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Superpower Geographies. Dr. Alasdair Pinkerton Department of Geography Royal Holloway, University of London a.d.pinkerton@rhul.ac.uk. @rhulgeography. @alpinkerton. Question 1:. What is a superpower?. What is a superpower?.
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Superpower Geographies Dr. Alasdair Pinkerton Department of Geography Royal Holloway, University of London a.d.pinkerton@rhul.ac.uk @rhulgeography @alpinkerton
Question 1: What is a superpower?
What is a superpower? • Country (or countries) with exceptional capacities especially military/industrial – nuclear weapon state • Global reach and projection of power • William Fox (1944) first used the term to refer to Allied powers at end of WWII
Winston Churchill Prime Minister, UK Franklin D Roosevelt President, US Joseph Stalin Premier, USSR Yalta Conference: February 4-11 1945
Question 2: Why might the term be useful?
Why might the term be useful? Exposes some powerful fictions of international politics: • All states equal and international boundaries respected by other states • Sovereignty is absolute • Superpowers as hyper-modern, developed, and civilizing agents?
Why might the term be useful? Helps us understand how/where global power is possessed and acquired… NON-STATE ACTORS NGOs, MNCs, Terrorist groups ISSUES Proliferation, disease, trade, resources, etc. BRIC Brazil, Russia, India, China
Cold War and Two Superpowers
Cold War and Two Superpowers Economic superpowers – trade and finance Military superpowers – nuclear weapon states Political superpowers – rival global ideologies Culture superpowers– public diplomacy and ‘soft power’ Rocky IV (1985)
Challenging superpowers • Non-Aligned Movement in 1950s and 1960s post-colonial states and ‘third way’ • Dissidents within the US and USSR • Resistance and defeat in Vietnam (US) and Afghanistan (USSR) and again….Iraq, Chechnya and Afghanistan Nehru (India) Nkrumah (Kenya) Nasser (Egypt) Sukarno (Indonesia) Tito (Yugoslavia)
Superpowers have their limits • Bound up in networks of allies and supporters e.g. NATO and Warsaw Pact • Military-Industrial supremacy expensive to maintain • Rise and fall of superpowers – from Vietnam to Iraq (US) and from the USSR (1917-1991) to Russia (1991-present) • Other nuclear weapon states e.g. India, Israel, Pakistan, North Korea, China…
Beyond the Cold War: Rising Powers? Brazil, China, India and Russia (BRIC) Is China the next superpower? US-China competing over resources, markets and strategic influence in Africa, Asia and Latin America Is the US a declining superpower?
Beyond the Cold War: Rising Powers? Military expenditure (US$ Billions)
China and the US in Africa Africa at the Boiling Point
China and the Polar Regions • China has a research stations in Svalbard and in Antarctica • China conducts research around central Arctic Ocean • China believes Arctic will be a resource rich frontier
EU as Superpower EU as a Superpower?
Alternative superpowers? • The Vatican as a religious superpower: • Tiny geographical enclave, but global community of believers (over 1.1 Billion followers) • Apple as a commercial superpower: • $76Bn in cash reserves. More money than the US government • Blackwater as a military superpower: • Blackwater (now Academi) named as world’s most powerful mercenary army
Conclusions Superpowers matter, but they are embedded within relationships, networks and actors Rise of potential superpowers but can/will BRIC or EU show global leadership? Do we need a more nuanced understanding of “power” to help us hold MNCs to account