PowerPoint 프레젠테이션 - DePaul University GIS
Download
Report
Transcript PowerPoint 프레젠테이션 - DePaul University GIS
Sub-Saharan Africa
Introduction
Cultural
complexity
Language,
The
religion, ethnicity, colonialism
world’s fastest growing region
45%
Low
of population is younger than 15 years old
economic output
1%
of global output with 11% population
Mounting debt structural adjustment programs
Environmental Geography
Elevated landmass
Low Africa
Great Rift Valley
High Africa
Great Escarpment
Plateaus
Escarpment
Forms
when plateau abruptly ends (eg. falls)
impedes river navigation low connectivity in this region
Great
Escarpment: refers to coastal escarpment in south
narrow coastal plane few human settlement in the coast
Mountain
range
Volcanic
mountains in southern half of the Great Rift
Valley (eg. Killimanjaro, Mount Kenya)
created in divergent plate boundary
Divergent plate boundary
Ridge
Rift Valley
The Rift Valley
In the Eastern Africa, this geological forces produce gash
along the boundary (eg. Lake Nyasa, Lake Tanganyika,
Lake Victoria)
fertile soil, abundant water dense settlement in eastern Africa
Watersheds
Congo
River (or Zaire)
The
Second largest river
Bndry. betw. Rep. of Congo and Demo. Rep. of Congo
Nile
River
The
Longest river
Lifeblood of Egypt, Sudan
Connects between North and Sub-Saharan Africa
Watersheds
Niger
River
Critical
source of water for the arid countries
Mali, Niger, Nigeria
Historic
Zambezi
Major
city – Tombouctou (11th century)
River
supplier of commercial energy
Kariba
Angola,
Res, Cabora Bassa Res.
Zambia, Zimbabwe, Mozambique
Soils
Relatively
infertile
can’t support intensive agriculture
Soil
fertility explains patterns of settlement
Rift
valley
Rwanda,
Nigeria
Brundi, Ethiopia, Kenya
Mostly tropical climates
(Af, Aw, BSh, BWh)
except for South Africa
Climate
Tropical forests (Af)
Warm
to hot temperature;
year-round precipitation
Relatively
intact (cf. SE
Asia, Latin America)
Low
population
Oil exports
Political chaos
Savannas (Aw)
Wrapped
around rain forest
Mixture of trees and tall
grasses
Critical habitat for large
fauna
Eg.
Masai Mara Nat’l Park,
Kenya
Deserts
Sahara
Desert, Namib Desert, Kalahari Desert
Midlatitude climates
South Africa
Southwestern
Mediterranean
climate (Csb)
wine production
Eastern
coast
subtropical
climate (Cfa)
Highland
Exhibits
Montane
Rift
altitudinal zonation
zones
Valley zone
Drakensberg Range
Desertification in the Sahel
Sahel
Between
Sahara Desert and Savanna southward
Transhumance
Movement
of animals between wet-season and dry-season
pasture adequate precipitation is essential for livelihood
Drought
(1968-74)
Desert-like
condition began to move south
Threaten the livelihoods of farmers and pastoralists
What causes the Sahelian drought?
Human-induced
Expansion
environmental degradation
of agriculture
loss of natural vegetation, declines in soil fertility
eg. peanuts production during the French colonial rule
Overgrazing
Expansion
of animal production after WWII
eg. wells digging to supply water
Climatic
fluctuation
Deforestation
Often
occurs in Savanna rather than rain forest
shortage of biofuel; Green Belt Movement
Deforestation
Central Africa’s
Deforested
Ituri rain forest
for logging
Madagascar’s
eastern rain
forest
endangered biodiversity
Lemur
Wildlife conservation
Diseases
kept people and livestock out of the areas
Survival of wildlife
Wildlife
reserves are in
East Africa
(Kenya, Tanzania)
Southern Africa (Zimbabwe)
Poaching
(eg. ivory trade) is a problem
Population and Settlement
Overall, not densely populated
Similar to that of U.S.
