Political Organization of Space: States, Nations, and Boundaries (AP Human Geography Unit 4)

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25 Terms

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Political geography

The study of how political power is organized across Earth’s surface and how that organization shapes (and is shaped by) people, places, and resources.

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State

A politically organized territory with a permanent population and a government that claims authority within its borders; the APHG term for a sovereign political unit.

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Sovereignty

A state’s ultimate authority over what happens inside its territory (making/enforcing laws, controlling borders, conducting foreign policy); a claim recognized by other states to varying degrees.

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Territory

The area a state controls, including land and often associated coastal waters and airspace; tied to security, economics, and identity.

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Territoriality

A strategy of using control over space to affect behavior—marking, managing, and defending territory to influence access, movement, and resource use.

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Nation

A group of people sharing a common identity (often history, language, religion, ethnicity) and a sense of belonging to a homeland; primarily cultural/psychological.

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Nation-state

A state whose territory closely matches the territory of a nation, with most people sharing a national identity and most members of that nation living within the state’s borders.

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Multinational state

A single state that contains two or more distinct nations (national groups), often creating challenges around representation, language rights, and autonomy.

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Multistate nation

A nation (one identity group) that is spread across multiple states, which can contribute to cross-border political tensions or autonomy movements.

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Political boundary

A real or imagined line marking the limits of a state’s jurisdiction—where one government’s legal authority ends and another’s begins.

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Border

The broader zone near a boundary where interaction and enforcement occur (e.g., checkpoints, customs, patrols); boundary = line, border = region.

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Physical (natural) boundary

A boundary that uses natural landscape features (mountains, deserts, rivers); can hinder movement but may be disputed if features shift or are ambiguous.

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Cultural boundary

A boundary that follows cultural divisions such as language, religion, or ethnicity; aims to align political control with identity but can leave minorities on either side.

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Geometric boundary

A boundary drawn using straight lines or arcs, often along latitude/longitude; easy to map but may ignore cultural and physical geography.

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Antecedent boundary

A boundary drawn before significant population settlement in an area; settlement patterns develop later in relation to the boundary.

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Subsequent boundary

A boundary drawn after populations are in place, often reflecting existing cultural or political divisions (though it can still create minorities/disputes).

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Superimposed boundary

A boundary imposed by an external force (often colonial powers) without regard for existing cultural patterns, frequently linked to later conflict.

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Relic boundary

A former boundary that no longer functions as an official boundary but still influences identities, cultural landscapes, or political/economic patterns.

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Definitional boundary dispute

A conflict over the wording or interpretation of documents (treaties/laws) that define the boundary.

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Locational boundary dispute

A conflict where states agree a boundary exists but disagree about its exact placement on the ground (often after new mapping or discoveries).

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Operational boundary dispute

A conflict over how a boundary should function in practice (crossing rules, enforcement, customs, immigration procedures).

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Allocational boundary dispute

A conflict over rights to natural resources (oil, gas, fishing, water) along or near a boundary, even if the boundary line is mostly agreed upon.

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Centrifugal forces

Forces that push a state’s people apart (e.g., separatism, ethnic conflict), often intensifying pressure in multinational states.

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Devolution

The process of granting more autonomy and decision-making power to regional or local governments within a state as a way to manage internal differences.

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Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ)

A maritime zone extending up to 200 nautical miles from a coastal state’s shore in which the state has special rights to marine resources (e.g., fishing, oil/gas).

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