AP Human Geography Outline: Ch. 1 Thinking Geographically
AP Human Geography Outline: Ch. 1 Thinking Geographically
AP Human Geography Outline: Ch. 1 Thinking Geographically
-The Board of Geographical Names was established in the late nineteenth century to be the
final arbiter of names on U.S. maps.
Formal region- an area within which everyone shares one or more distinctive
characteristics.
Functional region- an area organized around a node or focal point.
Vernacular region- a place that people believe exists as part of their cultural identity. Also
the area in which a specific language dialect is widely used.
Mental map- one’s perceived image of the surrounding landscape’s organization.
Culture- the body of customary beliefs, material traits, and social forms that constitute the
distinct tradition of a group of people.
Cultural ecology- the geographic study of human-environment relations.
Environmental determinism- belief that the physical environment causes social
development.
Proponents include:
-Alexander von Humboldt
-Carl Ritter
-Friedrich Ratzel
-Ellen Churchill Semple
-Ellsworth Huntington (argued that climate was determining factor)
Possibilism- the counter to e.d. (above), it is the belief that while environment can limit
certain actions of a people, it cannot wholly predestine their development.
Resources- the substances found on Earth that are useful to people.
-Climate is often classified using the system developed by German Vladimir Köppen. The
modified Koppen system divides the world into five main climate regions:
-A Tropical Climates
-B Dry Climates
-C Warm Mid-Latitude Climates
-D Cold Mid-Latitude Climates
-E Polar Climates
Each of these divisions is further subdivided based on precipitation levels and seasons.
Polder- a piece of land that is created by draining water from an area. First built in 13 th
century in the Netherlands.
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Globalization- a process that involves the entire world and results in making something
worldwide in scope.
-The world, geopolitically and economically, has grown more globalized over the past few
centuries. While leading to a wider dispersion of funds, and the increased
development of nearly every inhabited place on Earth, the globalization of the
economy has heightened economic differences among others. The gap between
the rich and the poor has increasingly grown wider (uneven development). From a
cultural standpoint, globalization is a delicate issue. While contributing greatly to
increased standards of living globally, especially among LDC’s, the spreading of
a uniform, and some argue, “western” culture is destroying some of the most
defining cultures in the world.
Ch. 2 Population
All of the above mentioned population clusters are located w/in 500 miles of ocean coasts
Crude birth rate- (CBR) total number of live births per every 1000 people per year.
Crude death rate- (CDR) total number of deaths per every 1000 people per year.
Natural increase rate- (NIR) % by which a population grows in a year (excluding
migration).
Doubling time- the number of years needed to double a population (assuming constant
NIR)
Total Fertility Rate- (TFR) the average number of births a woman will have in her lifetime.
Infant Mortality Rate- (IMR) the annual number of deaths of infants under 1 year old
compared to number of live births.
Life expectancy- the average number of years a newborn can expect to live at current
mortality levels.
Agricultural revolution- domestication of animals.
Industrial revolution- a conjunction of major improvements in technology that transformed
the process of manufactured goods.
Medical revolution- the diffusion of med tech from MDC’s to the LDC’s.
Zero population growth- (ZPG) occurs when TFR = 2.1. (again excluding immigration)
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The NIR was 1.3 % during the first decade of the 21st century, hit its all-time high of 2.2 %
in 1963, slowly fell throughout the latter part of the century, and has declined
sharply during the past decade. Although the NIR is lower now than in the
1960’s, the number of people being added to the population is still larger because
there is a larger base number to multiply the percentage with. Virtually 100% of
the natural increase is located in LDC’s, primarily sub-Saharan Africa. The TFR
has dropped dramatically in MDC’s, normally hovering around 2, and has
exceeded 6 in some African countries. Just as the NIR, TFR, CBR, and CDR, the
IMR is also highest in LDC’s, again primarily in Sub-Saharan Africa. Only life
expectancy and doubling time are higher in MDC’s.
Natural Increase
Birth
Death
STAGE 1: Fluctuating high death and birth rates produce little growth
STAGE 2: Death rate plummets as a country enters the ag and industrial revolutions,
causing plentiful food supplies and enhanced hygiene are dispersed to the masses. Birth
rate stays relatively constant, therefore the NIR skyrockets.
STAGE 3: The death rate continues to fall, not as dramatically as in stage 2 though. The
birth rate also falls as more families decide to have fewer children for economic and social
reasons. As a result, the NIR begins to taper off and fall.
STAGE 4: ZPG is obtained through both the improved standards of living as a result of
development and also because of social customs.
*STAGE 5: Some argue that a stage 5 may exist and that some W. European countries and
perhaps the U.S. will or have already entered. It is effectively the same as stage 1, except
the birth and death rates are extremely low, but NIR fluctuates around 0.
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Thomas Malthus proposed in his Essay on the Principle of Population 1798, that the
population grows faster than the food supply. He claimed that while population
expanded at a geometric or exponential rate, food supply increased arithmetically
or linearly.
However, the continued evolution of agriculture has continued to provide the world with an
adequate amount of food. The problem now is distribution of food, not the actual
production of it. Also, the birth rates declined sharply in the latter part of the 20th
century, thus the world population expanded to only 6 billion compared to
Malthus’s predicted 10.
Neo-Malthusians claim that more LDC’s are in stage 2 of the demographic transition that
ever before in history, thus putting a larger strain on the food supply. They also
modified Malthus’s theory by stating that the population growth is out-stripping
not just food production, but a wide variety of resources, such as oil, natural gas,
etc.
Critics of Malthus claim that population growth stimulates new technology and that as
strain is put on any resource, the inventive human being will simply develop an
alternative method once it is economically feasible.
Pandemic- a disease that occurs over a wide geographic area and affects very high
proportion of the population.
Epidemiology- the study of diseases that affect large numbers of people.
Epidemiologic transition- an alternative form of the demographic transition that
associates various degrees of medical advancement with the stages of population
growth shown in the d. t.
STAGE 1: pestilence and famine. Infectious and parasitic diseases are
primary causes of death. Black Plague
STAGE 2: receding pandemics; diseases spread quickly as poor people
crowd into rapidly growing industrial cities. Cholera
STAGE 3 & 4: degenerative and human-created diseases; vaccination
virtually eliminates infectious disease in MDC. The life expectancy
continues to expand and chronic disorders such as heart attacks,
cardiovascular diseases, and cancer begin to grow more prevalent.
STAGE 5: some propose that an age of the reemergence of infectious and
parasitic diseases will happen, as the once eradicated diseases adapt and
become immune to the antibiotics that have been used to control them
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AIDS (acquired immunodeficiency syndrome) has been the most lethal epidemic in years.
99% of new cases within the last decade have been in LDC’s, most notably in
sub-Saharan Africa. As a result, these countries have seen their CDR soar when it
should be dropping. (Most of these countries are in Stage 2 of the d.t.)
Ch. 3 Migration
Most people migrate for economic purposes, others for cultural and/or environmental
reasons, according to E.G. Ravenstein’s migration “laws.” Migration has been
tremendously enhanced in the past century due to various types of transportation.
Push factor- a force that induces people to move out of their present location.
Pull factor- a force that induces people to move into a new location.
3 types of push and pull factors are:
-economic: more jobs, better pay, etc.
-cultural: forced migration because of political unrest or slavery.
Refugee- a people forced to migrate from their homes and not allowed to return
for fear of persecution.
-environmental: harsh conditions tend to push people, i.e. floodplain- area around
a river prone to flooding. Appealing conditions tend to pull people, i.e. Florida.
US MIGRATION PATTERNS
Undocumented immigrants- individuals who enter the U.S. without proper documents.
