1 / 48

World Regional Geography

World Regional Geography. Ptolemy’s First World Map, circa A.D. 150 . Michael Reed Office: Natural Sciences (NS) 209 Phone: 310-660-6016 Email: mreed@elcamino.edu Web Page: http://www.elcamino.edu/Faculty/mreed/index.htm. B.A. History, Brown University, 1992

clay
Download Presentation

World Regional Geography

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. World Regional Geography Ptolemy’s First World Map, circa A.D. 150

  2. Michael Reed Office: Natural Sciences (NS) 209 Phone:310-660-6016Email: mreed@elcamino.edu Web Page:http://www.elcamino.edu/Faculty/mreed/index.htm • B.A. History, Brown University, 1992 • Geography Coursework, Cabrillo College, 1995 • M.A. Geography, SDSU, 1999 • Associate Professor of Geography, Glendale CC, 2000-2005 • Instructor of Geography, El Camino CC, 2005-present. • 27 jobs at last count, including tour guide, gondolier, waiter, newspaper reporter, N.Y.C. fashion executive, McDonald’s kitchen crew, stereo salesman, shoe salesman, receptionist, and many others.

  3. My Teaching Philosophy • I try to teach this class the same as I would anywhere else. Community colleges should not be second rate. • You are responsible for your own education, particularly now that you are in college. I am a guide, a helper, if you will. College is what you make of it. • I consider my responsibilities to include fairness, honesty, and compassion. Most of all, I think it is my job to earnestly attempt to make geography interesting and fun, without making it frivolous. • I promise this: if you take this class seriously, you will learn a great deal about the world.

  4. What Is Geography? • Introduce yourself to two other people. • Spend the next three minutes deciding together what geography is about. • Each person writes their definition on a blank sheet of paper for submission. Include your name and class time. • Three correct answers (randomly selected) get extra credit on the first test: 5 points for an A, 4 for a B, 3 for a C. • GO!

  5. What is Geography? Geography is the study of what is where and why it’s there. Mike Reed

  6. What is Geography? Geography is a representation of the whole known world together with the phenomena which are contained therein. Ptolemy, Geographia 2nd Century A.D. Geography is the science of place. Its vision is grand, its view panoramic. It sweeps the surface of the Earth, charting the physical, organic and cultural terrain, their areal differentiation, and their ecological dynamics with humankind. Its foremost tool is the map. Leonard Krishtalka, Carnegie Museum of Natural History, 20th Century A.D. Organized knowledge of the earth as the world of people. Dave Balogh

  7. Five “Key Themes” of Geography • 1. Location– specific location, where? • 2. Place–unique properties of a place • 3. Movement– diffusion, communications • 4. Region– an area’s uniform characteristics • 5.Human-Earth Relationships–human interaction with an environment

  8. Divisions of Geography • Physical Geography Human Geography • Rocks and Minerals Population • Landforms Settlements • Soils Economic Activities • Animals Transportation • Plants Recreational Activities • Water Religion • Atmosphere Political Systems • Rivers and Other Water Bodies Social Traditions • Environment Human Migration • Climate and Weather Agricultural Systems Geography is a bridge between the natural and social sciences. Geography is a holistic or synthesizing science.

  9. Fig. 1-7, p. 12

  10. Chapter 1:Globalization and Diversity Map of World Regions (fig. 1.2) Regions defined by Rowntree et al.

  11. Week One Goals • Understand framework for studying world regional geography • Examine varied aspects of globalization • Economic, cultural, geopolitical, environmental, social • Understand the following models and terms • Demographic transition • Measures of population growth and change • Indicators of social development • Measures of economic development • State, nation, and nation-state • Culture • Core-periphery model

  12. Globalization • The increasing interconnectedness of different parts of the world through common processes of economic, political, and cultural change. Economic globalization is happening fastest. Discussion: How is globalization affecting you? Can you see it in your everyday life? Panama, 1997

  13. Diversity Amid Globalization • Globalization: the increasing interconnectedness of people and places through the converging processes of economic, political, and cultural change • Converging Currents of Globalization • Global communications link world regions • Global transportation moves goods quickly • Transnational conglomerate corporations; international financial institutions more powerful than many countries • Global free-trade agreements • Market economies replace state-controlled economies • Globalized market for consumer goods (needed or not) • Globalization of workers, managers, executives

  14. Global Consumer Culture • May erode local diversity • Can cause social tensions between traditional cultures and new, external globalizing influences • Examples: clothing, food, movies, and more • Hybridization:sometimes occurs when forms of American popular culture spread abroad then are melded with local cultural traditions • world beat music, Japanese comic books, global rap, that are now found worldwide

