Zusammenfassung der Ressource
A2 Geography-
Superpower Geographies
- need to have global influence,
economic power, political and
cultural ideology projected on
world. Economic, Cultural &
Military power resulting in
global political influence.
- Emerging superpowers- growing influence e.g China- growing economy & military, less cultural influence.
EU-considerable power, decisions and policies compromised as need to be agreed by 27 members.
- Emerging powers-further from superpower status e.g Re-emerging Russia,
India, Brazil, Gulf states. Powerful energy resources, but not global influence.
- Regional powers- economic & political role within continents e.g South Africa & Japan
- Maintaining power-
Hard power(military) >
Soft power(cultural)
- Military presence & Force- Large air,naval & land forces, Nuclear weapons, Military bases in
foreign countries giving geographical reach e.g USA present in every continent, military alliances
e.g NATO, Diplomatic threats to use force if negotiation fails.
- Aid & Trade- Favouring certain trade partners by reducing import tariffs, trade blocs & alliances,
providing allies with technical & economic assistance, Using aid to influence policy/keep allies happy,
using economic sanctions against countries
- Culture & Ideology- Using media to promote particular image/message, exporting culture in form of
film/TV/brands, Gradually persuading doubters that a particular action/view is in their interests
- Changing Geographies- currently Unipolar world(1 superpower) 1800-1918-British Empire-25% world, 1918-45-
Transition period-USA & Russia increasing, Nazi Germany- Multipolar. 1945-90- USA(capitalist) & USSR(communist)-
Cold war period. 1990-2010-USA- USSR collapse. 2010- USA,EU,China(BRICs)-possibly Multipolar
- British empire collapse- colonial
countries demanded
independence, political
movements(Gandhi's india), UK
could not afford it, war
bankrupted, needed to focus on
post-war rebuilding in UK
- Growing power due to-
- Energy resources- Russia, Gulf
States(Qatar,UAE,Saudi) oil & gas resources-
economic power & energy weapons
- Alliances- EU growth from 6-1957 to 27-2009. EU GDP exceeds USA.
- Economic power-China-economic growth since 1990-2nd largest economy- worlds manufacturing workshop.
- Demographic weight- some countries have economic potential- e.g China & India both have over 15% world population- market
- Nuclear weapons- Ultimate threat- USA,Russia,China,France,UK- Treaty. Pakistan,Israel,India,N Korea not part of treaty.
- Theories
- Liberal
- Rostow- Take-off model- 5 stage
linear economic development-
take off when preconditions met
e.g-transport infrastructure.
Industrialisation follows-
jobs,trade & consumers. -Many
countries borrow heavily & invest
money into projects to meet
pre-conditions- fail to develop &
end up in debt
- World Bank-Asian model- China, S
Korea & Japan developed rapidly
since 1970, opened up to free trade
& foreign investment, state invested
in education & skills development.
-fails to take full account of support &
aid provided by USA during cold war.
- Marxist
- Frank's Dependency theory-
World divided to NvS.
Developed world keeps rest of
world underdeveloped to exploit
cheap resources. Aid,debt &
trade patterns reinforce the
dependency. NICs broken out of
divide- theory does not allow for
LDCs to have a say in their
development
- Wallerstein's world systems theory-
Core,periphery,semi-periphery
(NICs), some countries could
develop & gain power- weath &
power not static. - does not explain
world, written during cold
war(bipolar), does not account for
China
- India & China
development- neither allied
in Cold war- avoided
dependency by developing
internally & not allowing
world trade until 1990s,
Invested in home-grown
technology (Space
programmes, nuclear
weapons &
pharmaceuticals)(India(IT
companies(WIPRO)- no
reliance, opened up to FDI,
free trade in special
economic zones after
certain level of
development achieved.
- India- lack of investment in
basic infrastructure-poor
transport & power
shortages. China invested in
infrastructure & better
placed to attract FDI
- Role of Superpowers
- Control
- colonial- threatening, military voce,
imposing government systems, imposing
laws & language of colonial power, different
legal and social status between colonisers &
colonised. -colonies provided raw materials.
-Mines,farms,railways & ports developed.
-rebellions-1945> ,Africa-did not become
independent-replaced with neo-colonialism
- Mechanisms of Neo-colonialism
- Developed Nations- Aid for
corrupt dictators in return for
political support, bilateral aid
that benefit suppliers,
importing cheap raw materials
& exporting expensive
manufactured goods to LDCs,
brain drain of skilled workers
- TNCs- Exploitation of
resources e.g Nigerian Oil,
protect technology with patents
& licensing agreements,
exploit workers in low skill
factories-low wages
- International organisations-
Unsuitable lending-debt
crisis, intervening in
economies of developing
world using SAP to ensure
debt repayments, not doing
enough to create level
playing field-decrease trade
with developing world
- Marxist/Structuralist.-
LDCs suffered long term
war/conflict-prevented
investment/development.
NICs developed following
independence. Still
corrupt-finance & aid
never trickles down.
- International decision making
- World bank,IMF,UN(promotes peace
& cooperation),WTO(promotes free
trade-some say works in the interests
only of the free world)
- IGOs-trade
blocs(NAFTA,EU)-
promote free trade
but impose tariffs &
quotas on
non-members.
