the human mosaic chapter three

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The Human Mosaic The Human Mosaic CHAPTER THREE CHAPTER THREE Population Geography: Population Geography: Shaping the Human Mosaic Shaping the Human Mosaic

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The Human Mosaic CHAPTER THREE. Population Geography: Shaping the Human Mosaic. Kolkota, India. Introduction : What is geodemography? Spatial and ecological aspects of population density, distribution, fertility, gender, living standards, health, age, etc. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The Human Mosaic CHAPTER THREE

The Human MosaicThe Human Mosaic

CHAPTER THREECHAPTER THREE

Population Geography: Population Geography:

Shaping the Human MosaicShaping the Human Mosaic

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Kolkota, India

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►Introduction:

►What is geodemography?

►Spatial and ecological aspects of population density, distribution, fertility, gender, living standards, health, age, etc.

►What parts of the world see population growth, what parts don’t? Why?

►> 7.2 billion people!

World Population Clock

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► I) Demographic Regions

► A. Population Distribution and Density - uneven distribution of people on a global scale - largely unpopulated vs. thickly settled regions

>72% live on the Eurasian continent < 8% live on the North American continent

- Three major population clusters: 1) East Asia 2) Indian subcontinent 3) Europe

- population density vs. physiological density & carrying capacity:

“density beyond which people cease to be nutritionally self-sufficient"

What is the carrying capacity of a given piece of land?

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How have projections changed?

Projections from an earlier edition.

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Where does “our” oil come from? “Fracking” and related questions …

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B. Patterns of Natality

- Birthrate (number of births / year / 1000)

- Total Fertility Rate (TFR) (children / woman)

(focus: women, family size, future development) - TFR < 2.1 leads to population decline - Worldwide contrasts of TFR values- Hong Kong (TFR 1.02) and Macao (TFR

0.91)!

C. Geography of Mortality

- Death Rates (number of deaths / year / 1000)

- worldwide contrasts in death rates - correlation to TFR? - sub-Saharan Africa? - Europe? - North America? - death comes in different forms

geographically

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(We will talk about the diffusion of AIDS below.)

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D. Population Explosion  

- dramatic increase since 1900 (Why?) - decrease in death rates while TFR remains

high- result is geometrical population increase,

where doubling times become increasingly shorter

- 62 billion people!  

Thomas Malthus (1766-1834)  

"Human ability to multiply far exceeds our ability

to increase food production"

- Is that true? - Existential need to check population growth?- How? ----- Wars? Famine? What else?

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Malthus’s Dismal Equation?

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E. Or Population Implosion?

- Is the world overpopulated today? - Although we see decrease in TFR rates in

many countries, is the population explosion over?  

F. The Demographic Transformation Model

- The Stages: 1) Pre-Industrial 2) Beginning Industrialization 3) Transitional 4) Industrialization Completed 5) Postindustrial Period

 How do societies move from one stage to the next? Technical innovations? Birth control?

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S-shaped world population curve

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World Population Doubling Timeline

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Compare this graph with the one on the following slide!

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Demographic TransitionDemographic Transition

Figure 1.35

The Different Stages of the Demographic Transition

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What’s wrong with this question?

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G. Age Distribution  

- Why do some countries have overwhelmingly young populations?

- Why does the age structure vary within the United States?

- Population Pyramids as devices to study age and gender characteristics of societies.  

H. Geography of Gender  

- geographical differences in sex ratio within the U.S. and throughout the world

- "gendered spaces" (from Mount Athos in Greece to Valdosta, Georgia)

- female infanticide (see China and India)

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Residents of Sun City, Arizona

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Sun City, Arizona

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Population Pyramids

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Population Pyramid of Botswana / Impact of AIDS epidemic

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Population Pyramids from the USPopulation Pyramids from the US

Which of these represents Laredo (TX), Lawrence (KS), Naples (FL), or Cedar Rapids (IA)?

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Greek Orthodox Monastery on Mount Athos

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A “little emperor” with his grandparents in China

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Segregated beach in Tel Aviv, Israel.

