Another term that came to me in this reading was Infrastructure. Infrastructure is basic support systems to support an economy and/or keep it going. Examples of infrastructure are: roads, electricity, water, airports, ports, trains, technology, and education. One place this term came to mind was on page 217, where it stresses, “… all roads from the interior were developed to connect to the capitals but not to one another.”.
Development was a word scattered all throughout this article as well as implied throughout it. Development is a combination of a country’s gross national product; the total value of all goods and services produced by a country of one year in-and-out of the country, gross domestic product; the total value of all goods and services produced within a country over one year, as well as per capita income; the average …show more content…
A boundary is an invisible line marking the extent of a state’s territory. They’re important because they can generate disputes within the country or within its neighbors. 25% of the world’s boundaries are in dispute. The article mentions border disputes on page 221 where it writes, “Chile and Argentina argue over the Beagle Channel water route, Venezuela claims half of Guiana, and Ecuador has historical claims on Peru. This last example is one of the more serious land disputes in the continent and has led to three border wars over the past seventy-five years, the most recent being in 1995; but again, the growth of democracy has eased