4.3 Causes of armed conflicts

4.3 Causes of armed conflicts pt 1
Demographic
Economic
Cultural
Political
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Slide 1: Tekstslide
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4.3 Causes of armed conflicts pt 1
Demographic
Economic
Cultural
Political

Slide 1 - Tekstslide

What do you remember about demographic structures? 

(last year material, Brush up)

Slide 2 - Tekstslide

Demographic structure

Slide 3 - Tekstslide

Differences and how to predict it

Slide 4 - Tekstslide

Slide 5 - Tekstslide

1. Demographic causes
What do you see here?

Slide 6 - Tekstslide

Demographic causes
  • Demographic structure (“youth bulge”)
        - A high share of young people (15-24 yrs)
         - “Demographics can exacerbate conditions such as unemployment or                   poverty, resulting in a range of different security issues.” 
         - Urbanisation leads to concentration of problems.
         - Unemployment rates around 50 %
         - Consequences:
            Criminality; Political violence; Demonstrations / unrest; Breeding                          ground for terrorism; Migration (internal & international)

Slide 7 - Tekstslide

Brush up: Urbanisation

Slide 8 - Tekstslide

Consequences:
- Criminality
- Political violence
- Demonstrations / unrest
- Breeding ground for terrorism
- Migration (internal & international)

Slide 9 - Tekstslide

Example

Slide 10 - Tekstslide

Protests had begun in the eastern city of Atbara in Sudan in December 2018, reportedly against the tripling of the price of bread, but then broadened in focus and had spread rapidly throughout the country. By April 2019, protesters demanded an end to the 30-year rule of dictator Omar al-Bashir, who was removed from office on 11 April in a military coup. Protests continued, calling for power to be handed to civilian groups. On 3 June, government forces opened fire on unarmed protesters. Scores of people were killed and many more subject to further violence. Three days later the African Union suspended Sudan, in the midst of widespread international condemnation of the attack. The authorities sought to defuse protests by imposing blackouts, and shutting down the internet. Despite another severe crackdown on 30 June, the pro-democracy movement was eventually successful in signing a power-sharing agreement with the military, on 17 August.
(https://www.worldpressphoto.org/news/2020/contests-winners-announced )

Slide 11 - Tekstslide

Slide 12 - Tekstslide

Slide 13 - Tekstslide

Slide 14 - Tekstslide

"Food riots" because the food is becoming more and more expensive.

Slide 15 - Tekstslide

Slide 16 - Tekstslide

Global supply chain (globalisation) and its vulnerabilities
  • Ukraine conflict --> lack of rural labour force / blocked ports --> lower exports of wheat --> rising global wheat prices
  • --> developed countries: inflation, shrinking middle class, recession
  • --> developing countries: social unrest, poverty, famine?

Slide 17 - Tekstslide

Slide 18 - Tekstslide

4.3 Causes of armed conflicts pt 2
Demographic
Economic
Cultural
Political

Slide 19 - Tekstslide

2. Economic causes
What could be an economic cause for an armed conflict?

Slide 20 - Tekstslide

Geopolitics = the geographical aspect of a conflict

- Strategic territory (hill, valley, junction trade routes, narrow sea street)
- Resources (minerals, fertile soils, fresh water)

Economic causes

Slide 21 - Tekstslide

A few famous geographers you need to know:

Slide 22 - Tekstslide

Darwin - Darwinism

All species of organisms arise and develop through the natural selection of small, inherited variations that increase the individual's ability to compete, survive, and reproduce.
The ones that survive are the most adaptable to change.

Survival of the fittest / Natural selection

Slide 23 - Tekstslide

Friedrich Ratzel - Lebensraum
This was a leading motivation of Nazi Germany to initiate WWII.
 Germany required a Lebensraum necessary for its survival.
Strong states grow like animals and flowers; weak states wither or die.
He believed that human migration was necessary to gain the territory and resources required for a people to thrive. To Ratzel, the most powerful and fittest civilizations would prevail. 

Slide 24 - Tekstslide

Lebensraum
all living things do need space, at some bare minimum, for their physical structure and the necessities of life: water, food, waste disposal, and so on. This requirement is manifested in the territorial behavior of the lower animals, including the forceful rejection of intruders when instinctive mechanisms (e.g., threat displays) fail to repel them.

Slide 25 - Tekstslide

Karl Haushofer - Raumorganismen

Ratzel viewed states as organisms.
With Ratzel the concept still had a neutral biological meaning, with Haushofer it acquired a racist-imperialist connotation.
 The 'Lebensraum' had to be arranged in such a way that it could guarantee complete self-sufficiency in times of war (autarky).

Slide 26 - Tekstslide

Mackinder - Heartland Theory
“whoever rules East Europe commands the Heartland; whoever rules the Heartland commands the World-Island; whoever rules the World-Island commands the World.” (Mackinder)

Slide 27 - Tekstslide

Whoever controlled Eastern Europe –the Heartland (Eastern Europe)—would control the world. The idea was that whoever gained control of Eastern Europe, controlled the Heartland –also known as the Pivot Area—and whoever controlled the Heartland, could easily gain control of the World Island (Africa and Eurasia)

Slide 28 - Tekstslide

Why is Eastern Europe the Heartland?

Slide 29 - Tekstslide

Eastern Europe holds some of the greatest resources in the world in terms of raw materials and agriculture – the basic ingredients you need to control a large military.
Many people thought world conquest would come through sea power, but this theory proposes that land power can lead to world power. Mackinder thought that after gaining control of the Heartland and all its resources, one could easily gain the World Island by controlling the coasts and warm water ports, or the key areas that made international trade possible.

Slide 30 - Tekstslide

Spykman - Rimland Theory
Eurasia's rimland, the coastal areas, is the key to controlling the World Island

Slide 31 - Tekstslide

He criticized Mackinder for overrating the Heartland as being of immense strategic importance due to its vast size, central geographical location and supremacy of land power rather than sea power. 

He assumed that the Heartland will not be a potential hub of Europe, because:

1. Western Russia was then an agrarian society
2. Bases of industrialization were found to the west of the Ural mountains.
3. This area is ringed to the north, east, south, and south-west by some of the greater obstacles to transportation (ice and freezing temperature, lowering mountains etc.).
4. There has never really been a simple land power–sea power opposition.

Slide 32 - Tekstslide

To Do:
Write down in your notebook:
2 cultural causes for an armed conflict
2 political causes for an armed conflict

Slide 33 - Tekstslide

4.3 Causes of armed conflicts pt 3
Demographic
Economic
Cultural
Political

Slide 34 - Tekstslide

3. Cultural Causes
Examples:
Rwanda: Hutu’s & Tutsi’s /  Ireland: Prostants & Catholics /  Syria: Syrian Army, ISIS, Kurds /  Nigeria: Boko Haram versus Catholic South
Historical examples:
USA: North & South / race riots /  Conflict NL – Spain /  Balkan conflict: Yugoslavia

Slide 35 - Tekstslide

Cultural Causes
Different cultures or religions within a country or between countries.

Slide 36 - Tekstslide

4. Political Causes

Slide 37 - Tekstslide

Political Causes
Authoritarian regimes / dictatorship:
People start to demonstrate for democracy, freedom, human rights, etc.

Slide 38 - Tekstslide