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I. Standard of Living 

- infant mortality rate (number of children/ 1000)

(measure for health, nutrition, sanitation, access to doctors, education, etc.)  

- Human Development Index (literacy rates, life expectancy, wealth)

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Human Development Index

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II) Diffusion in Population Geography

How does demography relate to the theme of cultural diffusion?

A. Migration - from the early beginnings in central Africa to

today's examples of migration - push- and pull factors of migration - 50 million Europeans in the 19th century - change of national and international migration patterns over time - voluntary vs. forced migration

Migration events as described by ancient Aztecs

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Source regions of US immigrants.

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Foreign-born population as percentage of total population

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Filipina domestic servants in Hong Kong.

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European Refugee Crisis of 2015European Refugee Crisis of 2015

Dream turned nightmare

Dreams of a better future

Refugees outside a train station in Hungary

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Fleeing from the bubonic plague in London in the 1600s

B. Disease Diffusion

- historical example from Europe (bubonic plague / cholera)- example of aids in Africa, its source of origin, and its

spread through the rest of the world - aspects of contagious, relocation, and hierarchical

diffusion - preconceived notions about the agents of diffusion

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Mapping cholera in London (John Snow)

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Early diffusion of HIV

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C. Diffusion of Fertility Control

- importance for final two stages in demographic transformation model

- France as place of origin - Slow spread throughout Europe - China's "one couple, one child" policy (

with some exceptions)- 1970 a TFR of 5.9- 1980 a TFR of 2.7- 1990 a TFR of 2.2- 1994 a TFR of 2.0- 2007 a TFR of 1.7- negative side-effect of this policy in connection

with a culturally based preference for males?- recent discussions in China to do away with the

“one couple, one child” policy … why?- China changed its policy in October 2015!

Now two children per couple are allowed.

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Use of birth control in Europe

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III) Population Ecology

How is cultural ecology relevant to population geography?

A. Environmental Influence - population is being influenced by available resources,

climates, soils, etc. - tendency to live near coastlines and rivers, in

temperate climates, near water in dry climates, or away from regions prone to livestock diseases

B. Environmental Perception and Population Distribution - German and Italian speaking peoples of the Alps

(dairy culture versus warmth-loving crops)

- changing perceptions of regions rich in coal - perception influences migration

C. Population Density and Environmental Alteration - modification of habitats through adaptive strategies - correlation of population explosion and ecological

crisis - problem of overconsumption: the US with <5% of

world’s population consumes 25% of the resources

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Overpopulation/deforestation: Haiti vs. Dominican Republic.

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Human ImpactHuman Impact

Figure 1.36

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IV) Cultural Interaction and Population Patterns

How are issues of globalization, culture & demography intertwined?

A. Cultural Factors - rice in Southeast Asia & potatoes in Ireland - The Navajo Indians, their hogans, and their lack of

migration

B. Political Factors - forced migration & ethnic cleansing - China's "one couple, one child" policy

C. Economic Factors - industrialization in Europe - changes in cotton cultivation/resulting northward

migration

D. Gender and Geodemography - 19th century Irish women to U.S. - Filipinas in Japan & Burmese women in Thailand

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Population control in China.

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Population control in China. Patterns?

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V) The Settlement Landscape

How is the distribution of people reflected in the cultural landscape?

The example of rural settlement patterns:

A. Farm Villages - irregular clustered villages, street villages, green

villages, and checkerboard villages - what are strong-point, wet-point, and dry-point

settlements?

B. Isolated Farmsteads - what conditions favor dispersed settlements? - see North America, Australia, and New Zealand

C. Semi clustered Rural Settlements - hamlets, loose irregular villages, & row villages

D. Reading the Cultural Landscape - hypothetical farm village in Yucatan

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Irregular clustered village in southeastern Tibet.

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Irregular clustered village in northern Switzerland.

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Street village in Siberia, Russia, along the Lena River.

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Isolated farmstead in Iceland

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Hypothetical modern Mayan checkerboard village.

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Landscapes of Demographic Change

- industrialization, urbanization and shantytowns