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Vocabulary flashcards for AP Human Geography exam review based on provided notes.
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Qualitative Data
Data that describes something using words, not numbers, focusing on qualities and characteristics.
Quantitative Data
Data that uses numbers and measurements to quantify and describe phenomena.
Site
The physical characteristics of a place, including its climate, topography, and natural resources.
Situation
The location of a place relative to other places and its surrounding environment.
Toponym
The name given to a place.
Environmental Determinism
The theory that the environment solely controls human actions and development.
Possibilism
The theory that humans and the environment interact and influence each other.
Functional Regions
Uniform regions based on a shared set of characteristics.
GPS (Global Positioning System)
A system that provides exact location data using satellites.
Remote Sensing
The process of collecting data and images about Earth from satellites or other remote means.
GIS (Geographic Information System)
A system that stores, compiles, and analyzes geographic data, often in layered interfaces.
Overpopulated
A state where resources cannot adequately support the population.
Demographic Equation
Population change = (births - deaths) + (immigration - emigration)
Step Migration
Moving in smaller stages toward a final destination.
Chain Migration
Migration that occurs along established routes, often following those who migrated before.
Arithmetic Density
The number of people living in an area overall.
Physiological Density
The number of people living per unit of arable land.
Agricultural Density
The number of farmers working on each unit of farmable land.
Malthusian Catastrophe
An event where population growth outpaces food production, leading to widespread famine and death.
Immigrant
When a person enters a new country.
Emigrant
When a person leaves their country.
Centrifugal Forces (Push Factors)
Factors that cause people to leave a place.
Centripetal Forces (Pull Factors)
Factors that attract people to a new place.
Intervening Opportunity
A chance occurrence or opportunity that alters migration patterns.
Activity Space
The area where people regularly travel as part of their daily routine.
Relocation Diffusion
The spread of a feature or trend through bodily movement of people from one place to another.
Expansion Diffusion
The spread of a feature or trend among people from one area to another in a snowballing process.
Contagious Diffusion
Spreads rapidly and widely like a virus.
Hierarchical Diffusion
Spreads from a authority or power to others.
Stimulus Diffusion
The underlying idea spreads, but the specific form changes.
Cultural Landscape
The visible / physical imprint of human activity on the land, this is buildings, roads, signs, and other modifications that reflect a a culture’s values and practices
Acculturation
When a group or individual adopts some traits of another culture while still keeping parts of the original culture
Assimilation
When a group or individual fully adopts a new culture and loses their original cultural identity
Ethnocentrism
Judging other cultures based on one's own cultural standards
Cultural Relativism
Understanding and appreciating other cultures’ practices within their own cultural context.
Cultural Trait
One specific cultural thing (food, custom)
Cultural Complex
A group of related cultural traits (sports, rules, equipment, fans)
Cultural System
A bigger combination of cultural complexes ( the entire culture of a country or region)
Cultural Region
A geographical area where people share similar cultural systems and complexes ( middle east or latin america)
Folk Culture
Rooted in tradition, customs and practices unique to specific communities
Pop Culture
Spreads quickly across the world, often amking cultures more similar and vice versa
Lingua Franca
A language used as a common means of communication between people who speak different natives (swahili, arabic, english)
Dialect
A variation of a language that includes differences in vocabulary, grammar, and pronunciation, usually based on region or social groups
Isogloss
A geographic boundary that separates areas with different linguistic features, such as word usage, pronunciation, or grammar
Universalizing Religions
Religions that seek to appeal to people worldwide, not just those in a specific culture or ethnic group.
Ethnic Religions
Religions that are closely tied to a specific cultural group geographic area and generally do not seek new followers outside that group
Race
Based on physical characteristics, such as skin color.
Ethnicity
Based on cultural identity, like language, tradition, ancestry, religion, etc…
Blockbusting
A practice where real estate agents convinced white homeowners to sell their homes cheaply out of fear that Black Families would move in, which they though would cause property values to go down. The homes were then resold at higher prices to Black families, leading to racial segregation and formation of racially divided neighborhoods.
Centripetal Force (Political Geography)
A force that can unify a country.
Centrifugal Force (Political Geography)
A force that can break apart a country.
