mercredi 26 février 2014

COUNTRIES



countries


A country is a territory  characterized by  a unit, which can be political, social, historical, cultural or economic. It is delimited by  borders  and is equipped with a Sovereign state; its inhabitants have  a nationality.

HOW MUCH Y Does It Have COUNTRY IN The WORLD?

The number of the countries in the world  varies according to the selected definition. United Nations (UNO) regularly publishes the "list of the territories": it includes/understands the list of  the 192 countries  of the world members of UNO, and those of "Non-Self-Governing territories" (the Sahara-Westerner for example) and of "not car-controlled territories" (France of overseas for example). 

THE COUNTRIES ARE LIMITED BETWEEN THEM BY BORDERS

The borders are  artificial limits  decided by the men. For example, France divides borders with Belgium and Luxembourg in North, Germany, Switzerland and Italy in the East, Spain in the South: they are  the frontier countries  of France.

To draw the borders

On the charts, the borders are materialized by  continuous features  which draw the shape of the countries. On  the ground, they are generally marked by the presence of  terminals  and  customs houses, sometimes by a fence.
The idea that a border must obligatorily trace a continuous line on a chart is a relatively recent idea. Formerly, only the geographical obstacles constituted real borders. Then, as governments were constituted and started to worry about the integrity of their territory, they undertook to build fortified towns and border posts with the "borders" of the country. The border was gradually drawn on the charts like  an imaginary line  connecting the border posts the ones to the others.
? Sometimes two countries decided that the border which separates them follows  a natural geographical element: it is the case of the Rhine, which forms part of the border between France and Germany, while the peak of the tops of the Pyrenees draws that which separates France from Spain.
? Sometimes the border is traced in  straight line, in a completely artificial way: it is the case between certain countries of Africa.
? The borders  are sometimes disputed, each of the two countries asserting the same territory. On the charts, the disputed borders and territories are generally represented by the features in dotted lines and/or of the hatchings of particular color.

Conflicts around the river and maritime borders

If it is relatively easy to materialize a border on the ground, the river and maritime borders pose problems and are often sources of conflicts:
? when two countries share the same  river, the border is located theoretically at the medium, and  the resources  must be shared. But in the areas where water represents  a vital  stake (as in the Middle East), the conflicts concerning the exploitation of these resources are extremely frequent;
? the difficulties are even more significant with regard to  the maritime borders. Each country asserts a certain  sovereignty  on water which surrounds its grounds directly (i.e. he wants to have a certain part of the sea or ocean, as well as he has his terrestrial territory); in the same way, each country asserts to be able to exploit the maritime resources (fishing, resources of the basement like oil) of the water located near its territory. In practice, to trace clear limits is difficult and this question is a constant source of conflicts in the world.

The borders have a history

The current layout of the borders such as one can see them on a chart results from a history. Besides it is enough to look at charts of the world going back to various periods to realize it.
? For certain countries, the constitution of the own territory (and thus delimitation of the borders) were done according to  a natural process: it is in particular the case of the islands.
? In other areas of the world on the other hand, the relatively complex layout of the borders is the result of  a historical construction: it is the case in Europe in particular, where each country fought to establish its own territory. The drawing of France, for example, varied much during its history.
? For other countries, the layout of the border does not result from a historical construction, but from  an external decision. It is the case of many countries of Africa, which kept the borders traced "with the rule" by the European colonial powers to  the xix E century; it is also the case of the old Soviet republics (Latvia, Lithuania, Bielorussia, etc), which preserved the borders decided by the old USSR (today Russia). This situation, which does not respect the will of self-determination of the people, is also a source of conflicts.
? Lastly, of alliances  as the European Union allow to soften the concept of border: the European citizens have the right to move and remain freely on the territory of the Member States.




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