The Function of Political Boundaries
| English | Chinese | Pinyin |
|---|---|---|
| definition | 界定 | jiè dìng |
| delimitation | 标定 | biāo dìng |
| demarcation | 划界 | huà jiè |
| boundary dispute | 边界争端 | biān jiè zhēng duān |
Making a boundary real
- Setting a boundary has three steps: definition, delimitation, and demarcation.
- Definition 界定 agrees the boundary in words (a treaty).
- Delimitation 标定 draws it on a map; demarcation 划界 marks it on the ground (fences, posts).
Marking a boundary physically on the ground with fences or posts is called...
Demarcation puts the boundary physically on the ground.
Agreeing a boundary in words, such as in a treaty, is its ____.
Definition is the first step — the wording of the boundary.
Put the three steps with their action.
Define (words) → delimit (map) → demarcate (ground).
Boundaries and disputes
- A boundary dispute 边界争端 is a disagreement over a border.
- Types: definitional (wording), locational (where it runs), operational (how it works), allocational (resources under it).
- Oil, water, or fish under a border often start allocational disputes.
Which step or dispute?
Sort each example as a boundary-making step or a type of dispute.
A dispute over oil or water beneath a border is an allocational dispute.
Allocational disputes concern resources under or along a border.
The shape of the state
- A compact state is easy to govern (roughly round).
- Elongated, fragmented, perforated, and prorupted shapes create challenges.
- Shape affects defence, communication, and national unity.
Select all state shapes that create governing challenges.
Elongated, fragmented, and perforated shapes are hard to govern; compact is easiest.
Keep the three steps in order: you define (words), then delimit (map), then demarcate (ground). Many disputes arise when a boundary was defined and mapped but never clearly marked on the ground.
Two countries sign a treaty (definition), draw the line on a map (delimitation), then build border posts (demarcation). Years later, oil is found straddling the line — an allocational boundary dispute over who owns the resource.
Boundaries are made in three steps: definition (words), delimitation (map), demarcation (ground). Disagreements are boundary disputes (definitional, locational, operational, allocational). A state's shape affects how easily it is governed.