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Country
An identifiable land area; an everyday term that often (but not always) refers to a state, but is less precise for AP Human Geography.
State
A sovereign political unit with a defined territory, permanent population, government, and sovereignty (recognized right/ability to rule itself).
Nation
A group of people sharing a common identity (often language, religion, ethnicity, history, and/or political destiny); primarily about people/identity, not legal borders.
Sovereignty
A state’s independence and recognized right to govern territory; depends not just on power but also on international recognition.
Nation-state
A state whose population is largely one nation and whose borders roughly match the nation’s territorial extent (though few are perfectly culturally uniform).
Stateless nation
A nation (culture group) without an internationally recognized state of its own, or a group denied meaningful inclusion in the state’s political process (e.g., Kurds).
Multinational state
A state containing multiple nations/ethnic groups, often due to migration, mixing, and conquest (e.g., Belgium, Nigeria, Canada).
Multistate nation
A nation that spans more than one state and has at least one state of its own (e.g., one Korean nation split between North and South Korea).
Nationalism
A political ideology emphasizing loyalty and devotion to a nation; can drive independence movements or be promoted by states to unify populations.
Self-determination
The idea that nations should be able to decide their political status and govern themselves; can lead to autonomy, devolution, or independence movements.
Territoriality
The attempt to influence/control people and relationships by delimiting and asserting control over a geographic area; political control over space.
Citizenship
A person’s legal identity tied to a state (by birth or naturalization), linking individuals to the state’s rights and responsibilities.
State system
The global arrangement in which Earth is divided into states that recognize each other’s territorial boundaries, encouraging treaties, competition, and standardization (passports/borders).
Centripetal forces
Forces that unify and strengthen a state (e.g., shared nationalism, respected leaders, strong infrastructure, effective economy, social welfare).
Centrifugal forces
Forces that divide and destabilize a state (e.g., ethnic conflict, corruption, poor economy, isolating geography, disasters, wartime defeat).
Colonialism
Control of a territory and its people, typically involving settlement/administration and economic extraction.
Imperialism
Broader policies or practices by which a state increases power by gaining control over other areas, formally or informally.
Neocolonialism
Modern colonial-like influence based more on economic pressure than direct political control.
Boundary
The legal line marking where one state’s territory ends and another’s begins.
Physical (natural) boundary
A boundary following natural features (rivers, mountains, deserts); can be hard to mark precisely and may shift if features change.
Antecedent boundary
A boundary established before substantial settlement/development, meaning it predates later cultural landscape patterns.
Consequent (subsequent) boundary
A boundary drawn after settlement patterns exist, often reflecting cultural change, migration, or conflict outcomes (e.g., borders altered after 1945).
Superimposed boundary
A boundary imposed by an external power with little regard for local cultural patterns (e.g., many African borders formalized after the Berlin Conference).
Relic boundary
A boundary that no longer functions as an official political boundary but still influences identity, landscapes, or politics (e.g., Scotland–England after 1707).
Delimitation
The process of describing a boundary in a treaty/legal document and drawing it on a map.
Demarcation
The process of marking a boundary on the ground with physical features (fences, pillars, monuments).
Definitional boundary dispute
A dispute over the wording/interpretation of boundary documents (e.g., Kuril Islands dispute referenced in the notes).
Locational boundary dispute
A dispute over where a boundary should be placed on the ground, often when physical features move (e.g., shifting channels in the Ganges–Brahmaputra Delta).
Operational boundary dispute
A dispute over how a boundary should function in practice (movement, crossings, immigration rules), such as stricter entry requirements after 9/11.
Allocational boundary dispute
A dispute over resources near or crossing boundaries (oil, gas, water), such as water-use conflicts tied to rivers along boundary regions.
Enclave
(Territorial) A territory completely surrounded by another state; also used for a culturally distinct minority area concentrated within a larger country.
Exclave
A portion of a state separated from the main part by surrounding territory (e.g., Alaska separated from the contiguous U.S. by Canada).
Territorial morphology (state shape)
The shape of a state and how it can influence transportation, governance, defense, and internal unity.
Compact state
A state shape that is relatively round/without major irregularity, often seen as easier to govern and connect internally (shape is not destiny).
Fragmented state
A state broken into separated pieces (e.g., archipelagos), which can complicate transportation, defense, and administration.
Elongated state
A long, stretched state shape that can increase distance from the capital to far regions and complicate internal connectivity (e.g., Chile as a classic example).
UNCLOS (United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea)
International framework setting widely used standards for maritime boundaries and offering mechanisms for arbitration.
Territorial sea
Maritime zone extending 12 nautical miles from shore where the state’s laws apply.
Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ)
Maritime zone extending 200 nautical miles from shore where a state has exclusive rights to explore/extract natural resources (e.g., fisheries, oil/gas).
Unitary state
A state where power is concentrated in the central government; local governments mainly carry out national decisions.
Federal state
A state where sovereignty is divided between a central government and regional units with constitutionally protected powers.
Autonomous region
A region granted significant freedom from central authority, often due to distinct historical, linguistic, religious, or geographic factors (e.g., Basque region).
Devolution
Transfer of power from a central government to regional governments within the state; decentralization without leaving the state.
Legitimacy
The belief that a government has the right to rule; increases stability because compliance relies less on constant coercion.
Supranationalism
Alignment of two or more sovereign states for a common purpose; often involves pooling/limiting some sovereignty through shared rules.
Apportionment
The process of determining how many representatives each state/region receives, typically based on population (distinct from drawing district lines).
Redistricting
Redrawing electoral district boundaries within a state/region, often after population change.
Refugee
A person forced to flee who crosses an international boundary into another state.
Internally displaced person (IDP)
A person forced to flee their home who remains within their state’s borders (does not cross an international boundary).
Failed state
A state whose government cannot maintain effective territorial control, provide basic services, or ensure security; authority may be strong in the capital but weak in peripheral areas.