Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Ethnicity, Race, and Nationality AP Human Geography Unit of Study: Cultural Geography Overview • Ethnicity is growing in importance as people all over the world embrace their cultural heritage. • Personal and group identities are important and ethnicity is likely to remain diverse even with the globalization of religions, languages, economics, and politics. What is ethnicity? • Ethnicity is identity with a group of people who share the cultural traditions of a particular homeland or hearth. • Ethnicity comes from the Greek word ethnikos, which means national. Importance of Ethnicity to Geographers • Where? Like other characteristics of culture, geographers are interested in where ethnicities are distributed. • An ethnic group is tied to a particular place, because members of the group—or their ancestors—were born and raised there. The cultural traits displayed by an ethnicity derive from a group’s homeland. Importance of Ethnicity to Geographers • Why care? Ethnic identity comes from the interplay of migration and isolation from other groups. • Why ethnicities are distinct comes from their interaction with and isolation from other groups. Importance of Ethnicity to Geographers • Globalization. Although there are ethnic groups that fight to gain control of territory, NO ethnicity is attempting or even aspiring to achieve global dominance. • Even if globalization engulfs language, religion, or other cultural elements, the diversity of ethnic identity will remain. Assimilation v. Acculturation • Assimilation: the process of responding to new situations in conformity; “blending” in • Acculturation: the process by which a human being acquires the culture of a particular society African Americans in the U.S. Hispanic Americans in the U.S. Asian Americans in the U.S. Native Americans in the U.S. • International Migration of Ethnicities – Most African Americans are descended from Africans forced to migrate to the Western Hemisphere as slaves during the eighteenth century. – Most Asian Americans and Hispanics are descended from voluntary immigrants to the United States during the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries. • Forced Migration from Africa – Different European countries acquired slaves from various regions of Africa, then sent them to the Americas. • Examples – Portuguese shipped slaves from their colonies in Angola and Mozambique to their American colony, Brazil. – Other European countries took slaves primarily from a coastal strip of West Africa between Liberia and the Congo, then sent them to the Caribbean islands and Central and South America. • Voluntary Migration from Latin America and Asia – Latin America • Immigration from Mexico and Puerto Rico fueled rapid growth of Hispanics in the United States beginning in the 1970s. • Third largest group of Hispanics came to United States from Cuba. – Asia • Ranking of sending countries – 1) China 2) India 3) Philippines 4) Korea 5) Vietnam • Internal Migration of African Americans – African Americans have displayed two distinct internal migration patterns in the United States during the twentieth century. 1. Interregional migration from the U.S. South to northern cities during the first half of the twentieth century 2. Intraregional migration from inner-city ghettos to outer city and inner suburban neighborhoods during the second half of the twentieth century • Internal Migration of African Americans – Interregional Migration • Freed as slaves, most African Americans remained in the rural South during the late nineteenth century, working as sharecroppers—works fields rented from a landowner and pays rent by turning over a share of the crops to him or her. • Mechanization of agriculture served as a push factor, while manufacturing jobs in the north acted as a pull factor that encouraged African Americans to migrate to the northern cities. • Traveled by bus and car along the major two-lane longdistance U.S. roads • Internal Migration of African Americans – Intraregional Migration • African Americans arriving at northern cities clustered in neighborhoods where existing African Americans already lived. • Areas came to be known as ghettos. • Over time, ghettos grew outward typically along major avenues that radiated out from the center of city. • Many whites fled their neighborhoods when blacks began moving in nearby. (White Flight theory) • Ex. Detroit’s white population dropped by 1.5 million from 1950 to 2000. Ethnicities in Africa: First…a look at the political map! Ethnicities in Africa What is race? • Race is identity with a group who share a biological ancestor and it is distinct from ethnicity. • Example: In the U.S., Asians are a race and Asian Americans encompass basically the same ethnic group of people, though Asian American is a broad grouping for people from diverse Asian backgrounds. Important Term • Racism: the belief that race is the primary determinant of human traits and capacities and those racial differences produce an inherent superiority of a particular