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Contents: 1. Placing political geography Section A 2. Human territory, maps and the division of space 3. The idea of state 4. Making states function: The variety of local state systems 5. The politics of difference 6. Social movements, pressure groups and political parties 7. Electoral geographies Section B 8. Imagining natural divisions of global power 9. Dreams into action: The making of national foreign policy 10. Annexing the oceans Section C 11. Globalisation and the theory of world systems 12. States in the 21st Century 13. Conclusion: Spatial political change in context
Political geography has produced some of the most radical and innovative ideas in human geography in the past twenty years. The meaning and significance of traditional political subdivisions, such as the state, have had to be fundamentally re-evaluated in the face of the globalisation of society and economy and this has forced political geographers to look for new ways of explaining the dynamics of the world system. Political Geography provides a stimulating and concise introduction to the key themes of the subdiscipline, which moves beyond the study of the state to encompass the spatial consequences of power at all levels. In this student-friendly book, each chapter has bullet-pointed key concepts, boxes, annotated further reading, a self-review question and a summary paragraph.
The New Germany provides a picture of contemporary Germany from a
variety of perspectives, establishing relationships between recent
political events and society and cultural life. Contributors
include distinguished specialists in German Studies, including John
Sandford, Michael Patterson, Karl Koch and Charles Jeffery. Part 1
sets the scene, discussing the demise of East Germany from
historical perspective and unification in terms of the social
problems that have been provoked. Part 2 covers the new political
structure and Germany's role as a European power as well as the
social, educational and economic problems generated, especially in
the east, by the western takeover of the former GDR. Part 3 is an
extensive section devoted to culture and the arts, with studies of
the media, literature, theatre, film and language.
This is the first historical atlas of a major region of the United
Kingdom. Its aim is to create and communicate the history of the
south-western peninsula of England-Cornwall, Devon and the Isles of
Scilly - from the beginnings of man's occupation to the present
day. The cartographic message projected by around 400 maps is
extended by a substantial text of about 250,000 words as well as
diagrams, contemporary prints and photographs. This is one of the
most substantial collaborative cartographic ventures undertaken in
the United Kingdom. There are more than fifty contributors, about
half of whom are drawn from within the University of Exeter, the
remainder being researchers at other universities who specialize on
topics relating to South-West England. The majority are
geographers, archaeologists and historians, but there are also
important contributions from political scientists, sociologists,
educationalists and the region's museums, library and archive
services. The pre-medieval content is organized chronologically but
thereafter the reconstruction of human occupation is structured
thematically
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