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Chapters 24 and 25:

Chapters 24 and 25:. Cultural Geography of South Asia. India- Population Patterns. 1.1 billion people live there. 15% of world’s population. Largest number descended from Dravidians (southern India for 8,000 years) and Aryans who came from Central Asia about 3,000 years ago.

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Chapters 24 and 25:

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  1. Chapters 24 and 25: Cultural Geography of South Asia

  2. India- Population Patterns • 1.1 billion people live there. 15% of world’s population. • Largest number descended from Dravidians (southern India for 8,000 years) and Aryans who came from Central Asia about 3,000 years ago. • Most identify themselves by religion. Hindus, Muslims, Buddhists, Sikhs, Jains, or Christians. Hindus sub identify by jati, or caste. • 869 people per square mile. Average density is 7 times world average. • Location is depended on climate, physical features and vegetation. Where the agriculture is good the density can reach 2,000 people per square mile. • 70% live in villages and are rural. Subsistence farming. More and more migrate to urban areas for better jobs and higher wages. • Mumbai has 18.3 million.

  3. India- History and Government • Indus Valley civilization dates back 4500 years to area that is now Pakistan. Settled by the Aryan peoples. 2000s BC. Created the caste system. • Caste, or jati, is something you are born into. The Vedas explain how this works. Understanding religion is how you understand their culture. • Hinduism- every person has to carry out dharma or moral duty. Reincarnation. The law of kharma, good deeds, gets you to good reincarnation. • Buddhism- Siddhartha Gautama, Buddha. People suffer because they are too attracted to material goods. Think clearly, work hard, and show compassion. • Other groups came through the Khyber Pass in the Hindu Kush mountains. Mauryan and Gupta Empires. Final invaders were Europeans. Mercantilism introduced. • British practiced imperialism. Called their Indian empire the British raj. Introduced English, reconstructed educational system, built railroads and developed civil service. • Fight for independence led by Mohandas Gandhi. Achieved it in 1947. divided land into Muslim Pakistan and Hindu India. World’s largest democracy.

  4. India-Culture • School required until age 14. 65% literacy rate. Working on getting education to women and lower classes. • Health care is improving. State run. • 18 official languages. Hindi is the most widely spoken. • Most people are Hindus. Other religions include Christianity, Islam, Buddhism, and Sikhism. • Family is the most important social unit. Extended families live together. Arranged marriages happen frequently. Clear order to gender and age.

  5. Pakistan and Bangladesh- Population Patterns • Became separate because of diverse ethnic heritages. • Pakistan is diverse because of invasions and migrations. 5 main ethnic groups: Punjabis, Sindhis, Pashtuns, Mohajirs, and Baluchis. • Bangladesh- most people are Bengali and are Muslim. Most densely populated country in South Asia with 2,569 people per square mile. Dhaka is the third most densely populated city in the world. Despite advancement cannot feed their population. 1991 total fertility rate was 4. number has declined. Give women money to start businesses to help them not have as many children. • Pakistan- most urbanized country. 34% live in cities. Shortages in housing and jobs. Pollution.

  6. Pakistan and Bangladesh- History and Government • 2500 BC one of world’s most advanced societies developed along Indus River. Writing system, strong central government, and overseas trade. First cities. MohenjoDaro and Harappa. Disappeared and Aryans moved in. • 700s Islam brought by the Muslim traders. Played a huge role in development. • 1930s the idea of a separate Hindu state emerged. British gave them independence. • Kashmir- area between India and Pakistan that is contested especially after the first nuclear testing happened. • Bangladesh got its independence in 1971. happened after hard civil war. • Both countries have parliamentary rule but neither has worked. Violence in past years.

  7. Pakistan and Bangladesh- Culture • Education is not good. Literacy rates 43-48%. For females it is about 35%. Differs based on social class and gender. • Heath care is very poor. Cannot take care of their people especially during natural disasters. • Bangladesh- main language is Bangla. Urdu is main language in Pakistan but most people speak local languages. Islam and Hinduism main religions. • Extend families live together. Arranged marriages.

  8. Nepal, Bhutan, Maldives and Sri Lanka- Population Patterns • Nepal- Indo-Nepalese and Tibeto-Nepalese two main groups. • Bhutan- majority of people are Bhote. Descendants of Tibetan peoples. Speak Tibetan dialects and practice Tibetan Buddhism. Nepalese are 35% of population. Speak Nepali and are Hindus. • Maldives- people from India, Sri Lanka, East Africa and Arab countries. • Sri Lanka- two main groups. Speak difference languages. Buddhist Sinhalese are majority. Hindu Tamils fighting for independence. • Southern Bhutan and Nepal average density goes from 55-447 people per square mile. Higher elevation the lower the density. • Sri Lanka- 778 density. Maldives- 2,586 people per square mile.

