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Human Geography — Place diffusion, Desert (extended) Glossary

25 essential terms — because precise language is the foundation of clear thinking in Human Geography — Place diffusion, Desert (extended).

Showing 25 of 25 terms

The exact position of a place on Earth's surface, typically expressed using latitude and longitude coordinates.

Related:Relative LocationSite and Situation

The maximum population size that an environment can sustain indefinitely given the available resources, food, habitat, and water.

Related:SustainabilityMalthusian Theory

A systematic count and survey of a population, typically conducted by a government at regular intervals to gather demographic, economic, and social data.

Related:DemographyPopulation Density

A model of spatial organization in which power, wealth, and development are concentrated in core regions while peripheral regions remain dependent and less developed.

Related:World-Systems TheorySpatial Inequality

The visible imprint of human activity and culture on the natural landscape, including buildings, field patterns, roads, and monuments.

Related:Sense of PlaceCultural Diffusion

The shift from high birth and death rates to low birth and death rates as a country develops economically and socially.

Related:Population PyramidFertility Rate

The transfer or delegation of political power from a central government to subnational or regional authorities.

Related:SovereigntySupranational Organization

The dispersion of a people from their original homeland, often maintaining cultural ties and identity in their new locations.

Related:MigrationTransnationalism

The theory that the physical environment, rather than social conditions, determines culture and human development.

Related:PossibilismHuman-Environment Interaction

A geographic area with a high concentration of a particular ethnic group, often featuring businesses and institutions catering to that community.

Related:SegregationCultural Landscape

The average number of children born to a woman over her lifetime. The total fertility rate (TFR) is a key measure in demography.

Related:Demographic TransitionPopulation Growth

The renovation and improvement of a neighborhood by wealthier newcomers, often resulting in rising costs and displacement of existing residents.

Related:UrbanizationSpatial Inequality

The manipulation of electoral district boundaries to favor a particular political party or group.

Related:TerritorialityPolitical Geography

Computer-based systems for capturing, storing, analyzing, and displaying geographically referenced data.

Related:Remote SensingCartography

The increasing integration and interdependence of national economies, cultures, and populations through cross-border flows of goods, services, technology, and people.

Related:Time-Space CompressionTransnationalism

A composite index measuring a country's average achievement in health, education, and standard of living, developed by the United Nations.

Related:Spatial InequalityDevelopment

A metropolitan area with a total population exceeding 10 million people.

Related:UrbanizationPrimate City

The movement of people from one place to another with the intention of settling in a new location, either temporarily or permanently.

Related:Push and Pull FactorsDiaspora

A political entity in which the boundaries of the state coincide with the territory occupied by a nation (a group sharing common culture, language, and identity).

Related:SovereigntyTerritoriality

The number of people per unit of area, commonly expressed as persons per square kilometer or square mile.

Related:Carrying CapacityUrbanization

The geographic theory that the environment provides possibilities and constraints but human cultures ultimately determine which possibilities are realized.

Related:Environmental DeterminismCultural Landscape

The acquisition of information about the Earth's surface from sensors mounted on satellites or aircraft, without direct physical contact.

Related:GISCartography

The level of geographic analysis, ranging from local to regional to national to global. The scale at which a phenomenon is examined can affect the conclusions drawn.

Related:Spatial AnalysisRegion

The supreme authority of a state to govern itself and its territory without external interference.

Related:Nation-StateDevolution

The uncontrolled expansion of urban development into surrounding rural areas, characterized by low-density, car-dependent land use.

Related:SuburbanizationUrbanization
Human Geography — Place diffusion, Desert (extended) Glossary - Key Terms & Definitions | PiqCue