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NAME: PERIOD: DATE: MAKING SENSE OUT OF WORLD
... State-building Interpretation Globalization Synthesis Expansion Agricultural, Pastoral production Economic Systems Education Labor Systems Industrialization Religion Philosophies Ideologies Human/Environment Interaction Region Secularism, Atheism Racial, Ethnic Constructions Social, Economic Classes ...
... State-building Interpretation Globalization Synthesis Expansion Agricultural, Pastoral production Economic Systems Education Labor Systems Industrialization Religion Philosophies Ideologies Human/Environment Interaction Region Secularism, Atheism Racial, Ethnic Constructions Social, Economic Classes ...
Development - Harrison High School
... 4. Drive to Maturity: Tech. Diffusion, industrial specialization, international trade, modernization of core,pop. Decline ...
... 4. Drive to Maturity: Tech. Diffusion, industrial specialization, international trade, modernization of core,pop. Decline ...
Aristotle`s Taxonomy of Political Systems
... Medium to low to lowest Some coveted, but more neglected by Superpowers Some joined regional pacts in Africa, Latin America, etc. ...
... Medium to low to lowest Some coveted, but more neglected by Superpowers Some joined regional pacts in Africa, Latin America, etc. ...
Globalization and Underdevelopment in the Pre
... A large GDP per capita gap appeared between the industrial core and the poor periphery between 1810 and 1940, the periphery producing, increasingly, primary products. The terms of trade facing the periphery also underwent a secular boom then bust, peaking in the 1870s or 1890s. These terms of trade ...
... A large GDP per capita gap appeared between the industrial core and the poor periphery between 1810 and 1940, the periphery producing, increasingly, primary products. The terms of trade facing the periphery also underwent a secular boom then bust, peaking in the 1870s or 1890s. These terms of trade ...
developing - St. Charles Parish Public Schools
... • Wealth does not depend solely on what is produced; it depends in large part on how and where it is produced. • To understand how the production of a good creates wealth for some and not for others, you must understand commodity chain – a series of links connecting the many places of production and ...
... • Wealth does not depend solely on what is produced; it depends in large part on how and where it is produced. • To understand how the production of a good creates wealth for some and not for others, you must understand commodity chain – a series of links connecting the many places of production and ...
Development Vocab Matching
... 3. Takeoff (a few areas of economy receive technical advances and grow rapidly), 4. Drive to Maturity (technology diffuses throughout economy, incomes rise, and 5. Mass Consumption (production shifts from heavy industry (steel, energy) to consumer goods and service industries. ...
... 3. Takeoff (a few areas of economy receive technical advances and grow rapidly), 4. Drive to Maturity (technology diffuses throughout economy, incomes rise, and 5. Mass Consumption (production shifts from heavy industry (steel, energy) to consumer goods and service industries. ...
AP Human Geography
... Based on the 1980’s Brandt Report. Suggested a simplified world contrast of development and undevelopment based on degree of industrialization and per capita wealth. ...
... Based on the 1980’s Brandt Report. Suggested a simplified world contrast of development and undevelopment based on degree of industrialization and per capita wealth. ...
File - AP HUMAN GEOGRAPHY
... Domino Theory: the idea that if one land in a region came under the influence of Communists, then more would follow in a domino effect. It governed much of U.S. foreign policy beginning in the early 1950s. In Southeast Asia, the United States government used the domino theory to justify its support ...
... Domino Theory: the idea that if one land in a region came under the influence of Communists, then more would follow in a domino effect. It governed much of U.S. foreign policy beginning in the early 1950s. In Southeast Asia, the United States government used the domino theory to justify its support ...
Economic Development
... you is be a supernation creating their own currency. It will make things easier to export money or to buy resources. An example would be the European Union, because they have their own currency, which are called “euros. Countries also have to give up sovereignty when joining a supernation. For examp ...
... you is be a supernation creating their own currency. It will make things easier to export money or to buy resources. An example would be the European Union, because they have their own currency, which are called “euros. Countries also have to give up sovereignty when joining a supernation. For examp ...
Development KBAT AP Human Geography Mr. Montgomery KNOW
... compare and contrast different theories and models of economic development, especially core/periphery, dependency theory, self-‐sufficiency/import substitution and international trade/Rostow’s model ...
... compare and contrast different theories and models of economic development, especially core/periphery, dependency theory, self-‐sufficiency/import substitution and international trade/Rostow’s model ...
050 Economic_and_Industrial_Geography_Terms
... Special economic zones (China) SEZ’s A specific area within a country in which tax incentives and less stringent environmental regulations are implemented to attract foreign businesses and investment a geographical region that has economic laws that are more liberal than a country's typical economi ...
... Special economic zones (China) SEZ’s A specific area within a country in which tax incentives and less stringent environmental regulations are implemented to attract foreign businesses and investment a geographical region that has economic laws that are more liberal than a country's typical economi ...
Development and Institutions - University of California
... administration of justice, in which the people do not feel themselves secure in the possession of their property, in which the faith of contracts is not supported by law, and in which the authority of the state is not supposed to be regularly employed in enforcing the payment of debts from all those ...
... administration of justice, in which the people do not feel themselves secure in the possession of their property, in which the faith of contracts is not supported by law, and in which the authority of the state is not supposed to be regularly employed in enforcing the payment of debts from all those ...