- EU-joint policies- Economics & free
trade, Foreign & defence policy, Social
& environmental policy -Increased
power but has internal arguments,less
powerful military than USA.
- G8(USA, UK, France,
Germany, Italy, Canada,
Japan, Russia) -65%
global wealth, 95% global
nuclear weapons, 75%
global military spending,
15% global population
- Trade
- Superpowers have advantage in world trade- most TNCs
originate in MEDCs, most major shipping companies &
airlines originate in USA & Europe, many developed
countries allow free trade between each other.
- LDCs- export low-value commodities-coffee,copper,cotton, imports
manufactured goods- some broken out of cycle. China now exports
manufactured goods, India-IT & software exports. -rising wealth &
power. Russia & Gulf States-Oil & gas as trade weapons-State
owned companies control export volumes & profits.
- superpower culture
- Common values &
beliefs- religious,
attitudes, moral &
ethical issues,
language, dress, art
(music,dance,literature),
norms (behaviour &
laws)
- emergence of global
culture- globalisation-
dominated by Europe &
USA- McDonaldisation,
Disneyfication)-
threatens tradition
- Influence of western values-
Democracy-everyone has
right to vote;
Individualism-Individuals have
right to pursue own actions &
dreams; Consumerism-
Wealth, and ability to buy
goods & services leads to
happiness;
Technology-problems solved
by using high-end technology;
Economic Freedom- free
markets, people make money
how they choose
- Factors
promoting
cultural
globalisation
- Internet increases access to information; growth of TNCs; Global brand logos(nike); English as
business/media language; growth of tourism & cultural mixing; stronger & more widespread global
trade flows, Air travel increased-migration & spread of culture, Media(disney & NBC)
- Fears of global culture-lead to
backlash-protests
- 2005-UN convention on protection & promotion of diversity of cultural
expressions- allows countries to protect culture e.g limit foreign media
- superpower futures
- BRICs
- Chinas economic growth outpaced old powers-2000-07. BRICs rapidly adopting
communication technology & improving life expectancy throughout better healthcare.
Increased household income and more moving out of poverty.-increasing middle class.-
improved QoL & happiness, increased heart disease,obesity & stress-realted illness.
China- increased pressure for political change,freedom & democracy.
- BRIC consumers- strained resources &
environmental concerns- implications on
water resources, land, air quality & ecological
footprints
- Old v New
- threats to existing powers-
- Resources-fossil fuel supplies
tighten-increasing demand &
shrinking resources
- Military dominance-Russia, India,
China.-now nuclear powers-shift
military balance to Asia.
- Space- China & India now have
active, manned, well funded
space programmes
- Outsourcing-India benefitted
from IT & software
outsourcing. China-global
manufacturing shift.
- Ageing-Japan & EU- ageing populations- pension funding
crisis. China issues with one child policy. India & Brazil more
youthful & innovative. Emerging powers have government
owned investment funds-Sovereign wealth funds- from oil
wealth.-used to buy assets(foreign governments can control
strategic assets in another country) e.g China-$100m in
VISA.
- China recently investing in Oil & mineral extraction in Africa. In form of
FDI/developmental assistance- infrastructure building-
neo-colonialism. -China wants resource supplies more than political &
economic influence.
- China in Africa-
- Opportunities/benefits- Chinese FDI
boosted Africas economic growth, New
markets for raw materials, investment
in mines & factories- create
infrastructure, China providing
development assistance-no debt
- Dependency/problems-Chinese factory-produced goods
undercut price of local goods, many employees chinese
immigrants, class in zambia with locals, Chinese accused of
political interference-sudan- protect access to oil supplies
- Tensions
- No dominant
superpower-greater
equality of
power-arguments more
common, energy
resource battles, trade
& political agreements
more bilateral-less
global( increased
tensions-some
countries left out),
emerging powers
interfere with
superpower spheres of
influence
- Clash of
cultures-East v West.
9/11, Iraq, Taliban &
Al-Qaeda
- Islamic oil rich
world- more wealth
& power- increased
confidence
- USA & Europe- Politics- EU socialism is a choice,
Social Policy- USA-smaller welfare state,
Interventionism-USA more ready to take military action
to protect interests, Trade- Free trade agreements
viewed more sceptically in USA
- Synoptic Links
- Players- World bank, IMF, UN, WTO. EU,OPEC. Powerful countries(USA) viewed by some political
organisations(Anti-globalisation movement)-responsible problems such as environmental degradation & cultural globalisation.
- Actions-Global geopolitics- decisions involve international action- peacekeeping by UN, NATO. Superpowers
follow neo-liberal, market-led approach to economics & development- not environmentally sustainable
- Futures- Business as usual- USA unipolar dominance. Multi-polar future more likely- BRIC emergence-
geopolitical & economic. Rest would follow if one moved towards more sustainable consumption.
- Unit 1-Going
global-Globalisation plays
major role in creating wealth
for superpowers. Unit 3-
water convicts-emerging
superpowers place demands
on water resources. Energy
security- Oil & Gas key
source of power for Russia &
Gulf States- increasing
geopolitical tension
- wider global issues-Globalisation
driven by players in
superpowers(TNCs, Governments &
consumers) Costs & Benefits
(Environmental, economic, social).
Contributions to global warming-
USA-22% greenhouse gasses-2007,
China 18%.