Now in a thoroughly revised and updated edition, this
textbook examines the dramatic changes wrought by
ideological and economic forces unleashed by the end of
the Cold War. Saul Bernard Cohen, one of the world's
leading political geographers, considers these forces in
the context of their human and physical settings and
explores their geographical influence on foreign policy
and international relations. Beginning with a survey of
geopolitics and its practitioners, Saul Bernard Cohen
explains geopolitical terms, structure, and theory. He
traces the geopolitical restructuring of the world's
different regions, its major powers, and the global
networks that link them, thus creating a map of dynamic
equilibrium. Cohen illustrates why those regions-the
convergence of what he terms the Maritime, Heartlandic
Russian, and East Asian realms -have become
''Gateways,'' while the Middle East remains a
''Shatterbelt'' and much of South America and
Sub-Saharan Africa have grown marginalized. The author
argues that whether certain areas become Gateways or
Shatterbelts is the key question influencing global
stability. For example, the future of peripheral parts
of the Eurasian Heartland-Eastern Europe, the
Trans-Caucasus, and Central Asia depends on whether the
major powers adopt policies of accommodation or
competition. Cohen analyzes especially the current
forces favoring accommodation, including the economic
benefits of globalization and the common battle against
terrorism. Presenting a global spatial scope, the book
considers the entire hierarchy of geopolitical
units-subnational, national states, and quasi-states;
geopolitical regions; and geostrategic realms. By
emphasizing the interaction between geographical
settings and changing ideological and economic forces,
Cohen has succeeded in creating a new global
geopolitical map. |
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