  15. The Geopolitical Component • Globalization goes beyond national boundaries • United Nations provides representation to all countries • Global trade and cultural exchange are the product of international agreements • Environmental Concerns • Globalized economy creates and intensifies environmental problems, disrupts local ecosystems as transnational firms search for natural resources and factory sites • Native peoples may lose resource base • Globalization aggravates world environmental problems (climate change, air & water pollution, deforestation) • International treaties may help

  16. Social Dimensions • Increased international migration • Asians, Latin Americans to the U.S. • Africans, Asians to Western Europe • Japan and Korea less homogeneous • Immigrants from poor countries to less poor countries nearby • Criminal element to globalization • Terrorism (discussed later in the chapter) • Drugs • Illegal narcotics link remote mountains of Burma to the global economy • Economies reorient to drug smuggling & money laundering • Pornography and prostitution • Gambling

  17. Drug Trade The Global Drug Trade (Fig. 1.6)

  18. Advocates and Critics of Globalization • The Proglobalization Stance (Advantages) • Globalization is logical expression of capitalism • Removing trade barriers will increase efficiency, spread new technology and ideas • Free flow of capital will enhance global economic wealth • The world’s poorer countries will catch up through globalization • The Antiglobalization Stance (Disdvantages) • Today’s core, developed countries did not use globalization’s free-market economic model to foster their own development • Globalization creates greater inequalities • It promotes free-market, export-oriented economies, at the expense of local, indigenous economies • Spreads undesirable things (diseases, crime, harmful flora and fauna)

  19. Global Economic Inequity 1960-2000 (Fig. 1.9) Inequity

  20. Diversity in a Globalizing World • Will globalization bring a homogenous, culturally bland world? • The world is still a diverse place • Language, religion • Foods, architecture, urban form • Politics, economics • Ethnic and cultural differences are contributing to separatist political movements • Politics of diversity demands attention to worldwide tensions over terrorism, ethnic separateness, regional autonomy, political independence

  21. Themes and Issues in World Regional Geography • Geography describes Earth and explains spatial patterns • Themes and Issues in World Regional Geography • Environmental geography • Population and settlement • Cultural coherence and diversity • Geopolitical framework • Economic and social development

  22. Population and Settlement: People on the Land • The human population is at its largest point: more than 6 billion people on earth • About 86 million born each year (10,000 each hour) • 90% of population growth in developing regions (Africa, Latin America, South Asia, East Asia) • Several important population issues • Population growth rates vary from region to region; some grow rapidly, others with slow or no growth • Regions and countries have vastly different approaches to family planning (to increase or decrease population), from regulation to incentives and social cooperation • Migration is very important; some migrate for better life, but others migrate to flee war, persecution, or environmental disasters • The greatest international migration in human history is occurring NOW

  23. (Fig. 1.12)

  24. Population Growth and Change • There are several important population statistics that you need to know (memorize) • Rate of Natural Increase (RNI): annual growth rate for a country or region as a percentage increase • (annual number of births) – (annual number of deaths) = RNI • Current world RNI is 1.3% per year • Crude Birth Rate (CBR): total number of births divided by the total population, giving a figure per 1,000 of the population; world CBR is 22 per 1,000 • Crude Death Rate (CDR): total number of deaths divided by the total population, giving a figure per 1,000 of the population; world CDR is 9 per 1,000

  25. Population Growth and Change • More population statistics you must know • Total fertility rate (TFR): the average number of children born by a statistically average woman (world average is 2.8, 1.4 in Europe to 5.2 in Africa) • Percentage of population under age 15 • Signals future rapid population growth • Percentage of population over age 65 • Older people need more health care, social security from younger workers • Population pyramids: show the gender and percentage of the population in specific age groups

  26. Population Pyramids Population Pyramids (Fig. 1.14)

  27. Demographic Transition Model The Demographic Transition (Fig. 1.15)

  28. Migration Patterns • Today, about 125 million (2%) of total world population are migrants of some sort • Much international migration linked to global economy • Push factors: negative conditions that drive people from a location • Examples: cultural oppression, war, unemployment, natural disasters • Pull factors: favorable conditions at a destination that attract people • Examples: economic opportunity (jobs), freedom, good climate • Most migration involves both push and pull factors working together • Networks of families, friends, and sometimes labor contractors connect migrants from their origins to their destinations

  29. An Urban World • Cities are the focal points of the modern globalizing world • The size and growth rate of some cities is staggering • Mexico City and Sao Paolo (Brazil) • More than 20 million residents • And they’re adding 10,000 new people each week • Both are predicted to double in the next 15 years • Urbanized population: percentage of a country’s people who live in cities • Currently, 47% of world’s population lives in cities • U.S., Europe, Japan, Australia are more than 75% urbanized • Rates of urbanization in developing world is usually less than 50%, and may be considerably lower

