Political Geography Concepts | Definition | Significance |
Sate | Political unit with a permanent population and boundaries that are recognized by other states that allows for the administration of laws, collection of taxes, and provision of defense. | |
Nation | People who think of themselves as one based on a shared sense of culture and history and who desire political autonomy (right to self govern). | |
Nation-State | A state with a single nation. | |
Multinational State | A state with two or more nations. | |
Stateless Nation | A nation who does not have their own independent state. | |
Sovereignty | The authority of a state to govern itself without external interference (governing itself). | |
Territoriality | The connection of people to a specific geographic area and their assertion of control over it. | |
Autonomy | The ability of a region or group to govern itself independently. | |
Devolution | The transfer of decision-making power from a central government to a lower level government. | |
Territorial Disputes | Conflicts over land ownership and control between states or groups. | |
Annexation | The process of adding land to a city, state, or country. | |
Buffer State | A smaller state situated between two larger, potentially hostile states. | |
Self-Determination | The process by which a country determines its own statehood and forms its own allegiances and government. | |
Stateless Ethnic Groups | Ethnic groups that do not have their own state or political representation. | |
Microstate | A very small sovereign state in terms of land area and population. | |
City-State | A sovereign state that consists of a single city and its surrounding territory. | |
Frontier | An area/zone where no state has complete political control. | |
Compact State | A country that is small, roundish, and has a centralized government and the distance from the center of a compact state to any border is roughly equal. | |
Elongated State | A state shape that has a long sliver of land that extends far in one direction. | |
Prorupted State | A state having a shape that is a central land body with one part of the land extending out from one side much more than any other part. | |
Fragmented State | States whose land masses are fragmented into two or more parts. | |
Perforated State | A state that completely surrounds another state. | |
Landlocked State | A state that has no access to direct water sources because it is surrounded by other places. | |
Territorial Morphology (Compact, Fragmented, Elongated, Prorupt, Perforated) | The location of the country, size, and form are the key in the determination of variations of cultures, diversity in population, and political views. |