Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Globalization and
Diversity
- Geopolitical
framework
- Globalization involves positive
and negative transformation,
because of this it is a
controversial and contentious
topic.
- Economic globalization benefits
everyone as regional activities
become more effecient in the
face of global competition on the
other hand opponents argue this
with evidence that only the rich
are benefiting and the poorer
countries are actually even
farther behind
- Population and settlement
issues revolve around four of
these: rapid population
growth, family planning/
abstinence, migration to new
centers of economic activity
and rapid urbanization
- Tension between forces of
cultural homogenization and the
countercurrents of local cultural
and ethnic identity
- World Regional Geography
- Geography: A fundamental science
(describing the earth)
- Physical Geography
- investigates ecological
diversity like soil,
landforms, etc
- Regional Geography
- Analyzes a
specific topic
- Human Geography
- in charge of analyzing social,
cultural and economic
systems
- Areal Differentiation and
Integration
- Areal Differentiation
- describes and explains the
differences that distinguish
one place from other
- Areal Integration
- the study of how
places relate with
each other
- Global to Local
- it is a
systematic
inquiry sense of
scale
- Regions: Formal, Functional, and
Vernacular
- Regions:how geographers
compress into units of
spatial similarity
- Formal Regions
- defined by some
aspect of physical
form
- Functional Region
- where a
certain activity
takes place
- Vernacular Regions
- defined solely in
people’s minds as
spatial stereotypes
that have no visible
boundaries in a
physical landscape
- The Cultural
Landscape: Space
into Place
- Cultural landscape : the visible
material of human settlement
in the past or present. It is also
known as the tangible
expression of the human
environment.
- It is the division of cultural
values, symbols and
attitudes.
- The geographer’s toolbox:
Location, maps, remote sensing
and GIs
- Geographers use different tools to
analyze and examine the world
- Latitude and Longitude
- Relative Location
- specific places in
relation to other
landscape features
- Absolute Location
- gives the coordinates of
an specific place with the
numerical address based
on the longitude and
latitude
- Parallels → run from east to
west around the world (lines
of latitude)
- Medians → lines
from longitude that
run from north to
south
- Prime meridian →located
at 0 degrees longitude in
Greenwich
- The equator divides the world into
hemispheres that meet at 180 degrees
longitude in the Pacific Ocean.
- GPS
- Global Positioning systems use
time signals sent from an specific
location to a satellite and back to
the person with the exact
coordinates.
- Map Projections
- They are defined as different ways maps are
projected in a flat service
- Map Scale
- It is the scale in a mathematical relation
between a place and the surface mapped
- Representative Fraction→ the scale between
the area being mapped and the map.
- Graphic Scale → visually
characterize in a horizontal bar
distance units
- Map Patterns and Map Legends
- Simple reference map →
that show specific
characteristic
- Thematic map → that
demonstrate more
elaborated things
- Map Legend → gives details
by explain the different
elements of the map
- Chormopleth maps →
maps with different levels
of intensity data
- Aerial Photos and Remote Sensing
- Photos taken by a satellite or
an aircraft.
- This technology is really helpful
because it has many scientific
applications.
- Geographic
Information Systems
- All the data sources
computerized such as remote
sensing, aerial photos, maps, etc.
- The resultant databases are
used to analyze a wide range of
resource problems.
