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South Asia
South Asia by majority religion
Pakistan
Nepal
Bhutan
Bangladesh
India
Hindu
Islam
Buddhism
Sri Lanka
Maldives
Introduction
Geopolitical tension religious division
Hindu (India) Muslim (Pakistan)
Demographic concerns high natural growth
High population density
Limited resource bases
Less connected to the global economy
Slow economic growth
Inward orientation
Environmental Geography
Diverse Landscapes, from Tropical Islands to Mountain Rim
The Four Subregions of South Asia
Mountains of the North
Indus-Ganges-Brahmaputra Lowlands
Peninsular India
The Southern Islands
Mountains of the North
Mt. Everest
Includes the world’s highest mountain
Produced by the collision between tectonic plates
seismically active
Indus-Ganges-Brahmaputra Lowlands
Brahmaputra R.
Indus R.
Ganges R.
Created by three major river systems
Population core areas
Peninsular India
Deccan
Plateau
Continuous Western Ghats narrow western coastal plains
Discontinuous Eastern Ghats broad eastern coastal plains
high population densities
The Southern Islands
Sri Lanka:
Maldives:
Flat and low coral atolls
Mountains in the southern interior
ringed by extensive coastal plains
Monsoon rain – June in Mumbai
During the summer monsoon,
Mumbai receives more than 70 inches
of rain in just three months
South Asia’s Climates
Most
of South Asia has three distinct seasons
– Oct.: warm and rainy season
Nov. – Feb: cool and dry season
Match – May: hot period
June
What
is the major factor of this distinct season?
Monsoon
(Distinct seasonal change of wind direction)
Monsoons in South Asia
Summer wet
Winter dry
Southwest monsoon
Northeast monsoon
Orographic rainfall wet
Rain-shadow effect dry
10 inches
• Orographic rainfall results from the uplifting and
cooling of moist monsoon winds over high mountains
• Rainfall varies greatly from place to place
Ganges Delta rice; Punjab wheat
451 inches
Flooding in Bangladesh
Natural condition
Ganges Delta •High precipitation
•Low-lying land
•Cyclone
Man-made condition
•High population
density
•Deforestation in the
river headwater
Population and Settlement
The Demographic Dilemma
Soon will become the world’s most populous region
High natural growth
Fertility patterns vary by countries family planning
India, Bangladesh vs. Pakistan
One of the least urbanized regions in the world
Population distribution
Fertile soils
Dependable water supplies
Pull factor: rural-to-urban migration
Mumbai, Delhi, Calcutta
Push factor: refugees
Afghanistan, Kashmir, Burma, Sri Lanka
Crop zones in South Asia
Punjab
Rice wet, fertile
Wheat semiarid, fertile
Millet, Sorghum less fertile
Cattle in India
India
has the world’s largest cattle population
They don’t produce meat due to Hinduism
Rather, produce milk as major sources of protein
Also used for plowing and pulling carts
Major cities in South Asia
Islamabad
Lahore
Delhi
Karachi
Dhaka
Calcutta
Mumbai
Major cities in South Asia
India
Mumbai: financial center and media capital of India
Delhi: political capital (former Muslim capital, colonial capital)
Calcutta: trading center, declined after partition (1947)
Pakistan
Karachi: commercial core
Islamabad: forward capital – religious, and geopolitical
Bangladesh
Dhaka: global center for clothing, and shoe manufacturing
Overurbanization in South Asia
Mumbai hutments
Cultural Coherence and Diversity
A Common Heritage Rent by Religious Rivalries
Long
united by Hinduism
Caste
Arrival
System
of Islam
Religious
British
Use
rivalries between Hindu and Muslim
imperialism
of English due to multilingualism
Historic overview of South Asia
3000 B.C. 2000 B.C.
800 B.C.
Indus Valley Invasion of Ganges Valley
Civilization Indo-Aryan Civilization
1000 1600 A.D.
