What were the three main challenges of early humanity and to what did they lead to?
Why did fields like calculation or systems of trade even emerge in the first place?
Since during the neolithic revolution and the switch from hunter-gatherer to agriculture. (These systems were needed to be created to divide and capitalise on your produce to survive)
What does the term „terra nullius“ encompass and what are important examples including background info?
Terra nullius = nobodys land, he who claims it, can own it
1. Bir Tawil: unclaimed area between Egypt and Sudan near Halaib triangle (claimed by Sudan, administered by Egypt and rich in oil)
-> nobody willing to claim Bir Tawil, since in int court a trade with Bir Tawil and Halaib could be decided (one side gets useless Bir Tawil and other side lucrative oil fields in Halaib)
2. Mary Byrd: 1,6mil km2 of unclaimed ice —> Antarctic Treaty 1959
-> Trump intended to build case on american pilot having flown over it as first person (never happened)
Why was the Antarctic Treaty signed 1959 and what does it protect or result in?
Fear in 50s of countries claiming antarctic territory and thereby prohibiting free exploration lead to this Treaty in 1959 that clearly states that all antarctic land shall be claimed by nobody and countries can only conduct peaceful exploration without nuclear weapons or other military intentions. Scientific cooperation and openness as basis of treaty (observers of every MS have right to insight into every mission)
11 then to 53 MS now
What are main reasons certain territories remain unclaimed?
Definition and criteria State
Definition Gov`t
Organ implementing thing by public policies, democratic or authoritarian, acts in interest of leader/ppl
—> ordered rule
What is the Montevideo convention of 1933 and how does this declarative theory differ from the constitutive one developed since the Treaty of Westfalia 1648?
Montevideo convention: State = a humanly-created artifact, born in 1648, highest form of pol authority, building block of world politics
Declarative theory (Montevideo; state exists no matter if recognised by others or not)
Constitutive theory (Westfalia, state only exist when recognised by others)
State capacity concept
Measurement of states ability to efficiently fulfill its functions and accomplish it`s goals
1. effective supply of public goods
2. Maintaining Rule of Law
3. Monopoly of force
—> Weak, failed and collapsed states (siehe Rotberg)
How does Rotberg classify states in strong, weak, failed and collapsed states?
Strong: strong institutions, effective state, high quality pub goods, undisputed borders (high GDP, HDI)
-> CH
Weak: insufficient supply of pub goods (due to tensions), corruption, low-income and development, inable to control territory and weakened monopoly of force
-> Belarus, NK
Failed: little pub goods, warlords and terrorists control, inflation and famine, criminality and dissolution ( gov`t unable to provide public goods or safety) -> ruled-led opression leads to new elite
-> Afghanistan, Sudan
Collapsed: vacuum of authority (darwinist power distribution), unprotected pop, goods are traded privately, no basic infrastructure
-> Somalia
What are general indicators that may very sell lead to state failure or even collapse?
What is the Treaty of Westfalia, what is it`s content and relevance and why was it created in the first place?
1648: catholics lose war against protestants (loss of power leads to point zero of state)
Content: state as highest form of entity and independant actor with legal pers; legal equality between states (non-intervention); defined territories, monopolies of force
—> first modern expression of int order!
—> solved religion problem, but created question of who should obey to whom (-> BoP with allies)
What is the Treaty of Utrecht, what is it`s content and relevance and why was it created in the first place?
-> difference to Treaty of Westfalia
Treaty of Utrecht 1713: Spanish Succession War last 13y before treaty; Treaty established prohibition of F and ESP being led by same throne; established a BoP between ESP, F and GB empires; incorporation of BoP for first time in history (just equilibrium of power)
-> difference: did not only define states by family dynasties, but also linked sovereignty with geography
-> helped to establish BoP as basis of european politics; five powers arose: GB, F, Prussia, Russia, Austria
What was the Concert of Europe and why was it successful? (+ content)
After battle of Waterloo and the consequent loss of Napoleon, Europe`s five big powers agreed upon not furthering their spheres of influence and keeping BoP
Content: legitimacy of monarchies (no new ideologies allowed), no compensation for war wictims, BoP
-> European powers started to conquer Africa as a result of concert and to find much needed commodities for further industrial growth
-> return to monarchy and security, anti-liberal
What was the League of Nations and why did it fail?
LoN: first global peace-keeping inst created with help of Wilsons 14-point-plan, promoted open cooperation, diplomacy and humanitarian work, victors club (no GER or RU); comprised of Assembly and Council representing 45 states
Reasons for failure:
1. unanimity in Council leads to ineffectiveness
2. no mil power
3. States had to submit issues, LoN cant act on their own
4. slow and inefficient (rise of parallel diplomacy)
5. no binding power
6. can only act in regards to MS
-> relevance of LoN historically: promoted int coop and groundbreaking attempt to create int order
-> effective in preventing conflicts of small MS not big MS
What are the Origins and Functions of the UN Security Council? (+ Decision Making process and Membership)
Origins: int coop and prosperity after devastating WW2 much needed -> UN, WTO, Bretton Woods inst
Functions: Created in 1946 to foster int coop and peace (approves mil actions, sanctions,…) and additionally approves new UN Charter members
5 normal members with veto and 10 rotary members by world region
-> problem: umbrella effect of veto power (US for Israel, Russia for Syria)
What were the three main pillars of the int order after 1945?
What is power diffusion and transition?
Diffusion: gov`ts are losing power since several NSAs gain influence in this global world (harder for state to keep sovereignty)
Transition: the change in power distribution away from West towards Asia
Who are the Kurds, why and which problems are they having in Turkey?
Kurds: largest stateless pop united by ethnicity and culture, but with different dialects and languages; were key to fighting IS (have now been sacked by US, even though they`ve been promised to be protected)
Situation in Turkey: PKK has been in conflict with turkish state for years and since 2020 studying Kurding or going to a kurdish School is prohibited (major protests with civilian causalties after Siege of Kobani and several other riots/protests)
-> half of Kurds live in Turkey (originally of mesopotamian descent); were promised an own state but when Ottoman empire fell in 1923 and modern borders of Turkey denied Kurds poss of own territory
Who are the Rohingya, why are they opressed and which are the challenges they face?
nationless pop which is mostly muslim with a minority being hindu, that had to flee Myanmar into Bangladesh due to prosecution in their homelands ( no poss of education, use of public inst); not accepted by buddhist Myanmar
-> reason for recent escalation: political Rohingya group ARSA attacking burmese customs officers
Conservatism definition
tested by timeSocialism definition (+ problems)
Liberalism definition
Fascism definition (+ diff totalitarianism and authoritarianism)
Diff tot and auth: totalitarianism > authoritarianism; tot requires overtaking whole gov`t