Strait of Hormuz
The World's Most Important Oil Chokepoint
The narrow passage between Iran and the Arabian Peninsula through which one-fifth of global oil supply transits daily. Control of Hormuz means leverage over the world economy.
The Geopolitical Encyclopedia
Every alliance, every conflict, every trade route follows a logic older than the states themselves. We map that logic — from Mackinder to Malacca, from Westphalia to the present hour.
The theoretical frameworks that explain how geography shapes power, conflict, and international order.
The World's Most Important Oil Chokepoint
The narrow passage between Iran and the Arabian Peninsula through which one-fifth of global oil supply transits daily. Control of Hormuz means leverage over the world economy.
Asia's Lifeline and Strategic Vulnerability
The narrow waterway between Malaysia and Indonesia through which nearly one-third of global maritime trade passes. For rising Asian powers, Malacca is both lifeline and potential stranglehold.
The Most Dangerous Flashpoint on Earth
The 110-mile passage separating Taiwan from mainland China where the world's two greatest powers could collide. Control of the strait determines Taiwan's fate—and perhaps the future of the Indo-Pacific order.
The Oldest Principle of International Relations
The theory that peace and stability emerge when no single state dominates the system. For centuries, the balance of power has shaped alliances, wars, and the fundamental structure of world order.
The Grand Strategy of the Cold War
The American strategy of preventing Soviet expansion through a combination of military alliances, economic aid, and political pressure. Containment defined four decades of global competition.
The Study of Power and Geography
An introduction to geopolitics—the study of how geography shapes international relations. Understanding geopolitical concepts provides a framework for making sense of world events.
Mackinder's Geographical Pivot of History
The foundational geopolitical theory arguing that control of Central Eurasia—the 'Heartland'—is the key to world domination. Mackinder's 1904 thesis reshaped how nations think about geography and power.
Spykman's Challenge to the Heartland
Nicholas Spykman's counterargument to Mackinder, proposing that the Eurasian coastal regions—not the interior—hold the key to world power. This theory directly shaped American Cold War strategy.
Command of the Oceans and Global Influence
The theory that control of the seas is the foundation of national greatness. From Alfred Thayer Mahan to modern naval strategy, sea power has shaped the rise and fall of empires.
Architects of a Century of Peace
The 1814-1815 diplomatic settlement that redesigned Europe after Napoleon's defeat, establishing principles of great power concert and legitimacy that prevented major war for a century. The Congress created the template for multilateral diplomacy and collective security.
Thirteen Days on the Nuclear Brink
The October 1962 confrontation between the United States and Soviet Union over nuclear missiles in Cuba, the closest the world has come to nuclear war. The crisis offers enduring lessons about deterrence, crisis management, and the dangers of nuclear weapons.
The End of an Empire and Birth of a New World Order
The 1991 dissolution of the Soviet Union that ended the Cold War and created the 'unipolar moment' of American dominance. The Soviet collapse and its aftermath continue to shape Russian grievances and great power competition today.
Birth of the Modern State System
The 1648 peace settlement that ended the Thirty Years War and established the foundational principles of state sovereignty that still govern international relations. Westphalia created the template for a world of independent, legally equal states.
The Supranational Experiment
The world's most ambitious experiment in regional integration, pooling sovereignty among 27 European nations across economic, political, and increasingly security domains. The EU represents both model and warning for regional governance worldwide.
The Bretton Woods Twins
The twin pillars of international economic governance established in 1944, shaping development finance, crisis response, and economic policy worldwide. Together they embody both the promise and controversy of American-led economic order.
The Referee of Global Commerce
The multilateral institution governing international trade rules and resolving disputes between nations. Once the crown jewel of economic globalization, the WTO now faces existential crisis as great power competition undermines its foundational principles.
The Re-Emerging Superpower
The world's most populous nation and second-largest economy is reshaping the international order. Understanding China's geography, history, and strategic culture is essential for comprehending 21st-century geopolitics.
The Eternal Heartland Power
The world's largest country by territory, nuclear superpower, and heir to a thousand years of expansion and contraction. Russia's geography shapes a strategic culture of insecurity, defensiveness, and periodic aggression.
The Offshore Hegemon
The world's sole superpower, protected by two oceans and blessed with unmatched resources. American power has shaped the international order since 1945—but faces growing challenges from rising competitors.
Prophet of Sea Power
The American naval officer whose theories of sea power transformed global strategy. Mahan's ideas drove naval buildups from the United States to Japan and remain foundational to maritime strategic thinking.