More than one-half the immigrants to the U.S. are clustered in 4 states, California, New
York, Florida, and Texas.
Quotas- maximum limits on the number of people who could immigrate to the U.S. from a
country in 1 year.
Brain drain- the large-scale emigration of talented or scholarly individuals.
Guest workers- citizens of poor countries who temporarily obtain dangerous low-paying
jobs in MDC’s that the permanent citizens refuse to accept. (similar to time-
contract workers)
There is often difficulty distinguishing betwixt economic migrants and refugees, especially
during times of large-scale conflict. Ex. Cuba, Vietnam, Haiti.
Often immigrants to the U.S. and W. Europe face racism or prejudice from the permanent
residents who see the migrants as economic competition, cultural oddities, etc.
Most famous example within the US is the movement West. For nearly 200 years, the
dominant movement of American people was almost due west in the search for
new farmland to satisfy an overwhelmingly agrarian society, causing the
population center to continue its march westward into the country. (p.105)
In recent years, migration between regions has been dominated by the search for better
jobs, not different land to perform the same job on. Also, environmental factors
have played a large part, i.e. old people moving to Florida.
In other countries, interregional migration has been prompted for a variety of reasons.
Some like in Russia, Brazil, or Indonesia were either forced or encouraged by the
government to move in order to develop certain areas of the country.
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Key Issue 1: Where do folk and pop cultures originate and diffuse?
A social custom originates at a hearth, a center of innovation. Folk customs tend to have
anonymous sources, from unknown dates, through multiple hearths, whereas pop
culture generally has a known originator, normally from MDC’s, and results from
more leisure time and more capital.
EX: Folk music tells stories or conveys information about daily activities. Pop
music is written by specific individuals for the purpose of being sold to a large
number of people.
ISOLATION promotes cultural diversity as a group’s unique customs develop over several
centuries. Therefore, folk culture varies widely from place to place at one time.
Since most folk culture deals in some way with the lives and habits of its people,
the physical environment in which the people act has a tremendous impact on the
culture.
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People living in folk culture are likely to be farmers growing their own food, using hand
tools and/or animal power. Local food preferences are a large part of the folk
customs of that region. Religious, social, or economic factors often determine the
type and amount of food consumed in a given region.
Housing preference is another major contributor to folk culture. Local traditions, as well as
environmental factors determine the type of house that is built in a region.
Pop culture, compared to folk, varies widely from time to time in a given place. This is
due to its widespread and rapid diffusion, and the relative wealth of the people to
acquire the materials associated with pop culture. Pop culture flourishes where
people have sufficient income to acquire the tangible elements of the culture and
the leisure time to make use of them.
Housing in the US, from the 1940’s on, has been less dependent on what type of house is
appropriate for what site or region, but more on what the dominant trend is in the
architectural field at the time of construction.
The most prominent example of pop culture in the realm of clothing is the mighty blue
jeans. They have become a symbol of youth and “westernization” throughout the
world. Many people in foreign countries are willing to depart with a week’s
earnings just for a pair of Levi jeans.
Food preferences in pop culture depend on high income and national advertising. The
spatial distribution of many food or beverage trends are difficult to explain.
However, the dist. of wine shows the environmental impact. Wine is generally
consumed in areas where the vineyards grow best, and where people can afford to
drink it. Religious taboos often are responsible for certain areas’ preference or
dislike of specific foods, much as in folk custom. Ex: Wine is rarely consumed
outside Christian dominate countries.
Diffusion of the Internet is following roughly the same pattern as TV did at the start, which
is the U.S. has a disproportionately large share of the Internet hosts compared to
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its share of the world population. As the Internet increasingly becomes the
people’s resource of choice, pop culture will have yet another conduit to rapidly
and effectively diffuse to nearly every inhabited place on the planet.
In the U.S., TV stations are typically private enterprises that receive licenses from the
government in order to broadcast over a specific frequency. Elsewhere in the
world, the governments normally control the stations or at least have a board that
controls them. This censorship is used to minimize the likelihood that programs
hostile to current policies will be broadcast. This 1984-esque government
regulation has lost some of its strength in recent years however. The main reason
is the increased number of small satellite dishes that allow the customer to receive
signals from stations based in other countries. Although some countries outlaw
the ownership of these dishes, individuals continue to invent new ways to hide the
dishes and thus continue to receive their contraband signal.
As TV and Internet spread to more people in more social classes, many people are turning
from their folk cultures to the new pop customs. As this occurs, people may also
turn away from the society’s traditional values.
The spread of popular ideas concerning the role of women in society threatens to
undermine the subservience of women to men that is central to many folk
societies. While positive from a Western standpoint, this reversal of traditional
roles may actually threaten the economy in some lesser developed areas of the
world.
Three MDC’s, the U.S., the U.K., and Japan, virtually control the television industry. At
least one of the three serves nearly every LDC on Earth. The U.S. serves
primarily Latin America; the U.K. serves primarily Africa; Japan serves mainly S.
and E. Asia.
Many LDC leaders claim that because the “westerners” own nearly all of the TV broadcast
within their countries, a fair, unbiased report of local news is not presented.
Instead, the media focuses only on sensational, rating-boosting stories.
ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT
Pop culture is less likely than folk to be considerate of physical features. For many
popular customs, the environment is something to be modified to enhance a
product or promote its sale. Ex: golf courses, destruction/modification of large
expanses of wilderness to promote a popular social custom.
Pop culture also promotes uniformity of landscape, as evidenced by the prevalence of
nearly identical fast-food restaurants at convenient stops along highways.
Quite obvious is the increased need of natural resources to feed the pop culture craze. As a
new trend engulfs a population, a specific resource may be required to satisfy the
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demand, and little care is taken to ensure the preserving of that resource for
posterity. This, in turn, can lead to higher pollution levels as a result of pop
cultures.
Ch. 5 Language
Key Issue 1: Where are English-language speakers distributed?
English is spoken by one-half a billion people across the globe. It is the official language
of at least 42 countries; two billion people live in one of these countries.
The widespread diffusion of English is thanks, in large part, to the colonial practices of the
British. Through their colonization of the Earth, English was spread eventually to
N. America, Ireland, S. Asia, S. Pacific, S. Africa, and numerous other remote
locations.
Little is known of the British Isles until the Celts arrived around 2000 B.C., speaking
languages that we appropriately call, Celtic. Around 450 B.C. Germanic tribes,
the Anglos, Saxons, and Jutes, invaded and pushed the Celts farther north and
ruled “England” for several hundred years. Modern English would resemble
German to a large degree had not the Normans invaded in 1066 A.D. These
French ruled for nearly 300 years, and made their language the official language
of the Isles. Once they were driven out, few people wished to speak the
“enemy’s” language anymore, but the French influence on the language had
already taken place. Today’s English can be seen as a hybrid of the original
Germanic languages, with some Celtic and French mixed in. (along with varying
degrees of influence from a large number of other languages.)
“My Fair Lady” was a musical in the 50’s that depicted social effects of dialect.
Dialects within the States are numerous and varied due to the number of people in the U.S.,
the wide land area across which the language is spoken, the historical mobility of
the American people as they ventured across the West, and the varied ethnicity of
the English-speakers within this country.
Isogloss- the word-usage boundary that can be constructed for any word.
GERMANIC ALBANIAN
-English, German, etc. ARMENIAN
INDO-IRANIAN GREEK
-Indic (eastern) Hindi, Urdu, etc. ARMENIAN
-Iranian (western) Farsi, Kurdish, etc.
ROMANCE *These 4 are used less
-Med. Sea languages, French, Italian, etc. extensively than the others.
