The Revenge Of Geography: What The Map Tells Us... Apr 2026

Kaplan asserts that geography is the "beginning of discerning a historical logic". While not strictly deterministic—human choice and agency still matter—he contends that the physical landscape sets the "rules" for national strategy and shapes cultural identity.

In his 2012 book, The Revenge of Geography , Robert D. Kaplan argues that despite our "flat" world of digital connections and globalization, the physical map remains the ultimate arbiter of power and conflict. He suggests that we have lost our "sensibility about time and space," leading to a dangerous over-optimism that ideology or technology can override the enduring realities of mountains, rivers, and borders. Core Thesis: Geography as a Persistent Constraint The Revenge of Geography: What the Map Tells Us...

: He revives 19th- and 20th-century geopolitical thinkers like Halford Mackinder , who emphasized that control of the Eurasian "Heartland" is central to global dominance. Kaplan asserts that geography is the "beginning of

Kaplan applies this geographic lens to several modern global "hot spots": Kaplan argues that despite our "flat" world of

: The title refers to geography "reclaiming" its importance as modern states find themselves limited by the same physical barriers—like the Himalayas or the Russian plains—that shaped their ancestors. Key Regional Insights