AP Human Geography Unit 7: Cities, Unit 6: Economic Geography extension taken from AP YouTube Livestreams (with FRQ Terminology and Examples)
Globalization and the environment
"The impacts of globalization as currently practiced has almost certainly degraded local and global environments seriously" "Globalization has created space for the expression of concern with this situation" Climate change, global warming
Situation
How a site is connected to other places/location of a place related to others
Cultural enclaves developing in edge cities in suburbs
Chain migration, people coming from foreign nations to join others
What led to rapid growth of cities?
Changes in transportation (the epochs), population growth, migration, economic development, government policies
Cities are created for 2 reasons
Resource node, Transport node
Development and industrialization will contribute to
larger growth (India, China, Indonesia)
In ____________________________ regions, concrete measures to improve living conditions of the urban poor _________________________________________________________________________________________ and faster pace of _______________________________________.
less-developed, lacked in countries with higher proportion of slum dwellers, urbanization
Public services
provide security and protection to citizens and businesses
Top 10 cities by estimated annual GDP growth
BAN 8.5% DHA 7.6 MUM 6.6 DEL 6.5 SHE 5.3 JAK 5.2 MAN 5.2 TIA 5.1 SHA 5.0 CHO 4.9
Role of Transportation and Communications in Urbanization and Suburbanization
Borchert's Epochs of Human Growth/Urban Evolution
Top 10 megaregions in the world
Bos-Wash Par-Am-Mun Chi-Pitts Greater Tokyo SoCal Seoul-Busan Dallas, Houston, San Antonio, Austin (Texas Triangle) Beijing, Tianjin Lon-Leed-Chester Hong-zhen
Reasons for a city to be settled
Break-of-bulk, head of navigation, entrepot, railhead, security and defense
Infrastructure Factors
Health-care facilities, advanced communication system, major int'l airport. The need for clustering of services in large cities was expected to be reduced by technology, but this did not occur
Bigger city = more functions
Higher order place within society
Connectivity (situational) of NYC
Clustering of major interstates, very high, close to other major cities
How do geographers rank global cities?
Geographers divide global cities into three levels: alpha, beta and gamma. Alpha is subdivided into (most to least important): Alpha ++, Alpha +, Alpha, and Alpha -. They use a combination of factors to identify and assign these ranks.
Financial institutions
Global cities are centers for finance, and attract HQs of major banks, insurance companies, and specialized financial institutions where corporations obtain/store funds for expansion of production
Global cities
Global cities are urban settlements that play an especially important role in global business services. They can be subdivided according to a number of criteria.
Political Factors
Hosting int'l organization HQs and capitals of countries that are influential leaders in international events
Negative effects of rural to urban migration
Housing issues (overcrowding)
World city network
Levels of scale - cities as nodes - world economy as the supranodal network level - advanced producer service firms formal a subnodal level - Latter create an interlocking network through their global location
World Economic Forum (10 most magnetic cities in the world)
London NYC Tokyo Paris Singapore Seoul Hong Kong Amsterdam Berlin Vienna
What types of government services need to be provided in a city with an increasing old-age dependency ratio?
Medicare services
Since 2007
More people living in urban areas in the world than rural areas for the first time
1950 largest cities
NYC 12.3 TKY 11.3 LON 8.4 PAR 6.5 MOS 5.4 BUE 5.1 CHI 5.0 KOL 4.5 SHA 4.3 OSA-KBE 4.1
Top 10 cities by GDP 2035
NYC 2.5t TOK 1.9t LOS 1.5t LON 1.3t SHA 1.3 BEI 1.1 PAR 1.1 CHI 1.0 GUANGZHOU 0.9 SHENZHEN 0.9
Lawyers, accountants, and other professional services
Professional services cluster in global cities to provide advice to major corporations & financial institutions. Advertising agencies, marketing firms, other services concerned with style & fashion locate in global cities to help corporations anticipate changes in taste and to help shape those changes.
