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Demography

AP Human Geography Chapter 3 Section 4

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Chapter 3, Section 4 AP Human Geography 2012-13 School Year Chad Guge, Instructor Key Concepts/Terms Information NOT covered in this presentation that you SHOULD know? Historical migration trends within the United States between regions Migration patterns and examples from other countries including: Russia, Brazil, Indonesia, India, and the region of Europe Information COVERED in this presentation? Migration within a region Concept of ?counterurbanization? Migration Within a Region Migration patterns that occur within a region usually fall under? Rural-to-Urban Urban-to-Suburban Metropolitan-to-Nonmetropolitan (also known as ?counterurbanization?) Rural-To-Urban Migration

AP Human Geography Migration Theories Study Guide

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Theories in Migration Additional Content APHG Fall 2013 Zelinsky?s Migration Transition Model Pre-Modern small in volume but lots of circulation type movements Rural to rural migration dominates Transitional (LDCs now in varying stages) Rural to Urban migration dominates: Urban Pull (jobs) & Rural Push Increase in transportation technology Decrease in cost of long-distance movement Post-Transitional: ?advanced societies? Increase in circulation for leisure (summer homes etc.) Rural to urban transition finished International Labor Migration from LDCs to MDCs High rate of International urban to urban (job relocation) Future ?Post Industrial? (Is the Future here?) communications technology possibly reduces the need to migrate

AP Human Geography Chapter 3 Study Guide

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Why do People Migrate? Reasons for Migration Effect of Distance for Migration Characteristics of Migrants Where are Migrants Distributed? Global Migration Patterns U.S. Migration Patterns Impact of Immigration on the United States Why do Migrants Face Obstacles? Immigration Policies of Host Countries Cultural Problems Living in Other Countries Why Do People Migrate Within A Country? Migration Between Regions of a Country Migration Within One Region in a Country Vocabulary You Need To Know You should be able to define, explain, and use real-world examples (when possible) for the terms below. Term/Concept Definition Example(s) (Real-world)

AP Human Geography Chapter 2 Part 1

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Chapter 2: Population Part 1 Mr. Guge, Instructor Fall 2012 Distribution-geographers are concerned about the arrangement of features on the earth?s surface. 3 main properties of distribution are: Density-the frequency that something occurs in a given space. Concentration-changes in distribution-how close together-dispersed or clustered. Pattern-the arrangement of the distribution of features in a given space. 2 Density is an important issue in Population studies-the number of people per square mile in a country might tell you something about living conditions and living standards. Concentration-the population used to be clustered or concentrated in the northeast, but it is becoming more dispersed as many people move to the West, Southwest or South.

ap_human_goegraphy_unit_3_part_1.pptx

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Why Do People Migrate? Unit 3-Key Issue 1 AP Human Geography Chad Guge, Instructor Fall Semester, 2012 Topics Covered in This Presentation.. Emigrants vs. Immigrants and the concept of net migration Push-Pull Factors in Migration Definitions Types of Factors International vs. Internal Migration Types of Internal Migration Voluntary vs. Forced Migration Emigrant vs. Immigrant An Emigrant is someone who leaves your country (Migration FROM a location) An Immigrant is someone who comes to your country (Migration TO a location) Concept of Net Migration Definition: The measure of the difference in total number of immigrants and the total number of emigrants Net In-Migration: Total # of Immigrants is greater than total # of Emigrants

ap_human_geog_chapter_3_part_2.pptx

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Chapter 3, Section 2 AP Human Geography 2012-13 Chad Guge, Instructor Topics Covered In This Presentation... Global Migration Patterns Recent Overall Picture U.S. Immigration Patterns Historical (Focus on European and African Migration) Current (Focus on Less Developed Countries (LDC)) Impact of U.S. Immigration Europe's Demographic Transition Undocumented Immigration Destination of Immigrants within U.S. Global Migration Patterns Asia, Latin America and Africa have net out-migrations N. America, Europe and Oceania (major islands in the Pacific) have net in-migrations Important patterns of migrants... Asia TO Europe and N. America Latin America and Europe TO N. America Importance of flow from LDC's to MDC's

immigration doc

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Immigration Why Immigration Matters by Thomas Kessner It is difficult today to recapture the iconoclasm signaled by Oscar Handlin?s opening words to his Pulitzer Prize-winning The Uprooted more than fifty years ago: ?Once I thought to write a history of the immigrants in America. Then I discovered that the immigrants were American history.?

Unit 2 population study guide

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Unit 2 Population Vocabulary Demography Arithmetic density Agricultural density Physiological density Ecumene Overpopulation Carrying capacity Dependency ratio Crude birth rate Crude death rate Total fertility rate Natural Increase rate Doubling Time Life expectancy Census Immigration Emigration Push factor Pull factor Distance decay Chain migration Step migration Intervening obstacles Refugee Transhumance Guest workers Endemic Infant mortality rate Intervening opportunity Intra-regional migration Inter-regional migration Pandemic Concentration Dependency ratio Epidemiology Medical revolution Industrial revolution Zero population growth Brain drain Quotas Key Concepts to Know 1. Definition of demography and importance of studying it

AP Human Geo Ch 2 vocab

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Vocabulary Agricultural Density - The ratio of the number of farmers to the total amount of land suitable for agriculture. Agricultural Revolution - The time when human beings first domesticated plants and animals and no longer relied entirely on hunting and gathering. Arithmetic Density - The total number of people divided by the total land area. Census - A complete enumeration of a population. Crude Birth Rate (CBR) - The total number of live births in a year for every 1,000 people alive in the society. Crude Death Rate (CDR) - The total number of deaths in a year for every 1,000 people alive in a society.

AP Human Geo Ch 6 notes

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Seth Adler Where Are Religions Distributed? Universalizing religion ? A religion that attempts to appeal to all people, all over the world. Ethnic religion ? A religion that appeals only to one type of people. Universalizing Religions 58% of the world practiced a universalizing religion, 26% practice an ethnic religion, 16% no religion. The three main universalizing religions are Christianity, Islam, and Buddhism. A religion is divided in three ways. Branch ? A large division within a religion. Denomination ? A division of a branch. Sect ? A small group broken away from a denomination. Christianity More than 2 billion adherent, more than any other. Most widespread distribution. Predominant in North America, South America, Europe, and Australia. Branches Of Christianity

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