Human geography
this entry includes skills, concepts and content for AP Human Geography
Human geography
- = deeper understanding of human use of space, distance, localities and other interactions with the earth
- includes:
- resources
- land use, including mining, farming, etc.
- population
- language
- economies
- urbanization
- connections & intersections
Demography/ demographics[edit | edit source]
- = study of human organizations and sub-categories for classification
- including, age, employment, economics, ethnicity, location, race, religion, sex, social class, etc.
Demographic transition[edit | edit source]
Five stages of demographic transition[edit | edit source]
- theory of shifts in populations from high to low birth/death rates
- driven by industrialization, globalism, and mechanized argriculture
- these shifts happen in different places at different times
- demographic analysis can be empowered by these categories
pre-Stage 1[edit | edit source]
- pre-Agriculture or early agriculture (Neolithic)
- hunter-gatherers
- nomadic pastoral (herders)
- low fertility rates
- hunter-gatherer societies, women typically have babies every 4-5 years
- stable population
Stage 1[edit | edit source]
- marked by both high birth and death rates
- pre-industrial agricultural period
- high fertility rates
- in pre-industrial agricultural societies, women typically have babies every 2 years
- high birth rates coincident w/ high death rates
- = stable population
- = high birth rate for population replacement
- most people involved in agriculture
- includes herding, farming
- population dependent upon food supply
- susceptible to famines and environmental
- susceptible = easily impacted by
- susceptible to famines and environmental
Stage 2[edit | edit source]
- falling death rates and ongoing high birth rates
- = high population growth
- declines in death rates due to
- higher agricultural yields, due to
- crop rotation
- soil management
- seed and seeding technologies
- lower early-age death rates due to better hygiene
- higher agricultural yields, due to
- public health improvement due to
- sewerage:
- fresh water supply
- sewage disposal
- general better hygiene
- sewerage:
- ongoing high-birth rates due to dependence on agriculture
Stage 3[edit | edit source]
- low death rates and lower birth rates
- lower fertility
- less need for farm labor
- contraception
- movement of women into workforce
- more educational opportunities for women
- urbanization
- increase in literacy
- decline in youth dependency ratio
- leads to increasing population aging
Stage 4[edit | edit source]
- lower death and birth rates
- leads to decline in population growth
- larger female integration into education and workplace and general independence
Stage 5[edit | edit source]
- lower death rates and birth rates below replacement levels
- sub-replacement fertility
- population aging and decline
- Stage 5 countries without immigration will have population declines
key terms[edit | edit source]
agriculture[edit | edit source]
- food supply
- soil management
- irrigation
- crop yields
- seeds/ seed technology
- genetic manipulation
- mechanized agriculture
population[edit | edit source]
- birth/death rate
- fertility rate
- mortality rate
- fertility factors
- contraception
- population momentum
- population aging
- sub-replacement fertility
- baby boom
- urbanization
health conditions[edit | edit source]
- hygiene
- vaccinations
- public health
- sewers/ sewage treatment
- disease
- health care
age[edit | edit source]
- age stratification
- dependency ratio
- working age population
- dependent window
- demographic dividend
- demographic trap