Compare
Provide a description or explanation of similarities and/or differences
Explain
Provide information about how or why a relationship, process, pattern, position, or outcome occurs, using evidence and/or reasoning
Describe
Provide relevant characteristics of a specified topic
Urbanization impacting transition to stage 3/4 DTM
Pulling people from rural to urban areas, development allows them to earn more money and feel more secure, impacting growth, birth, and death rate (access to health care)
Transportation Factors
Railroads (19th century) and the motor vehicle and airplane (20th century) enabled quick delivery of inputs, products, and people. Decentralization of industry has been made possible by modern communications and transport, but these things have reinforced the preeminence of global cities in the global economy instead
Urban Hierarchy
Rank order of cities based on the population in the nationally defined statistical urban area. National and global scales 1. Some grow very large 2. No perfect-sized city 3. Cities are part of inter-connected network influencing growth
Overall MDC and LDC responses
Regional planning efforts, remediation and redevelopment of brownfields, establishment of urban growth boundaries, farmland protection policies
Relationship of market gardening to large urban areas
Relationship to central market- transportation costs, perishable foods (close to market due to this)
California Gold Rush (1849)
Resource Node: Sacramento Transport Node: San Francisco
New Centers of international migration growth are experiencing
Rural to Urban migration
2015 largest cities, 2030 largest cities
Tokyo 38 Tokyo 37.2 Delhi 25.7 Delhi 36.1 Shanghai 23.7 Shanghai 30.8 Sao Paulo 21.1 Mumbai 27.8 Mumbai 21.0 Beijing 27.7 Mexico City 21.0 Dhaka 27.4 Beijing 20.4 Karachi 24.8 Osaka-Kobe 20.2 Cairo 24.5 Cairo 18.8 Lagos 24.2 New York 18.6 Mexico City 23.9
Transport Node
Towns/cities are founded at the intersection of 2 or more lines of transport
Resource Node
Towns/cities are founded based on proximity to natural resources
Chicago is a ___________________ node
Transport: Great Lakes, hub for raw materials and animals
Security and defense
Walls, former forts, etc. Ancient cities old walls began as defense operations when protecting certain lands (ie fort worth in the United States)
India will shift into 2nd largest economy due to
has many of the world's fastest growing cities, rapid urbanization, has many of the world's fastest growing cities
The transportation Epochs
increase connectivity, population, and development, cause population to become healthier
Asia's GDP %
increase to 35% by 2030
Urban areas in nations on the periphery are growing at _________________ _________________
rapid rates. See Urban attraction FRQ writing These people are disadvantaged and need the city
Urbanization is ____________________________
rapidly growing
Consumer services
service to individuals who desire/can pay for them
Egypt goes form 21st
to 7th
Resource node must be connected through ____________________
transport
NYC is a ____________________ node
transport. Close to ocean, Hudson River (water), connected to Midwest via Buffalo/Erie Canal. No need for Mississippi
Situation is the relative location and
uniqueness of a site. Site is the terrain, patterns, water, roads, agriculture, founded for protection, sustenance, leaves cultural footprint and causes regional influence
Economic Factors
# of headquarters for globally influential (in terms of economy) multinational corporations, financial institutions, and law firms
Why is there such a large population growth in developing countries?
Lack of education for girls and women, lack of information and access to birth control, religious beliefs
Megacity clusters with 10+ million by 2030
W Africa, India, China, Japan
Connection by land and
connection by land- internet
New centers of international migration growth
- Rio, Paulo, Alegre, Aires (S America) - S Africa (Namibia, Botswana, Zimbabwe) - Mumbai to Delhi stretch (Pakistan and Southeast Asia) - Japan (same as below) - E China coast, Philippines, SE Asia (Eastern and Southeastern Asia) - Tijuana, Mexico city (from Ctrl America)
Identify
1-2 sentences, Indicate or provide information about a specified topic, without elaboration or explanation
Kyoto-Osaka-Kobe
Large developing corridor/network rivaling Tokyo/Yokohama.
1. Sail-wagon epoch
1790-1830 Very slow, ships and wagons. Period of expansion with primitive overland and waterway circulation - leading cities northeastern ports heavily oriented to European overseas trade - Hinterlands barely accessible.
3. Steel Rail Epoch
1870-1920 long haul railroads and a national railroad network. Major advancement from Industrial Revolution, steel rails speed up transportation
4. Auto-Air Amenity Epoch
1920-1970 Period of maturation of national urban hierarchy, key elements were airplane and automobile, expansion of white-collar services jobs, growing pull of amenities (pleasant environments) stimulating urbanization of the suburbs.
5. High-Technology Epoch
1970-present Advanced cars, commercial airlines, jets, satellites modern technology has facilitated suburbanization and metropolitan decentralization. expansion of service & information industries (not originally part of model)
Communications Factors
19th century invention of telegraph and telephone and 20th century invention of the computer enables immediate worldwide communication with customers, coworkers, clients
Positive effects of rural to urban migration
Access to stable food sources, health care, and education
Global network connections
Air, land, water (flights, ships, trucks, trains, cars, etc.)
Urbanization
An increase in the percentage and in the number of people living in urban settlements.
