CHAPTERS 29, 31 & 32:  THE GLOBALIZATION OF CULTURE, AND THE GEOGRAPHY OF INEQUALITY: RACE, ETHNICITY & GENDER

CHAPTER 31       CHAPTER 32        CHAPTER 29

 

CHAPTER 31. GEOGRAPHIES OF INEQUALITY: RACE AND ETHNICITY

In the last two decades, geographers have become extremely interested in the issue of ethnicity. Ethnic groups are found in essentially all societies. Ethnic groups are populations that feel a common bond and have a sense of common origin that distinguishes them from other groups. Religion, language, national origin, and skin color are all used to various degrees by ethnic groups to distinguish themselves from others. It is estimated that the 200 or so independent countries recognized by the United Nations are made up of about 5000 ethnic groups. Increased migration of people in the last 200 years has produced a complex pattern of ethnic groups.

Essentially, ethnicity is a spatial concept. Ethnic groups are associated with clearly recognized territories, either some large homeland district or some smaller urban or rural enclaves in which they are the primary or exclusive occupant. In addition, they have somehow marked these places with certain distinguished cultural signs.

Students should be made aware of the fluidity of the concept of the term ethnicity. For example, the various language groups that occupied North America before the arrival of the Europeans (e.g., Iroquois, Apache, etc.) are generally not described as ethnic groups, while individual populations migrating from patterns of similar complexity in Europe are always called ethnic groups (e.g, Germans, Bohemians, etc.).

The term "ethnic" comes from the Greek word ethnos, which means people or nation, but it is used in the contemporary world to label groups that share some prominent trait. While there must be some physical and social identification, which sets them apart from other nations, there is no single trait that denotes ethnicity. Ethnic groups are frequently distinguished from racial groups, but the concept of race is so poorly defined that many people use the word race and ethnicity interchangeably. Most readings on ethnicity link it directly to immigration, and most major textbooks in geography focus on ethnicity in the United States . Since the fall of the Soviet Union , ethnicity has become a more common topic for academic discussion. It is also linked with the notion of nationalism. Nationalism argues that distinctive groups (perhaps ethnic groups) should have sovereignty and control internal political and economic affairs.

Human geographers give varying amounts of importance to ethnicity in the United States in the introductory courses. A survey of books published in the last decade will shows a growing emphasis on ethnicity. Although emphasis has increased, the confusion between race and ethnicity has not diminished. Most textbooks discuss ethnic enclaves or even entities such as the "Mormon cultural region."  Some textbooks refer to Native Americans, Hispanic Americans, and African Americans as ethnic groups and map their various patterns and change over time.

Textbooks also focus on the landscapes produced by ethnic groups, although it is very difficult to find clear-cut examples of such areas. Agricultural landscapes created by North American immigrants have been subsumed in the mass culture produced by the industrial era. In contrast, European landscapes are not threatened by mass culture to the same degree, because unique field and crop patterns or house types make them more distinct.

American textbooks also describe ethnicity as it relates to urban patterns and to historic processes by which groups that are confined to certain parts of industrial cities become minority populations in the United States (i.e., segregation). Segregation is, of course, a shorthand term for the concept that these individuals are not distributed randomly over the city, and it continues today in North American cities. There are two kinds of segregation: One is forced segregation, in which individuals are coerced by majority powers to stay in a certain area. The other pattern in known as affinity segregation, in which groups choose to live with one another, even though there is no official sanction against them spreading over the entire region.

In recent times, the American public has been shocked by the conflict among ethnic groups in Rwanda , the Balkans, and particularly those surrounding the breakup of the former state of Yugoslavia . Conflicts among ethnic groups in places like Israel , Yugoslavia , Armenia , Azerbaijan , Rwanda , Ethiopia , and Eritrea are regrettably frequent and violent. Geographers have no real insight into why ethnic groups hate and/or go to war against one another. At one time it was thought that there was some deep-seated instinct to defend territory that united humans with animals, birds and fish. Today, belief in defensible territoriality is not widespread through the profession.

The distinction between ethnicity — as discussed in the chapter on cultural geography — and nationalism — which is discussed in the political geography section of the course  —  is, in many respects, a question of scale. Nationalities are ethnic groups that have control of a territory or a country which may or may not be completely independent. When members of a nation move into another nation-state, they become an ethnic group in the new country. So the distinction between these two concepts is one of time and place. Ethnic groups can become nations through a process of nation building and wars of independence and liberation. Members of nations can also become ethnic groups by moving from their country of origin into another country.

