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Summary notes OCR A Level Geography Powers & Borders

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Highly detailed, clear summary notes on everything you need to know for OCR A Level Geography's specification on Powers & Borders part of human interactions. Includes notes on all 4 subtopics: 1. What is meant by sovereignty and territorial integrity, 2. What are the contemporary challenges to sovereign state authority, 3. What is the role global governance in conflict and 4. How effective is global governance of sovereignty and territorial integrity.

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KQ1 What is meant by sovereignty & territorial integrity

Key terms
State
- A politically organised group of people occupying a definite territory (clearly defined
boundaries)
Nation
- A large group of people with strong bonds of identity who share they same descent, history,
traditions & culture

Sovereignty
- Absolute authority independent states have to exercise over governance of territory
Internal: power of a state to govern itself by making laws & enforcing them without INT intervention
External: recognition of a state’s independence & right to govern without intervention from other
states

Territorial integrity
- Principle under INT law that gives right to sovereign states to defend their borders and all
territory

Geopolitics
- Study of how physical features of a country affect its political activity and relationships with
other countries

Intervention
- Action taken by one or more sovereign states, within the territory of another

Norms
- Accepted standards, customs & ways of living people have developed over time

International border
- Boundary that separates geographic areas either imposed by physical features or political
entities (e.g. governments, sovereign states etc.)

Types of borders:
1. Physical: based on landforms, physical features such as mountain ranges, river etc (e.g.
Rio Grande River separates US from Mexico)

2. Superimposed: drawn on an area by a conquering or colonising power
(e.g. 1885 European states met in Berlin to divide up Africa)

3. Subsequent boundaries: established after settlement in area, so changes as cultural
landscape changes, due to events such as war
(e.g. Yugoslavia faced heavy ethnic conflict in the 1990s = breaking up over course of 90s and
2000s)

4. Consequent boundaries: drawn to separate groups based on ethnic, linguistic, religious
or ethnic differences
(e.g. between India & Pakistan to separate main religious groups: Hindu & Islam)

5. Geometric: drawn using straight lines with little concern for physical or cultural diff
(US-Canada border is drawn as a rough straight line 49N = known as ‘49th’ parallel)
4 characteristics that make up states:
1. Population- people who live in state
2. Territory- area of land & water that a state occupies & has authority over
3. Sovereignty- ability of state to govern itself & make decisions without intervention
4. Government- institution establishing & enforcing rules & order

, Causes of territorial & border changes:
1. Secession: transfer of part of a state’s area & population to another state
2. Annexation: formal act whereby a state proclaims its sovereignty over territory outside it’s
domain
Example = Russia invading Ukraine
3. Independence: situation in which people of a county exercise self government &
sovereignty over their state
Example = India from British Empire in 1947
4. Decolonisation: colonies become independent post colonising of country)
5. Unification: two or more countries join together to become one
6. Accession: whereby a states accepts offer or opportunity to become a member of a treaty
Example = countries joining NATO, e.g. Finland in April, 2023

Challenges to sovereignty
1. Current political boundaries
Kashmir (India, Pakistan); South China Sea

2. Transnational corporations
Shell in Nigeria; Apple in China

3. Supranational institutions
UN (Libya); EU (Poland/Hungary); IMF (Ecuador)

4. Political dominance of ethnic groups
Catalonia, Spain; Somaliland, Somalia

Characteristics of a strong state:
- Strongs systems of governance at local, district & regional levels
- Have UN recognition as a state
- Hold regular elections, may be democracies
- Few refugees or IDPs
Characteristics of a weak state:
- Weak judiciary and lack of rule of law
- Lack UN recognition as a state
- Lack of democracy, rarely hold elections
- Little control over borders & movement of people, goods & drugs
- High number of fatalities due to war/conflict

“Failed state” = a political entity that has lost the basic characteristics & functions necessary for it to
be considered a sovereign state

Fragile State Index
DEF: assesses states’ vulnerability to conflict or collapse (must be a UN member with sufficient
data) by placing them into one of 4 categories: alert, warning, stable, sustainable

Strongest states (high-low): Switzerland (17.8), NZ, Finland, Iceland, Norway (14.5)
Weakest states (high-low): Somalia (111.9), Yemen, South Sudan, DRC, Syria (107.1)

China challenging sovereignty
‘One belt, One road’ plan
- under former president Xi govt in 2013
- trillion dollar economic plan to build infrastructure in countries that could not readily get
investment
- aim to increase global power & foster closer economic & diplomatic relationships

Example- What has China funded in Sri Lanka?
- port costing $1,3 billion
- airport MRIA opened in 2013 costing $200 million financed with high interest loans
- aim for airport to become a regional aviation base- e.g. former president Rajapaksa
ordering national airline to land flights at new airport

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