Muslim rules
Hinduism
Caste System
Buddhism
Jainism
Sikhism
Islam
Religious diversity in South Asia
Hinduism (1500 B.C.~)
Indus valley civilization + Indo-Aryan religion
Persist to present day (eg. Caste System); main religion in India
Buddhism, Jainism (500 B.C.~)
Challenge to Hinduism orthodoxy
Islam (1000 A.D.~)
Muslim rule in the north or trade network in the south
Active conversion from Hindus to Islam particularly in
northwest (Pakistan) and northeast (Bangladesh)
Sikhism (1400 A.D. ~)
Hinduism + Islam in Punjab(modern bnd b/w. India and Pakistan)
Geographies of Religion
Muslim rule
Sikhism
Hinduism
India, S Nepal
Islam
Pakistan, Bangladesh,
Maldives
15% of India
Northeast Sikhism: Punjab
tribal area
Jainism
Goa
Sri Lanka, Bhutan, NE
Kashmir, N Nepal
Jainism: Gujarat
Trade networks of the Arabian Sea
Buddhism
Christian: Goa, NE India
Linguistic diversity in South Asia
Indo-European
(north)
Iranian
Baluchi,
Pashtun western Pakistan, Afghanistan
Indo-Aryan
Closely
associated with Indian states
Bengali, Punjabi Indian states with Bangladesh, eastern
Pakistan
Singhalese, Divehi Sri Lanka, Maldives
Dravidian (south)
Confined to southern India
Geographies of Language
Indo-European north
Dravidian south
Linguistic Dilemmas
So many different languages in one country
India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka
India has 15 official languages with no unified national language
Role of media
Hindi is spreading through popular media
Role of English
Main integrating language of India
South Asian global diaspora
• British India: settlements in British colonies
• Contemporary India: migrated into U.S. and North America
Geopolitical Framework
A Deeply Divided Region
British
rule (mid 18c ~ mid 20c)
Independence and partition
Separation
of Pakistan from India (1947)
Separation of Bangladesh from East Pakistan (1971)
Continuing
Intensified
tension between Pakistan and India
by the nuclear capabilities of both
Mughal Empire (mid 16c ~ mid 19c)
Muslim
Portuguese
Hindu
Dutch
British Conquest (mid 18c ~ mid 20c)
During chaotic waning years of the Mughal Empire (18c),
the British East India Company began to monopolize trade
After Sepoy Rebellion (1856), South Asia was ruled
directly by the British government
Independence and Partition
• The British withdrew from South Asia in 1947
• The region was divided into two countries: a Hindumajority India and a Muslim-majority Pakistan (1947)
• Bangladesh was separated from East Pakistan (1971)
Conflicts in Kashmir
Hostility between Pakistan and India
• Before the partition, this regions of predominantly
Muslim population was ruled by a Hindu maharaja
• Some Kashmirs wish to to join Pakistan while others
argue for an independent state
Separatism in Punjab region
Hostility between the Sikh majority
and the Indian government
Sikh-majority
Punjab
Hindu-majority
Haryana
• Sikh leaders strived for autonomy
Sikh temple at Amritsar
Civil war in Sri Lanka
Religious and linguistic differences
Hindu Tamils
: support political autonomy
Buddhist Singhalese
: favor unitary government
Global implication of the tension
between India and Pakistan
During Cold War
Pakistan – U.S. India –? Soviet Union
After 1991
Pakistan – China India
China’s animosity toward India
Pakistan – Taliban Afghanistan
After 9/11
Pakistan – U.S. Taliban Afghanistan
But anti-Americanism in Pakistan needs to be addressed
Economic and Social Development
Burdened by Poverty
South Asian Poverty
Disparity
between social classes
World-class
scientific and technological
accomplishments
Largest undernourished and malnourished people
Developmental
contradictions in economic history
Land
of great riches until the early modern period
Exploitation by external forces
Central Asian,
the British
The poorest world region along with Sub-Saharan Africa
Pessimism: undercut by large and growing population
Optimism: globally interconnected IT industry
The Himalayan countries
Disadvantaged
by their rugged terrain and remote
locations
Bhutan
Isolationist
policy
Nepal
Closely
integrated with the Indian economy
Relies heavily on international tourism
Bangladesh
Bad news
Burdened by massive population, environmental degradation,
and colonial legacy
Devastating effect of partition (1947)
Increasingly uncompetitive Jute market
Good news
Competitive in textile manufacture low wage rate
Falling birthrate economic growth begins to catch up with its
population growth
Pakistan
Current potential
Productive agricultural sector (eg. Punjab)
Large textile industry huge cotton crop
Export of surgical implements legacy of sword-making center
Future potential
Burdened by high level of defense spending
Powerful landlord class with no benefit for economy
Failure to develop IT industry (cf. India)
Sri Lanka and the Maldives
Sri
Lanka
Specialization
in textiles and tea
Perennial civil war overshadows potentials such as
strategic location, and high levels of education
Maldives
Revenues
from fishing and international tourism
Economic division in India
Lesser developed areas
Green
Revolution
Centers of economic growth Subsistence
economy
Social
conservatism
Merchants
Remittance
India’s economic
pacesetter
High-tech sector
Political
corruption
Socialist
economic
policy
Major industrial areas
Economic policy after independence
Mixed
socialist-capitalist system by the 1980s
Economic
nationalism
Self-sufficiency policy
Liberalization
Privatization
of economy since the early 1990s
of state-owned industries
Deregulation
Internationalization
Global linkages
High levels of social welfare in the south
Sri Lanka, Maldives, southwestern India
Low levels of social welfare in the north
Pakistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Nepal, northern India
The status of women
Women has a very low social position in both the Hindu
and Muslim traditions
Women in the Hindu tradition
Excluded from inheriting land, early marriage, dowry, not
allowed to remarry
Women has a high social position in southern India and
Sri Lanka
Inheritance through the female line in Kerala