  9. Nepal, Bhutan, Maldives and Sri Lanka- History and Government • Nepal- Licchavi dynasty established in 400. 9th century ceased to exist and replaced by three new dynasties. They were conquered by Shah dynasty. Contact with British during the Anglo-Nepalese War (1814-1816). Nepal kept independence and original size. • Bhutan history starts with introduction of Buddhism from fleeing Tibetan monks in the 800s. Politics and religion tied together. • Sri Lanka- Sinhalese arrived in 500s B.C. • Bhutan- early 600s lama consolidated power. When he died chaos ensued. 1800s ruler established tie with British. Now has constitutional monarchy with a representative government. • Nepal- fairly isolated from European influences. Going back and forth between monarchy and representative government. • 1500s spice trade brought huge profits to Europe so their influence in this area increased. Dutch were the first major power followed by the British. 1972 Sri Lanka got its independence. Parliamentary republic now. Internal conflicts.

  10. Nepal, Bhutan, Sri Lanka and Maldives- Culture • Hinduism and Buddhism major religions. Maldives influenced by Islam. • Nepal- most people speak Nepali. Sri Lankans speak Sinhalese and Tamil. Maldives speak Dhivehi. Bhutan speak Dzongka. • Maldives have best education with 97% literacy rates. Sri Lankans get free education through university age. Bhutan’s literacy rate is 47% and Nepal’s is 48%. • Health care in all of the countries is low and most rely on tradition medicine because there are not enough doctors.

  11. Economy-Agriculture • Subsistence farming using primitive methods. Water is a major concern. Use animal power. • Farms vary in size based on geographic, historic, and cultural factors. Terracing in highlands. Water used to grow rice. Plantations. • Cash crops big here. Tea, rubber, coconuts, tobacco, bananas, coffee, tea, cotton and jute. • Grains exports and food source. Rise is major crop in this area. • Green revolution- sought to increase crop yields. Has its costs. Good- feed the people. Bad- increased use of chemicals leads to pollution.

  12. Economy- Mining and Fishing • Make good money and have potential to be profitable in the future. • Gangetic Plain yield some of the richest mineral deposits. Iron ore, low grade coal, bauxite and copper in eastern India. • Bhutan rich in coal, lead, marble, zinc and copper. Sri Lanka has precious and semi-precious stones. • Ocean location makes fishing a huge industry

  13. Economy- Industry • 1940s India concentrated on promoting home industries and limiting foreign investments. 1990s reopened country to foreign investments. Deregulated many companies giving them back to private individuals. Growing inequality among classes. • Light industry comes from cottage industry (home industries). Concentration on traditional methods. Microcredit- giving small loans to women to start businesses. Helped decrease birth rates. • Heavy industry- mass production. Steel, iron, cement and heavy machinery. Ship breaking- dismantling old ships for parts. • Service industries- wholesale and retail trade and government services. • High technology sector- world’s leading exporter of software services.

  14. Economy-Tourism • Conflicts cause issues with tourism. • Regulate tourism to protect natural and cultural resources. • Ecotourism is growing.

  15. Economy- Trade and Transportation • Nepal has least developed modern transportation system. Mountain trails however are crucial to culture and are main trade routes. • India has 20,000 miles of highway. Huge rail system built by the British. • Bhutan and Nepal are landlocked and do not share the advantages of having sea ports as the other countries do. • Communication is restricted is some countries and free in others. 1999 before Bhutan had television and internet service.

  16. Economy- Trade and Interdependence • Want to depend on the other countries but long standing conflict often make that difficult. Trade though has lessened some of the tension. • India has several trading agreements with foreign nations while landlocked Bhutan and Nepal depend on India for certain things. India’s dominance does make some countries wary of becoming dependent on India. • SAFTA- South Asia Free Trade Agreement. Signed in 2004. not solve conflict but it helped.

  17. Environment- Human Impact • Key to success is sustainable development. • Water is a huge issue. Even in Ida 60% of urban population and 20% of rural population have access to sanitation facilities. • Rely on water polluted with human waste. • Northern India lose crops to droughts. At same time in southern India losing crops to floods. Building dams helps with these. Problems with that is disease from increasing bug activity as well as flooding of land causing people to lose their homes. • Deforestation an increasing problem. Mining, population growth and lumber industry have contributed. Agriculture to blame as well. Losing ways that we keep the soil from eroding. • Impacts wildlife. Diverse array of species found here. Many have become endangered in this area. Hunting and poaching problems. Created reserves and are studying erosion and natural disaster patterns.

  18. Environment- Future Challenges • 1947 Kashmir is a fought over piece of land between Pakistan and India. Mostly Muslim people live there. In last 50 years 2 of the 3 wars fought over this. • Line of Control- the unofficial border. Working to make it official. • Hope that trade will help ease this tension. Escalated in 1998 with both countries tested nuclear weapons. • Internal discrimination where one ethnic group wants either more government power or independence. Religious tension and fighting as well.

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