Download Human Geography

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts
no text concepts found
Transcript
Human Geography
Population Geography
Cultural Geography
Languages and Religions
Studying Population
• Want to understand the relationship between
populations and their environments
• Demography: statistical study of human
populations.
– Help us to forecast future population trends
– Use statistics to understand population changes
and potential impact on the world.
– Used in city planning
Population Study Tools
• Population Density: average number of people
living in an area. Usually expressed as persons
per square mile
– Reflect size of country, size of population, and
environmental conditions
– Vary for each country (Canada 8 per sq mile,
Bangladesh 2,324 per sq mile)
• Population Distribution: Where do people live
and why?
– 90% of world’s population live in N. Hemisphere (60%
of those live in middle latitudes)
– People tend to live in areas favorable for settlement.
– Four great population clusters: East Asia, South Asia,
Europe, North America
Density
Distribution
Population Study Tools
• Population Change: The number of people in any
place is a result of three major factors:
– Birthrate: # births per year for every 1,000 people
– Death rate: # of deaths each year for every 1,000
people
– Migration: people moving from one place to another
• Emigrants vs. Immigrants
– Can have major implications on a country
• Push and Pull factors – used in study of migration
• Refugees: people forced to leave and cannot return to their
homes
Population Study Tools
• Natural Increase: based on just births and
deaths , migration is not taken into account.
– Subtract birth from death rate (expressed as a %)
– USA is 0.6% natural growth rate
– Highest rates are found in Africa and Southwest
Asia, averaging about 3%
– Italy and Russia have negative rates
– 3% increase can lead to doubling of population in
23 years – “doubling time”
World Population Trends
• Current world population is 6.8 billion
– USA 300 million
• Increasing by nearly 80 million a year
• 220,000 people a day
• Historically:
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
Population year 1 AD – 300 million.
By 1600 doubled to 600 million
By 1850 doubled to 1.2 billion
By 1930 doubled to 2.4 billion
By 1975 doubled to 4.6 billion
By 2000 to 6 billion
Estimated to reach 9 billion by 2042!!!!!
• Growing at a rate of 1.2%
Cultural Geography
• Culture: All of the
features of a people’s
way of life. It is learned
and passed down
through teaching,
example, and imitation.
– Includes a group’s
language, economics,
religion, architecture,
clothing, family life,
food, and government
Culture Traits
• These are activities and behaviors that people
often take part in.
– Some such as learning to read and do math are
almost universal
– Others vary: USA we eat with a fork and knife,
Chinese eat with chopsticks, Ethiopians use their
fingers or bread to scoop food
• Each trait is considered correct where it is practiced.
Culture Regions
• An area in which people have many shared
culture traits is called a culture region.
– Some countries have one culture regions (Japan)
while others have many culture regions (Africa,
USA) or ethnic groups
• An ethnic group is a population that shares a common
culture or ancestry
• Country borders can disrupt or separate ethnic groups.
– Kurds of Western Asia (Iran, Iraq, Turkey)
Culture Change
• Cultures are changing all the time (fashion, music,
food, communication, etc)
• When an individual or group adopts some of the traits
of another culture the process is called acculturation
– Immigrants to the USA provide perfect examples
• New language, customs, practices - assimilation
• Innovation – new ideas that a culture accepts
– Can last or fade (baseball starts in USA & spreads)
• Diffusion – when an idea or innovation spreads from
one group to another.
– Jazz starts in New Orleans, spreads around the world
– Shared languages can help diffusion
– Types of diffusion: expansion, relocation, hierarchical
Culture Change – 80’s
Culture Change – 90’s
Culture Change – 2000’s
Assimilation
Culture Change
• Globalization: The process, in which connections
around the world increase and cultures become
more alike
– Cultures blending together: cultural convergence
– USA ideas, music, fashion spread through the world.
Imports to the USA also change us. Spread of products
and food are examples (STARBUCKS)
• Traditionalism: following longtime practices and
opposing many modern technologies and ideas.
– Opposite of globalization
– Tied to fundamentalism
– Cultural divergence: process of cultures becoming
separate and distinct
Languages
• Language is important to culture because it is the main
means of communication
• As many as 6500 languages spoken around the world
– Broken into language families that are ten broken into
branches (page 101 of text)
• English is a language in the Germanic branch of the Indo-European
family.
• About 50% of the world speaks an Indo-European language
• Most spoken language is Mandarin Chinese
• Dialect: is a regional variety of language
– British English and American English are dialects of same
language
• Lingua Franca: a language of trade and communication
– English is the main language of globalization
– Millions speak as a second language
Religion
• It is a key culture trait that binds many societies
together and gives meaning to people’s lives
– Geographers are interested in the cultural traits,
landscapes, and conflicts produced by religion
• Geographers identify 3 types of religions
– Ethnic Religion: one ethnic group and has not spread. Do
not seek to convert others. Hinduism, Confucianism,
Judaism, and Taoism are all examples.
– Animist Religion: believe in the presence of spirits and
forces of nature. Closely tied to polytheism.
– Universalizing Religion: seek followers. Hope to appeal to
the masses. More than 50% of world follow this type of
religion. Tied to monotheism. Christianity and Islam are
examples.