “splendid isolation”. All
hegemonic powers must protect the economic foundations of their
power, as represented by this photograph of U.S. air superiority in
the Gulf War.
Antiglobalization
                  Demonstrations
Bern, Switzerland                       French farmers protest




 Globalization often leads to the downward convergence of wages and
 environmental standards, an undermining of democratic governance, and a
 general recoding of nearly all aspects of life to the language and logic of
 global markets.
End of Chapter 2
Discussion Topics and Lecture
               Themes
•       The world-system did not always exist. Why did it
        develop, and why did Europe emerge as the core of
        the world-system?
    –     The world-system began in the 1400s, when Europeans
          started exploring and settling beyond their home regions.
          European expansion brought about the exchange of ideas,
          technologies, and resources between regions that previously
          had little to do with each other. Europe emerged as the core of
          the world-system because of its economic system of
          capitalism, its rapidly growing population, and its technological
          innovations. European expansion abroad and the exploitation
          of natural resources outside Europe were critical factors in
          Europe’s emergence as a core region. See pages 48–64 in
          the textbook for more information.
Discussion Topics and Lecture
               Themes
•    Ask the students to give examples of core,
     semiperipheral, and peripheral states. Are
     there some countries that do not clearly fit in a
     single category?
    –   Examples of core states would include the United
        States, Canada, Japan, Australia, New Zealand,
        and most of western and central Europe. Examples
        of semiperipheral states include Mexico, Brazil,
        India, and Taiwan. Examples of peripheral states
        include Ethiopia, Nepal, Bolivia, and Guatemala,
        among many others. Ambiguous examples might
        include Singapore and Korea (core–semiperipheral)
        and Iran and Vietnam (semiperipheral–peripheral),
        but these distinctions are partly a matter of opinion.
Discussion Topics and Lecture
               Themes
•       Have the students compare two countries, one in the
        core and one in the periphery (for example,
        Switzerland and Bolivia). Why is one of these countries
        richer and more economically developed than the
        other? How does the world-system model help to
        explain these differences?
    –     World-systems theory argues that it is the relationship
          between states that helps establish their place in the core–
          semiperiphery–periphery hierarchy. Much of the difference
          derives from the effectiveness of a state in insuring the
          international competitiveness of its products. Switzerland, for
          example, produces high-value goods—such as watches—and
          important services—such as banking—while Bolivia relies on
          low-value exports that are not processed locally—such things
          as tin ore and fruit.
Discussion Topics and Lecture
               Themes
•    Discuss the differences and similarities among
     colonialism, imperialism, and neo-colonialism.
    –   All are similar in that they are the means of
        domination by one state over another. Colonialism
        refers to the establishment and maintenance of
        political and legal domination, whereas
        neocolonialism is an indirect means whereby core
        states use political and economic strategies to wield
        their influence. Imperialism is largely a competitive
        form of colonialism that resulted in a scramble for
        territory as (mainly) European powers attempted to
        build colonial empires.
Discussion Topics and Lecture
               Themes
•    Have the students describe the principal
     means of transportation and communication in
     the local region. When were these systems
     first introduced? What existed before them?
     What impacts did changes in transportation
     and communications technology have on the
     local area?
    –   Data on local transportation and communication
        networks can be obtained from maps as well as
        from the companies and agencies that operate
        these networks.
Discussion Topics and Lecture
               Themes
•    Have the students give examples of each of
     the four factors (described on pages 72–74 of
     the textbook) that have led to globalization in
     the past twenty-five years. What evidence for
     these factors exists in the local area?
    –   The four factors are (1) a new international division
        of labor, (2) an internationalization of finance, (3) a
        new technology system, and (4) a homogenization
        of international consumer markets. See pages 72–
        74 in the textbook for more information.
Discussion Topics and Lecture
               Themes
•       Why does it no longer seem appropriate to speak of
        the First, Second, and Third Worlds? What advantages
        does a division into Fast and Slow worlds offer? Ask
        the students to describe their own experiences (if they
        have had them) in traveling between these worlds.
    –     Changes stemming from the four factors (see Question 6,
          above) have led to a Fast World, largely composed of the core
          regions, where people are involved, as producers and
          consumers, in transnational industry, modern
          telecommunications, materialistic consumption, and
          international news and entertainment. The Slow World refers
          to people, regions, and places where these things are limited.
