Urbanization.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
World Cities.
Advertisements

MIGRATION. Migration the movement of people from one place or region to another.
Unit 2 Review True/False.
The Mega City Chapter 14. The Mega City  Shift to living in urban centers was not gradual process but sudden shift  Over 50% of the world’s population.
According to the UN, world population is expected to grow to 9.2 billion by the year What challenges do you see if this prediction proves accurate?
Do people live in the same location of early cultural hearths? Early Cultural Hearths Current World Population Density.
Ms. Soles Social Studies Lesson 5 Human Geography Populations.
The Human World.  By the end of 2011 we will have 7 BILLION 7 BILLION people on earth -roughly 1 billion every 12 years  Latinos are growing in numbers.
(A) What is rural – urban migration ?
URBANIZATION - IMPACTS
Cunningham - Cunningham - Saigo: Environmental Science 7 th Ed. Urbanization and Sustainable Cities Chapter 24.
1 Urbanization. 2 Urbanization – What is it? The movement of people from rural areas to urban settings; The physical expansion of towns and cities into.
Thought Questions: Questions to answer. Write these questions on a piece of paper and answer them. 1. What things would cause people to leave a certain.
Population 10 pts 10 pts 5 pts 5 pts 15 pts 15 pts 20 pts 20 ptsGrowth 5 pts 5 pts 10 pts 10 pts 15 pts 15 pts 20 pts 20 pts 10 pts 10 pts 5 pts 5 pts.
Megacities Cameron Dunn
Population. Where would you rather live? Population There are more than 7 billion people living on the earth. This number has grown drastically since.
Objectives Analyze the causes of urban growth in the late 1800s.
Urbanization – Part Two GGS 12 Manuel/Sheppard. URBAN vs. RURAL HAMLET – Less than 100 people VILLAGE – Between 100 and 1000 people Ex. Aylesford, Tatamagouche.
Global Cultures. Culture The way of life of a group of people who share similar beliefs and customs What languages people speak, what religions they follow,
Migration Rural-urban migration Push factors: things that encourage, and sometimes force, people to leave the countryside not enough jobs lack of investment.
URBANIZATION With much help from Pam Rogers (almost Ph. D)
Chapter 3.2 Migration. Why People Migrate 1. People’s movement from one place or region to another is called migration. 2. Immigrants are people who move.
Population, Culture, and Natural Resources
Introduction to the Mega City & the Global City. How did Industrial Revolution create a push towards Urbanization?  In 1800 only 3% of the world’s population.
Megacities IB Geography II.
What do these images have in common?. What is urban? With a partner create your own a definition Think of 5 words which best describe ‘urban’
World History/ Geography Monday November 16, 2015
The Human Population and Its IMPACT 7,000,000,000 and counting... How big is 7 billion?
Urbanization is the physical growth of rural or natural land into urban areas as a result of population immigration to an existing urban area.
The Challenges of Urbanization. THE STORY TO DATE…
Industrialization in the 19th Century. Essential Question How did industrialization change American life in the 19 th century?
URBAN AREAS OR CITIES. PEOPLE USE THE TERM’S ‘URBAN’ OR ‘CITY’ TO MEAN A SETTLEMENT CONTAINING A LARGE NUMBER OF PEOPLE. THE WORD URBAN THEREFORE REFERS.
Human Populations Mr. Haase. Worldwide life expectancy Life expectancy increased, on average, four months each year from Between 1980 and.
IB Geography II. White Flight Debrief  Chicago Racial Demographics: 13/01/29/chicago-racial- demographi_n_ htmlhttp://
 The People ◦ There are nearly 320 million people in the United States today. ◦ The first people moved to the region thousands of years ago from Asia.
Population and Movement Pgs Population Growth Demographers are scientists that study human populations. They study the rate at which the population.
How are urban areas changing in different parts of the world?
How has urbanization changed? INTRODUCTION TO URBANIZATION.
CHANGING URBAN ENVIRONMENTS
International Migration Standard Grade Geography International Issues.
The Influences of Human Migration Section 2 Chapter 3.
Population and Migration Push and pull factors Types of migration.
Analysis On a sheet a paper, create a list of places where people live. Then create a list of places where people do not live. YOU HAVE 5 MINS. The person.
Urbanisation in LEDCS How does the MEDC land use model compare to that of an LEDC? What are the push and pull factors for people moving from towns to cities.
Grade 12 Global Geography
Rural AreaUrban AreaSuburbs. A shift from people living in the countryside into towns and cities A few Statistics:  Since 1950, the world’s urban population.
Chapter 21 Economic and Social Unrest
DEMOGRAPHICS.  Statistical study of the size, structure, and distribution of human populations and their response to changes in:  Birth (Birth Rates)
World Cities Objectives: Recognise what a World city is Understand how urban populations are changing Consider where and why these changes.
Human Geography Lesson 1: The World’s People
Where in the World Wednesday?
To move from a country means to what?
Population and Urbanization
Migration.
Urbanisation.
To move from a country means to what?
Urban issues and challenges - KO Paper 2: Question 1
Earth’s Human Geography
Urbanization Laboni Molla SSO 102
Megacities and urbanisation
Geography Time.
Today’s Questions How did industrialization and inventions affect cities? Write 5 adjectives that describe what it was like to live in a tenement. How.
Population Patterns of the United States and Canada
Urban Growth.
World Cities.
Population & migration
Earth’s Human Geography
Lesson 1 The World’s People
Chapter 3 Section 2 - Migration.
Movement & Migration.
Presentation transcript:

Urbanization

What is Urbanisation? It is an increasing concentration of the population in cities and a transformation of land use and society to a metropolitan pattern of organization.

How did it all begin? At the beginning of the Industrial Revolution only 3% of the world population were living in cities. Now about 43% of the world's people live in cities. In the U.S about 79% of the population is urban.

Causes of Urban Growth Natural increase (more births than deaths) Natural increase is fuelled by improved food supplies, better sanitation, and advances in medical care that reduce death rates and cause populations to grow both within cities and in the rural areas around them. Immigration is the second reason why population grows, and it is the largest source of its growth.

Causes of Urban Growth: Immigration Immigration Push Factors - The "surplus" population is forced to migrate to cities in search for jobs, food, and housing. In some places, economic forces or political, racial, or religious conflicts drive people out of their homes. The UN estimated that in 2010 at least 15.9 million people fled their native country and that another 11.6 million were internal refugees within their own country, displaced by political, economic, or social instability.

Causes of Urban Growth: Immigration Immigration Pull Factors - Even in the most chaotic cities, people are there by choice, attracted by the excitement, vitality, and opportunity to meet others like themselves. The most important thing to them is that cities offer jobs, housing, entertainment, and freedom from the constraints of village traditions. Possibilities exist in the city for upward social mobility, prestige, and power not available in the country. 

Current Urban Problems Traffic and Congestion Ex: In Sao Paulo, Brazil, the government passed such law that only allows certain cars to circulate on the streets according to their plate number. Air Pollution: Ex: An estimated 60% of Calcutta's residents are thought to suffer from respiratory diseases linked to air pollution. Sewer System and Water Pollution Ex: The World Bank estimates that only 35 percent of urban residents in developing counties have satisfactory sanitation services. In Egypt, Cairo's sewer system was built about fifty years ago to serve a population of 2 million people. It is now being overwhelmed by more than 17 million people. Crime & Noise

Cities of the Future An alternative to spreading the population across a wide area of countryside is to build upward. This model, which depends strongly on technology. They have been called the technopolis, vertical city, or city of the future. The central hub of most big American cities now is dominated by skyscrapers and a highly technological environment. The emerging supercities of the Developing World are also moving toward this style, in part because of its association with wealth, power, and progress

People Moving into Urban Areas Canada is an Urban nation with 80% of our population living in Urban areas. 90% of our population growth now happens in our 33 largest cities. Urbanization is occurring globally as population grows and people move to larger economic centers. More than 50% of the worlds population now lives in urban areas In 1900 this number was only 13%