1 / 18

United States

United States. Human geography. ESPN: A Framework For Studying Countries. E conomic S ocial P olitical E N vironmental. Economics. Mixed economy Which elements are free enterprise? Which elements are socialist?. Economics - Demographics.

matana
Download Presentation

United States

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. United States Human geography

  2. ESPN: A Framework For Studying Countries • Economic • Social • Political • ENvironmental

  3. Economics • Mixed economy • Which elements are free enterprise? • Which elements are socialist?

  4. Economics - Demographics • How would you describe the level of development of the U.S.? • More developed • Where does the U.S. rank in the Human Development Index? • NUMBER FOUR!

  5. Economics – Resources and infrastructure • Rich in resources • Minerals, energy, forests • Arable land • Highly developed infrastructure • Roads • Communications • Ports and railroads • Education

  6. Economics – Globalization • Vast export sector • Large role in world financial markets • Multinational corporations and outsourcing • NAFTA

  7. SOCIAL - U.S. and the World • American popular culture spread worldwide • America as a world power • National security and the military • UN Security Council member

  8. SOCIAL – Immigration • 17th and 18th century migration • Religious persecution • Economic gain/resources • 19th century migration • Religious persecution (again!) • Famine in Europe • Jobs in factories • Railroad construction • Available land • 20th and 21st century migration • Economic growth and opportunity • War and revolution (with religious persecution!)

  9. SOCIAL - Population Patterns • What are the major cities in the U.S.? • Where has population shifted over time?

  10. Regions within the U.S. • Perceptual regions – How would you describe… • The Northeast? • The Midwest? • The South? • The West?

  11. Regions within the U.S.: The NORTHEAST • 1/5 of the country’s population • Financial and industrial center • Urbanization centered around rivers and ports • “Rust Belt” • Culturally diverse

  12. Regions within the U.S.: The Midwest • Major farming region • “Corn Belt” • “Dairy Belt” • Leading producer of industrial goods • Large cities along the Great Lakes and the Mississippi River • African American population concentrated in urban centers

  13. Regions within the U.S.:The South • 30% of the country’s population • Historically agricultural, but new industries developed in late 20th century • Economy centered around natural resources • Large Hispanic population

  14. Regions within the U.S.:The West • Largest and most sparsely populated • Interior West very different from Pacific states… why? • Livestock, mining, and tourism

  15. Politics • What is the political system in the U.S.? • What do voting patterns in the U.S. have to do with population? • What about popular participation?

  16. Human-Environment Interaction • Railroads and interstate highways opened/connected new areas despite physical barriers • Rivers, dams, bridges, canals, and irrigation (aquifers) made water resources more useful – early “highways” for trade • Later technological advances made it possible to live comfortably in formerly marginal areas

  17. Human-Environment Interaction • People live near key resources • Mountains mined • Wind generates green energy

More Related