BALTO-SLAVIC
-Russian, Polish, Czech, etc.
Vulgar Latin- the Latin that people in the provinces learned; substandard.
Evidence exists that a “superfamily” language once was used, known as Proto-Indo-
European. However, little conclusive evidence has been found, and the issue is
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hotly debated among linguists. Most theories on the diffusion of language are
conjecture and invalidated.
The main language families of the world, other than Indo-European (spoken by 50% of
world population) are:
-Sino-Tibetan spoken by 20% of pop; in China and S.E. Asia
-Afro-Asiatic spoken by 5% of pop; N. Africa and S.W. Asia and Mid East
-Austronesian spoken by 5% of pop; S.E. Asia
-Niger-Congo spoken by 5% of pop; sub-Saharan Africa
-Dravidian spoken by 5% of pop; in India
-Remaining 10% speak one of following:
-Nilo-Saharan
-Amerindian
-Caucasian (Georgian)
-Altaic
-Uralic
-Japanese
-Korean
-Ausro-Asiatic
The most obvious, and the main, reason for preserving a language is to preserve language
diversity and to promote a self-identity. Many groups have revived their
languages recently in order to help preserve an integral part of their culture.
Examples include Hebrew and Celtic.
Ch. 6 Religion
ISLAM- 1.3 billion followers in Middle East, Indonesia, Pakistan, India, Bangladesh.
The branches of Buddhism are Mahayana (56%), Theravada (38%), and Tantrayana
(6%).
The other two main universalizing religions other than the above three are:
-Sikhism 24 million followers, 21 of which are clustered in the Punjab region of India.
-Bahá’í 7 million followers dispersed across the globe.
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HINDU- the world’s 3rd largest religion with 820 million adherents. 97% live in India
CONFUCIANISM- mainly in China, stresses ethical lifestyles
TAOISM- mainly in China also, followers seek the dao (tao) meaning the way or path.
SHINTO- mainly in Japan, before WWII was the state religion and emperor was regarded
as divine.
JUDAISM- 6 million followers in U.S., 4 million in Israel, 2 million in Russia, 2 million
elsewhere. First religion to support monotheism- the belief in only 1 god, as
opposed to polytheism- the belief in many gods.
ANIMISM- traditional African religions that focus on the animate qualities of normally
considered inanimate objects, like stones, water, etc. Animism is a sort of all-
encompassing term rather than a specific religion. I will now shamelessly plug my
own work and say that for more info on African religions, ask Mr. King to see the truly
fabulous one-of-a-kind presentation that a certain student of his has prepared.
As a general rule, universalizing religions have origins based on a specific individual’s life
in the past, ethnic religions typically have either no origin or an unclear one at
best.
Diffusion of Religions
Christianity spread mainly through the work of missionaries, and also by some conquest
and colonization.
Islam spread mainly through conquest.
Buddhism spread mainly through missionaries and trade merchants.
Ethnic religions rarely diffuse, and when they do, it is to a small extent. Thus, the
universalizing religions diffuse mainly at the expense of the smaller ethnic
religions, and often a semi-hybrid religion will result with concepts from both the
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Buddhism and Islam are the universalizing religions that place the most emphasis on
identifying shrines/holy places. In universalizing religions, the holy places are
generally locations at which memorable events happened in the founder’s life,
such as Mecca is in Islam because it is Muhammad’s birthplace. Holy places in
ethnic religions are often physical features that are closely tied to the religion. For
example, in Hindu one of the most important rituals is the bathing of oneself in
the Ganges River.
Cosmogony and calendars also differ betwixt universalizing religions and ethnic religions.
Ethnic religious creation stories tend to deal with the physical environment and
natural events, whereas universalizing religion stories often attempt to explain the
mystical. Ethnic religions typically organize their calendars around the seasons,
other natural events, or the physical geography. Universalizing religions’ main
purpose in calendars is to commemorate events in the founder’s life, thus the
seasons or weather are not central to the structure.
The distribution of religious elements on the landscape reflects the importance of religion
in people’s values.
In Christianity, the landscape is dominated by a high density of churches. They are critical
because of the emphasis placed on regularly attending worship.
In Islam, mosques are the places for general assembly. They are not viewed as a sanctified
place but rather a convening point for the community. A mosque normally has a
central courtyard surrounded by classrooms.
In Hinduism, temples are built within the home or individual community. They have a
central room to house a spirit, with rooms for rituals, and outer purifying pools.
In both Buddhism and Shinto, pagodas are the common architecture. They are typically
built to enshrine sacred religious artifacts.
In Bahá’í, the church officials decided to open seven Houses of Worship on multiple
continents to stress the universality of their religion.
The disposing of the dead differs from religion to religion. Some prefer to bury while
others choose to cremate.
Religion often influences the place-names of certain regions. Ex. The vast amount of
places named for saints in predominantly Roman Catholic Quebec.
Hierarchical religion- well-defined geographic structure with a high degree of
organization.
Ex. The Roman Catholic Church
Diocese- the basic geographic unit of the R.C.C.
Autonomous religions- self-sufficient religions with little organization.
Ex. Islam prefers to unify by faith rather than specific boundaries.
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Fundamentalism- the literal interpretation and strict intense adherence to one’s religious
principles. Fundamentalists try to return society to its religious ways. The most
obvious example is the Taliban in Afghanistan.
Caste- the class or distinct hereditary order into which a Hindu was assigned according to
religious law.
Religion is nearly always suppressed in communist countries. Leaders believe that religion
has a tendency to upset stability and therefore ban it altogether, though often they
just concrete the people’s religious adherence instead of destroying it.
Other times, when people of different religions live in close proximity to one another,
engage in contact often, or share interests in a particular location, especially
violent interaction will occur. Ex. The Middle East. Jews, Christians, and
Muslims have fought for over 2,000 years to control the same small strip of land
in the East Mediterranean. Historically the Crusades between Christians and
Muslims played out as each fought to control the Holy Lands. Hostilities continue
in the modern era over these same lands. Attempting to summate the issue in a
few sentences would not be sufficient, see pgs. 213-220.
The controversy in Ireland occurred when predominantly Catholic South Ireland wished to
secede from predominantly Protestant Great Britain. However, the northernmost
six counties of Ireland are overwhelmingly Protestant and wished to remain part
of the U.K. When the split occurred a small number of Roman Catholics in both
N. Ireland and the Republic of Ireland joined the Irish Republican Army (IRA), a
militant organization devoted to achieving Irish unity by whatever means
necessary. A Protestant organization has formed in return. Violence continues as
extremists from both sides disrupt the lives of peaceful civilians.
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Ch. 7 Ethnicity
Key Issue 1: Where are ethnicities distributed?
Ethnicity- the identity of a group of people who share the cultural traditions of a particular
homeland or hearth.
Race- the identity of a group of people who share a biological ancestor.
The most common ethnicities within the U.S. are African Americans and
Hispanics/Latinos, about 13% each. Others include Asian American (4%) and
American Indian (1%). The fourteen races w/in the U.S., as decided by the
Census, are: white, black-African American-Negro, American Indian-Alaska
Native, Asian Indian, Chinese, Filipino, Japanese, Korean, Vietnamese, Native
Hawaiian, Guamanian-Chamorro, Samoan, other Pacific islander, and lastly, other
race.
The current clustering of African Americans w/in the U.S. results from three major
migration flows:
1. Immigration from Africa in the 18th century (slave trade)
2. Immigration from the South to northern cities during first ½ of 20th century.
3. Immigration from inner-city ghettos to other urban neighborhoods in the
second ½ of the 20th century.
