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100

The process whereby regions within a state demand and gain political strength and growing autonomy at the expense of the central government.

Devolution

100

When the state moves to solidify control over its territory. (example: solidifying its borders to prevent unwanted immigration)

Reterritorialization

100

Forces that tend to divide a country-such as internal religious, linguistic, ethnic, or ideological

Centrifugal

100

Term encompassing all the citizens of a state, however, usually refers to a tightly knit group of people possessing bonds of language, ethnicity, religion, and other shared cultural attributes

Nation

100

A state that possesses formal sovereignty and is occupied by a people who see themselves as a single, united nation. It exsists almost nowhere

nation-state

200

Forces that tend to unify a country-such as widespread commitment to a national culture, shared ideological objectives and common faith.

Centripetal

200

Political boundary defined and delimited by a prominent physical feature in the natural landscape-such as a river or the crest ridges of a mountain range

Physical-political

200

Political boundary defined and delimited (and occasionally demarcated) as a straight line or an arc

Geometric boundary

200

Economic model wherein people, corporations and states produce goods and exchange them on the world market, with the goal of achieving profit

Capitalism

200

A nation that stretches across borders and across states (Kurds)

Multistate-nation

300

Processes that incorporate lower levels of education, lower salaries, and less technology; and generate less wealth than core processes in the world-economy.

Periphery

300

A political system with a central government that controls common interests-defense, foreign affairs, and the like-yet allows local entities to retain their own identities and to have their own laws, policies, and customs in certain spheres

Federal

300

World order in which one state is in a position of dominance with allies following rather than joining the political decision-making process

Unilateralism

300

Processes that incorporate higher levels of education, higher salaries, and more technology; generate more wealth than periphery processes in the world-economy

Core

300

A nation that does not have a state (Palestinians)

Stateless Nation

400

A venture involving three or more nation-states involving formal political, economic, and/or cultural cooperation to promote shared objectives. (EU, NATO, NAFTA)

Supranational Organization

400

A nation-state that has a centralized government and administration that exercises power equally over all parts of the state

Unitary

400

Promotion of commercialism and trade practiced by European states during the 16th-18th centuries. Aquisition of gold and silver and the maintenance of a favorable trade balance

Mercantilism

400

The principle of international relations that holds that final authority over social, economic, and political matters should rest with the legitimate rulers of independant states

Sovereignty

400

Created by Immanuel Wallerstein, three-tier structure (core, periphery, semi-periphery) linking economic activities of developing world to developed world

World-systems Theory

500

The movement of economic, social, and cultural processes out of the hands of states.

Deterritorialization

500

Places where core and periphery processes are both occurring; places that are exploited by the core but in turn exploit the periphery

Semi-periphery

500

A state with more than one nation within its borders. (U.S.)

Multinational State

500

A politically organized defined territory, with a sovereign government, a permanent population and is recognized by other states

State

500

Treaty negotiated in 1648 recognizing statehood and nationhood, clearly defined borders, and guarentees of security

Peace of Westphalia