An Atlas of World Affairs
The economic, social and environmental systems of the world remain in turmoil. Recent years have seen possibly irrevocable change in the politics of Europe, Asia, Africa and Latin America.
Entirely revised and updated, the eleventh edition of An Atlas of World Affairs describes the people, factions and events that have shaped the modern world from the Second World War to the present day. International issues and conflicts are placed in their geographical contexts through the integration of nearly one hundred maps. The political context provided for current events will be invaluable to all those uncertain about the changing map of Europe and Africa, conflicts in the Middle East, and the appearances in the headlines and on our television screens of al-Qaeda, Chechnya, the Taliban, Mercosur, Somaliland, Kosovo, AIDS, OPEC and Schengenland. Critical new issues are covered, including the war on terrorism, nuclear proliferation, European Union expansion, and the pressing environmental concerns faced by many sovereign states. This edition provides guidance through all these recent changes (and many more)... Contents
Foreword / ix 1 People and Pressure / 1 2 Economic Groupings / 5 3 Energy / 8 4 Nuclear Geography / 12 5 Sea Law / 17 6 No Longer Three Worlds / 20 7 United Nations / 23 8 Terrorism / 27 9 Commonwealth / 30 10 Europe: East and West / 33 11 Atlantic Alliance / 36 12 European Unities / 39 13 Germany / 44 14 Central and Eastern Europe / 47 15 Former Yugoslavia, Albania / 51 16 Former Soviet Union / 55 17 Russia / 58 18 Baltic to Black Sea / 61 19 Caucasus / 64 20 Ex-Soviet Central Asia / 67 21 Scandinavia / 71 22 Northern Seas / 73 23 Minorities and Micro-States / 76 24 Ireland / 80 25 Gibraltar / 82 26 Cyprus, Greece and Turkey / 84 27 Asia and Africa / 86 28 Islam / 89 29 The Arab World / 92 30 Africa / 94 31 Southern Africa / 97 32 Central Africa / 99 33 Angola and Namibia / 102 34 Republic of South Africa / 105 35 Sudan and the Horn of Africa / 108 36 East Africa / 111 37 Nigeria and Guinea Coast / 114 38 Ex-French Africa / 117 39 North Africa / 120 40 Morocco and Western Sahara / 123 41 Middle East and North African Oil / 125 42 Suez and Indian Ocean / 128 43 Israel and Arabs I / 131 44 Israel and Arabs II / 135 45 Lebanon and Syria / 140 46 Arabia / 143 47 Gulf States and Iran / 146 48 Iraq’s Wars / 150 49 Kurds / 154 50 Afghanistan / 156 51 South Asia I / 159 52 South Asia II / 162 53 Himalayas, Tibet, Burma / 165 54 China and Russia / 168 55 China and Other Neighbours / 171 56 Taiwan / 173 57 Hong Kong and Macau / 175 58 Japan / 177 59 Korea / 180 60 South-East Asia / 183 61 Indochina / 186 62 Cambodia / 189 63 Malaysia and Singapore / 191 64 Indonesia and New Guinea / 193 65 Australia and New Zealand / 196 66 South Pacific / 199 67 America and the Pacific / 202 68 United States of America / 205 69 Canada / 208 70 Mexico / 211 71 Central America, Caribbean, Cuba / 213 72 Colombia and Panama / 217 73 East Caribbean, Guianas, Venezuela / 220 74 Latin America / 222 75 Argentina and Falklands / 226 76 Antarctic / 230 77 Arctic / 232
Tables / 234 Related Information Sources / 237 Index / 239 Kurds
Nearly all of the more than 25 million Kurds are Sunni Muslims. Their language is of the Iranian group, distantly related to Persian (Farsi). Most of them live in an area that is divided between four countries: Turkey, in which there are at least 14 million Kurds; Iran, with 6 million; Iraq, with at least 4 million; and Syria, with 1 million (there are also some thousands of Kurds in Armenia and Israel). About a third of the Kurds in Turkey have migrated to its western regions, and many have, in varying degrees, become assimilated; a quarter of the members of the Turkish parliament, and a quarter of the 2 million immigrants from Turkey now in Germany, are of Kurdish origin. But the Kurds’ heartland is the region stretching from south-east Turkey to northern Iraq and western Iran, whose Population is predominantly Kurdish. Rebellious Kurds have repeatedly challenged each of the three governments that share control of this region.
After the 1914–18 war and the collapse of the Ottoman Turkish empire (which had included Iraq and Syria), it was proposed in the 1920 Treaty of Sèvres that, under a League of Nations mandate, Britain should administer an autonomous Kurdistan. Turkey successfully resisted this plan, and the territory that had been proposed for Kurdistan was instead divided between Turkey and Iraq. In later years, several ostensible offers of autonomy were made to Iraq’s Kurds by successive governments, but nothing of substance developed..... An Atlas of World Affairs Andrew Boyd & Joshua Comenetz
Routledge Eleventh edition
First published 1957 by Methuen & Co. Ltd Second edition 1959 Third edition 1960 Fourth edition 1962 First published by Methuen as a University Paperback (fifth edition) 1964 Sixth edition 1970 Seventh edition 1983 Reprinted 1985 First published by Routledge (eighth edition) 1987 Reprinted 1989, 1990 Ninth edition 1991 Tenth edition 1998 Eleventh edition published 2007 by Routledge 2 Park Square, Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon OX14 4RN
Simultaneously published in the USA and Canada by Routledge 270 Madison Ave, New York, NY 10016
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© 2007 Andrew Boyd and Joshua Comenetz
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or utilized in any form or by any electronic, mechanical, or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publishers.
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ISBN 0-203-96752-6 Master e-book ISBN
ISBN10: 0–415–39168–7 (hbk) ISBN10: 0–415–39169–5 (pbk) ISBN10: 0–203–96752–6 (ebk) ISBN-13: 978–0–415–39168–9 (hbk) ISBN-13: 978–0–415–39169–6 (pbk) ISBN-13: 978–0–203–96752–2 (ebk)
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