race. What is nationality? • A nationality is identity with a group of people who share legal attachment and personal allegiance to a particular country. • A nation or nationality is a group of people tied together to a particular place through legal status and cultural traditions. Differences… • Ethnicity describes cultural identity while nationality describes political ties and ideas about voting, passports, and civic duties. • American is a nationality, Hispanic-American or African-American are ethnicities, and race is the genetic heritage with skin color being the most visible trait. Self-identification • What is it? the act of identifying yourself as a particular kind of person, including your ethnicity and race Nationalism • Nationalism is loyalty and devotion to a nationality. • Nationalism promotes one nationality and culture above that of other nations. How is nationalism fostered? • Mass media (controlled in some states— believed to be a risk to the government) • Flags, songs, symbols, holidays • Propaganda (often negative images about other countries) Samples of symbols or images that promote nationalism Sample of propaganda intended to promote a particular attitude about war Centripetal and Centrifugal Forces • A centripetal force is an attitude that tends to UNIFY OR CONNECT people and enhance support for a state (country). • A centrifugal force is an attitude that tends to DIVIDE people and decrease support for a state. Do you know the difference? Centripetal or centrifugal? 1. flag 2. civil war 3. interstate system 4. national anthem 5. poor economy The Index of Residential Dissimilarity —What is it? • Segregation is a shorthand expression for the extent to which members of an ethnic group are not uniformly distributed in relation to the rest of the population. • Think of separation! The Index of Residential Dissimilarity —What is it? • A commonly employed measure for quantifying the degree to which a distinctive group is segregated is the index of residential dissimilarity. • It indicates the difference between the distributions of two component groups of a population, with a theoretical range of values from 0 (no segregation) to 100 (complete segregation). The Index of Residential Dissimilarity —What is it? • Example: Detroit, Michigan – 1. Population (2011): 9.8 million people – 2. Overall segregation index—83 (established by the U.S. Census Bureau) – 3. Index of Dissimilarity: • Blacks: 89 • Hispanic: 42 • Asian: 48 The Index of Residential Dissimilarity —What is it? • Evidence from cities throughout the world makes it clear that most ethnic minorities tend to be sharply segregated from the charter group. • Charter means “first,” referring to the first group that has a lasting impact on the cultural landscape. To what extent is America a “melting pot”? Well…let’s talk about it… Schoolhouse Rocks! To what extent is America a “melting pot”? • It is really more of an American myth than reality. • Wilbur Zelinsky: “ Doctrine of First Effective Settlement” – Cultural areas of the U.S. are European in origin – His doctrine refers to the first group that is able to establish a viable, continuing society within a specific territory. – United States—first group to establish core as spread culture as the U.S. expanded Interactive Map Showing Settlement Patterns Now…let’s see how much you remember… Question 1 Which of these is an example of a cultural trait? A. sleeping B. eating a meal C. wearing a turban D. walking E. parenting Question 1 Which of these is an example of a cultural trait? C. wearing a turban Question 2 An ethnicity is typically distinguished by all but which of the following? A. B. C. D. E. art culture history traditions sovereignty Question 2 An ethnicity is typically distinguished by all but which of the following? E. sovereignty Question 3 Elements of nationalism include all of the following except A. a common culture. B. shared attitudes. C. shared emotions. D. political structures (type of government). Question 3 Elements of nationalism include all of the following except D. political structures (type of government). Question 4 In the United States, which of the following is shared by all Americans? A. B. C. D. E. nationality language religion race ethnicity Question 4 In the United States, which of the following is shared by all Americans? A. nationality Question 5 Latinos and Hispanics are clustered in which areas of the United States? A. B. C. D. E. Northeast, cities West, Southwest Southwest, Northwest cities rural areas Question 5 Latinos and Hispanics are clustered in which areas of the United States? B. West, Southwest Question 6 Self-identification includes A. B. C. D. ethnicity race religion all of the above Question 6 Self-identification includes D. all of the above Question 7 Which of the following is not a strong centripetal force in the United States? A. B. C. D. network television the Pledge of Allegiance a common currency diverse ethnic groups Question 7 Which of the following is not a strong centripetal force in the United States? D. diverse ethnic groups