Lexi M.
Period 5.
The study of patterns and rates of population change, including birth and death rates, migration trends, and evolving population distribution patterns. | ||
A period and official count of a country's population. | ||
The number of individuals per unit area | ||
The population of a country or region expressed as an average per unit area. | ||
The number of people per unit area of agriculturally productive land | ||
The structure of a population in terms of age, sex and other properties such as marital status and education | ||
A graphic representation of a population showing the percentages of the total population by age and sex. | ||
The number of live births per year per 1,000 people. | ||
The number of deaths per year per 1,000 people. | ||
The number of babies that die within the first year of life in a given population. | ||
The average number of children born to a woman during her childbearing years. | ||
change in a population from high birth and death rates to low birth and death rates | ||
The time it takes to double a population. | ||
Cumulative or compound growth (of a population) over a given time period. | ||
Expansion that increases by the same amount during each time interval. | ||
Crude death rate subtracted from crude birthrate | ||
the rapid growth of the world's human population during the past century, attended by ever-shorter doubling times and accelerating rates of increase | ||
The level at which a national population ceases to grow | ||
the EXACT way or direction to get to something (north,south,east,west) | ||
Directions such as left, right, forward, backward, up, and down | ||
... | ||
distance measured, not in linear terms such as miles or kilometers, but in terms such as cost and time. | ||
negative conditions and perceptions that induce people to leave their adobe and migrate to a new location | ||
Things that make a person want to move to an area, it's attractions -i.e Florida; Beaches, Warm weather, Theme Parks, etc. | ||
The space within which daily activity occurs. | ||
movement that has a closed route and is repeated annually or seasonally | ||
movement among a definite set of places. Ex of cyclic movement. | ||
Movements that are taken based on a seasonal basis. | ||
the movement of persons from one country or locality to another | ||
migration from a place (especially migration from your native country in order to settle in another) | ||
Permanent movement compelled usually by cultural factors. | ||
Permanent movement undertaken by choice. | ||
Permanent movement within a particular country. | ||
Movement from one country to another. It may be voluntary or involuntary. | ||
Permanent movement from one region of a country to another. | ||
Migration to a distant destination that occurs in stages, for example, from farm to nearby village and later to a town and city | ||
the return of migrants to the regions from which they earlier emigrated | ||
The presence of a nearer opportunity that greatly diminishes the attractiveness of sites farther away. | ||
The diminishing in importance and eventual disappearance of a phenomenon with increasing distance from its origin. | ||
a person who has to leave his or her country to find safety. | ||
Refugees encamped in a host country or host region while waiting for resettlement. | ||
Refugees who have been substantially integrated into the host country or host region and who are thus seen as long-term visitors. | ||
Refugees who have crossed one or more international boundaries during their dislocation and who now find themselves encamped in a different country | ||
Refugees who have abandoned their town or village but not their country. | ||
Laws and regulations of a state designed specifically to control immigration into that state. | ||
Government policy designed to favor one racial sector over others. | ||
Government policy that encourages large families and raises the rate of population growth. | ||
Government policy designed to reduce the rate of natural increase. | ||
The actual decline in population due to less than replacement births or extensive diseases. When the death rate exceeds the birth rate. |