Types of Government
Borders
More Borders!
Tribal Sovereignty
100


This form of government is ruled by the people, often through elected representatives

Democracy

100

Borders created by physical features like rivers or mountains.

Natural Borders

100

A lake that causes a major dispute between Tanzania and Malawi.

Lake Malawi

100

The idea that tribes have the power to govern themselves.

Tribal Sovereignty

200

In this system, religious leaders hold political power, and laws are based on religion.

Theocracy


200

Borders drawn by humans—sometimes ignoring cultural or linguistic differences.

Artificial or geometric

200

The Himalayas create a natural border between these two populous Asian countries.

India and China


200

This U.S. document recognizes tribes as separate political nations with treaty-making authority.

U.S. Constitution

300

A ruler with absolute authority who may or may not use force to maintain power.

A dictator

300

The cause of "superimposed"/artificial borders in Africa

Colonialism through the "Scramble for Africa" 

300

Chile and Argentina are divided by this mountain range.

The Andes

300

The forced relocation of tribes in the 1830s that violated tribal sovereignty.

Indian Removal Act (Trail of Tears)

400
A system where there is both a monarch and elected officials. 

Constitutional Monarchy


400

Example of a cultural border dispute

India-Pakistan border

400

These two rectangular U.S. states are defined almost entirely by geometric borders.

Colorado and Wyoming 

400

These agreements between tribes and the U.S. government often went broken or ignored.

Treaties

500

Power is divided between central and regional governments (like the U.S.).

Federal (Federalism)

500

The U.S.–Canada border follows this line of latitude for hundreds of miles.

49th Parallel

500

The United States doubled in size with this 1803 purchase.

The Louisiana Purchase

500

An example of a present day fight for tribal sovereignty

Standing Rock vs the Dakota Access Pipeline