Transcript Chapter 1

Key Issue 3: Why are different places similar?
3 major concepts
 Explain why two places or regions can display similar
features
 Scale: From local to global
 Space: Distribution of Features
 Connections between places
Scale: From Local to Global
 What are some examples of a local scale?
 State
 Town/City
 Neighborhood
 Global scales show broad patterns of entire world
 Where is population growing?
 Religion
 Location of industry/factories
Globalization
 The world is becoming interdependent on a global
scale
 More uniform world
 Small scales are becoming less important
 Few people can live without global interaction
Globalization
 Every place in world is part of global economy
 Different specializations
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Raw materials
Workers
 Transnational Corporation
 Invest and operate in many countries
 Communication & Transportation make for easy trade
Globalization of the Economy
Fig. 1-17: The Denso corporation is headquartered in Japan, but it has regional
headquarters and other facilities in North America and Western Europe.
Starbucks
 Largest coffee shop in the world
 Over 17,000 stores in 55 countries
 Coffee grown all over the world
 TNCs
 Choose location best for
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Raw materials
Produce parts
Sell products
Manage operations
Globalization of Economy
 Transnational Corporations
 Play a large part in spatial division of labor
 What areas have cheap labor force?
 Policies on unions?
 Safety standards?
 Worker skills?
Globalization of Culture
 All around world people wear Nikes, eat McDonalds,
drink Coca-Cola
 English is the unofficial language of globalization
 People all over world are displaying less differences
and more similarities in culture
 Local culture/traditions are threatened
 Africans converting to Christianity or Islam
 Al-Qaeda terrorism, opposed to globalization
Globalization Video
Space: Distribution of Features
 Arrangement of people and activities around world
 Why are they distributed the way they are?
 An action at one point in space can result from
something happening somewhere else AND can affect
conditions elsewhere
Distribution
 The arrangement of a feature in space
 Ex: A building or a community
Three Main Properties:
 Concentration
 Density
 Pattern
Density
 The frequency with which something occurs in space
 People, houses, cars, volcanoes
 Kilometers, miles, acres, etc
 Arithmetic Density
 Total number of objects in an area
 Number of people divided by its area
 Ex: 345 persons per square mile
Distribution:
Density,
Concentration, &
Pattern
Fig. 1-18: The density, concentration, and
pattern (of houses in this example)
may vary in an area or landscape.
Density
 Physiological Density
 Number of persons per unit of area suitable for
agriculture
 Does that country have enough food to sustain
population?
 Agricultural Density
 Number of farmers per unit area of farmland
Concentration
 The extent of a feature’s spread over space
 Clustered
 Objects close together
 Dispersed
 Objects far apart
Pattern
 Geometric arrangement of objects in space
 Draw a map of your neighborhood
 Draw a map of your ideal neighborhood
 Dispersed or clustered?
 Any pattern?
 Google Maps
Density and Concentration of
Baseball Teams, 1952 & 2007
Fig. 1-19: The changing distribution of North American baseball teams illustrates
the differences between density and concentration.
Gender and Ethnic Diversity in Space
 Looks at location based on gender and ethnicity
 How do families choose location of home?
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Mom? Dad? Where are their daily activities?
 Neighborhoods usually consist of one color
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People want to reinforce their cultural identity w similar
people
 Homosexuals
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Similar trends of living where they “fit in”
Diffusion
 Process by which a characteristic spreads across space
over time
 Hearth: where it originates
 Relocation Diffusion: spread of an idea through
physical movement of people
 Ethnic Restaurants in Silver Spring?
Space-Time Compression, 1492-1962
Fig. 1-20: The times required to cross the Atlantic, or orbit the earth, illustrate how
transport improvements have shrunk the world.
Airline Route Networks
Fig. 1-21: Continental Airlines, like many others, has configured its route network
in a “hub and spoke” system.
Diffusion
 Expansion Diffusion: snowball process of spreading
 Hierarchical
 Contagious
 Stimulus
Hierarchical Diffusion
 Spread of an idea from an authority to other persons
 Fashion Design
 Rap music
Contagious Diffusion
 Rapid widespread diffusion of a characteristic
throughout population
 Flu
 AIDS prevention
 Internet: ideas spread quickly
 Like the wave
AIDS
Diffusion
in the US,
1981-2002
Fig. 1-22: New AIDS cases were concentrated in three nodes in 1981. They spread through
the country in the 1980s, but declined in the original nodes in the late 1990s.
Swine Flu
 Current outbreak of swine flu in U.S.
 162 cases this year
(only 13 last year)
 What might a human geographer ask about the outbreak to
better understand it?
Which type of diffusion?
Stimulus Diffusion
 Spread of an underlying principle
 Principle often adopts changes
 Example: McDonalds in India
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Hamburgers vs Veggie burgers
Diffusion of Culture and Economy
 Transportation & Communication
 Rapidly diffuse raw materials, goods, services & capital
 Every area of world is affected
 3 major centers: North America, Western Europe &
Japan
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Adv. Technology, capital, wealth
affects the rest of world
 Farmers who used to provide for family, now forced to mass
produce crops for TNCs
Uneven Development
 Increasing economic gap between regions in core and
periphery
 Wealth continues to grow in Core areas, leaving parts of
world behind
 Cultural Aspects
 Communication is known throughout world, but not
accessible to all.
 Restricted access due to wealth, gender, minorities
Big Mac Geography