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Nov 19
2009
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"Misled by the Map"Posted by Bruce Robinson in students , speaker , Sonoma County , research , literacy , international , Ideas , history , events , education |
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A map such as this is a way of organizing the world into distinctly defined nations. But the lines on a map can and often do differ from what is true in the physical and political world that map attempts to represent.
Many of the lines on international maps—especially the straight ones—were a creation of colonial convenience, explains Stanford geography professor Martin Lewis, but have proved to have remarkable staying power.

Borders clearly define national borders on paper, says Martin Lewis, but the country in question may not actually control all that territory.
See the map of Somalia, below, for another example.
Lewis has distilled these ideas into a paper he's titled Misled By The Map, which you can read here:
That's also the title of the talk that professor Lewis will present to the World Affairs Council of Sonoma County onThursday, Nov. 19 at 7:30 pm at Spring Lake Village in Santa Rosa. To see a full-length video presentation of Lewis speaking on "Misled by the Map," click here.
The map below shows the difficulty in representing a politically volatile area, such as Somalia, an area now "governed" by multiple regional entities, as shown in the color key. Note the disclaimer at the bottom.


GSE was started by brothers Lucas (left) and Jasper Oshun as an outgrowth of their own experiences visiting and working with other students in Peru and Argentina. Lucas says the successful conclusion of Global Student Embassy’s first international student visitation in early 2009 helped inspire them to want to expand their horizons.
This community garden at the Village Park mobile home park in Sebastopol may be the most visible manifestation of what Global Student Embassy is doing, but it is just one aspect of their efforts. Here, student volunteers from Sonoma County, Zurite Peru and Santa Fe Argenita celebrate their shared accomplishment. Y0u learn support the work of Global Student Embassy
There’s nothing like seeing other parts of the world first-hand to give one a different perspective on “home.” A Sonoma State professor who did just that last summer with his students in the international Semester at Sea program, reports back.

Written almost a quarter century ago, Occidental writer 




