AP Human Geography Unit 2

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76 Terms

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Agricultural Population Density

Number of Farmers divided by the arable land

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Arable Land

Land suitable for farming/agriculture

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Physiological Population Density

Population of a region / arable (farmable) land

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Arithmetic Population Density

Population of a region divided by total land area.

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Baby Boom

Temporary marked increase in the birth rate

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Census

A complete count of of a population

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Child Mortality Rate

Total number of child deaths per 1,000 live births

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Crude Birth Rate

Total number of live births in a year for every 1,000 people in the society

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Crude Death Rate

Total number of deaths per 1,000 people in a society

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Dependency Ratio

Number of people too young or too old to work compared to workers

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More Developed Country (MDC)

Also known as a relatively developed country or a developed country, country that has progressed further along the development continuum

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Doubling Time

Number of years needed to double the population

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Ecumeme

The areas of earth occupied by human settlement

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Epidemiological Transition Model

The theory that says that there is a distinct cause of death in each stage of the demographic transition model. It can help explain how a country's population changes so dramatically.

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Industrial Revolution

Time during the 19th century, major improvements in manufacturing goals and delivering them to market

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Infant Mortality Rates

the number of infant deaths (under age 1) per 1000 live births

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Less Developed Countries (LDC)

Non-industrialized/poor countries.

Stage two, early three

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Life Expectancy

Average number of years an infant can expect to live

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Thomas Malthus

An English economist who was one of the first to argue that the world's population increase was far outrunning the development of food production

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Malthusian Theory

The theory that population grows faster than food supply

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Medical Revolution

Time during the late 20th countries, when medical technology from Europe and North America diffused to developing countries

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Rate of Natural Increase (RNI)

The percentage of annual growth in a population excluding migration.

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Neo-Malthusian

A belief that the world is characterized by scarcity and competition in which too many people fight for too few resources. Named for Thomas Malthus, who predicted a dismal cycle of misery, vice, and starvation as a result of human overpopulation

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Population Pyramids

A bar graph representing the distribution of population by age and sex.

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Anti-Natalist Policies

Government policies to reduce the rate of natural increase

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Pro-Natalist Policies

Government policies to increase the rate of natural increase

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Sex Ratio

The number of males per 100 females in the population.

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Total Fertility Rate

The average number of children born to a woman during her childbearing years.

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Zero Population Growth

A decline of the total fertility rate to the point where the natural increase rate equals zero.

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Demography

The scientific study of population characteristics

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Overpopulation

The number of people in an area exceeds the capacity of the environment to support life at a decent standard of living.

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Population Center

An area of land where people are most dense, including East Asia, South Asia, Southeast Asia, and Europe.

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Demographic Transition Model

A sequence of demographic changes in which a country moves from high birth and death rates to low birth and death rates through time.

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Mobility

A general term covering all types of movement from one place to another

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Periodic movement

Movement - for example, college attendance or military service - that involves temporary, recurrent relocation

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Net migration

The difference between the number of immigrants and the number of emigrants

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Push Factors of Immigration

reasons people emigrate and leave their homes such as economic troubles, overcrowding, poverty

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Intraregional Migration

movement within a region

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Interregional Migration

Movement from one region to another

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Migration Transition

Change in migration patterns in a society caused by industrialisation, population growth, and other social and economic changes that also produce the demographic transition

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Gravity Model

Predicts interaction between places on the basis of their population size and distance between them.

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Migrant Workers

people, typically farmers, who move from place to place to harvest fruits and vegetables

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Refugee

a person who has a well-founded fear of being persecuted for reasons of race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group, or political opinion

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Asylum seeker

Someone who has migrated to another country in the hope of being recognized as a refugee

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brain drain

the loss of highly educated and skilled workers to other countries

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guest worker

a foreign laborer living and working temporarily in another country

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intervening obstacle

An environmental or cultural feature of the landscape that hinders migration.

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internal migration

permanent movement within the same country

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transhumance

The seasonal migration of livestock between mountains and lowland pastures.

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Ravenstein's Laws of Migration

A set of 11 "laws" that can be organized into three groups: the reasons why migrants move, the distance they typically move, and their characteristics.

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remittance

Money migrants send back to family and friends in their home countries

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migration selectivity

Only people exhibiting certain characteristics in a population choosing to migrate

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step migration

migration to a distant destination that occurs in stages

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chain migration

pattern of migration that develops when migrants move along and through kinship links

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activity space

The area within which people move freely on their rounds of regular activity

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urbanization

An increase in the percentage and in the number of people living in urban settlements.

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Atlantic Slave Trade

the buying and selling of Africans for work in the Americas

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carrying capacity

Largest number of individuals of a population that a environment can support

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contraception (birth control)

methods of preventing conception

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Diaspora

A dispersion of people from their homeland

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Distribution

Description of locations on Earth's surface where populations live

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Immigration

Migration to a new location

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fertility

The production of offspring within a population

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Forced Migration

Permanent movement compelled usually by cultural factors.

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Great Migration

movement of over 300,000 African American from the rural south into Northern cities between 1914 and 1920

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infrastructure

Fundamental facilities and systems serving a country, city, or area, as transportation and communication systems, power plants, and schools

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internally displaced person

Someone who has been forced to migrate for similar political reasons as a refugee but has not migrated across an international border

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Migration

Form of relocation diffusion involving permanent move to a new location.

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migration stream

the constant flow of migrants from one country into another country

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population composition

Structure of population in terms of age, sex and other properties such as marital status and education

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Rural-urban migration

Permanent movement from rural area to the urban city area.

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S-curve

a curve that depicts growth; shape of an "S." The leveling off of a J-Curve exponential growth.

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Voluntary Migration

Permanent movement undertaken by choice.

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Pull Factors of Immigration

Reasons to migrate to a new area such as Economic Opportunity ($)

Jobs/ workers were needed

Land

Peace and stability

Freedom to make a better life

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degenerative disease

any disease in which deterioration of the structure or function of tissue occurs

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Maternal Mortality Rate

The number of women who die giving birth per 100,000 births