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AP Human Geography Barron's Book AP Exam Vocabulary Chapter 2: Population Geography Flashcards

Chapter 2: Geography,Population Geography Vocabulary of AP Human Geography Barron's Book, 2012 4th Edition

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1593111620Age-Sex DistributionA model used i population geography that describes the ages and number of males and females within a given population; also called a population pyramid.0
1593111621Arithmetic DensityThe number of people living in a given unit area.1
1593111622Baby BoomA cohort of individuals born in the Unite States between 1946 and 1964, which was just after World War 2 in a time of relative peace and prosperity. These conditions allowed for better education and job opportunities, encouraging high rates of both marriage and fertility.2
1593111623Baby BustPeriod of time during the 1960s and 1970s when fertility rates in the United States dropped as large numbers of women from the baby boom generation sought higher levels of education and more competitive jobs, causing them to marry later in life. As such, the fertility rate dropped considerably, in contrast to the baby boom, in which fertility rates were quite high.3
1593111624Carrying CapacityThe largest number of people that the environment of a particular area can sustainably support.4
1593111625Census TractSmall county subdivisions, usually containing between 2,500 and 8,000 persons, delineated by the U.S. Census Bureau as areas of relatively uniform population characteristics, economic status, and living conditions.5
1593111626Chain MigrationThe migration event in which individuals follow the migratory path of preceding friends or family members to an existing community.6
1593111627Child Mortality RateNumber of deaths per thousand children within the first five years of life.7
1593111628CohortA population group unified by a specific common characteristic, such as age, and subsequently treated as a statistical unit8
1593111629Cotton BeltThe term by which the American South used to be known, as cotton historically dominated the agricultural economy of the region. The same area is now known as the New South or Sun Belt because people have migrated here from older cities in the industrial north for a better climate and new job opportunities.9
1593111630Crude Birth RateThe number of live births per year per 1,000 people.10
1593111631Crude Death RateThe number of deaths per year per 1,000 people.11
1593111632Demographic Accounting EquationAn equation that summarizes the amount of growth or decline in a population within a country during a particular time period taking into account both natural increase and net migration.12
1593111633Demographic Transition ModelA sequence of demographic changes in which a country moves from high birth and death rates to low birth and death rates through time.13
1593111634DemographyThe study of human populations, including their temporal and spatial dynamics.14
1593111635Dependency RatioThe ratio of the number of people who are either too old or young to provide for themselves to the number of people who must support them through their own labor. This is15
1593111636Doubling TimeTime period required for a population experiencing exponential growth to double in size completely.16
1593111637EmigrationThe process of moving out of a particular country, usually the individual person's country of origin.17
1593111638Exponential GrowthGrowth that occurs when a fixed percentage of new people is added to a population each year. Exponential growth is compound because the fixed growth rate applies to an ever-increasing population.18
1593111639Forced MigrationThe migration event in which individuals are forced to leave a country against their will.19
1593111640Generation XA term coined by artist and author Douglas Coupland to describe people born in the United States between the years 1965 and 1980. This post-baby-boom generation will have to support the baby boom cohort as they into their retirement.20
1593111641GeodemographySame as population geography. A division of human geography concerned with spatial variations in distribution, composition, growth, and movements of population21
1593111642ImmigrationThe process of individuals moving into a new country with the intentions of remaining there.22
1593111643Infant Mortality RateThe percentage of children who die before their first birthday within a particular area or country.23
1593111644Internal MigrationThe permanent or semipermanent movement of individuals within a particular country.24
1593111645Intervening ObstaclesAny forces or factors that may limit human migration.25
1593111646Involuntary MigrationSame as forced migration. The migration event in which individuals are forced to leave a country against their will.26
1593111647Life ExpectancyThe average age individuals are expected to live, which varies across space, between genders, and even between races27
1593111648Thomas MalthusAuthor of "Essay on the Principal of Population" (1798) who claimed that population grows at an exponential rate while food production increases arithmetically, and thereby that, eventually, population growth would outpace food production.28
1593111649Maternal Mortality RateNumber of deaths per thousand of women giving birth.29
1593111650MigrationA long term move of a person from one political jurisdiction to another.30
1593111651Natural Increase RateThe difference between the number of births and number of deaths in a particular country.31
1593111652Neo-MalthusianAdvocacy of population control programs to ensure enough resources for current and future populations.32
1593111653OverpopulationA value judgement based on the notion that the resources of a particular area are not great enough to support that area's current population.33
1593111654Physiologic DensityA ratio of human population to the area of cropland, used in less developed countries dominated by subsistence agriculture.34
1593111655Population DensityA measurement of the number of persons per unit land area.35
1593111656Population GeographyA division of human geography concerned with spatial variations in distribution, composition, growth, and movements of population36
1593111657Population PyramidA model used in population geography to show the age and sex distribution of a particular population.37
1593111658Pull FactorsAttractions that draw migrants to a certain place, such as pleasant climate and employment or educational opportunities.38
1593111659Push FactorsIncentives for potential migrants to leave a place, such as harsh climate, economic recession, or political turmoil.39
1593111660RefugeesPeople who leave their home because they are forced out, but not because they are officially being relocated or enslaved.40
1593111661Rust BeltThe northern industrial states of the United States, including Ohio, Michigan, and Pennsylvania, in which heavy industry was once the dominant activity. In the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s, these states lost much of their economic base to economically attractive regions of the United States and to countries where labor was cheaper, leaving old machinery to rust in the moist northern climate.41
1593111662Sun BeltU.S. region, mostly compromised of southeastern and southwestern states, which has grown most dramatically since World War 2.42
1593111663Total Fertility RateThe average number of children born to a woman during her childbearing years.43
1593111664Voluntary MigrationMovement of an individual who consciously and voluntarily decides to locate to a new area- the opposite of forced migration44
1593111665Zero Population GrowthProposal to end population growth through a variety of official and nongovernmental family planning programs.45

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