History, asked by neetadiru576, 4 months ago

conclusion political geography ​

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Answered by Anonymous
4

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Political geography could maximize its contribution to the understanding of the citizen–state relations and social transformation by paying increasing attention to the dynamics and geographical difference of social movements and their intimate relationships with formal institutions

Politics and geography are inter-twined because geographical images and relationships enter into political la nation's geography affects its view of itself and its view of the world. Politicians and political decisions must not only of people, but also technology and natural resources.

Examples include: how boundaries between countries, states or counties are made. whether the size of a country affects how powerful it is. how the way natural resources are distributed around the world affects trade and war.

Answered by Japji21
1

This conclusion presents some closing thoughts on the key concepts discussed in the preceding chapters of this book. Taking inspiration from work on art in relation to the event, from philosophical, postcolonial and decolonial accounts of the event, and from the ways in which the event has been explored in political geography, international relations and related fields, the book argues for developing the idea of the event as a fundamental focus for critical research on geopolitics. This argument has been driven to a large extent by the difficulty of thinking the 2003 Iraq war through existing ideas of the event, thus recognising its problematising character as an event, and informing my framing of the geopolitical event as a disruptive transformation of the world and of ways of sensing and making sense of it. The book also argues for rethinking a specific event, the 2003 Iraq war, or still more specifically, Britain's Iraq war, through art.

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