Ap Human Geography Chapter 3 Questions And Answers – Flashcards
Unlock all answers in this set
Unlock answersquestion
Activity Space
answer
An area within which we typically move freely on our rounds of regular activity, sharing that space with others who are also about their daily affairs.
question
Attitude
answer
Many decisions result from unconscious mental activities and are influenced by emotions.
question
Awareness Space
answer
Knowledge of opportunity locations beyond normal activity space
question
Barrier
answer
Impede spatial interaction, either by blocking it totally, slowing it down, or redirecting it.
question
Behavioral Approach
answer
How individuals make spatial decisions and how those separate decisions may be summarized by models and generalizations to explain collective actions.
question
Chain Migration
answer
Assures that the mover is part of an established migrant flow from a common origin to a prepared destination.
question
Channelized Migration
answer
link areas that are in some way tied to one another by past migrations, by economic trade considerations, or some other affinity.
question
Complementarity
answer
One place has a supply of an item for which there is an effective demand, as evidenced by desire for the item, purchasing power to acquire it, and means to transport it.
question
Counter Migration
answer
The likelihood that as many as 25% of all migrants will return to their place of origin.
question
Critical Distance
answer
The distance beyond which cost, effort, and means strongly influence our willingness to travel.
question
Distance Decay
answer
The decline of an activity or function with increasing distance from its point of origin.
question
Forced Migration
answer
The relocation decision is made solely by people other than the migrants themselves.
question
Gravity Model
answer
We are attracted by the expectation of of opportunity that we associated with larger rather than smaller places.
question
Intervening Opportunities
answer
Serve to reduce supply/demand interactions that otherwise might develop between distant complementary areas.
question
Link
answer
Connecting routes in a network.
question
Migration
answer
The longer-term commitment related to decisions to leave the home territory permanently and find residence in a new location.
question
Migration Field
answer
Areas that dominate a locale's in and out migration patterns.
question
Mobility
answer
General term applied to all types of human movement through space and time.
question
Movement Bias
answer
The predictable flows of people going to centers attractive to them.Increased flow strengthens the developed pattern of spatial interaction.
question
Network
answer
A set of routes and the places that they connect.
question
Partial displacement migrations
answer
Local moves wherein migrants move to a new residence nearby.
question
Personal communication field
answer
The informational counterpart of that person's activity space. It's size and shape are defined by the person contacts in work, recreation, shopping, school, or other activities.
question
Personal space
answer
The zone of privacy and separation from others that our culture or our physical circumstances require or permit.
question
Place perception
answer
Our beliefs impressions, and feelings-- rational or irrational, consciously realized or not-- about the natural and cultural characteristics of an area and about its opportunity structure.
question
Place utility
answer
The measure of an individual's satisfaction with a given residential location.
question
Potential model
answer
Provides an estimate of the interaction opportunities available to a center in such a multicentered network.
question
Pull factor
answer
The presumed positive attractions of the migration destination are known as this.
question
Push factor
answer
Negative home conditions that impel the decision to migrate.
question
Refugee
answer
When people are essentially forced to leave their homeland due to difficult or dangerous environmental, military, economic, or political conditions.
question
Reluctant relocation
answer
Less than fully voluntary migration.
question
Return migration
answer
The likelihood that as many as 25% of all migrants will return to their place of origin.
question
Space-time path
answer
Showing activity locations and movements around the landscape plotted against time.
question
Space-time prism
answer
The daily space time constraints of our time geography may be represented this. It's size and shape are determined by our mobility and our locational responsibilities.
question
Spatial interaction
answer
Contact between places, and in human geography, means the movement of people, ideas, and commodities from place to place.
question
Spatial search
answer
The process by which locational alternatives are evaluated- is not initiated.
question
Step migration
answer
Involves the place transition from rural to a major city gradually.
question
Territoriality
answer
The emotional attachment to and the defense of home ground.
question
Time geography
answer
The study of temporal characteristics of activities in conjunction with their spatial characteristics.
question
Total displacement migration
answer
Migrants travel so far that they have completely new activity space that do not overlap at all with their former home ranges.
question
Transferability
answer
Acceptable costs of an exchange are met.
question
What is the difference between temporary travel and migration?
answer
Temporary travel is when you return home and you do not relocate and migration is when you leave home permanently.
question
What must people consider to be mobile?
answer
Time, distance, and cost considerations
question
The types of trips that individuals make, and thus the extent of their activity space, depend on which 3 factors?
answer
1. Stage in life 2. Means of mobility 3. Opportunities in our daily lives
question
What is space-time budget?
answer
How far we can travel in a given period of time.
question
When massive amounts of people move what does it affect?
answer
National economy, alters ethnic, religious mixtures, and inflames tensions.
question
What is the difference between chain migration and channelized migration?
answer
Chain migration is when a relative or friend tells you to come to a certain area and channelized migration is when people come for mostly jobs and opportunities (No strong family ties telling you where to go)
question
Give an example of step migration.
answer
Farm -> small town -> suburb -> major city
question
Negative home conditions that impel the decision to migrate are called push factors. What might some include?
answer
-Loss of job -Lack of professional opportunity -Overcrowding or slum clearance -Poverty -War
question
What percentage of migrants (legal & illegal) will move back to their place of origin?
answer
25%
question
What is the most common form of migration?
answer
Partial displacement migration
question
What is globalization?
answer
-Countries trade more frequently -Foreign investment is very high -Has caused our financial systems to be intertwined
question
What is the main reason women are starting to migrate?
answer
Economic pull factors
question
Are migration fields normally stable and persistent overtime or are they unstable and unreliable?
answer
Stable and persistent
question
What is the difference between critical distance and distance decay?
answer
Critical distance is the distance beyond which cost, effort, and/or means play a determining role in the willingness of people to travel and distance decay is the declining intensity of any activity, process or function with increasing distance from its point of origin.