Young population, large families
population growth
family planning policies in the 1980s
High child mortality, low life expectancy
low access to basic health services
Population density
Crude
population density
Population
/ area
Even though SubSaharan Africa has low
Physiological density
crude population
# people per unit of arable land density, it has high
agricultural density
Agricultural
#
density
farmers per unit of arable land
Family size
Large families are encouraged by
Rural lifestyle
Seen
Ethnic
as a source of labor, and social security
rivalries
More
High
number is affiliated with high political influence
child mortality rates
Limited education to women
Family size
Recently growth rate has weaken due to
Government policies
Urbanization
AIDS
Population concentration
West Africa,
Highland East Africa
Fertile soil, permanent agriculture
Eastern
half of South Africa
Urbanized
economy based on mining
Forced relocation of black South Africans into eastern
homelands
Subsistence crops
tropical soils shifting cultivation (or
swidden) can’t support high population density
Poor
Staple
crops (millet, sorghum, corn, and tubers) all
over the region
Yam
in West Africa (eg. Ibo: southeastern Nigeria)
Irrigated rice in West Africa, and Madagascar
Plantation crops
Coffee:
Ethiopia, Kenya, Rwanda, Brundi,
Tanzania
Peanuts: Sahel
Cotton: Sudan, Central African Republic
Cocoa: Ghana, Ivory Coast
Rubber: Liberia
Palm oil: Nigeria
Herding and livestock
Extremely important in semiarid zones
Camel, goats in Sahara; cow father south of Sahara
Symbiotic relationships with neighboring farmers
Manure of stocks can fertilize the soil; exchanged for grain
But often pastoralists independent of agriculture (eg. Masai)
Difficult environment for raising livestock because of
infestation of tsetse flies (eg. Central Africa)
Historic cities
Axum, Ethiopia (1st century)
Tombouctou, Gao in the Sahel (11th century)
Capital of ancient empire
Trans-Saharan trader centers
Zanzibar(Tanzania), Mombasar(Kenya) (12th century)
established by Arab traders
Rooted in Swahili language
West African cities
Ibadan, Nigeria – settled by Yoruba (12th century)
Lagos, Nigeria – 12 million, Yoruba
Lagos
Accra,
Ghana – settled by Ga (16th century)
Colonial
administrative center in the late 1800s
Division along income lines
South African cities
Colonial
origin unlike that of west Africa
eg.
Lusaka (Zambia), Harare(Zimbabwe), and
metropolitan areas in South Africa rich minerals
South Africa
eg.
Johannesburg, Durban, and Cape Town
Reflects the legacy of apartheid
Racial segregation in Cape Town
Cultural Coherence and Diversity
No
institutionalized form of religion
No widespread unified language
Many
Lacks
of African are multilingual
a history of widespread political union
Common history of slavery and colonialism
African language groups
Can be divided into two types
(1) Associated with other parts of the world
Afro-Asiatic (North Africa, Ethiopia, Somali) Islam
Austronesian (Madacascar) indonesian settlement
Indo-European (French, English, Afrikaans) colonialism
(2) Unique to the region
Nilo-Saharan (Southern Sudan, Sahel)
Khoisan (Kalahari)
Niger-Congo Bantu migration
Bantu Migration
Swahili is the most widely spoken
Sub-Saharan language
Religion
Combine
animist practices and ideas with their
observances of Christianity and Islam
Introduction of Christianity
A.D. 200 ~
Northern Ethiopia: Coptic form of Christianity
1600s ~
South Africa: European settlers and missionaries (1600s)
Dutch settlers
Mid 1800s ~
Former British colony – Protestant Christianity
Former French, Belgian, Portuguese colony – Catholicism
U.S. – Pentecostal, Evangelical, Mormon
Introduction of Islam
1000
years ago
introduced to
Sahel from
North Africa
Later,
southward
spread from
Sahel
Interaction between religious traditions
Unlike
other regions, religion is not a source of
political conflict in the Sub-Saharan Africa with
the exception of Sudan
Coexistence
Nigeria:
Hausa (north) & Igbo, Yoruba (south)
Eritrea: Half Christian, half Muslim
Eastern coast: Eastern Islam & Hinterland Animist
Conflict
Sudan:
Muslims in north vs non-Muslims in south
African music tradition
trade melding of African cultures with
Amerindian and European ones
Slave
eg.
Rumba, jazz, bossa nova, the blues, rock & roll
Congo’s Authenticity Movement
Introduced
by President Motutu
Subsidies to musical groups
Franco’s
OK Jazz band: rumba + Congolese folk music
Soukous: dance step & music style
eg.
Papa Wemba
Music as political conscience
Singer
Fela Kuti was voice of political conscience
for Nigerians struggling for democracy
Lyrics critical of military government
Geopolitical Framework
Long
duration of human settlement
Ethnic conflicts after the colonial era
Indigenous kingdoms
Influenced by Egypt and Arabia
B.C. 2000 Nubia (northern Sudan)
A.D. 200 Axum (northern Ethiopia, Eritrea)
The first Indigenous African states in the Sahel
Ghana, Mali, Songhai, Kanem-Bornu
City-states in the Gulf of Guinea
Ife/Oyo, Benin, Dahomey, Ashanti
Later profit from the slave trade in the 16th, and 17th century
Early Sub-Saharan states and empires
European colonization
Failed/limited
due to diseases until mid 1800s
Portuguese
in Angola and Mozambique
Dutch in South Africa
Quinine
made colonization possible
Scramble
British
for Africa in the 1880s
seizure of Egypt (1882)
Empire-building
Berlin Conference
Gathering
of 13 countries in 1884 in which SubSaharan Africa was carved up and traded around
No Africans
Borders
participated
drawn with disregard for African cultures
European colonization in 1913
Establishment of South Africa
Dutch settlement (1652~) in Cape Town
Became Afrikaner or Boer
Slowly expanded towards north and east
Developed social system based on racism
British seizure of Cape district (1806)
Afrikaner migration (1835-43?)