ICE -The theories of international assistance
... focused more on the issue of poverty, its causes and possible solutions Specific short-term goals were set in such programmes as the Millennium Development Goals and the Human Development approach. Other ideas that began to enter the debate included a greater emphasis on public-private partnerships ...
... focused more on the issue of poverty, its causes and possible solutions Specific short-term goals were set in such programmes as the Millennium Development Goals and the Human Development approach. Other ideas that began to enter the debate included a greater emphasis on public-private partnerships ...
Slide 1
... Malaysian government built a new, ultramodern capital at Putrjaya to symbolize the country’s rapid economic growth. ...
... Malaysian government built a new, ultramodern capital at Putrjaya to symbolize the country’s rapid economic growth. ...
Industrial Activity and Geographic Location
... Marshall Plan; today has 30 member countries (which produce > 2/3 world’s goods & services), w/ more than 70 developing and transition economies working w/ them – Membership is limited only by a country's commitment to 1) a market economy, and 2) a pluralistic democracy ...
... Marshall Plan; today has 30 member countries (which produce > 2/3 world’s goods & services), w/ more than 70 developing and transition economies working w/ them – Membership is limited only by a country's commitment to 1) a market economy, and 2) a pluralistic democracy ...
Road to Development
... The MDGs also provide a framework for the entire international community to work together towards a common end – making sure that human development reaches everyone, everywhere. If these goals are achieved, world poverty will be cut by half, tens of millions of lives will be saved, and billions more ...
... The MDGs also provide a framework for the entire international community to work together towards a common end – making sure that human development reaches everyone, everywhere. If these goals are achieved, world poverty will be cut by half, tens of millions of lives will be saved, and billions more ...
Heterodox Theories of Economic Development
... Enormous growth of the Argentinian economy from 1980s until the second decade of 20th century. In 1920s-30s, Argentina faced the adverse effects of Great Depression and the dominance of US in the world market and had difficulties with its primary trade partner; Britain. Both prices of and demand for ...
... Enormous growth of the Argentinian economy from 1980s until the second decade of 20th century. In 1920s-30s, Argentina faced the adverse effects of Great Depression and the dominance of US in the world market and had difficulties with its primary trade partner; Britain. Both prices of and demand for ...
Development2_2010_student
... Hong Kong (now part of China) have joined Japan to form a core of trade and centre of banking and investment. Emerging cores can challenge the traditional cores (Europe and North America) but usually these cores remain regional. The theory suggest that the traditional cores will continue to dominate ...
... Hong Kong (now part of China) have joined Japan to form a core of trade and centre of banking and investment. Emerging cores can challenge the traditional cores (Europe and North America) but usually these cores remain regional. The theory suggest that the traditional cores will continue to dominate ...
Unit VI - Wikispaces
... Terms, Concepts, Models, Geographers – Use notecards OR write these out on paper, which ever helps you LEARN and UNDERSTAND the geographic-ness of each item best. You still need to draw a graphic or hint for each item. 1. Term, Concept, Model or Geographer 2. Symbol, graphic or hint to help you reme ...
... Terms, Concepts, Models, Geographers – Use notecards OR write these out on paper, which ever helps you LEARN and UNDERSTAND the geographic-ness of each item best. You still need to draw a graphic or hint for each item. 1. Term, Concept, Model or Geographer 2. Symbol, graphic or hint to help you reme ...
Development Chapter 10
... 5. High Mass Consumption: high income, widespread production of G&S, Service Sector ...
... 5. High Mass Consumption: high income, widespread production of G&S, Service Sector ...
development powerpoint by mr. cox
... Malaysian government built a new, ultramodern capital at Putrjaya to symbolize the country’s rapid economic growth. ...
... Malaysian government built a new, ultramodern capital at Putrjaya to symbolize the country’s rapid economic growth. ...
Development Chapter 10
... Malaysian government built a new, ultramodern capital at Putrjaya to symbolize the country’s rapid economic growth. ...
... Malaysian government built a new, ultramodern capital at Putrjaya to symbolize the country’s rapid economic growth. ...
File
... *European merchant fleets seized control of key international trading routes *Spain & Portugal first began, followed by growing efforts from Britain, France, and Holland 2. Toward a World Economy *Europe’s maritime dominance generated 3 wider changes from the 1490s onward: (1) Columbian Exchange of ...
... *European merchant fleets seized control of key international trading routes *Spain & Portugal first began, followed by growing efforts from Britain, France, and Holland 2. Toward a World Economy *Europe’s maritime dominance generated 3 wider changes from the 1490s onward: (1) Columbian Exchange of ...
World-systems theory
World-systems theory (also known as world-systems analysis or the world-systems perspective), a multidisciplinary, macro-scale approach to world history and social change, emphasizes the world-system (and not nation states) as the primary (but not exclusive) unit of social analysis.""World-system"" refers to the inter-regional and transnational division of labor, which divides the world into core countries, semi-periphery countries, and the periphery countries. Core countries focus on higher skill, capital-intensive production, and the rest of the world focuses on low-skill, labor-intensive production and extraction of raw materials. This constantly reinforces the dominance of the core countries. Nonetheless, the system has dynamic characteristics, in part as a result of revolutions in transport technology, and individual states can gain or lose their core (semi-periphery, periphery) status over time.