Triangular slave trade- an efficient triangular trading pattern used to transport trinkets
from Europe to Africa, slaves from Africa to the Caribbean, and molasses from
the Caribbean to Europe. An optional stop was from the Caribbean with
molasses to the U.S. to exchange for rum and then back to Europe.
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Sharecropper- an individual who works fields rented from a landowner and pays the rent
by turning over to the landowner a share of the crops.
Racism- the belief that race is the primary determinant of human traits and capacities and
that racial differences produce an inherent superiority of a particular race.
Racist- a person who subscribes to the beliefs of racism.
“White flight” is the rapid fleeing of whites from the cities as black families emigrate out
of the ghettos, or as the ghetto expands. It was encouraged by blockbusting.
blockbusting- the real estate practice of scaring whites into selling their homes at low
prices by telling them that blacks would soon be moving in and causing property
values to fall. The real estate agents then turned around and sold the homes at
extremely high prices to blacks that were emigrating from the inner city.
Apartheid- the physical separation of different races into different geographic areas, i.e.
South Africa.
The apartheid laws were repealed in 1991 in South Africa, but many years will be
needed to erase the legacy of such racist policies.
Nationality- the identity of a group of people who share legal attachment and personal
allegiance to a particular country.
Self-determination- the concept that ethnicities have the right to govern themselves.
Nation-state- a state whose territory corresponds to that occupied by a particular ethnicity
that has been transformed into a nationality. Denmark is an excellent example.
Ethnic groups have been transformed into nationalities because desire for self-rule
is a very important shared attitude for many of them.
Nationalism- loyalty and devotion to a nationality.
Centripetal force- an attitude that tends to unify people and enhance support for a state.
Multi-ethnic state- a state that contains more than one ethnicity.
Multinational states- multi-ethnic states that contain two ethnic groups with traditions of
self-rule that agree to coexist peacefully. The United Kingdom is an example.
The Soviet Union was the largest multinational state until is fall in the early
1990s; it consisted of 15 different republics based on its largest ethnicities. Now
Russia is the largest multinational state, with 39 nationalities.
After the fall of the Soviet Union, many new countries in the Baltic, E. Europe, and Middle
East were created, sometimes corresponding to nationalities, sometimes not. An
example of turmoil resulting from poorly drawn boundaries is in the Caucasus
region, betwixt the Black and Caspian seas. Many ethnicities exist here, with
several pushing for nationality.
Many Europeans believed at the beginning of the 20th century that ethnicities were a thing
of the past, however, they were quite incorrect. After the fall of communism in
many states, ethnicities that had long been suppressed were allowed to expand and
flourish. This is especially evident in the former Yugoslavia, which was utterly
decimated as minority ethnicities exerted themselves and demanded
independence.
Key Issue 3: Why do ethnicities clash?
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Often the cause of violence is when different ethnicities compete to rule the same region or
nationality. Especially common in sub-Saharan Africa, where the superimposed
boundaries of the Europeans colonies poorly coincide with the thousands of
ethnicities. The Horn of Africa has been the site of many ethnic disturbances:
Ethiopia and Eritrea, Sudan, Somalia, etc.
The other main source of ethnic violence occurs when ethnicities are divided among more
than one state. Such as in S. Asia where the British divided their former colony
into Pakistan and India. (East Pakistan became Bangladesh after 1971) As a
result of the partition, millions of Hindus had to migrate from the Pakistans, and
Muslims had to migrate from India. During the course of the migrations, many
adherents were killed by members of the opposite religion. Also, controversy
continues in the northern area of Kashmir over the proper border. Similar unrest
is present on the island of Sri Lanka, betwixt the Tamil Hindus and the Sinhalese
Buddhists.
Ethnic cleansing- the process in which a more powerful ethnic group forcible removes a
less powerful one in order to create an ethnically homogeneous region. Probably
the best example is WWII in which millions of Jews, gypsies, and other ethnicities
were forcibly moved to concentration camps, where most were exterminated.
When Yugoslavia was one country, encompassing multiple ethnicities, dissent was kept
under control. However, once Yugoslavia broke up into six republics, the
boundaries did not align with the boundaries of the five largest nationalities, and
ethnicities fought to redefine the boundaries. In some cases, as in Bosnia and
Kosovo, ethnic cleansing was used to strengthen certain nationalities’ cases for
autonomy. As a result, millions of ethnicities were forcibly removed from their
homes, and marched elsewhere, or simply killed. Similar ethnic cleansing occurs
in Central Africa betwixt the Hutus and Tutsis.
Balkanized- used to describe a small geographic area that could not successfully be
organized onto one or more stable states because it was inhabited by many
ethnicities with complex, long-standing antagonisms toward each other.
Balkanization- the process by which a state breaks down due to conflicts among its
ethnicities.
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State- an area organized into a political unit and ruled by a sovereign government. It
occupies a defined area on Earth’s surface and has a permanent population.
Sovereignty- a state’s independence of internal affairs from other states.
Antarctica is the only large landmass that officially belongs to no state, as part of the
Treaties of Antarctica 1959 and 1991. Several countries claim portions of the
continent, but the U.S., Russia, and numerous other states refuse to recognize
these claims.
Korea was originally a colony of Japan, but was divided into two occupation zones along
the 38th parallel by the U.S. and former Soviet Union after Japan’s defeat in
WWII. The division became permanent in the 1940s when the zones were turned
into autonomous states. North Korea became the Democratic People’s Republic
of Korea, and South Korea became the Republic of Korea. In 1950, N. Korea
invaded the South, sparking a three-year conflict that ended with a cease-fire line
near the 38th parallel. Both governments are committed to reuniting the country;
however, attempts at reconciliation were halted when N. Korea decided to build
nuclear weapons while its people starved.
Chinese Nationalists who fled the country after communist takeover, established control
over the island of Taiwan. The Nationalists claim that they still are the legitimate
rulers of China, but for the time being will rule Taiwan. The communists claim
control over Taiwan, but most other world states believe the two are separate and
sovereign states. After ruling power was shifted in 1971 from the Nationalists to
the communists, Taiwan became the most populous state not in the United
Nations.
A similar problem of defining a state is seen in Africa, where the Sahrawi Arab Democratic
Republic (Western Sahara) is considered by most to be a sovereign state but
Morocco claims the territory and built a 3,000 km wall around it to keep out rebel
forces. A cease-fire signed in 1991 is supervised by U.N. peacekeeping forces.
Spain controls two cities in Morocco.
Microstates- states with very small land areas. The smallest U.N. state is Monaco (.6
square miles)
City-state- a sovereign state that comprises a town and the surrounding countryside.
These were the first states to develop in ancient times. Reached highest point in
the Roman Empire.
Early European states evolved after the fall of the Roman Empire as powerful nobles
emerged and began consolidating surrounding estates into kingdoms. This
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method formed the basis for the development of states like England, France,
Spain, etc.
Colonialism- the effort by one country to establish settlements and to impose its political,
economic, and cultural agenda on an uninhabited territory. The three reasons for
colonialism are:
Colony- a territory that is legally tied to a sovereign state rather than being completely
independent.
Imperialism- establishing control of a territory already occupied and organized by an
indigenous society.
After colonization ended, many former colonies established their independence from the
mother country. Thus, very few colonies exist in the modern world, nearly all of
which are small islands in the S. Pacific or Caribbean.
Pitcairn Island is the world’s smallest colony, with 54 residents on an island less than 2
square miles. It was originally settled in 1790 by the crew of the British vessel
Bounty. The islanders survive by selling fish and postage stamps to collectors.
