Mainland

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Template:Short description Script error: No such module "other uses".Mainland is defined as "relating to or forming the main part of a country or continent, not including the islands around it [regardless of status under territorial jurisdiction by an entity]."[1] The term is often politically, economically and/or demographically more significant than politically associated remote territories, such as exclaves or oceanic islands situated outside the continental shelf.

In geography, "mainland" can denote the continental part of any polity or the main island within an island nation. In geopolitics, "mainland" is sometimes used interchangeably with terms like metropole as an antonym to overseas territories. In the sense of "heartland", mainland is the opposite of periphery. In some language a separate concept of "mainland" is missing and is replaced with a "continental portion".

The term is relative: in Tasmania, continental Australia is the mainland, while to residents of Flinders Island, the main island of Tasmania is also "the mainland", though the geological Australian continent includes all the former plus the island of New Guinea and all the smaller islands (e.g. the Torres Strait Islands) in between.

Prominent usages of the term mainland

Continental

This list denotes prominent usages of the term "mainland" to distinguish the islands of a continent from the mainland of a continent through a geopolitical lens.

Internal

This list denotes prominent usages of the term "mainland" to distinguish between distinct regions within a single country based on an "islands-to-mainland" relationship. Note that the "mainland" can sometimes consist of a large island rather than a continental landmass.

Internal (disputed)

This list denotes prominent internal usages of the term "mainland" that are disputed.

Irredentist

This list denotes prominent usages of the term "mainland" to distinguish between distinct regions within an irredentist region

  • The relationship between the de facto independent state of Republic of China (ROC; commonly called Taiwan) and the PRC as that of an island to its mainland. This is done in order to tacitly support the PRC's territorial claim to Taiwan.Script error: No such module "Unsubst". This is highly controversial among supporters of Taiwanese independence. Within Taiwan, Pan-Blue politicians who support the ROC's constitutional territorial claim to the Chinese mainland have popularised this phrase as well.
  • Mainland Greece as opposed to the Greek part of Cyprus

See also

Notes

Template:Reflist

  1. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  2. Edles, Laura Desfor (2003). "'Race,' 'Ethnicity,' and 'Culture' in Hawai'i: The Myth of the 'Model Minority' State" Template:Webarchive. In Loretta I. Winters and Herman L. DeBose (ed.) New Faces in a Changing America: Multiracial Identity in the 21st Century. SAGE Publications. p. 241. Template:ISBN.
  3. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  4. Stuck at the Border, Point Roberts Residents May Get This Help Getting to the Mainland Template:Webarchive - Centralia Chronicle 17 Aug 2020
  5. Template:In lang Crimean channel ATR resumes broadcasting in mainland Ukraine Template:Webarchive, Ukrayinska Pravda (4 June 2015)