Geog 001 Chapter 10 (Southeast Asia)
Geog 001 Chapter 10 (Southeast Asia)
Geog 001 Chapter 10 (Southeast Asia)
Chapter 10 Southeast Asia A The Southeast Asian Realm B Insular Southeast Asia C Continental Southeast Asia
Clustered population patterns. Poor intraregional communications. Cultural fragmentation (complex ethnic, linguistic, and religious patterns), situated in river basins.
Mekong
Archipelagos
375
750
1,500 Miles
USA
Middle East
Southeast Asia
Europe
Indochina
Often used to define the region. Hint at the strong historical Chinese and Indian influence. Notably refers to the former French colonies of Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos.
Indochina
Burma
Laos Thailand Vietnam Philippines
Korea
Taiwan Burma
Hong Kong Macao
Indochina
Japan Great Britain France Portugal Holland Spain (USA after 1898)
Malaysia
Philippines
Most of the Southeast Asian part of the Eurasian plate was above water during the last Ice Age (up to 16,000 years ago).
Huxleys Line
Deep ocean trench separating Southeast Asia in two. Division between the Asian and Australian ecosystems. Also known as the Wallace Line.
Pacific Plate
Philippines Plate
Wallacea
Emerging nations:
Malaysia, Indonesia, the Philippines, Thailand.
Tibetan-Burmese
Thai
Vietnamese
Mon-Khmer
Malay/Indonesian
Papuan
Minorities
Prevalent in Monsoon Asia, especially Southeast Asia. Fertile / flatland occupied by the dominant ethnic group; higher populations. Marginalization increases with altitude; isolation and lower populations.
Mekong
Lowlands: Vietnamese / Khmer. Midlands: Lao. Highlands: Hmong.
Iloko PanayHiligaynon
Malay
Sumatra
Kalimantan Sulawesi
Jakarta
Irian Jaya
Volcanism
Intense volcanic and seismic activity. 300 volcanoes of which 200 have been historically active.
Australian Plate Australian Plate Krakatau Exploded in 1883; Largest volcanic eruption in known history. Explosion heard at 3,000 miles; 20 cubic kilometers of rock into the atmosphere. Tsunami drowned 34,000 people and ashes burned to death 2,000 people. 30 meters waves that traveled 8,000 miles.
Thailand Cambodia
Sri Lanka
Epicenter
Maldives
Malaysia
Singapore Indonesia
Population control:
Successful family planning strategies (50% decline in fertility between 1975 and 2000). TFR of 2.4 (2001).
Periphery
Inner islands (Java, Madura and Bali) Fertile land due to volcanic origin and monsoon (among the most fertile land in the world). 80% of the population on 7% of the land. Mostly Javanese.
Outer islands (Sumatra, Kalimantan, Sulawesi, Irian Jaya) 20% of the population on 93% of the land. Most of the minorities. Sparsely populated but abundant in resources.
Cultivation System:
Provided that a village set aside a fifth of its cultivable land for the production of export crops. These crops were to be delivered to the government instead of taxes.
The core along the Chao Phrya Valley. Access to the Indian (Gulf of Bengal) and Pacific (Gulf of Thailand) oceans. 62 million population:
Thai 75%, Chinese 14%, other 11%. Buddhist 94.4%, Islam 4%, Hindu 1.1%, Christian 0.5%. Muslims minority in the south (along the Malaysia border).
Indian Ocean
0 75 150 300 Miles
Seen as a buffer state between France and Britain. Treaties to guarantee boundaries signed early 20th century. Specialized in rice production:
Feed the neighboring European colonies (plantations). Was indirectly incorporated in the colonial system. Trade was in the hands of foreign interests.
WWII:
Invaded by Japan and became allied. Alliance shifted back to the United States against communism, thus receiving aid.
Vietnam War:
Boost for the economy: R&R for US troops. Refugees from Vietnam.
Manufacturing:
Accounts for more than agriculture in the GDP (30% against 12%). Japan is the major investor (40% of FDI).
Increased urbanization:
Notably in Bangkok; primate city. 10 million population with congestion and overcrowding problems. 50 times larger than the second largest city.
Changes:
Thailand is clamping down on the sex industry to change its image. Curfews for bars (Midnight).
Coastal plain along the South China Sea with a population of 78 million. Stands for People of the south. Two major deltas: the Red River (Song Koi) and Mekong. Natural penetration corridor towards China. Only 5% of the territory is mountainous. The south is more fertile than the north. Most minerals resources are in the north.
Differences between the north and the south, as the south was more exposed to capitalism.
Porous boundaries:
Same ethnic groups on both sides. Artificial or contested boundaries. Difficult to enforce border control.
Yunnan Burma
Hong Kong
Lawless segment of the region: Opium production by mountain tribes (19th century): Fast growth in the 1990s:
Overlaps Thailand, Laos and Burma, with parts of Vietnam and China (Yunnan province).
Eastern Burma controlled by the United Wa State Army. Chased from southern China. Tripling production. 98% of the production takes place in Burma. 70% of the heroin in the US comes from the Golden Triangle.
Laos Hanoi
Thailand
Bangkok
Vietnam
Phnom Penh
Shift in role:
Thailand now produces little opium. Subject to intense drug trafficking along its border. 2-3 million drug users in Thailand.
250,000 200,000
150,000
100,000 50,000
0
1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003