          The breakup of the Soviet Union and the collapse of
          international communism generally have also made
          meaningless the concept of a Second World.
Discussion Topics and Lecture
               Themes
•    What minisystems once existed in the
     local area? What happened to them?
    – Consult ethnographies of the indigenous
      population. The local museum or library may
      also hold information on the area’s original
      minisystems.
Discussion Topics and Lecture
               Themes
•       The Geography Matters 2.5 boxed text discusses the nature and
        meaning of commodity chains. Have the students gather data
        about the three kinds of commodity chains and then sketch out
        the “links.”
    –      The three kinds of commodity chains are 1) producer-driven, in which
           large, often transnational, corporations coordinate production
           networks; 2) consumer-driven, where large retailers, brand-name
           merchandisers, and trading companies influence decentralized
           production networks in a variety of exporting countries, often in the
           periphery; and 3) marketing-driven, which involves the production of
           inexpensive consumer goods that are global commodities and carry
           global brands yet are often manufactured in the periphery and
           semiperiphery for consumption in those regions.
    –      The Internet will provide a starting point for gathering this data, and
           you might also want to contact the companies (such as Wal-Mart)
           directly.
Discussion Topics and Lecture
               Themes
•       Figure 2.22 shows how
        North America is a key
        node in global telephonic
        communications flow,
        What accounts for the
        distribution shown in the
        figure?
    –     The wealth of North
          America and its pioneering
          of much communications
          technology are in part
          responsible for this
          position.

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Human geography2

  • 1. Human Geography: Places and Regions in Global Context, 5e Chapter 2: The Changing Global Context Paul L. Knox & Sallie A. Marston PowerPoint Author: Keith M. Bell
  • 2. Overview This chapter further describes the process of globalization and introduces the idea of a world-system in which all countries participate. This world-system is divided into core, semiperipheral, and peripheral regions based on each region’s place within the world-system. The chapter begins by looking at the state of the world before 1500, when the world-system did not yet exist. The middle part of the chapter explains how the world-system came into being, especially due to innovations in industrial production and in transportation and communications technology. The final part of the chapter describes the current situation and proposes a division of the world’s population into Fast and Slow worlds, based on contrasting lifestyles and levels of living. Students should be aware of the existence of the world-system and the function of its core, semiperipheral, and peripheral components. The students should understand how the world system came into being, and why Europe was the initial core region, which later came to include the United States and Japan. Students should further realize that life in the United States—a core region—is very different from life in semiperipheral and peripheral countries.
  • 3. Chapter Objectives • The objectives of this chapter are to illustrate: – Geographic expansion, integration, and change – Industrialization and geographic change – Forces that organize the periphery – The fast world and the slow world
  • 4. Chapter Outline • The Premodern World (p. 42) • Contemporary Globalization (p. – Hearth areas 68) – Growth of early empires – Causes and consequences of – Early geographic knowledge globalization – Geography of the Premodern – Outcomes of globalization world – Jihad vs. McWorld • Mapping a New World – Opposition to globalization Geography (p. 48) • Conclusion (p. 78) – Cartography and exploration – Core, semiperiphery, and periphery – Beginnings of modern geography – Industrialization in core regions – Internal development in core regions – International division of labor – Imperialism – The Third World and neocolonialism
  • 5. Geography Matters • 2.1 Geography Matters—Early Geographic Knowledge (p. 46) – Ancient Greek and Roman development of geographical knowledge • 2.2 Geography Matters—Geography and Exploration (p. 50) – The European Age of Discovery and its global impacts • 2.3 Geography Matters—The Foundations of Modern Geography (p. 54) – Immanuel Kant, Alexander von Humboldt, Karl Ritter, Friedrich Ratzel, and other founders of modern geography • 2.4 Geography Matters—World Leadership Cycles (p. 60) – The historical rise of Portuguese, Dutch, British, and American global hegemony • 2.5 Geography Matters—Commodity Chains (p. 70) – How commodity production is organized, especially in the global garment industry
  • 6. The Changing Global Context The modern world-system has evolved through several distinctive stages. The new technologies of the Industrial Revolution created a new global economic system. Places and regions are part of a world-system that has been created by the processes of private economic competition and political competition. The world-system is highly structured and is characterized by three tiers: core, semi- peripheral, and peripheral regions. The growth of the core regions could take place only with the foodstuffs, raw materials, and markets provided by colonization of the periphery. Successive technological innovations have transformed regional geographies. Globalization has intensified the differences between the core and the periphery, creating a digital divide.