  30. Growth of World Cities (Fig. 1.18)(2000 and projected 2015)

  31. Culture • Culture is LEARNED (not innate), is shared (not individual) behavior, and includes both abstract (language, religion) and material elements (architecture, technology) • When Cultures Collide • Cultural imperialism: active promotion of one’s cultural system over another • Cultural nationalism: the process of defending a cultural system against offensive cultural expression while at the same time actively promoting local or national values • Cultural syncretism or hybridization: the blending of elements of culture to form a new culture

  32. Language and Culture • Language and culture are closely tied • Language is often the characteristic that best defines cultural groups • Since language is the means for communication within a cultural group, it includes other aspects of cultural identity (politics, religion, commerce, folkways, customs) • Dialect: a distinctive form of a language associated with a specific region (e.g., American and British English) • Lingua franca: a third language that is adopted by people from different cultural groups within a country who cannot speak each other’s language (e.g., Swahili in Africa, or English in India)

  33. Languages World Languages(Fig. 1.22)

  34. Geography of World Religion • Religion is another extremely important defining trait of cultural groups • Universalizing religion: attempts to appeal to all people regardless of location or culture (examples: Christianity with 2 billion, Islam with 1.2 billion, Buddhism) • Ethnic religion: identified closely with a specific ethnic group; does not actively seek converts (examples: Judaism, Hinduism with 850 million in India) • Secularization: exists when people consider themselves to be non-religious or outright atheistic (about 1 billion)

  35. Religions Major Religious Traditions(Fig. 1.36)

  36. Geopolitics: Fragmentation & Unity • Geopolitics: term that describes the close link between geography and political activity • Focuses on the interaction between power, territory, and space at all scales • State: a political unit with territorial boundaries recognized by other countries and internally governed by an organizational structure • Nation: a large group of people who share many cultural elements (e.g.: language, religion, cultural identity) and view themselves as a single political community • Nation-state: a relatively homogenous cultural group with its own fully independent political territory (e.g.: Japan, France); Kurds are a nation without a state

  37. Kurds: A Nation without a State (Fig. 1.26)

  38. Geopolitics: Fragmentation & Unity Micronationalism: group identity with the goal of self-rule within an existing nation-state - On the rise, and a source of geopolitical tension in the world Centrifugal and Centripetal Forces Centrifugal forces: Cultural and political forces acting to weaken or divide an existing state - Examples: linguistic minority status, ethnic separatism, territorial autonomy, disparities in income and well-being Centripetal forces: Forces that promote political unity and reinforce the state structure - Examples: shared sense of history, need for military security, overarching economic structure

  39. Global Terrorism • 9/11 terrorist attacks not attached to a nationalist or regional geopolitical aspiration to achieve independence or autonomy • Global terrorism is a product and an expression of globalization • Asymmetrical warfare: the differences between a superpower’s military technology and strategy and the lower level technology and decentralized guerilla tactics used by al Qaeda and the Taliban • Colonialism and Decolonialization • Colonialism: formal establishment of rule over a foreign population • Decolonialization: the process of a colony’s gaining (or regaining) control over its territory and establishing a separate independent government

  40. The Colonial World in 1914 (Fig. 1.42)

  41. Economic and Social Development: The Geography of Wealth and Poverty • Economic development, when successful, brings increased prosperity to individuals, regions, and nation-states

  42. Measuring Economic Wealth • Gross Domestic Product (GDP): value of all final goods and services produced within a country • Gross National Product (GNP): GDP plus the net income from abroad; but omits non-market economic activity (bartering, household work) • Gross National Income (GNI): the value of all final goods and services produced within a country plus net income from abroad • GNI per capita – obtained by dividing the GNI by a country’s population • Purchasing power parity (PPP): a comparable for a standard “market basket” of goods and services purchased with a local currency • Economic growth rate: annual rate of expansion for GNP (Gross National Product)

  43. GNI World Gross National Income (GNI) Per Capita (Fig. 1.31)

  44. Indicators of Social Development • Life expectancy: average length of life expected at birth for a hypothetical male or female, as based on national death statistics • Mortality rate under 5 years: measure of the number of children who die per 1,000 persons • Adult illiteracy rates: percentage of a society’s males and females who cannot read • Female labor force participation: percentage of a nation’s labor force that is female

  45. Conclusion • Globalization is driving a fundamental reorganization of economies and cultures through trade agreements, supranational organizations, military alliances, and cultural exchanges • Discussion of each region includes 5 themes: • Environmental Geography • Population and Settlement • Cultural Coherence and Diversity • Geopolitical Framework • Economic and Social Development Geographies End of Chapter 1: Diversity and Globalization

  46. Fig. 1-4a, p. 8

  47. Maps Affect OurEnvironmental Perception

  48. Human-Environment Interaction(Cultural Ecology) • Successful cultures are those that adapt well to their environments. (Chaco Canyon, North Africa, Fertile Crescent, Easter Island) Chaco Canyon, New Mexico Easter Island, Polynesia

More Related