Father of Geopolitics
The British geographer who invented geopolitical analysis. Mackinder's Heartland Theory and vision of geography as the 'handmaid of statecraft' founded the field and shaped a century of strategic thinking.
Father of Modern Realism
The German-American scholar who founded the realist school of international relations, whose 'Politics Among Nations' established power as the central concept in the study of world politics and shaped how generations of scholars and practitioners understand international affairs.
The Architect of Realpolitik
The most influential American diplomat of the twentieth century, whose practice of realpolitik, pursuit of detente, and opening to China reshaped the international order while generating enduring controversy about the moral costs of strategic pragmatism.
Architect of Structural Realism
The political scientist who transformed international relations theory with his structural approach, arguing that the anarchic international system—not human nature—explains why states compete for power and why war recurs despite its costs.
Architect of American Grand Strategy
The Dutch-American scholar who reframed Mackinder's Heartland thesis and provided the intellectual foundation for American containment strategy. Spykman's Rimland theory shaped Cold War geopolitics.
The Father of Political Realism
The ancient Athenian historian whose account of the Peloponnesian War established the foundations of realist thought, introducing concepts of power politics, the security dilemma, and the tragic inevitability of great power conflict that continue to shape international relations theory.
The artificial waterway connecting the Mediterranean to the Red Sea, eliminating the need to sail around Africa. Control of Suez has triggered wars and remains vital to European-Asian commerce.
Climate change has evolved from an environmental concern into a central driver of geopolitical competition, reshaping resource distribution, triggering migration flows, and forcing a fundamental recalculation of national security strategies as nations simultaneously compete for advantage and negotiate collective responses to planetary crisis.
Cyber warfare has emerged as a defining feature of modern conflict, enabling states to attack adversaries' critical infrastructure, steal sensitive information, and conduct influence operations while maintaining deniability—creating a persistent gray zone of digital hostilities that blurs the line between peace and war.
Debt diplomacy describes the use of loans and development financing as instruments of foreign policy, enabling creditor states to gain political leverage, access strategic assets, and expand influence over debtor nations—with China's Belt and Road Initiative representing the most prominent contemporary example of this practice.
Deterrence theory explains how states prevent adversaries from taking unwanted actions by maintaining credible threats of punishment—a logic that underpins nuclear strategy and extends to conventional, cyber, and economic domains.
Digital sovereignty refers to a nation's capacity to govern the digital infrastructure, data flows, and technological systems operating within its borders—an increasingly contested domain as power in the twenty-first century flows through fiber optic cables as much as oil pipelines.
The archipelagic line running from Japan through Taiwan to the Philippines that contains China's navy within East Asian waters. Breaking through or controlling this chain is central to Chinese strategy—and to American efforts to maintain regional primacy.
Geoeconomics describes the practice of wielding economic instruments—trade, investment, sanctions, technology controls—to achieve strategic objectives that were once pursued primarily through military means.
Globalization describes the intensification of cross-border flows of goods, capital, people, and ideas that has reshaped the world economy and international politics—a process now facing unprecedented challenges from geopolitical rivalry, technological change, and domestic backlash.
Gray zone conflict describes activities that fall between routine statecraft and open warfare—coercive actions that challenge adversaries while remaining ambiguous enough to avoid triggering decisive military response.
Hybrid warfare combines conventional military operations with cyber attacks, information warfare, economic coercion, and proxy forces to achieve strategic objectives while avoiding the costs and risks of traditional armed conflict.
Migration has become a central force in geopolitics, driving domestic political realignments, straining international institutions, and increasingly being weaponized by states who use refugee flows as instruments of pressure against adversaries—transforming human movement into a tool of statecraft with profound humanitarian consequences.
Navigate our encyclopedia through seven distinct lenses on global power.
In 1904, a British geographer stood before the Royal Geographical Society and argued that whoever controlled the interior of Eurasia would command the world. A century later, NATO expansion, China's Belt and Road, and Russia's wars still trace the lines he drew.
This is not coincidence. It is geography.
Mountains dictate where armies stop. Straits determine which economies breathe. The distance between a capital and its coastline shapes whether a nation looks inward or outward, trades or fortifies, rises or fractures. These forces do not trend. They do not cycle. They persist.
GEOPOL.UK maps the permanent architecture of international order — the chokepoints, the doctrines, the rivalries, and the thinkers who first made them legible. Every article is built to be as useful in ten years as it is today.
This is the reference shelf for people who read the world structurally.