Balkanization
The breakup of a state into smaller, often hostile units, usually due to ethnic, cultural, or religious differences
Shatterbelt
A region where tensions wer so high that they got caught between stronger external forces, often experiencing conflict, instability and pressure, to divide, this is likely to experience balkanization
Devolution
When a central government peacefully gives power to regional groups, often to prevent or respond to potential balkanization or unrest in a shatterbelt
Forward-Thrust Capital
A capital city built inland to promote development and integrate the country.
Hegemony
When one country dominates other politically, economically, or culturally (the US post-WWII)
Buffer State
A country lying between two rival or potentially hostile greater powers.
Exclave
A part of a country separated from the main area, like Alaska
Enclave
A part of a country completely surrounded by another country, like Lesotho within South Africa
Territoriality
The effort by a country or group to control and defend a specific geographic area.
Microstate
A very small state.
Elongated State
States benefit from having a diverse range of climates (because they are so long!)
Compact State
Compact states benefit from being easily accessible to governing as they can just create a central node in the center, expanding equally out
Fragmented State
Fragmented states like Indonesia can control scattered resources but face unity challenges
Prorupted State
Prorupted states like Thailand gain access to important areas like coasts or buffer zones through extensions
Federal State
Share power between national and regional governments
Unitary State
Centralize their power in one main government with little local autonomy.
Packing (Gerrymandering)
Puts many opposition voters into one district to reduce their power elsewhere.
Cracking (Gerrymandering)
Spreads opposition voters thinly across districts to prevent them from winning any.
EU (European Union)
A politcal and economical union of European countries that promotes cooperation, trade, and peace
NAFTA/USMCA
Created to eliminate trade barriers and increase economic ties between the US, Canada, and Mexico
Supranational Organizations
Support globalization by encouraging cooperation but can reduce member countries’ full sovereignty
Irredentism
The belief that a country should reclaim territory based on ethnic or historical ties, like Russia in Crimea
Primary Activity
Fishing, involves the extraction of natural resource directly from the Earth
Secondary Activity
Manufacturing, turning raw materials (like timber) into finished products (like furniture)
Tertiary Activity
Teaching, providing services to other rather than producing goods
Quaternary Activity
Research and Development, activities related to knowledge based services, such as scientific research
Subsistence Agriculture
growing food primarily for consumption by the farmer and theirfamily
Pastoral Nomadism
Herding livestock like cattle, sheep, or goats over large areas of land for food and resources.
Shifting Cultivation
Clearing forested areas by cutting and burning vegetation to create fields for crops, with periodic movement to new land
Agribusiness
Refers to the business activities involved in the production, processing, and distribution of agricultural products.
Transhumance
The seasonal movement of livestock between feixed summer and winter pastures.
Swidden
A form of shifting cultivatio where vegetation is cut, burned, and ucltivated fora few years before the area is abandoned to recover (slash and burn)
Hamlet
very small, few services
Village
small, limited services
Town
larger, more services and infrastructure
City
dense population significant services and governance
Metropolis
major urban center, often with surrounding suburbs
Megalopolis
a chain of connected metropolitan areas
Rank Size Rule
The population of a city is inversely proportion to its rank in the urban hierarchy (every city is halved in population in proportion to the next lower one)
Primary City Rule
The largest city is disproportionately larger and more significant than the ones after it
Range
The maximum distance people are willing ot travel to use a good or service
Threshold
THe minimum number of people needed to support a service
Squatter Settlements
informal housing areas built by people who occupy land illegally, often lacking basic services like clean water, electricity, and sanitation
Annexation
the legal process by which a city adds land to its jurisdiction, often incorporating surrounding unincorporated areas to extend services or increase tax revenue
Counter-Urbanization
people moving away from the CBD into suburban or rural areas
Concentric Zone Model
by Ernest Burgress, descripts outward growth in concentric rings from CBD
Sector Model
Sectors of influence from CBD, wedges, certain sectors do specific things, advantages, explains why some ares are weather or more industrial than others, even at the same distance from CBD
Multi-Nuclei Model
developed by harris, desripts a city has multiple centers or activity, not just CBD, reflects high complexity of places
HDI (Human Development Index)
The human development index measures a country’s overall level of development and quality of life. It’s used to compare social and economic progress between countries