Landlocked state- a state that lacks a direct outlet to the ocean. Especially common in
Africa.
Frontier- a zone where no state exercises complete political control.
Unitary state- a state that places most of the power in the hands of a central govt.
Federal state- a state that allocates strong power to units of local govt. w/in the country.
The trend in recent years has been more states moving from their unitary stance to a more
federal government.
States cooperate for political and military reasons. The most important supranational
organization is the United Nations. Established in 1945, it contained 49 members.
As of 2003, 190 countries were part of the U.N. Though the power of the U.N. is
somewhat limited, it is still a substantial step in the direction toward global peace.
The U.N. nations can elect to create peacekeeping forces, and can request the
military assistance from other states. Other significant military organizations are:
-Organization of American States (OAS) all 35 W. Hemisphere states
-Organization for African Unity (OAU) all African states
-Commonwealth of Nations the U.K. and 53 former colonies.
States also cooperate for economic purposes. The best example is the European Union.
The EU main goal is to promote development within the member states through
economic cooperation. Farmers subsidies, and the introduction of the common
currency the EURO, are some of the methods through which the EU has
developed W. Europe into the most viable market on Earth. Germany dominates
the EU. Stringent guidelines prevent many Baltic states from being admitted, thus
preserving the economic benefits reaped by the 15 older members.
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Al-Qaeda is a network founded by Osama bin Laden who used his several million dollar
inheritance from his billionaire father to fund the program. Al-Qaeda (an Arabic
word meaning “the base”) was formed in 1990 to unite jihad fighters from around
the world in an organized offensive against the United States, whom bin Laden
sees as the “Great Satan” because of U.S. support for the royal family of Saudi
Arabia and for supporting the Jewish state of Israel. Al-Qaeda’s holy war against
the U.S. reached its apex on Sept. 11, 2001.
Another reason for increased terrorist activity is the increased amount of state support for
terrorism, defined as:
1. Providing sanctuary for terrorists wanted by other countries. Ex. The Taliban
govt. of Afghanistan harboring al-Qaeda fugitives.
2. Supplying weapons, money, and/or intelligence to terrorists. Ex. Libyan
Colonel Muammar al-Qaddafi provided terrorists with money to kill his opponents
living in exile.
3. Planning attacks using terrorists. Ex. The Libyan govt. hiring terrorists to bomb
a Berlin nightclub frequented by U.S. soldiers.
The U.S. invaded Afghanistan to hunt down members of al-Qaeda. The Taliban govt. was
also overthrown for its support of al-Qaeda. The U.S. then invaded Iraq in order
to investigate reports that Iraq had been develop weapons of mass destruction.
Little conclusive evidence has been recovered to justify that Iraq had WMDs or
was in the process of developing them.
-Yemen
-Sudan
-Syria
-N. Korea
-Iran
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Ch. 9 Development
Key Issue 1: Why does development vary among countries?
Development- the process of improving the material conditions of people through diffusion
of knowledge and technology.
More developed country- (MDC) a country that has progressed relatively far on the
development continuum. Also relatively developed country; developed country.
Less developed country- (LDC) a country in an earlier stage of development. Also
developing country.
Gross Domestic Product- (GDP) the value of the total output of goods and services
produced in a country per year.
Literacy rate- the percentage of a country’s people who can read and write.
Human Development Index- (HDI) the official “scorebook” that the U.N. uses to classify
countries’ development as distinguished by its economic, social, and
demographic factors. The economic factor is a country’s GDP per capita; the
social factors are literacy rate and the amount of education; the demographic
factor is life expectancy.
The country with the highest HDI has been Norway at .944. Others have been Canada,
Japan, U.S.A., and various W. Europe countries. The lowest ranking HDI was
recorded in Sierra Leone with a .275. The other global lows are clustered in sub-
Saharan Africa.
The different types of jobs are classified into three major sectors, all of which will be
discussed in greater detail in later chapters.
-Primary sector jobs are those that are involved in directly extracting materials
from the Earth, i.e. ag, mining, fishing.
-Secondary sector jobs are manufacturing jobs.
-Tertiary sector jobs involve the provision of goods and services to people in
exchange for payment. This sector is subdivided into quaternary
(businesses like trade, insurance, banking) and quinary (health, research,
govt.)
In MDC’s the number of primary and secondary sector jobs have decreased while the
tertiary sector has increased enormously. In LDC’s the number of primary sector
workers may be exceed 75% in countries where individuals must actively engage
in subsistence farming.
Productivity- the value of a particular product compared to the amount of labor needed to
make it.
Value added- the gross value of the product minus the costs of raw materials and energy.
Both productivity and value added are higher in MDC’s where manufacturing is far more
efficient.
Generally, those countries that have had abundant resources stood a better chance to
develop than those that have had few resources. However, some countries, like
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A measure of the wealth of a country is the number of consumer goods, like telephones,
computers, cars, and television. In LDC’s, very few of these products are likely to
be found, and those that do exist are normally shared among many neighbors who
all share the cost. Contrasted with MDC’s where the number of TVs to people is
practically 1:1. In MDC’s those with wealth typically reside in the suburbs and
the lower classes reside in the inner cities; LDC’s show the exact opposite with
the wealth clustered in the city and poor people living in the countryside.
The literacy rate exceeds 95% in MDC’s compared to less than 30% in some LDC’s. The
student-teacher ratio is 15 or below in many MDC’s and above 40 in some
LDC’s.
People are healthier in MDC’s because there are more physicians, hospitals, and nurses per
person than in LDC’s. The people in MDC’s have a healthier, more complete
diet, and receive more calories and proteins than the people in LDC’s who barely
receive the daily minimum.
Life expectancy is higher in MDC’s than in LDC’s. Infant mortality rate, Natural Increase
Rate, and CBR are all higher in LDC’s. CDR is not indicative of development
because it remains relatively constant betwixt MDC’s and LDC’s. The reasons
for this are that medical technology has diffused to the LDC’s and thus lowered
their CDR, and that there is a higher number of old people in MDC’s, therefore
the CDR will equal that of LDC’s.
Key Issue 2: Where are more and less developed countries distributed?
The world is categorized into nine major regions according to their level of development.
The nine regions are:
-Anglo-America – Canada and the U.S.
-Latin America
-Western Europe
-Eastern Europe
-East Asia
-Japan is separate and is its own region.
-South Asia
-Southeast Asia
-Australia and New Zealand are treated separately and known as the S. Pacific.
-Middle East
-Sub-Saharan Africa
Three of the nine regions are classified as more developed. They are Anglo-America, W.
Europe, and E. Europe. (Japan and the S. Pacific as well) The other six are
considered less developed.
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Developed Regions
Developing Regions
LATIN AMERICA has an HDI of .78. Development is high along coast, where MDC’s
have established manufacturing centers or tourist destinations, but the standard of
living is lacking elsewhere in the region.
EAST ASIA has an HDI of .72. China is expected to overtake U.S. as the world’s largest
economy w/in a few years.
SOUTHEST ASIA has an HDI of .71
MIDDLE EAST has an HDI of .66. Many of the wealthiest people in the world are
clustered here because of oil. However, only a select few have access to this
money, and it is poorly distributed to the general public.
SOUTH ASIA has an HDI of .58
SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA has an HDI of .47
The GDI uses the same indicators of development used in the HDI adjusted to reflect
differences in the accomplishments and conditions of men and women. The GDI
reflects improvements in the standard of living and well being of women, whereas
the GEM measures the ability of women to participate in the process of achieving
those improvements. The GEM is calculated by combining:
-Two indicators of economic power
-income
-professional jobs
-Two indicators of political power
-managerial jobs
-elected positions
The GDI and GEM are both substantially higher in MDC’s than in LDC’s.