One feature that characterizes ethnic and nationalist warfare is what is now called ethnic cleansing. This is an ancient practice in which the victors relocate the vanquished by moving them. For example, the Native Americans were moved from almost the entire area they occupied in the eastern section in the United States . More recently, during the breakup of Yugoslavia , Serbs moved Croatians, and Croatians moved Serbs — each moving the other from territories they felt belonged to them. Most recently, the Serbian population was forced out of the Serbian province of Kosovo .

We use the term racism widely to refer to patterns of behavior, which demonstrate that members of one race feel that another race is inferior. This attitude also seems to apply to ethnic groups as well, but we don't have a word like "ethnicism" which would mean one ethnic group feels superior to another because of the innate quality of the group. In this case, it would be a cultural rather than a strictly biological quality. This whole field of inquiry into racism, prejudice, and ethnic feelings and attitudes is in a major state of flux at present because of the rise of strong nationalism and feelings of ethnic group solidarity. The renewed importance of ethnicity seems to have taken American scholars by surprise.  Scientists are struggling to come up with some kind of understanding of this apparently very ancient attitude.

CHAPTER OUTLINE

   I.       The human race

             A.    All humans belong to the same species

                     1.     The term race focuses on differences rather than on similarities

                     2.     Many anthropologists believe the whole concept of human "races" should be abandoned

  II.       A geography of race

             A.    Genetic makeup is the key

                     1.     Within a species, chromosomes of reproducing organisms are identical in number and size

                     2.     Focus on: Genetics

                     3.     Regional differences in physical appearance

                             a)     Does not result from differences in fundamental genetic makeup of each group

                             b)     Does result from differences in gene frequencies among populations

                     4.     Blood type differences

                             a)     Type O dominates in Native American populations

                             b)     Type A dominates in Western Europe

                     5.     Differences occur within the human race, not between races

                             a)     Differences probably result from a long history of adaptation to different environments

                             b)     Use of the term "race" is in error

             B.     Culture and race

                     1.     After thousands of years populations with distinct physical attributes are still clustered

                     2.     Example of Rwanda : a cultural not a racial conflict

                     3.     Examples of Yugoslavia and Northern Ireland

                     4.     Culture often fires conflict

             C.    Human biological variation

                     1.     Some anthropologists argue there are four basic human stocks

                             a)     The Negroid Stock

                             b)     The Australoid Stock

                             c)     The Mongoloid Stock

                             d)     The Caucasoid Stock

                             e)     Not all groups fit into the above four categories

                     2.     Skin color (Figure 30-1)

                             a)     Most pervasive biological-physical traits

                             b)     Melanin pigment

                                      (1)      Protects against the sun's radiation in tropical populations

                                      (2)      Higher latitude people have less melanin and lighter skins

                                      (3)      Protects inner layers of skin from ultraviolet rays

                             c)     Often first thing people notice about another person is their color                                            

                             d)     Populations in South America have lighter skins than populations in African and Australiasian tropics

                     3.     Physique and size

                             a)     Bergmann's Rule – the closer you get to the tropics the slimmer the people tend to be.

                             b)     Stress and diet can be determining factors

                             c)     People in Europe , Japan , and the United States are growing taller

                             d)     No totally satisfactory explanations for variations in humanity's physical appearance

                     4.     Other physical traits

                             a)     Head shape: cephalic index

                             b)     Facial features: nose shape and length

                             c)     Hair types: straight, curly, woolly

                             d)     Epicanthic fold: overlapping skin over the eye

 III.       Race as a social category

             A.    Racism

                     1.     Part of the human condition, has both geographic expression and geographic consequences

                     2.     Turkish guestworkers in Germany are attacked

                     3.     In India , lighter-skinned families have enjoyed advantage and privilege for centuries

                     4.     Example of the United States ' relationship with African Americans

                     5.     Perception of segregated neighborhoods in the United States

             B.     Race and environment

                     1.     Early civilizations

                             a)     Asia and Africa developed sophisticated cultures long before most European societies arose above simple tribal organization

                             b)     Example of China and Southwest Asia

                     2.     The "racial" stereotype remains a huge obstacle to social harmony

  IV.     Ethnic patterns and processes

             A.    Introduction

             B.     Ethnic mosaics

                     1.     In America , ethnic enclaves are common

                             a)     Have names such as "Little Italy, " Chinatown ," or "Little Havana" etc.