  • 7. Hearth Areas: Old and New Worlds • The essential foundation for an informed human geography is an ability to understand that places and regions constantly change: all geography is historical geography. • Systematically differentiated human geographies began with minisystems, or societies with a single cultural base and a reciprocal social economy. • Carl O. Sauer noted that agricultural breakthroughs could only occur in certain geographical settings: plentiful natural food supplies, diversified terrain, and rich/moist soils.
  • 8. Minisystems • A transition to food-producing minisystems had several implications for the long-term evolution of the world’s geographies: – It allowed much higher population densities. – It brought about a change in social organization. – It allowed some specialization in non-agricultural crafts. – Specialization led to the beginnings of barter and trade between communities, sometimes over substantial distances.
  • 9. The Growth of Early Empires A world-empire is a group of minisystems that have been absorbed into a common political system while retaining their fundamental cultural differences. Urbanization: Towns and cities became essential as centers of administration, military garrisons, and as theological centers for ruling classes. Greek colonies and the extent of the Roman Empire Colonization: The physical settlement in a new territory of people from a colonizing state; an indirect consequence of the operation of the law of diminishing returns .
  • 10. Early Geographic Knowledge • Greek scholars developed the idea that places embody fundamental relationships between people and the natural environment, and that the study of geography provides the best way of addressing the interdependencies between places and between people and nature. – Mathematics & Astronomy – Philosophy & Humans – Regional Approach • The Romans were less interested than the Greeks in the scholastic and philosophical aspects of geography, though they did appreciate geographical knowledge as an aid to conquest, colonization, and political control.
  • 11. The Geography of the Pre-modern World • The generalized framework of human geographies in the Old World as they existed around A.D. 1400 are characteristically important: – Harsher environments in continental interiors were still characterized by isolated, subsistence-level, kin-ordered hunting-and-gathering minisystems. – The dry belt of steppes and desert margins was a continuous zone of kin- ordered pastoral minisystems. – The hearths of sedentary agricultural production extended in a discontinuous arc from Morocco to China, with two main outliers.
  • 12. The Silk Road The dominant centers of global civilization were China, northern India (both of them hydraulic variants of world-empires), and the Ottoman Empire of the eastern Mediterranean. They were all linked by the Silk Road, a series of overland trade routes between China and Mediterranean Europe.
  • 13. The European Age of Discovery Cartography is the name given to the system of practical and theoretical knowledge about making distinctive visual representations of Earth’s surface in the form of maps.
  • 14. The Foundations of Modern Geography • Kant, von Humboldt, Ritter, and Ratzel were German scholars who wanted to move geography away from straightforward descriptions of Earth. • They wanted explanations and generalizations about the relationships of different phenomena within and among particular places. • Kant saw human activities heavily influenced by physical geography. • Von Humboldt emphasized the mutual causation among species and their physical environment. • Ethnocentrism and Masculinism • Environmental determinism
  • 15. Technology and Economic Development The Industrial Revolution at the end of the eighteenth century was driven by a technology system based on water power and steam engines, cotton textiles, ironworking, river transportation systems, and canals. Each new technology system opens new geographic frontiers and rewrites the geography of economic development, shifting the balance of advantages between regions.
  • 16. Europe: Three • 1790–1850: based on the Waves of initial cluster of industrial technologies (steam engines, Industrialization cotton textiles, and ironworking); was very localized • 1858–1870: involved the diffusion of industrialization to most of the rest of Britain and to parts of northwest Europe, particularly the coalfields of northern France, Belgium, and Germany • 1870–1914: a further industrialization of the geography of Europe as yet another cluster of technologies imposed different needs and created new opportunities
  • 17. New World System: Core-Periphery • Capitalism truly became a global system with the new production and transportation technologies of the Industrial Revolution. • New transportation technologies triggered successive phases of geographic expansion, allowing for internal development as well as for external colonization and imperialism. – Core Regions: dominate trade, control the most advanced technologies, and have high levels of productivity within diversified economies – Peripheral Regions: dependent and disadvantageous trading relationships by primitive or obsolescent technologies; undeveloped or narrowly specialized economies with low levels of productivity – Semiperipheral Regions: able to exploit peripheral regions but are themselves exploited and dominated by core
  • 20. The World System: 2000 Many places around the globe are connected like never before, leading to a backlash against globalization or “Americanization” (e.g., Jihad vs. McWorld).
