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Population Geography

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Population Geography Demography: The study of Population and Population Change What factors influence population distribution? Environmental factors-- What type of ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Population Geography


1
Population Geography
  • Demography The study of Population and
    Population Change

2
What factors influence population distribution?
  • Environmental factors--
  • What type of natural resources are in the area?
    Does it have oil, or arable land or access to
    water?
  • What is the climate like?
  • Does it have capital resources such as
    transportation and technology?

3
  • Economic factors--
  • What is the economic development like?
  • What are the resources like?
  • Political factors--
  • What is the government policy?
  • Are there many conflicts?
  • Is it a rural/urban area?

4
What are the characteristics of human
populations?
  • Birth and Death rates-
  • How many people per 1000 are born or die in a
    year?
  • Age Distribution--
  • How many people are in each age category?

5
  • Male/Female distribution--
  • Are there more males or more females? Why?
  • Life Expectancy--
  • How old can you expect to live?
  • Infant Mortality--
  • How many children die before their second
    birthday?

6
  • Urban /Rural--
  • Where do most people live? In the city/country?
  • GDP--
  • Is the countrys GDP high or low?
  • Ethnicity--
  • Does the population have one dominate ethnicity
    or many and do they get along?

7
  • Language--
  • Do the people speak one language or do they have
    multiple languages?
  • Religion--
  • Do the people share the same religion or do they
    have multiple ones?
  • Education--
  • Are the people highly educated?

8
What factors influence population growth rates?
  • Does the country have modern medicine and hygiene
    practices?
  • What is the level of the average education?
  • Is the country industrialized and do the people
    live in urban areas?

9
  • What is the level of economic development? Does
    the country have a primary, secondary, or
    tertiary economy?
  • What is the governments policy toward growth?
    Are there any restrictions?
  • What role do women play in the society?

10
Push factors of immigration
  • Push factors are factors which force people to
    move.
  • Overproduction
  • religious persecution
  • lack of job opportunities
  • agricultural decline
  • conflict

11
  • Political persecution
  • Natural hazards--droughts, floods, famines,
    volcanic eruptions
  • Limits on personal freedom
  • environmental degradation (decline)

12
Pull factors of immigration
  • Pull factors attract people to an area
  • Religion
  • Economic opportunity
  • Land availability
  • Political freedom

13
  • Ethnic and family ties
  • Arable land

14
What is the impact of migration on regions?
  • Language--multiple languages
  • Religion and religious freedom
  • Customs/traditions--exchanged
  • Cultural landscape--diffusion
  • Diffusion--is the spreading of ideas and traits

15
What is some evidence of cultural interaction?
  • The spreading (diffusion) of North American
    culture to other regions of the world
  • Popularization of other cultures traditions in
    the North America

16
Spatial Divisions as Forces of Conflict and
Cooperation
  • Spatial divisions are regions of the Earths
    surface over which groups of people establish
    social, economic and political control. Spatial
    divisions may generate conflict and/or
    cooperation.

17
Examples of Spatial Divisions
  • Neighborhoods

18
  • School districts

19
  • Cities and Counties

20
  • Election Districts
  • Political Caucases

21
  • Regional Districts

22
  • States or Provinces

23
Reasons for Spatial Divisions
  • Why are spatial divisions necessary at the local
    and regional levels?
  • 1) Desire for government to be closer to home
  • 2) need to solve local problems and
  • 3) need to administer resources more efficiently

24
Reasons for Conflict
  • How do spatial systems generate conflict?
  • 1) Citizens may argue over boundaries
  • 2) Citizens may have low tolerance for
    different cultures

25
  • 3) Citizens may fight/compete over scarce
    resources and
  • 4) Citizens and/or politicians may try to gain
    political advantage

26
Political Advantage?
  • Yes, spatial divisions can be created in order to
    manipulate an electoral area, usually by altering
    the boundaries. This is known as gerrymandering.
    This is done to gain an unfair political
    advantage in an election.

27
Reasons for Cooperation
  • 1) Natural disasters
  • 2) Economic advantages (attracts new businesses)
  • 3) Cultural similaritiesethnic backgrounds
  • 4) Addressing regional issues like waste
    management, magnet schools and transportation.

28
Urban Development
  • Urbanization, or the growing of cities, was
    triggered by industrialization.
  • Patterns of urban development occur according to
    site and situation.

29
Site and situation
  • Site and situation are important geographic
    concepts when studying the growth of cities.
  • Site is the actual location of a city.

30
  • Situation is another name for relative
    locationthe location of a city with respect to
    other geographic features, regions, resources,
    and transport routes.

31
Site
  • Harbor Sites NY City, Alexandria, Egypt
    Istanbul Turkey
  • Island sites Paris, Hong Kong, Singapore
  • Fall line sites Richmond, VA
  • Confluence sites Khartoum, Sudan Pittsburg, PA

32
  • Hilltop sites Rome, Athens, Jerusalem
  • Oasis Sites Damascus, Syria
  • Sites where rivers narrow London, Quebec City

33
Situation
  • IstanbulCommand of straits and land bridge to
    Europe
  • Mecca, Saudi Arabia Varanasi (Benares),
    IndiaFocal point of pilgrimage
  • Samarkand, Uzbekistan Xian, China Timbuktu,
    Mali SingaporeCities that grew up around trade
    routes

34
  • Capetown, S.AfricaSupply station for ships
  • Omaha, Nebraska Sacramento, CaliforniaCities
    that grew up along the U.S. Transcontinental
    railroad
  • Novosibirsk,Vladivostok-Cities that grew up along
    the Trans-Siberian Railroad

35
Functions of towns and cities
  • Security and defense
  • Religious centers
  • Trade centers (local and long distance
  • Governmental administration
  • Manufacturing centers
  • Service centers

36
Examples of a city changing functions over time
  • Rio de Janeirowas the capital but now is a
    tourist attraction (Brasilia)
  • Pittsburgh, Pennsylvaniaearly function was for
    frontier defense, then shifted to steel
    manufacturing, and now is the home to many
    diverse services

37
  • New York Cityhas changed from a center of
    coastal and transatlantic trade to a center for
    the Great Lakes and Erie canal region to
    worldwide trade and finances
  • Mining towns once the resources were gone, many
    towns became ghost towns

38
What influence does urban areas have on their
region and country?
  • They are the home to monuments which help bring
    pride and develop nation-building.
  • They are transportation and communication
    centers.
  • They are natural attractions for immigrants.

39
  • They are the seed beds for new ideas and
    technologies.
  • Their diversity helps lead to creativity in the
    arts.
  • Many are the home to major Universities which
    provide educational opportunities.

40
  • They are the headquarters and regional outposts
    of major corporations.
  • The major media outlets have their centers there
    (newspapers, radio, and television).

41
What problems are associated with growth of urban
areas?
  • Transportation problems, especially since the
    automobile.
  • Rich and poor neighborhoods are usually isolated
    from one another.
  • As overcrowding occurs, providing essential
    services (water, sewage, electricity) is a
    problem.

42
  • Air, water, and noise pollution
  • Sprawl (spreading) of urban areas takes
    agricultural land out of production.
  • Rapid migration results in shantytowns on the
    edge of Latin American, Asian, and African cities.

43
  • In developing countries, major cities are more
    connected to the outside world than to less
    developed regions in their own countries
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