 Geopolitics is sticky, but it is a concept that sort of puts the place, the geography, in central. So it's an understanding of contextual issues that it's an analytical perspective that takes geography and contextual issues into account. Well, my understanding of geopolitics is, of course, shaped by my own background. I'm an American citizen with a Chinese background, which gives me actually a slightly, I would say, state-centric understanding of how geopolitics governs the world today. But what I think is really important about this program in particular is the critical angle of what geopolitics can and should be in relation to not only human society but also to the environment. So geopolitics for me is about the context that the politics are situated in. So, for example, what types of resources the country has or where they're situated on the map. My understanding of geopolitics, and I think this is like a newer understanding of it, is that the strategy and interest is not just coming from real politics itself, not just for the state, but it's for the whole world and the world itself. It's not just for humans but for every being. And that's why I'm really glad to be doing research on this. I'm thinking about geopolitics as politics in the relationships between different groups and, for example, states or urban areas or citizens in different parts of the world. The relationship between them and in a geographical context, how the geographical context influenced these relationships. It doesn't have to be about states or nations. It can also be between urban areas in different parts of the world or citizen groups in different parts of the world. But how do your geographical contexts influence these relationships? Geopolitics, I think, is important to understand or at least carry with you when you look at, as my interest is how states act in this new, like we're in the Anthropocene, if you want to call it that, or in this new area where you're telling where you have climate change that is happening. And I think that you cannot look at this without understanding the geopolitics. You need to understand why states might act in certain ways. You need to understand how northern countries might act and see things in a way that countries in the south may not or even in the east. And I think that all of, like, geopolitics is an important concept to carry with you when you're looking at climate change and environmental politics.