- Global climates and human impacts
- Climate controls
- Factors affecting climate controls
- Solar energy
- Earth surface and the atmosphere are heated by the energy of the Sun
- Latitude
- The Sun strikes the Earth only in one angle , which causes
the equator and its surroundings to be warmer than other places
- Interactions between land and water
- The arrangements of land and water differ in their capacity to absorb and reradiate insolation
- Global pressure systems
- High and low pressure cells are produced because of the uneven heating of Earth due to the latitude
differences
- Global wind patterns
- High and low pressure systems produce global wind patterns at local, regional and global scales
- Topography
- At sea level, air temperatures are warmer because the lower atmosphere is heated by solar energy
- Global climate change
- The world’s climate is causing a lot of repercussions for all living organisms due to human activities
like industrialization
- Causes of global warming
- Global industrialization and the consumption of coal and petroleum
- Animal and plant extinctions
- Wildfires
- Heatwaves
- The International debate on limiting emissions
- The carbon inequity was the position taken by some developing countries that talked about how the
industrial countries were causing the global warming because of big amount of fossil fuels
- 174 countries signed an agreement in which they had to limit their GHG emissions. Despite of this,
none of the countries reached the emission reduction targets, so a second agreement was made
- The countries that didn’t reached the emission reductions targets would be penalized
- Water: A scarce world resource
- Wet or dry conditions are caused because of this water problems that are produced by varied global
climates
- The water stress data that is a concept to visualize where do water problems exist or to predict
where future problems will occur
- Water scarcity, sanitation and access
- Water scarcity is becoming a bigger problem because in some areas where water shortages are
common, the population is increasing even more causing the problems to increase as well
- Water access is another big problem because lots of people have to walk a long path and wait for
hours in a line in order to get some water for their families
- There are people that do not have access to clean water and therefore have to use contaminated
water causing lots of illnesses and deaths
- Population and
Settlement
- Increase population
- From In-migration
- Mostly
economic
- Population planning
- Vocabulary
- RNI
- Rate of Natural Increase
- TRF
- Total Fertility Rate
- Population pyramid
- Graphical indicator of
a population's age and
gender.
- Life expectancy
- NMR
- Net
Migration
Rates
- Democratic transition
- Stage 1.
Preindustrial
- Stage 2.
Transitional
- Stage 3.
Transitional
- Stage 4.
Industrial
- Stage 5.
Post-Industrial
- Population Density
- Average
number of
people per
area.
- Globalizing
world
- Economic,
political &
cultural
changes.
- Cultural
Coherence and
Diversity
- Cultural
influences,
traditions &
changes.
- Culture in a
globalizing
world.
- Culture is
always
changing.
- Conservative vs. Changes
- When cultures collide
- Cultural
Imperialism
- One cultural system at the expense of another.
- Cultural nationalism
- Protecting cultural system nationally.
- Cultural hybrids
- Blending cultures to form a new one.
- Gender and
globalization.
- Define behavior for
each gender.
- Gender
equiality by
globalization.
- Language and
culture in
globalization.
- Language
defines cultural
groups.
- National identity
- World religion
- Universaling religions
- Seek new
converts
- Ethnic religions
- Do not seek new converts
- Secularism: nonreligious
- Examples: Christianity, Islam, Judaism,
Hinduism, Buddhism.
- Economic and Social
Development pages
- Small groups are setting
themselves apart from larger
national cultures with
renewed interests
- As the world becomes connected
through international economic and
political alliances the nation's
governments loose power
- Doors open for
separatist groups
seeking autonomy and
independence
- Terrorist groups wage their
battle against Western interests
and ways of life
- Increasing disparity between
rich and poor, between
countries and regions
- Countries that already
have wealth are getting
richer through
globalization
- Inequalities in social
development, education and
working conditions
accompany these disparities
in wealth
- Globalization
- Affects the geography of people
and places throughout the world
- The handmaiden of
globalization is diversity
- World regional geography is central to
this task because of its integration of
environmental, cultural, political, adn
economic themes and topics.
- Most scholars agree that the major
component of globalization is the economic
reorganization of the world.
- the american journalist and author Thomas Friedman, one of the most influential
advocates of economic globalization, argues that the world has not only shrunk, but
also become economically" flat" so that financial capital, goods, and services can flow
freely from place to place.
- the cultivation, processing,
and transhipment of coca,
opium, and marijuana are
global issues.
- Globalization also has important
geopolitical components, to many an
essential dimension of globalization is
that it is not restricted by territorial or
national boundaries.
- in some world
regions a
weakening of
traditional states
power has resulted
in stronger local
and separatist
movements
- Rowntree, L (2014) Globalization and Diversity Geography of a Changing World. Pearson: United
States