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Chapter 15 Country and City: The Natural World and the Social World.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 15 Country and City: The Natural World and the Social World."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 15 Country and City: The Natural World and the Social World

2 Overview  Population  Demography  Theories on Population Growth  Population Problems  Urbanization  Patterns in urbanization  In-class exercise  The Environment

3 DEMOGRAPHY  Study of the size, composition, distribution and changes in human population  U.S. population  U.S. Census Bureau  312+ million in Nov. 2011  World population estimates  6.9+ billion in Nov. 2011  Population dynamics  Biological and social factors

4 DEMOGRAPHIC VARIABLES  Estimating Population Growth  Fertility Rates The average number of children a woman bears  Mortality Rates The average number of deaths per 1,000 people Infant Mortality –The average number of deaths per 1,000 live births  Life Expectancy The average age to which a person can expect to live –Life span or longevity  Migration Immigration and emigration –Movement from one geographic area to another for the purpose of resettling

5 Fertility Rates

6 Infant Mortality Rates

7 Life Expectancy

8 Global Migration

9 Population Change in the U.S.

10 The World Population Problem  Historical background  Population boom in Europe during Industrial Revolution (1800)  What accounts for this?  The Malthusian Theorem  Thomas Malthus – “The Principles of Population” Food production growth is additive –Other resources Population growth is exponential  The “Malthusian Trap”

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12 Sociological Perspectives on Population Growth  Influences on population growth  Religious  Political/Economic  Cultural  Population control strategies  Family Planning

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15 Was Malthus Right?  Debate among demographers  “Neo-Malthusians”  Believe population growth will eventually outpace available resources Leads to global catastrophe  Do statistics support or refute?

16 Was Malthus Right?  “Anti-Malthusians”  Believe that conclusions are faulty  Predict that population will peak and stabilize  Based on rationality, family planning, other changes  May even lead to population shrinkage  Believe that demographic transition will spread to developing world  From high to low birth/death rates

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18 Which theory is correct?  Consider effect of new technologies on population  For example?  Potential for population booms or shrinkage  According to United Nations  #1 problem is worldwide population growth catastrophe

19 The American Population Problem  U.S. is 3 rd most populace in the world  Along with China and India  The American standard of living  Impact of the American Dream and consumerism  If our standards were adopted by all How many more planet Earths would we need to support the rest of the world?  Ecological Footprint Quiz  Estimate of resources needed for your consumption and waste

20 The American Population Problem  Ecological threat of Americans to the planet  Comprise approximately what % of world population? 6%  Consume approximately what % of world resources? 30%  Produce approximately what % of world waste? 50%  The impact of 1 American is equal to:  2 Japanese  6 Mexicans  13 Chinese  32 Indians  140 Bangladeshi  284 Tanzanians  372 Ethiopians

21 Next … Urbanization

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23  Urbanization  The movement of the masses to cities  The influence of cities on society  Cities  A place where a large number of people live on a permanent basis  Key to their origin is the development of efficient agriculture City dwellers do not produce their own food

24  Metropolis  Urban area with large population 500,000 to 1,000,000 residents  Megalopolis or Megacity  A group of densely populated metropolises Eventually combine into huge urban complex The “Southland”  Global City  Megacities with global impact Centers of economic, political and social power

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26 U.S. Urban Patterns  From country to city  In 1800 6% lived in cities  In 1920 50% lived in cities  In 2007 83% lived in cities  From city to city  Migration From the “rust belt” to the “sun belt”  Fasting growing and shrinking cities

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28 Urban Density in the U.S. (2009)  Population per square mile  U.S. average: 80 California average: 270  Urban density  Minneapolis: 1,800  Portland: 3,000  Los Angeles: 8,000  Philadelphia: 11,000  Chicago: 14,000  San Francisco: 16,000  Isla Vista: 18,000 (per ½ sq. mile)  New York City: 27,000 (Manhattan: 67,000)

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31 Trends in Urbanization  Suburbanization  Shift toward edges of cities  Urban (white) flight  Movement of affluent classes to suburbs Leaves behind decaying cities  Same urban problems follow into suburbs  Suburban (or urban) sprawl  Poorly-planned development vs. smart growth  Urban Renewal  Efforts to rebuild decaying inner-cities  Gentrification  Transform neighborhoods into more affluent communities  The Rural Rebound  Increase in rural counties, usually adjacent to city

32 In-Class Exercise Word Search: Population and Urbanization


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