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MDC’s are in stages 4 or 5, while LDC’s are in one of the first three. Rostow’s
model is often considered overly optimistic by assuming that every country will
develop. The core-periphery model states that the LDC’s (periphery) will remain
so until they “beat the system” and become part of the core (MDC’s). Examples of
Rostow’s model can be seen in the oil-rich Middle East states or the Four Asian
Dragons (S. Korea, Taiwan, Singapore, and Hong Kong) all of whom developed
some internal advantage, i.e. oil or cheap labor, and sold it to the MDC’s. Problems
with Rostow’s model are:
1. Resources are not distributed unevenly, causing some countries to be left with
little internally to sell to MDC’s
2. The stagnation of the world market
3. As alluded to in the core-periphery model, the LDC’s will continue to become
more indebted to the MDC’s.
Rostow’s model is seen as a more applicable approach to development than is the
self-sufficiency model in the modern era. Countries like India that have recently
31
switched to the international trade approach have seen far greater results. To
further promote this model the World Trade Organization (WTO) was founded.
Regardless of the approach taken, nearly all LDC’s face the challenge of financing their
development. LDC’s can borrow money from MDC’s to build infrastructure in
order to instigate growth, but many are unable to even pay the interest on the
loans, much less actually pay them off. Recently, MDC’s have grown
increasingly unwilling to lend money to LDC’s because of their history of
defaulting. Many MDC’s force the LDC’s that wish to borrow money to adopt
structural adjustment programs- economic policies that create conditions
encouraging international trade, such as raising taxes, reducing govt. spending,
controlling inflation, selling publicly owned utilities to private corporations, and
charging citizens more for services.
In recent years, U.S., Japanese, and European multinational corporations (MNC) have been
created. These companies take advantage of the cheap labor and relaxed
regulations found in many of the LDC’s to produce products cheaply and sell
them back home for much higher. The main problem with MNCs is that LDC
governments concentrate only on creating the infrastructure to attract these large
companies, therefore using crucial funds to draw big business instead of investing
in the standard of living of its citizens. In addition, the govt. may overlook labor
violations in order to keep the MNC from leaving.
Ch. 10 Agriculture
Key Issue 1: Where did agriculture originate?
Before ag, humans existed through hunting and gathering, meaning the collection of food
on a daily basis. About 250,000 people still engage in hunting and gathering;
these people live in isolated areas of the Arctic, Africa, Australia, and S. America.
The first form of agriculture was vegetative planting- the reproduction of plants
by direct cloning from existing plants, i.e. cutting roots/stems. Later, seed
agriculture- the reproduction of plants through annual planting of seeds that
result from sexual fertilization.
Vegetative planting originated in three primary hearths: S.E. Asia, West Africa, and
northwest South America.
Seed ag also originated in several primary hearths: west India, north China, Ethiopia, south
Mexico, and north Peru.
Subsistence ag- the production of food primarily for consumption by the farmer’s family.
Commercial ag- the production of food primarily for sale off the farm.
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Mixed crop and livestock farming is common in the U.S. west of the Appalachians and in
much of Europe from France to Russia. The most distinctive characteristic of this
type of ag is the integration of crops and livestock. Most of the crops are fed to
animals rather than humans. Typically in a mixed farm, nearly all of the land is
used for crop growing, but more than 75% the profits come from the sale of
animal products. Crop rotation is actively used in mixed farming. The choice of
crop grown on the farm varies widely, but two of the most frequent are corn and
soybeans.
Dairy farming is the most important type of commercial ag practiced on farms near the
northeast U.S., southeast Canada, and northwest Europe. Dairy farms must be
nearer their market areas than other products because their product spoils quickly;
milkshed- the ring surrounding a city from which milk can be supplied without
spoiling. Improvements in transportation have increased the range of dairy farms,
but they are mainly still located near large urban areas. Those dairy farms that are
farther from the cities tend to sell their product to processors who make butter,
cheese, etc, because these products keep longer than milk.
Grain farming is typically done in the Great Plains states of the U.S. The U.S. is by far the
world’s largest producer of grain. W/in the U.S, grain is grown in three areas, the
winter wheat area (the crop is planted in the autumn and develops a strong root
system before growth stops for the winter, and is harvested in the early summer)
like Oklahoma, Kansas, Colorado; the spring wheat belt (the crop is planted in
spring and harvested in the late summer) in the Dakotas, Montana; and the third
important area is in the Palouse region of Washington state. Wheat is an
important crop because it is highly exportable and is a source of economic and
political strength for its largest producers, like the U.S. and Canada.
Livestock ranching is the commercial grazing of livestock over an extensive area. In
MDC’s it is practiced in semiarid lands where the vegetation is too sparse and the
soil too poor to support crops. The cattle were taken to market via cattle trails and
railways in the 19th century, but more recently by semi-trucks and interstate
highways. Cattle ranching is done in other parts of the world where wide open
lands are available, and are better suited to supporting cows than crops.
Regardless of the region, ranching has followed a similar pattern across the globe.
Initially it is the herding of cattle over open ranges, then ranching transforms into
fixed farming by dividing the open land into ranches. Some ranches are converted
into farms as the countryside develops and irrigation is more available. The
remaining farms must experiment with new breeding and feeding processes to
enhance the value of their cows.
Mediterranean ag exists mainly in the lands that border the Mediterranean Sea in S.
Europe, N. Africa, and W. Asia. It has spread to parts of California, Chile, South
Africa, and Australia as well. Most of the food grown in this style of farming is
for human consumption and is typically of high value. Horticulture- the growing
of fruits, vegetables, and flowers forms the base of Med. ag.
Commercial Gardening and Fruit Farming is the main farming found in the U.S. southeast.
It is characterized by truck farming- growing many of the fruits and vegetables
34
demanded in more developed societies. These farms are highly efficient and
make use of machinery and cheap labor in every facet of the process.
Plantation farming is found in the tropics and subtropics. Plantation- a large farm that
specializes in one or tow crops, typically cash crops. These types are farms are
isolated in sparsely settled locations and are thus quite self-sufficient. After the
outlawing of slavery in the U.S., many of the plantations were sold or subdivided
as the ample source of cheap labor was no longer an option.
-Access to markets
The von Thünen model was introduced by Johann Heinrich von Thünen in 1826 to help
explain the importance of proximity to market in the choice of crops on
commercial farms. A rough schematic is reproduced below:
City
Horticulture and dairy
Forestry
Crop rotation
Alternating pasture and crop
Animal grazing
The basic premise of von Thünen’s model is that the more perishable and difficult
to ship something, the closer it will be to the market.
-Overproduction
Some farmers are turning to sustainable ag- the ag practice that preserves and enhances
environmental quality. Two methods are used: more sensitive land management
(ridge tillage- the system of planting crops on ridge tops to lower production
costs and conserve soil quality); and better integration of crops and livestock.
35
-Farmers must feed an increasing number of people. Thus they leave fields fallow for
shorter periods of time, effectively turning the land into a desert (desertification).
-Because many govt. are trying to develop along the international trade model, they are
encouraging farmers to grow crops for export rather than food for direct
consumption. The export crop of choice for many LDC farmers is drug crops.
Ch. 11 Industry
Key Issue 1: Where did industry originate?
Industrial Revolution- the period betwixt 1750 and 1950 in which the transformation of
manufacturing, productivity, and sociopolitical systems occurred. It was the
collective invention of hundreds of mechanical devices.
The term is somewhat misleading because the “revolution” happened over several
centuries, not overnight. The I.R. diffused from EnglandW. Europe N.
