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Photo courtesy of the interviewee
"Geopolitics and Empire: The Legacy of Halford Mackinder", Oxford University Press, 2009
Interview with Gerry Kearns about his new book (BBC Radio Four)
Gerry Kearns is Director of the School of Public and International Affairs at Virginia Tech.
After being an undergraduate and postgraduate at the University of Cambridge (UK), he has worked in Departments of Geography at the Universities of Liverpool (UK), Wisconsin-Madison (USA), and Cambridge (UK).
Mr Kearns researches topics in historical, political, and medical geography.
His new book, "Geopolitics and Empire: The Legacy of Halford Mackinder" has just been published by Oxford University Press:
Book description by Oxford University Press
The "Geopolitical Passport" series aims to humanise geopolitics by offering geopolitical specialists an opportunity to give their views on this discipline. The interviews address issues such as the rational behind their decision to conduct geopolitical research, their favourite books and their expectations regarding the geopolitical future.
As a first year graduate student, I began looking at the ideas of Halford Mackinder and their relations with the political thought of his day.
Following my interest in Mackinder, I have been particularly interested in the links between geopolitics and imperialism.
My work on Mackinder is now published as "Geopolitics and Empire: The Legacy of Halford Mackinder" (Oxford University Press, 2009).
In it I offer a comparative approach to the contextual history of Geopolitics and a way of making that history both critical and effective for modern Geopolitics. The comparative approach means that I show how contemporaries of Mackinder’s who yet shared a similar intellectual context elaborated very different world-views, placing moral and political choices at the heart of Geopolitics.
I show that the legacy of Mackinder may be understood in terms both of echoes and influences. Influences are the genealogical track of people learning from Mackinder’s writings or from thinkers who themselves had read Mackinder. Echoes are when modern thinkers appear almost to reinvent Mackinder’s ideas by addressing the same problems as Mackinder with very similar assumptions to his.
I try to show that this approach can produce what Mitchell Dean writing of Michel Foucault calls critical and effective histories. I do this by showing that alongside Mackinder’s echoes and influences we can identify an alternative legacy that challenges Mackinder and that cannot be dismissed, as it would have been by Mackinder himself, as merely idealistic since that parallel legacy of Progressive Geopolitics can point to many global institutions and arrangements that work towards a world characterized by peace, cooperation and justice rather than by war, competition and force.
Geography in the aid of statecraft. It captures the idea that statecraft might be an art and science that could comprehend a range of approaches and that geography likewise can serve very different styles of statecraft.
Donald Meinig. His four volume work on The Shaping of America is a coherent and systematic study of the relations between space and statecraft in the elaboration of the human geography of the United States.
Derek Gregory’s "Colonial Present: Afghanistan, Palestine, Iraq" (Blackwell, 2004). The book engages with the relations between space and statecraft in the so-called Middle East and brings out the vital ethical issues involved in the remaking of spaces in line with so-called security interests.
The website of United for Peace, which collates a whole series of resources for hope in the pursuit of global justice:
Addressing the legacy of Bush II.
The resources for hope.
Injustice.