  • 21. The Manufacturing Belt of the United States The cities of this region, already thriving industrial centers that were well connected through the early railroad system, were ideally placed to take advantage of a series of crucial shifts: telegraph system, manufacturing technologies, railroad system. Specialization required an increase in commodity flows.
  • 22. Major Steamship Routes, in 1920 The shipping routes reflect (1) the transatlantic trade between the bipolar core regions of the world-system at the time, and (2) the colonial and imperial relations between the world’s core economies and the periphery.
  • 23. International Telegraph Network, in 1900 For Britain, submarine telegraph cables were the nervous system of its empire. This enabled businesses to monitor and coordinate supply and demand across vast distances on an hourly basis.
  • 24. International Division of Labor • The fundamental logic behind all colonization was economic. – Need for extended arena of trade. – Need for an arena supplying foodstuffs and raw materials in return for industrial goods of the core. • The outcome was an international division of labor: – where an established demand existed in the industrial core. – where colonies had a comparative advantage in specializations that did not duplicate or compete with the domestic suppliers within core countries.
  • 25. The British Empire, late 1800s Imperialism: The core countries engaged in preemptive geographic expansion in order to protect their established interests and to limit the opportunities of others.
  • 26. Commodity Chains and Containerization Commodity chains: producer-driven, consumer-driven, and marketing driven Containerization revolutionized long- distance transport of goods; wider geographical scope and faster pace
  • 27. Communication Flows and 24-Hour Trading In 2008, the fifth of the world’s population living in the highest-income countries had 75 percent of world income, 83 percent of world export market, and 76 percent of world telephone lines. The GDP of the 41 Heavily Indebted Poor Countries (567 million people) is less than the wealth of the world’s seven richest individuals combined. They are disaffected and disconnected. Is there spatial justice?
  • 28. Contemporary Globalization • Cultural anthropologist Arjun Appadurai described five kinds of cultural flows that contribute to global cultures: – Ethnoscapes: produced by flows of people including tourists, immigrants, refugees, exiles, and guest workers – Technoscapes: resulting from the diffusion of goods, technologies, and architectural styles – Finanscapes: produced by rapid flows of money in currency markets and stock exchanges – Mediascapes: images of the world produced by news agencies, magazines, television, and film – Ideoscapes: resulting from the diffusion of ideas and ideologies, concepts of human rights, democracy, welfare, and so on
  • 29. Internal Development of the Core Regions The canal systems that opened up the interiors of Europe and North America in the eighteenth century were initially dependant on horse power. This photograph shows part of the Burgundy canal in France.
  • 30. World Leadership Cycles: Hegemony • The modern world-system has so far experienced five full leadership cycles. • Portuguese dominance: Atlantic exploration, trade, and plunder • Dutch dominance: fishing and shipping industries, Dutch West India Company • British dominance: overseas trade and colonization, strong navy, Nelson at Trafalgar, Wellington at Waterloo • United States dominance: economically dominant by 1920, hegemony in 1945, credit crisis in 2008 threatens U.S. leadership status
  • 31. World Leadership Cycles: The United States The United States was economically dominant within the world- system by 1920 but did not achieve hegemonic power because of a failure of political will, choosing “splendid isolation”. All hegemonic powers must protect the economic foundations of their power, as represented by this photograph of U.S. air superiority in the Gulf War.
  • 32. Antiglobalization Demonstrations Bern, Switzerland French farmers protest Globalization often leads to the downward convergence of wages and environmental standards, an undermining of democratic governance, and a general recoding of nearly all aspects of life to the language and logic of global markets.
  • 34. Discussion Topics and Lecture Themes • The world-system did not always exist. Why did it develop, and why did Europe emerge as the core of the world-system? – The world-system began in the 1400s, when Europeans started exploring and settling beyond their home regions. European expansion brought about the exchange of ideas, technologies, and resources between regions that previously had little to do with each other. Europe emerged as the core of the world-system because of its economic system of capitalism, its rapidly growing population, and its technological innovations. European expansion abroad and the exploitation of natural resources outside Europe were critical factors in Europe’s emergence as a core region. See pages 48–64 in the textbook for more information.