America Japan E. Europe, South Asia, South Pacific, various other
locations.
Cottage industry- the home-based manufacturing that preceded the I.R.
As a result of the diffusion of the I.R. into the realm of textiles (woven fabrics), such as
new machines to spin, weave, thread, and make clothing, clothing production
skyrocketed. In order to clean the abundant new clothes the chemical industry
emerged with new chemicals and compounds.
Due to the increased number and complexity of machines, the field of engineering was
born.
The diffusion of the principles of the I.R. was severely inhibited in Europe due to the
instability of the region and continuous railroads were prevented because of war.
36
Although the I.R. spread to N. America after it did to Europe, it was adopted more
quickly because of the unity of the people.
Because the new industries required certain materials like iron, coal, flowing water, etc. the
density of industries grew far more compact and concentrated around known
resources.
North America
-Concentrated in northeast. The region comprises only 5% of land area but 1/3
pop. and 2/3 manufacturing output.
-Other industrial areas in N. America are:
-New England- textiles originally; now skilled labor
-Middle Atlantic- seaports
-Mohawk Valley-aluminum, paper, steel
-Pittsburgh-Lake Eire- steel
-Western Great Lakes- transportation
-St. Lawrence Valley-Ontario Peninsula- steel, cars
-The U.S. south is dominated by right-to-work states- states that prevent
employers from making employees join a union before being hired.
Western Europe
-Rhine-Ruhr Valley-iron, steel, coal, most important industrial area
-Mid-Rhine- skilled labor
-U.K.- high tech industry
-Northern Italy- textiles, hydroelectric power from the Alps
Eastern Europe
-Central Industrial District- In Russia; ¼ industrial output
-St. Petersburg- In Russia; ports, railways, food-processing
-Eastern Ukraine- coal, iron, steel
-Volga- In Russia; oil, natural gas
-Ural Mountains- In Russia; over 1,000 types of minerals
-Kuznetsk- In Russia; coal, iron
-Silesia- steel production, coal
East Asia
-Japan- electronics, cars, stereos, TVs, etc.
-Tokyo
-Osaka-Kobe-Kyoto
-China- cheap labor, textiles
-Hong Kong; Yangtze River valley; and Gulf of Bo Hai
Key Issue 3: Why do industries have different distributions?
37
Break-of-bulk points- the locations where transfer among transportation modes is possible.
Situation factors- involve transporting materials to and from a factory; seeks to minimize
transport costs.
Site factors- land, labor, and capital are the three production factors that site
encompasses.
-Land- modern factories are more likely to locate in areas where land is cheap,
either in the suburbs or in other countries entirely. Industries also look for land
that is well powered, and has some amenities.
-Labor- labor intensive industry- an industry in which labor cost is a high
percentage of expense. The unskilled industries, like textiles and clothing for
instance, are more likely to search for the cheapest labor pool possible. Highly
skilled labor tend to be concentrated in MDC’s in cities with a high number of
colleges or college graduates.
-Capital- industries need funds. Therefore, they will only settle where they have
the ability to borrow more money. A good example is Silicon Valley in the U.S,
where nearly ¼ of all U.S. capital is spent. The banks there are willing to provide
loans to risky business ventures, thus explaining the large number of techno-
industries concentrated there.
Obstacles to prime industrial location, as determined by situation and site factors, can be
personal preferences of the CEO, historical locations, nostalgic attachment to a
specific community, or simply the desire not to participate in the time-consuming
and costly search for optimal location.
Trading blocs- international economic coalitions designed to boost the economic well-
being of its members. The three major blocs in the world are: the Western
Hemisphere, Western Europe, and East Asia.
On a global scale, many industries face a stagnant demand for products. Many people are
simply trading in older models of an appliance, rather than purchasing one for the
first time. The other major problem is the increased capacity of industries all over
the world to produce. Due to the high efficiency of modern manufacturing, the
markets have been saturated with products. The supply is plentiful, the demand is
not.
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In MDC’s, trading blocs stand in the way of industry. While they promote economic
cooperation w/in a bloc, the three blocs seemingly do everything in their power to
compete with the other blocs. Also, disparities exist w/in trading blocs.
LDC’s face the same industrial problems that the MDC’s faced ½ century ago; distance
from markets and inadequate infrastructure. In addition, they face new problems.
As more and more countries industrialize, fewer are left to sell goods to. Thus,
more countries are competing for fewer markets. LDC’s also face increasing
exploitation at the hands of the MDC multinational corporations taking advantage
of cheap labor.
New international division of labor- the selective transfer of unskilled jobs to LDC’s while
retaining the highly skilled and managerial positions in the MDC’s.
Ch. 12 Services
Key Issue 1: Where did services originate?
Service- any activity that fulfills a human want or need and returns money to those who
provide it.
Settlement- a permanent collection of buildings, where people reside, work, and obtain
services.
Consumer service- provides services to individual consumers who desire them and can
afford to pay for them.
Retail services- provide goods for sale to consumers.
Personal services- provide for the well-being, health, and personal improvement of
individual consumers.
Business services- facilitate other businesses through 1. producer services which are
banks, insurance, lawyers, engineers, etc and 2. transportation and information
services which are businesses that diffuse and distribute services.
Public services- provide for the security and protection of citizens and businesses.
The service sector is subdivided into three types: consumer, business, and public services.
The breakdown is as follows: (numbers in brackets are % of total pop in that service.)
SERVICES
All of the growth in employment in the U.S. has been in the service sector.
Clustered rural settlements- settlements where a number of families live in close proximity
to each other, with fields surrounding the collection of houses and farm buildings.
Ex. Circular rural settlements, linear or “long-lot” settlements.
39
Central place- a market center for the exchange of goods and services by people attracted
from the surrounding area.
Central place theory- a geographic concept that seeks to explain how services are
distributed and why a regular pattern of settlements exists. Proposed by Walter
Christaller in the 1930s. Christaller’s theory states that cities and services have
a hierarchical setup. That is that the largest cities have the most services with the
largest range, and their range overlaps those of smaller settlements which are
spaced at even intervals between the mega-cities.
Market area- hinterland; the area surrounding a service from which customers are
attracted. Represented by hexagons, because they are relatively uniform and do
not overlap or gap when nested together.
Range- the maximum distance people are willing to travel to use a service. Ranges are
farther for certain services like concerts or sporting events, and they are shorter
for everyday services like groceries. Not measured just in absolute distance, but
also the amount of time it takes one to arrive, given certain traffic conditions.
Threshold- the minimum number of people needed to support the service. Every enterprise
has a minimum number of customers required to generate enough sales to make a
profit. Once the range of a service has been calculated, a provider must ensure
that enough individuals are within that range to meet the service’s threshold.
The optimal location for a business is one in which it has the most number of people within
its range with a minimum driving distance/time without overlapping the range of a
similar service and thus risking the possibility of losing customers to that
competitor.
Rank-size rule- there are two different definitions. One is that in a given country, the n-th
largest city contains 1/n the pop of the largest city. Meaning that the country’s
second largest city contains ½ the pop of the largest city. The other definition is
that if for instance a country had a city with 1,000,000 people, then it would have
two cities with 500,000, four cities with 250,000, etc.
Primate city rule- the largest settlement in a state has more than 2x pop of the second
largest city; in which case that city is referred to as a primate city.
40
Every settlement in an MDC such as the U.S. provides services to people in a surrounding
hinterland, but not every settlement of a given size has the same number and types
of business services. Business services disproportionately cluster in a handful of
settlements.
