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
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
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?
Mom? Dad? Where are their daily activities?
Neighborhoods usually consist of one color
People want to reinforce their cultural identity w similar
people
Homosexuals
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
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
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