  • 35. Discussion Topics and Lecture Themes • Ask the students to give examples of core, semiperipheral, and peripheral states. Are there some countries that do not clearly fit in a single category? – Examples of core states would include the United States, Canada, Japan, Australia, New Zealand, and most of western and central Europe. Examples of semiperipheral states include Mexico, Brazil, India, and Taiwan. Examples of peripheral states include Ethiopia, Nepal, Bolivia, and Guatemala, among many others. Ambiguous examples might include Singapore and Korea (core–semiperipheral) and Iran and Vietnam (semiperipheral–peripheral), but these distinctions are partly a matter of opinion.
  • 36. Discussion Topics and Lecture Themes • Have the students compare two countries, one in the core and one in the periphery (for example, Switzerland and Bolivia). Why is one of these countries richer and more economically developed than the other? How does the world-system model help to explain these differences? – World-systems theory argues that it is the relationship between states that helps establish their place in the core– semiperiphery–periphery hierarchy. Much of the difference derives from the effectiveness of a state in insuring the international competitiveness of its products. Switzerland, for example, produces high-value goods—such as watches—and important services—such as banking—while Bolivia relies on low-value exports that are not processed locally—such things as tin ore and fruit.
  • 37. Discussion Topics and Lecture Themes • Discuss the differences and similarities among colonialism, imperialism, and neo-colonialism. – All are similar in that they are the means of domination by one state over another. Colonialism refers to the establishment and maintenance of political and legal domination, whereas neocolonialism is an indirect means whereby core states use political and economic strategies to wield their influence. Imperialism is largely a competitive form of colonialism that resulted in a scramble for territory as (mainly) European powers attempted to build colonial empires.
  • 38. Discussion Topics and Lecture Themes • Have the students describe the principal means of transportation and communication in the local region. When were these systems first introduced? What existed before them? What impacts did changes in transportation and communications technology have on the local area? – Data on local transportation and communication networks can be obtained from maps as well as from the companies and agencies that operate these networks.
  • 39. Discussion Topics and Lecture Themes • Have the students give examples of each of the four factors (described on pages 72–74 of the textbook) that have led to globalization in the past twenty-five years. What evidence for these factors exists in the local area? – The four factors are (1) a new international division of labor, (2) an internationalization of finance, (3) a new technology system, and (4) a homogenization of international consumer markets. See pages 72– 74 in the textbook for more information.
  • 40. Discussion Topics and Lecture Themes • Why does it no longer seem appropriate to speak of the First, Second, and Third Worlds? What advantages does a division into Fast and Slow worlds offer? Ask the students to describe their own experiences (if they have had them) in traveling between these worlds. – Changes stemming from the four factors (see Question 6, above) have led to a Fast World, largely composed of the core regions, where people are involved, as producers and consumers, in transnational industry, modern telecommunications, materialistic consumption, and international news and entertainment. The Slow World refers to people, regions, and places where these things are limited. The breakup of the Soviet Union and the collapse of international communism generally have also made meaningless the concept of a Second World.
  • 41. Discussion Topics and Lecture Themes • What minisystems once existed in the local area? What happened to them? – Consult ethnographies of the indigenous population. The local museum or library may also hold information on the area’s original minisystems.
  • 42. Discussion Topics and Lecture Themes • The Geography Matters 2.5 boxed text discusses the nature and meaning of commodity chains. Have the students gather data about the three kinds of commodity chains and then sketch out the “links.” – The three kinds of commodity chains are 1) producer-driven, in which large, often transnational, corporations coordinate production networks; 2) consumer-driven, where large retailers, brand-name merchandisers, and trading companies influence decentralized production networks in a variety of exporting countries, often in the periphery; and 3) marketing-driven, which involves the production of inexpensive consumer goods that are global commodities and carry global brands yet are often manufactured in the periphery and semiperiphery for consumption in those regions. – The Internet will provide a starting point for gathering this data, and you might also want to contact the companies (such as Wal-Mart) directly.
  • 43. Discussion Topics and Lecture Themes • Figure 2.22 shows how North America is a key node in global telephonic communications flow, What accounts for the distribution shown in the figure? – The wealth of North America and its pioneering of much communications technology are in part responsible for this position.

Notes de l'éditeur

  1. Minneapolis = grain milling; St. Louis & Milwaukee= brewing; Cincinnati = coach building and furniture; Springfield = agricultural machinery