After the fall of the Roman Empire, urbanization was halted for some time. However,
when it resumed, certain cities emerged as medieval world cities. These cities
were trading capitals, government seats, and religious centers. Some prominent
examples are: Baghdad, Constantinople, Kyoto, Beijing, and Cairo.
In modern times, several world cities have emerged where a high percentage of the world’s
business is transacted and political power is concentrated. These cities are centers
of business services, and they stand at the top of the central place hierarchy in the
provision of consumer services. The modern world cities are those that are most
closely integrated into the global economic system and at the center of the flow of
information and capital. The three modern world cities are New York City,
London, and Tokyo. The other levels of major cities are:
-Command and control centers: contain the HQ of many large corporations, well-
developed banking facilities, and concentrated businesses. Ex. Boston, Denver,
etc.
-Specialized producer-service centers: responsible for the fabrication of a specific
good or service. Ex. semiconductors in San Jose; cars in Detroit; etc.
-Dependent centers: provide unskilled jobs and depend on decisions made in
world cities. Ex. Ft. Lauderdale, Las Vegas, etc.
Basic industry- industries that export primarily to consumers outside the settlement and
thus bring in capital from outside the settlement.
Nonbasic industries are enterprises whose customers live in the same community.
According to researcher Richard Florida, the principal reason enticing talented individuals
to cluster in some cities more than others is cultural rather than economic. Those
cities with a higher degree of cultural diversity (measured by % gay men, %
cultural facilities per capita, and “coolness index”) attract a higher number of
talented people. (college-educated, scientists, professionals)
Central business district- (CBD) the area of a city commonly referred to as downtown;
Retail services in the CBD tend to be those with a high threshold (although in recent years,
these have migrated to the suburbs), high range, and retail servicing downtown
41
workers. Producer services tend to locate downtown since the actual location of
their business is not critical and so cluster in the CBD for accessibility.
High land costs in the CBD (more than $1,000,000,000 per acre in Tokyo) have led to
intensive use of the land that is available. Cities often have underground
networks, and subways to facilitate the movement of the masses. In addition, the
buildings are vertical rather horizontal. Skyscrapers are especially common
because they allow large amounts of people and equipment to reside/work in a
relatively small land area. Due to the high price of land, manufacturing is less
common downtown than in the past, instead many companies choose to move to
the suburbs where land is cheaper, but the CBD is still readily accessible. Fewer
people are living in the CBD than in the past. One reason is that the businesses
are more able to pay the high rents associated with downtown apartments, and
also many people want to move to the suburbs to access better schools, less
crowded streets, and larger homes. The few residents left downtown are often
poor and trapped in a cycle of poverty.
Because of the availability and low cost of land in the suburbs, many department stores and
other businesses with high thresholds that used to be downtown, have clustered in
the suburban malls. These malls are agglomerations of various services in one
large building or network of buildings surrounded by parking, that is easily
accessible from a nearby road junction.
Urbanization- the process by which the population of cities grows; by an increase in the
number of people living in cities and/or an increase in the percentage of people
living in the cities.
Defining where urban areas end and rural areas begin is becoming increasingly difficult,
especially in areas dominated by urban sprawl, like the U.S. Louis Wirth argued
that an urban resident follows a different way of life from a rural dweller. Thus,
Wirth socially defined the city as having these three characteristics:
-Large size
-High density
-Social heterogeneity
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Physically designating a “city” is even more difficult. Various methods are used,
sometimes interchangeably, sometimes overlapping.
-Legal definition of a city. The area of urban settlement that has been legally
incorporated into an independent, self-governing unit.\
-Urbanized area- In the U.S, the central city and the surrounding built-up
suburbs.
-Metropolitan Statistical Area- the U.S. Census official method of measuring the
functional area of a city. It includes:
-An urbanized area with a pop of at least 50,000.
-The county within which the city is located.
-Adjacent counties w/a high pop density and large % of residents working in
the central city’s county.
-Micropolitan statistical areas- same as MSA only designed for smaller urban
areas.
Sometimes the MSA of cities will overlap resulting in a mega city commonly referred to as
a megalopolis, such as the Boswash corridor. (The “continuous” city of Boston,
Washington D.C., and New York City)
Three main models exist that attempt to at least generalize the various trends and patterns
that a city shows when developing. The models of urban structure are:
Concentric zone model- created in 1923 by E.W. Burgess, it shows the city as growing
outward in concentric rings. Though the ring size may vary betwixt cities, the
same order is always evident: CBD; zone of transition (industry and slums);
working class zone; middle-class family zone; commuter zone. This model
displays that wealth is what designs the city, as one moves out from the CBD, the
residences in each zone are progressively nicer, and the people are progressively
richer.
Multiple nuclei model- created in 1945 by C.D. Harris and E.L. Ullman, it says that the
pattern of urban development is that there is no pattern and a city is a complex
structure that includes more than one center around which activities revolve.
No model is truly better than another. Normally one can argue any of the three to fit any
city. The three models are used primarily to help in the understanding of where
people with different social characteristics tend to live within an urban area.
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Census tract- urban areas that contain approx 5,000 residents and try to correspond to
neighborhood boundaries.
European and less developed cities typically follow the same models, only the direction of
increasing wealth is reversed. The rich cluster downtown and the poor are
banished to the outskirts. Many LDC cities show this trend because they were
founded by European colonists who simply imposed their urban planning upon
whatever city they chose.
Squatter settlements- the outskirts of many LDC cities where the poor are clustered. These
settlements often lack running water, schools, electricity, mass transit, or any
other service that one would expect in a city.
Many low-income inner-city residents lack job skills because they never completed high
school, and few low-skilled jobs remain downtown, most having moved out to
their customers in the suburbs. About 3 million Americans are homeless, most
roaming through the cities. Because some inner-city residents are unable to
escape the cycle of poverty, they turn to crime, drugs, and/or other illegal
behavior to make ends meet.
The concentration of low-income residents in the inner-city, with most of the middle and
upper classes in the suburbs, has left city governments with extreme financial
problems. Without a strong tax base, many governments are unable to fund
schools or other social programs that would help end the underclass cycle, thus
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the problem continues. Cities are less able to annex compared to the past.
Suburbanites wish to have their own services and have jurisdictions independent
of the city. Suburbs wish to remain close to the city to enjoy its amenities, but not
become part of it and have to join in its problems.
Peripheral model- developed by C.D. Harris, it suggests that an urban area consists of an
inner city surrounded by large suburban residential and business areas tied
together by a beltway or ring road. Peripheral areas lack the problems of many
inner-cities, but often result in a large amount of inefficient urban sprawl.
Edge cities- areas that develop along the ring road that are nodes of consumer and
business services.
Density gradient- the density change as one leaves the inner city. Typically drops from
extremely high in the CBD, to low in the rural surroundings. However, in recent
years, fewer people are living in the center thus creating a “hole” in the density
gradient with the highest pop density surrounding this hole. Also, as suburbs “fill
in”, the density differences are softened as one moves in a given direction.
Sprawl- the progressive spread of development over the landscape.
The most important cause of sprawl is the automobile. More than any other invention, it
has increased the daily range of people, and thanks to highways, people can live
many miles from their job, and commute everyday in their private vehicle,
causing extreme congestion of roadways and accelerated levels of pollution.
Cities must also devote an enormous amount of land to parking everyone’s
vehicles. Mass transit is popular in many American cities, and in other MDC’s.
However, the availability of public transportation is limited at best for all but a
select few cities in the U.S, compared to near universal usage throughout Europe.
As resource crises loom on the horizon, many governments are researching new
and improved forms of mass transit.
Smart growth- legislation and regulations to limit suburban sprawl and preserve farmland.