AP Human Geo Chapter 17 Voacb

5.0(1)
studied byStudied by 24 people
learnLearn
examPractice Test
spaced repetitionSpaced Repetition
heart puzzleMatch
flashcardsFlashcards
Card Sorting

1/22

Study Analytics
Name
Mastery
Learn
Test
Matching
Spaced

No study sessions yet.

23 Terms

1
New cards

Ecological Footprint

Impact of a person or community on the environment, expressed as the amount of land required to sustain the use of natural resources

2
New cards

Mixed-Use Development

A single planned development designed to include multiple uses, such as residential, retail, educational, recreational, industrial, and office spaces

3
New cards

Walkability

A measure of how safe, convenient, and efficient it is to walk in an urban environment

4
New cards

Transportation-Oriented Development

The creation of dense, walkable, pedestrian-oriented, mixed-use communities centered around or located near a transit station

5
New cards

Smart-Growth Policy

Policy implemented to create sustainable communities by placing development in convenient locations and designing it to be more efficient and environmentally responsible

6
New cards

Mixed-Use Zoning

Zoning that permits multiple land uses in the same space or structure

7
New cards

Traditional Zoning

Zoning that creates separate zones based on land-use type or economic function such as various categories of residential (low-, medium-, or high-density), commercial, or industrial

8
New cards

New Urbanism

A school of thought that promotes designing growth to limit the amount of urban sprawl and preserve nature and usable farmland

9
New cards

Slow-Growth City

City where planners have used smart-growth policies to decrease the rate at which the city grows outward

10
New cards

Urban Growth Boundary

A boundary that separates urban land uses from rural land uses by limiting how far a city can expand

11
New cards

Greenbelt

A ring of parkland, agricultural land, or other type of open space maintained around an urban area to limit sprawl

12
New cards

De Facto Segregation

Segregation that results from residential settlement patterns rather than from prejudicial laws

13
New cards

Redlining

Practice by which a financial institution such as a bank refuses to offer home loans on the basis of a neighborhood's racial or ethnic makeup

14
New cards

Blockbusting

A practice by real estate agents who would stir up concern that Black families would soon move into a neighborhood; the agents would convince White property owners to sell their houses at below-market prices

15
New cards

Zone of Abandonment

Area that has been largely deserted due to lack of jobs, declines in land value, and falling demand

16
New cards

Filtering

The process of neighborhood change in which housing vacated by more affulent groups passes down the income scale to lower-income groups

17
New cards

Inclusionary Zoning Law

Law that creates affordable housing by offering incentives for developers to set aside a minimum percentage of new housing construction to be allocated for low-income renters or buyers

18
New cards

Land Tenure

The legal rights, as defined by a society, associated with owning land

19
New cards

Eminent Domain

A government’s right to take over privately owned property for public use or interest

20
New cards

Environmental Injustice

The ways in which communities of color and poor people are more likely to be exposed to environmental burdens such as air pollution or contaminated water; also called environmental racism

21
New cards

Urban Renewal

The nationwide movement that developed in the 1950s and 1960s when U.S. cities were given massive federal grants to tear down and clear out crumbling neighborhoods and former industrial zones as a means of rebuilding their downtowns

22
New cards

Regional Planning

Planning conducted at a regional scale that seeks to coordinate the development of housing, transportation, urban infrastructure, and economic activities

23
New cards

Brownfield

Abandoned and polluted industrial site in a central city or suburb