                             b)     Place names can refer to ethnic background

                     2.     Term ethnic comes from the Greek word ethnos, meaning "people" or "nation"

                     3.     Racial identity is largely a matter of self-perception

                             a)     Previously discussed Slovenia

                             b)     Northern Ireland and its religious ethnic glue

                             c)     Belgium 's problem is principally linguistic

                             d)     The Maori community in New Zealand have a growing ethnic awareness and identity

                     4.     Ethnicity exists at many spatial dimensions, large and small

                     5.     Advantages of ethnic community

                             a)     Group identity and cohesiveness yield advantages for the individual

                             b)     Constitutes a social network

                             c)     For the new arrival it eases transition

                             d)     A familiar language and common church

                             e)     Preserves and protects customs and traditions to mutual advantage

             C.    Acculturation and ethnicity

                     1.     Diffusion of popular American culture traits affects ethnic neighborhoods

                     2.     Miami 's Cuban neighborhoods

                             a)     Now a generation old

                             b)     The older Spanish-speaking residents represent a dwindling minority

                             c)     Old values still prevail, but acculturation is eroding them

                             d)     Young Cubans born in Florida are adopting American cultural norms

                             e)     These neighborhoods are in transition that will stabilize

                     3.     Miami also has other ethnic culture neighborhoods (Figure 30-3))

                     4.     Focus on: Ethnicity and Environment

                     5.     Cultural revival

                             a)     People of similar ethnic background first clustered in particular areas                                   

                             b)     Later they diffused outward relocating from the cluster that served as a stepping stone (Figure 30-3A)

                             c)     These dispersed immigrants intermarry and form loose networks

                             d)     They are still conscious of their shared ethnicity (Figure 30-3B)

                             e)     Prosperity generates funds used to revive old ties to the common cultural source–renewed awareness of cultural linkage (Figure 30-3C)

                             f)      Renewed cultural linkage tends to counter assimilation

                             g)     In recent years former immigrant groups have even demonstrated in support of their former homelands

                     6.     Focus on: Ethnicity, Folk Culture, and Popular Culture

   V.      Ethnic conflict

             A. Introduction

             B.     The case of Quebec

                     1.     Large environmentally diverse country with a plural society

                     2.     Canada is divided into 10 provinces, and two territories

                     3.     Has a specially designated territory of Nunavut , set aside for the indigenous peoples (Figure 30-4)

                     4.     Because of a vast regional geography, Canada faces diverse problems

                     5.     Provinces are accustomed to a degree of autonomy

                     6.     Today the biggest problem in Canada is ethnicity and ethnic revival

             C.    French Canada

                     1.     Historical geography of Quebec

                             a)     French entered part of what is now Canada in the 1530s; the British followed

                             b)     French created laws, a land tenure system, and the Roman Catholic church prevailed

                             c)     A series of wars with the English ended with French defeat

                             d)     French kept a certain amount of territory, their land tenure system, and church

                             e)     The British parliament changed Quebec province many times before the French accepted their terms

                             f)      When Charles de Gaulle visited Canada the French found a champion

             D.    Ethnic revival

                     1.     Ethnic feeling in Quebec has risen in surges since the 1960s

                     2.     Quebec demanded to be recognized as a "distinct society" within Canada

                     3.     In 1988 Quebec enacted a law making it illegal to exhibit any outdoor commercial sign in a language other than French within the entire province

                     4.     Feelings of ethnicity rose among Canada 's native peoples as well

                             a)     They want their rights protected by the Canadian federal government

                             b)     Quebec 's Mohawks do not wish to become part of a sovereign Quebec

             E.     Territorial adjustments

                     1.     Ethnic assertion by Canada 's native peoples could have an impact on the future map of  the country

                     2.     The Crees' historic domain extends over more than half of Quebec

                     3.     Quebec remains a prime example of ethnic revival

                     4.     The Quebec government has established an official presence in Paris , France

                     5.     Canada 's government has tried hard to prevent the problems of ethnic revival, but it has not worked

                     6.     The forces of ethnicity can disrupt even the most stable governmental system

CHAPTER 32. GENDER AND THE GEOGRAPHY OF INEQUALITY

Just as there is a geography of ethnicity, language, and religion, there is a geography of gender. Gender refers to the inequality of the sexes, and is a term that is related to social situation, not just biology. We can see the differences between modern geography and tradition geography most clearly in the treatment of the geography of gender. In the past, scientists and writers viewed humans not as sexual beings, but just as people. The way a man viewed the environment was thought to be shared by women and children of all ages. Beginning in the 1980s, a new interpretation of cultural geography took hold. Sometimes called the new cultural geography, it breaks down the old monolithic view of culture.

There are five general contexts in which the geography of gender is the most important: demography and health; family and social conditions; education and opportunity; economic and productive activity; and politics/public life. Students of the geography of gender are plagued by the lack of accurate statistics and comparable data from different places around the world. Therefore, this field of geography is attracting researchers.

