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Jim Pickett

Choices: Global Security Matrix - 0 views

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    A GREAT guided matrix looking at risks across a wide field of thinking. Based on Jim Der Derian's work, the Global Security Matrix explores a broad range of threats across the layers of the international system. Check out the pandemic links!
Kevin Collon

Resource: Human Geography: People, Places, and Change - 0 views

  • Human Geography combines economic and cultural geography to explore the relationships between humans and their natural environment, and
  • tionships
  • to track the broad social patterns that shape human societies
  • ...12 more annotations...
  • . Imagining New Worlds
  • Reflections on a Global Screen
  • Global Firms in the Industrializing East
  • Global Tourism
  • . Alaska: The Last Frontier?
  • Population Transition in Italy
  • . Water Is for Fighting Over
  • A Migrant's Heart
  • Berlin
  • Changing
  • Center
  • . The World of the Dragon
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    Basic Definition of Human Geography
Jim Pickett

Foreign Policy: Revenge of the Geographers - 0 views

  • Victorian geography is back in vogue. In The End of Poverty, Jeffrey Sachs blames geography for poverty, while in Guns, Germs, and Steel, Jared Diamond says that the different shapes of Eurasia and the Americas explain the course of global economic development. And now, in "The Revenge of Geography," Robert Kaplan suggests that states have had their day and that global society will dissolve into tribal conflicts over dwindling resources. He commends British geographer Halford Mackinder for his 1904 essay, "The Geographical Pivot of History," and its analysis of the geographical dynamics of the perennial struggle over Eurasia.For Kaplan, the appeal of environmental determinism is evident. It reduces otherwise complex theories of economic development or of international relations to a stable set of factors (such as climate, physiography, and location) and further suggests that the primary causes of social, political, and economic inequality lie outside the realm of human intervention. The revenge of geography centers on environmental realities that never cease to frustrate the grand schemes of men who would remake the world after their own ideals. But there are four problems with Mackinder's case, and ultimately Kaplan's argument, as he builds upon it. First, the fact that today's conflicts are in many of the same places as yesterday's is a testament not to the guiding hand of Mother Nature, but to the pitiful legacy of those earlier wars -- colonialism, political instability, and economic exploitation. (The British alone fought wars in Iraq during 1914-1918, 1920-1921, 1922-1924, 1943, and 1945, and in Afghanistan during 1839-1842, 1878-1880, and 1919, and of course are again in both places.) Second, cultural identities are created as distinct communities interact with one another, not through isolated communion with the Earth. Third, rich and powerful countries' interests in the affairs of poorer countries are driven as much by their economic needs as by the problems afflicting the poorer countries. Finally, for all the U.N.'s flaws, international relations are not solely structured around the threat of force; Wilsonian values are credible pillars of international institutions and affairs. Ideas matter more than Kaplan admits. None of these critiques is new and they were made by Mackinder's contemporaries. John Hobson, the author of the famous work, Imperialism: A Study (1902), wrote from a rich liberal tradition that was hostile to warmongering and he criticized the colonial wars that Mackinder celebrated. Élisée Reclus, who put together a monumental 19-volume survey of global geography, likewise argued that colonialism had serious and continuing consequences. In particular, Reclus showed that the commodification of land and resources produced food insecurity throughout indigenous societies. Another of Mackinder's contemporaries, geographer and anarchist Peter Kropótkin, insisted that identity was neither biological nor environmental fate, but rather a social creation enabling people to cultivate their higher natures. Mackinder, by contrast, saw colonialism as diffusing technology and civilized values to benighted savages. For him, environment determined racial character and this in turn dictated people's intellectual firepower and level of civilization. He saw a clear hierarchy of civilizations -- the further from Anglo-Saxon values you were, the more inferior your society. If we are to rehabilitate Victorian geography, as Kaplan attempts to do here, then, we must also recall its contested nature, and against simplistic environmentalism we must urge the relevance of a historical analysis that emphasizes colonialism, an understanding of cultures as dynamic and interdependent, and a recognition of the importance of cooperation, justice, and multilateral institutions.
    • Jim Pickett
       
      Hits the point RIGHT on the head. Kearns, a Mackinder scholar, gets Kaplan's errors "just right".
Jim Pickett

ICONS Project Research Library - 0 views

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    Useful research resource for one stop shopping regarding global issues. Tied to University of Maryland's ICONS Project.
Jim Pickett

Election Guide - 0 views

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    THE global guide to elections everywhere!
Jim Pickett

BBC NEWS | Special Reports | The Box - 0 views

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    A fascinating series of stories detailing the travels of a shipping container. The stories go on for 1 year... WOW!
Jim Pickett

SHOW®/WORLD Atlas - A New Way To Look At The World - 1 views

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    Cartograms of a host of global, US, and Japanese data sets.
Jim Pickett

ReliefWeb - 0 views

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    Worldwide maps, data, and analysis on global issues and crises...
Jim Pickett

GIS Mapping activities and data - 0 views

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    Some interesting projects on medical geography, global demographic data, and economic development
Jim Pickett

World DATA Clock - 0 views

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    Cool visualization of global population data, with some US specific data as well.
Jim Pickett

MEPC - TeachMideast - Educational Resources on the Middle East and Islam - TeachMideast - 0 views

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    Great resource on understanding global Islam, and conceptions (true and false!) of the Middle East, Arab world, and Islam
Jim Pickett

Soundcities: The Global soundmaps project. Sounds from around the world in an online d... - 0 views

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    Now THESE are unique maps... to bad we can't do SMELLS ;-)
Jim Pickett

On The Media: Transcript of "Bridging the Online Language Barrier" (April 30, 2010) - 0 views

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    Great story regarding language use and the internet, and the rise and fall of English
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