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What is the shrinking world?
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All Flashcards in Topic 4.3
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4.3.112 cards
What is the shrinking world?
The sense that places feel **closer** because faster transport and communications cut the **time and cost** of crossing the distance between them.
Define time-space convergence.
The **fall in travel time (and cost)** between two places as transport and communications technology improves.
Does the Earth actually get smaller in the shrinking world?
No — its real size is unchanged. What shrinks is the **friction of distance**: the time, cost and effort of crossing it.
Name the main transport technologies that shrank the world, in order.
Sail to **steamship** to **railway** to **jet airliner** (plus container shipping and high-speed rail).
Name the main communications technologies that shrank the world, in order.
The postal letter to the **telegraph** to the **telephone** to the **internet** and **social media**.
Why is the shrinking world uneven between people?
Because it depends on **access** to technology — the **digital divide** leaves poorer and remoter groups with a large, slow world.
What is a multi-government organisation (MGO)?
A body of cooperating governments that sets **shared rules** to smooth flows of trade, money and people across borders.
What is a free-trade zone or trade bloc?
An agreed area within which **tariffs and trade barriers are cut**, speeding the movement of goods and capital between members.
What is an export-processing zone (EPZ)?
A special industrial area offering **tax breaks and relaxed rules** to attract investment and accelerate export flows.
Name two forces that SPEED UP global interactions.
**MGOs** (shared rules) and **free-trade zones / EPZs** (cut tariffs, tax breaks) — both lower barriers to flows.
Name two forces that SLOW global interactions.
**Physical geography** (mountains, deserts, distance, isolation) and **poor access to technology** (the digital divide).
In one line, how do speeding and slowing forces interact?
Political and economic **structures decide how fast** flows move; **physical geography caps how far** they reach — so they interact rather than simply compete.
4.3.212 cards
What is resistance to global interactions?
Efforts by places, groups and governments to **slow, block or reverse** global flows of trade, people, money and ideas.
Define anti-globalization.
Organised **opposition** to free trade, global institutions and the power of multinational firms.
Define nationalism.
Putting your own nation's **interests, identity and control first**, often above international cooperation.
Define populism.
Politics that pits **ordinary people against a distant 'elite'**, often blaming globalization for everyday hardship.
What is protectionism?
Government policy that **shields home industries** from foreign competition, using tariffs, quotas and subsidies.
What is a tariff?
A **tax on imported goods** that makes them dearer so home-made goods can compete.
What is a sanction?
A deliberate **trade or financial restriction** used to punish or pressure another country.
What is resource nationalism?
When a state keeps **strategic resources** (oil, gas, lithium) under national or state control rather than open to foreign firms.
What is re-shoring?
**Bringing production back** to the home country after years of offshoring it abroad, often with government subsidies.
Why is resistance geographical?
It is **strongest where globalization's costs are felt most** — deindustrialised regions, communities facing rapid change, and states protecting sovereignty.
Why does resistance rarely stop globalization?
Flows **route around** barriers — trade diverts to third countries, sanctioned states find new partners, and digital flows are hard to block.
What is the top-band judgement on resistance?
Resistance is **reshaping, not reversing**, the global economy — it re-routes and re-shores flows, but globalization is too embedded to reverse.
Topic 4.3 study notes
Full notes & explanations for Human and physical influences on global interactions
Geography exam skills
Paper structures, command terms & tips
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