Looking first at demography and health, we see the longevity gap (the fact that women tend to live longer than men). Since 1950, the longevity gap in the world expanded from five to seven years. In India , Pakistan , and Bangladesh , male and female longevity rates are essentially the same. However, Russia women, on average, live fourteen years longer than men, and in the United States , women live six years longer. This pattern varies all over the world. The gap may be rooted in women's behavior. Women are less likely to adopt the unhealthy habits associated with wealth including cigarette smoking and alcohol consumption. Although women live longer, this is not an indication that their quality of life is significantly better than that of men. Women face high maternal mortality rates and, in some parts of the world, they are malnourished and overworked. In some cultures where there is a strong bias toward men, female infanticide is practiced. It is reported that 300,000 more girls than boys die each year, and many more are never born because they are aborted after gender detection tests. As a result, the ratio of men to women in India continues to widen where now it is approximately 900 women to 1000 men. In 1994, the United Nations reported that there are 133 single men for every 100 single women.

Education is also disproportionately available for girls and boys. In North America , it is normal for all boys and girls to attend school, but in other places, it is quite uncommon for women to study. In India the overall literacy rate is 55 percent, but UNICEF estimates that 65 to 75 percent of all Indian women are illiterate.

If we look at economic productivity, we see a problem in the collection of statistics. Women's work is primarily focused inside the home and is not given any dollar value. This makes any discussion of productivity flawed. The female labor force is growing, and in advanced economies, more and more women are working as skilled labor.

Politics and public life is a sad story. In major democracies worldwide, women only recently began to vote, and in only a few, such as Norway , Iceland , and the United Kingdom , they occupy high-level positions. In the United States , women were enfranchised only in 1920, and their political power is still less than that of men.

One of the growing subfields of geography is the study of geography of the home. Many feel this topic is the last unexplored area on the surface of the earth. Landscapes like the home that are created and dominated by women are usually unreported in the core literature of geography.

CHAPTER OUTLINE

   I.       Introduction

             A.    Women's inequality in poorer countries

                     1.     Countries with high population growth rates

                             a)      Women who bear the children are confined to their village

                             b)      Men and women born and raised in the same village live in different worlds

                     2.     Migration

                             a)      In African refugee camps, women and female children always are the worst off

                             b)      In voluntary migrations, males tend to dominate the decision-making process

                             c)      In new destinations, males quickly widen their activity spaces

                             d)      Male dominance remains the rule rather than the exception

             B.     Women in the modern developed countries

                     1.     Reduction of inequality between men and women

                     2.     Women not always paid the same wage for the same work as men

                     3.     In corporate, political, and many other settings inequality can still be seen

                     4.     Women take jobs closer to home

                             a)      Families to take care of

                             b)      Work hours so they can be home when necessary

                             c)      They lose opportunity for advancement

                     5.     Example of Saudi Arabia , an oil rich nation

                             a)      Women are not allowed to drive automobiles

                             b)      Women who drove during the Gulf War were arrested

  II.       Demography and health

             A.    The longevity gap

                     1.     On the average women today tend to live about 4 years longer than men

                     2.     In the developed countries, between 1950 and 1990, the gap widened from 5 to 7 years

                     3.     Men and women have equal life expectancy in just three of the world's countries

                             (Figure 31-1)

                     4.     In virtually all cultures, men tend to marry younger women

                     5.     Hundreds of millions of women who spent lifetimes sustaining families die alone in poverty

             B.     Quality of life

                     1.     Women in the poorer countries of the world

                             a)      Pregnancy and childbirth confront women with high health risks

                             b)      Pregnancy risk is 80 to 600 times higher than that in developed countries

                             c)      Asian women face the highest maternal mortality rate

                             d)      Inadequate medical services

                             e)      Excessive number of pregnancies and malnutrition (Figure 31-2)

                     2.     Gender differences in nutrition in the poorer countries

                             a)      Women are less well nourished than men

                             b)      Female children are even worse off

                             c)      Reports from WHO indicate that anemia affects the majority of women

             C.    Female infanticide

                     1.     India

                             a)      Many are aborted after gender-detection tests

                             b)      India , in 1994, had 133 single men for every 100 single women

                             c)      Female infants are killed by oleander berries, smothering, by depriving them of food

                             d)      Laws prohibiting prenatal tests solely to determine sex of a fetus are being violated

                             e)      Fathers want male children to see the lineage preserved

                             f)       Tradition of dowry makes males valuable even if it is now illegal

                     2.     China

                             a)      One-child policy has brought an imbalance in male-to-female ratio

                             b)      Number of males unable to find wives during the first decade of the twenty-first century will double or even triple

                     3.     Government incentives may be necessary to stop the imbalance in male-to-female ratios

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