Regions connections by air
Connect the US, Europe, and East Asia (China) mainly, also Brazil
NYC trade lines
Connect to all over, especially Western Europe. All railroads terminate into NYC
Another large developing network/corridor region
Connects Europe with the rest of the world, high-speed rail Amsterdam-the Hague-Delft-Utrect-Zaanstad
3 types of services
Consumer, business, public
The Epochs can be connected to the
DTM
Borchert's Epochs of Human Grown/Urban Evolution
Five distinct periods in the history of American Urbanization Cities arose because there was an advantage in living close to centers of information exchange and places where most transactions were easier to complete Modern roads, cars, etc, in partnership with digital communications have bolstered suburbanization
2. Iron Horse Epoch
Development of stream trains and steamboats, provided nation-wide transportation system, NYC primate city by 1850 1830-1870
How does urbanization change traditional cultural practices?
Difficulties of holding onto traditional cultural practices in an ever-changing world where you are met with a lot of different people
Connection= efficiency/processing=
ECONOMIC ADVANTAGE!
Six factors used to compile the ranking of global cities
Economic factors, political factors, cultural factors, infrastructure factors, communications, transportation
Railhead
End of rail line, goods loaded, unloaded, transported (rail lines all come into one point, cargo distributed to other rail lines, trucks, container storage facilities, mains of connectivity to other states and the distribution of cargo)
Megacity breakdown by region
Europe: London, Paris, Moscow, Istanbul Americas: New York, LA, Lima, MEX, Rio, Sao, Buen Africa and the Middle East: Lagos, Cairo, Tehran China: Beijing, Shanghai, Shenzhen, Guangzhou, Tianjin, Wuhan India: Mumbai, Delhi, Bangalore, Kolkata Remaining Asia Pacific: Manila, Jakarta, Dhaka, Bangkok, Karachi, Ho Chi Minh City, Seoul, Tokyo, Osaka
Site
Everything in a location- Human & physical characteristics of a place
Types of business services located in Global Cities
Financial institutions, headquarters of large corporations, and Lawyers, accountants, and other professional services
Largest amount of migration growth
India and China, Eastern side of Africa, Mexico
Top 10 cities by future population
JAK (sinking) 38m TOK 37.8 CHONGQING 32.2 DHA 31.2 SHA 25.3 KAR 24.8 KINSH 24.7 LAG 24.2 MEX 23.5 MUM 23.1
Indonesia economy triples
Jakarta projected to become world's largest megacity by 2030
Look at
Kearney Global city index, Swiss KOF index
Site and situation influence
Origin: Why are they there? Resource vs transport Function: How do the fit the entire economy? NYC allows things to operate. Growth: CONNECTIVITY = GROWTH
Shenzhen and Hong Kong are
POLLUTED (bridge between it and Shenzhen, facilitating cooperation between the two areas
Entrepot
Port/city/center to which goods are brought for import, export, collection, and distribution (breaking down imports and exports)
Why does the site and situation of a place influence its role in a globalized world?
Ports/access to trade routes, resources, other parts of the world
Cultural Factors
Presence of educational institutions (colleges, universities), famous cultural organizations/institutions, sports facilities, and well-known, powerful media organizations in the city
Globalization
Process of interaction and integration among the people, companies, and governments of different nations, a process driven by international trade and investment and aided by information technology. This process has effects on the environment, on culture. on political systems, on economic development and prosperity, and on human physical well-being in societies around the world. Countries coming together
Headquarters of large corporations
Shares of corporations are bought and sold on stock exchanges in global cities. Timely obtaining of info is needed to buy & sell shares at attractive prices. Executives of manufacturing firms meet far away from the factories decide what to make, how much to produce, what prices to charge. Support staff far away from factories account for flow of money and materials to and from factories. All this is done in offices in global cities
Relationship between population and growth of megacities in less developed countries
Stresses include poverty issues, squatter settlement growth, infrastructure challenges, work finding issues. Will continue as long as city grows
Head of navigation
The farthest point of travel possible by one means of transportation, i.e. farthest inland a vessel can go
Primate city
The largest city in population and usually the economic, cultural, and political center; commonly found in states with strong central governments (Paris, London, Tokyo). lot of global cities are primate cities
Areas where megacities are increasing in number and growing rapidly
West Africa, India, China, Japan,
Megaregions
a large network of metropolitan regions that share several or all of the following: environmental systems and topography, infrastructure systems, economic linkages, settlement and land use patterns, and/or culture and history (megacities sprawl and merge)
Break-of-bulk
act of unloading, transferring, or distributing part or all of a shipment (truck, air, ship, rail), large amounts of cargo enter in larger cities
Urban
dense area of human settlement with an infrastructure of a built environment (roads, infrastructure, etc.)
Business services
facilitate activities of other services