1 / 4

Economic Geography

Economic Geography. dr. Jeney László Senior lecturer jeney@elte.hu. Economic Geography I. International Business bachelor study programme (BA) Autumn term 201 5 /201 6 . CUB Department of Economic Geography and Futures Studies. Course description of Economic Geography.

mbarbera
Download Presentation

Economic 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. EconomicGeography dr. Jeney László Senior lecturer jeney@elte.hu Economic Geography I. International Business bachelor study programme (BA) Autumn term 2015/2016. CUB Department of Economic Geography and Futures Studies

  2. Course description of Economic Geography E.3.391, Monday9.50–11.20 Altogether 13 lessons 1 week cancelled: 26thOctober Assessment: coursework mark Written in-class test: Multiple choice test questions about the material of the lectures (100%) Topographical exercise on an outlined map based on a given list of geographical names (30%) – recognition of geographical names on an outlined map: 142 cities and their countries This course tries to introduce to the discipline of (regional) economic geography to help understanding what's going on in our mosaic-like world with geographic approach, concepts and tools to expand the knowledge about major regions of the world and the similarities and differences among and inside them to take a holistic approach bringing together the world’s environments, landscapes, people, cultures and economics 2

  3. Bibliography The lecture notes are mainly suggested for the preparation Recommended readings Bradshaw, M. – Dymond, J. – White, G. – Chacko, E. 2011: Contemporary World Regional Geography. 4th Edition. – McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 620 p. ISBN: 978-0071314732 MacKinnon, D.–Cumbers, A. 2007: An introduction to economic geography: globalization, uneven development and place. – Pearson Education, 354 p. ISBN: 978-0131293168 3

  4. Economic geography in the structure of sciences Concerns with Spatial patterns of wealth and poverty Use of resources Production, distribution and consumption of goods Flows of labour and capital 2 parts: Regionaleconomicgeography General economic geography Strongly affected by economics (especially general economicgeography) • Socialism: economic geography was used instead of the term of the whole human geography (as a complementary of physical geography) 4

More Related