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Summary - Unit 4 - Human Systems and Geopolitics (9GEO-02) - Superpowers £8.49   Add to cart

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Summary - Unit 4 - Human Systems and Geopolitics (9GEO-02) - Superpowers

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A full in-depth summary of content notes following full specification for SUPERPOWERS (including all case studies)

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  • August 24, 2023
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Topic 7 – Superpowers:

7.1: Geopolitical power stems from a range of human and physical characteristics of superpowers

 Superpower: a country with significant global influence and ability to project influence
o E.g., USA
 Emerging power: a country that is growing and gaining influence globally
o E.g., China, Brazil, India, Russia
 Regional power: a superpower within a distinct region / geographical area
o E.g., UK + Germany + France = Europe
o E.g. Saudi Arabia + Iran = middle east
o E.g. South Africa + Nigeria = Africa

 Hyperpower: globally dominant superpower
 Hard power: influencing other countries via
 Soft power: the power of persuasion + cohesion
 Multipolar: increasing poles of power + spread across the world

Superpower characteristics:
Economic:  Large GDP, high % of international trade, currency used as reserve currency.
 A large GDP creates influence as a potential market and as the home of TNCs which
create FDI.
 Underpins the other 5 characteristics
E.g., The USA has the world's largest total GDP - $18.5 trillion
Political:  The ability to influence the policies of other countries through the dominance of
negotiations. (Both bilaterally and through international organisations.)
 Many international organisations do not equally weight members.
 Voting power may be determined by economic contribution, historical role in
founding of organisation (UN), population etc...
 Often due to dominance in other characteristics.
 E.g., large economy gives it power in trade talks, military power can make
countries a threat - giving them political power
Military:  Military power with a global reach means they can be used to achieve geopolitical goals
 Global influence through blue water (ocean going) navy and drone, missile and satellite
technology
 Indicators of power: army size, defence spending, nuclear weapons, inter-continental
ballistic missiles (ICBMs), size of blue water navy, being a major arms exporter, presence
on/leading international military organisations.
 Dependent on demographic power: the number of military personnel that can be
deployed
 Dependent on economic power: budget determines investment in military technology,
which increases power
E.g., Russia has the most active nuclear warheads (1790)
E.g., The USA is in second place with 1750
Cultural:  The ability to influence the beliefs, values, ideology and way of life in other
countries.

,  Achieved through:
 the dominance of media (films, radio, television, internet, education)
 TNCs or migrants introducing cultural products (food, clothing, music,
religion)
 imposition of viewpoint in international agreements
 Indicators: global spread of music, fashion, food, language, religion
E.g., The USA has the highest percentage of the world's 20 largest TNCs - 27%.
Demographic:  A large population -> a large diaspora and workers at TNCs
 Assists economic power through a large market and economies of scale (so more
profit).
 Means army can be larger.
E.g., China has the largest population - 1382 million
Resources:  Control of access to physical resources: energy, minerals
 Provides inputs for economic growth
 Means they can be exported at a high price -> economic power
o e.g. OPEC and oil
 May be internally located, or accessed through reliable source countries through
transport pathways.
 Essential for military power

Superpower status:
 Political stability
 Access to natural resources
 Cultural influence
 Strong military
 Access to nuclear energy
 Strong economy
 Access to technology and infrastructure
 Global connection
 Advantageous geostrategy (e.g. ocean)

Example: China Soft power in Africa
 Dependency theory of development
 Neo-colonialism
 Mandarin schools, infrastructure projects, restaurants present in Kenya
 Kenyan works experiencing neo-liberalism
 China sees potential in Africa (using soft power, to improve likability in Africa)
 Superhigh way in Kenya build by China (fast and cheap building, time reduced from 2hrs to 40mins)
 Nairobi has new mall built by China = biggest mall in Africa

 Soft power needs to be softer
 To win African hearts and minds hey need to understand the African way of life = communication is
missing (increase propaganda and portrays fake positive image)
 Government to government relation doesn’t involve local population opinions
o It is said a person who knows more Chinese is more beneficial than a top degree and has more
of an advantage
o Segregation between group settings (master vs servants)

, Halford Mackinder’s Heartland Theory:
 Explores the change in balance of power
 The further away from the heartland a country was, the less influence it would have on the “inner
crescent”
 It persuades the USA, UK, and other European countries that Russia needed to be 'contained', i.e.
prevented from spreading outward by taking over new areas close by.
 It reinforced the idea that control of physical resources (land, mineral wealth) was important.


 Heartland theory + 21st century global shift:
o Shift east to reflect the growing importance of China
o The centre of gravity has been pulled toward the industrialising superpowers through history
o Modern military technology (inter-continental ballistic missiles, drones, aircraft carriers, strike
aircraft) can hit deep inside another country's territory - size is no longer a protection.
o Physical resources are traded internationally; there is much less need to have them
domestically.
o War and conflict are generally seen as abnormal, whereas in the past they were accepted ways
of gaining power




7.2: Patterns of power change over time and can be uni-, bi- or mutli-polar

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