1 / 15

GEOGRAPHY MATTERS

GEOGRAPHY MATTERS. (So what is human geography, anyway?) . A way of looking at the world. Human Geography is a WAY of studying the world, not a set of topics Geography looks at how places in the world are created, inhabited, and connected Geography focuses on interdependence.

taite
Télécharger la présentation

GEOGRAPHY MATTERS

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. GEOGRAPHY MATTERS (So what is human geography, anyway?)

  2. A way of looking at the world • Human Geography is a WAY of studying the world, not a set of topics • Geography looks at how places in the world are created, inhabited, and connected • Geography focuses on interdependence • Geography is the study of the spatial organization of human behavior, and people’s interactions with their environments.

  3. Place is CONSTRUCTED • People transform the natural environment to make places that are physically distinct and enable diverse ways of living. • Places may have different social meanings to different groups

  4. Place is CONSTRAINING • The spaces and places we live limit what we can do. • Limits come from the natural environment, and the built environment.

  5. Scale matters • Places are interdependent at different scales. • New York migration: Haiti and NYC are connected (even though they are at different scales) by large scale migration • Core, periphery, and semi-periphery defined by density of connection

  6. Globalization • Increasing interconnectedness of different parts of the world. • Common processes of economic, environmental, political and technological change • Uneven connections: who is the US’s biggest trading partner?

  7. Three Views of Globalization • Hyperglobalist • Skeptical • Transformationalist

  8. Hyperglobalist View *Neoliberalism *Limited role for the state, barriers to movement of money, goods and information should be low. *Corporations more important than states • “Open markets and free trade will make everybody more prosperous.” • “A rising tide lifts all boats”

  9. Skeptical View • Globalization is nothing new. • The nation-state is not going away. • The world economy is just regionalizing as it did before, not truly globalizing

  10. Transformationalist View • Globalization is a huge historical change---it’s new • It profoundly transforms societies. • Change is unpredictable • Increased social stratification

  11. Key Issues of Globalization • Environmental issues • Climate change • Desertification • Pollution • Health • Global pandemics • HIV • Security • Terrorism • Rogue Nukes

  12. Spatial Analysis • Location: where is it and why is it there? • Absolute space: latitude and longitude • Relative space: technology shapes distance • Tbilisi and Gori • Cognitive space: where things seem to be. • (the “hell yes” line)

  13. Spatial Analysis • Distance: • Friction of distance • Distance/decay function

  14. Spatial Analysis • Space • Topological space: connectivity • Accessibility • Spatial interaction: movement and flow • Complementarity and Transferability • Time/Space Compression • Spatial Diffusion

  15. Questions?

More Related