Afrikaner establishment of two republics (1850s)
British incorporated the Zulu (1900)
Establishment of South Africa
Establishment of South Africa
Boer War (1899-1902)
British-Afrikaner tension over mineral wealth in Transvaal
(South African Republic)
The British annexed two republics to form the union of South
Africa
South Africa’s independence (1910)
Afrikaner’s National Party gained control (1948)
Introduced apartheid
Construction of black homelands by ethnic group
Establishment of South Africa
Establishment of South Africa
Townships
segregated
neighborhoods for nonwhites,
located on outskirts of cities
Opposition
Free
to apartheid during 1960s ~ 1980s
election (1994)
Elimination of Homelands
Establishment of South Africa
Decolonization and independence
Beginning in 1957, smooth transition
Organization of African Unity (OAU) (1963)
Continent-wide organization
Mediate disputes between neighbors
Former Portuguese colonies: Angola, Mozambique
armed resistance
Socialist-oriented rebel movement during Cold War
Enduring political conflict
Lack
of institutional framework for independent
government; lack of higher education
Difficult
to establish cohesive states because of
legacy of Berlin Conference
European
colonial powers have drawn boundaries
without regard for cultural and political geographies
Enduring political conflict
Refugees
People who flee their state because of a well-found fear of
persecution based on race, ethnicity, religion, or political
orientation
3 million Africans (2000)
Internally displaced persons
People who flee from conflict but still reside in their country of
origin
13 million Africans (2000)
Ethnic conflicts
Rwanda
(1994)
Democratic Republic of the Congo (1996)
Liberia (1989-96)
Sierra Leone (2000)
Somalia (early 1990s)
Secessionist movements
Republic
of Katanga (1960), Congo
State of Biafra (1967), Nigeria
Eritrea (1993), Ethiopia
Province of Equatoria, Sudan
Postcolonial conflicts
Big man politics
Occurred when presidents refuse to let go of reigns of
power
Military governments, one-party states, and presidentsfor-life are the norm
Nigeria, Democratic Republic of Congo, Liberia
Corruption of political institutions
Disproportionate spending on the military
1990s saw growth in multi-party states and free elections
Economic and Social Development
Negative economic growth
Roots of African poverty –
environmental factors
Infertile
soil
Erratic patterns of rainfall
Paucity of navigable river
Virulence of tropical diseases
Roots of African poverty – historical
and institutional factors
Slave trade depopulation, flee into refuges
Colonization
little investment in infra., rather interested in natural extraction
Impedes internally dynamic economy
Failed development policies
economic nationalism less competitive industries
Agricultural and food policies
low prices of crops opted for subsistence agriculture
Focus on export crops failure to meet staple food needs
Corruption: kleptocracy
Links to the world economy
Major export & import : E.U., U.S.
Low connectivity
But expansion of mobile telephone
More aid than investment
Little foreign investment too poor and unstable
Debt relief program
Given
to countries that are determined to have
“unsustainable” debt burdens
States
qualify for different levels of debt relief
provided they present a poverty reduction strategy
Uganda, Tanzania,
Mozambique…
South Africa
Largest
economy in Sub-Saharan Africa
Well-developed, well-balanced industrial economy
Healthy agricultural sector
World’s mining superpowers
Gold
Worst
production
distributions of income in the world
Oil and mineral producers
Oil
Nigeria,
Gabon, Cameron
Republic of Congo
Equatorial Guinea
Mineral
resources
Diamond
- Namibia, Botswana
Leaders of ECOWAS
Nigeria
Second largest economy
Oil money urban growth
Ivory Coast, Senegal
Commercial centers
Economic downturn in the 1980s
Ghana
Economic recovery in the 1990s
Debt relief negotiation (2001)
East Africa
Kenya
Good
infrastructure by African standars
1 million foreign tourists
Agricultural exports of coffee dominate economy
Tanzania
form of socialism – Ujaama
World’s largest per capital recipient of foreign aid
Built African
Poorest states
Sahel
Horn of Africa
Ethiopia, Eritrea, and Somalia
Conflict-afflicted states
Mali, Burkina Faso, Niger, and Chad
Burundi, Rwanda, Sierra Leone, Liberia, Angola, and the
Democratic Republic of the Congo
Etc.
Malawi, Guinea Bissau, Gambia, and Zambia
Low life expectancy
child mortality rate paucity of health care
Extreme poverty
Environmental hazards (drought)
Environmental and infectious diseases (malaria,
cholera, SIDS, and measles)
High
Women and development
Invisible
contributors to local and national
economies
Dominates informal sector which accounts for 30
to 50% of GDP
Status of women
No
social liabilities
cf.
South Asia, SW Asia, North Africa
Discrimination
Prevalence
polygamy, practice of “bride-price”, denial
of property inheritance
Practice of female circumcision, or genital mutilation