Maps and Population
Cultural Geography
Political Geography
Models
Theories
100

The level at which geographic data is analyzed and displayed.

What is scale of analysis?

100

The attitude or belief that one's own group, ethnicity, or nationality is superior to others.

What is ethnocentrism?

100

The use of economic, political, cultural, or other pressures to control or influence other countries, especially former dependencies.

What is neocolonialism?

100

This measures the Crude Birth Rate, Crude Death Rate, and Natural Increase Rate as countries go through development stages.

What is the Demographic Transition Model?

100

This theory explains the optimal location of manufacturing industries based on minimizing transportation, labor, and agglomeration costs.

What is Least Cost Theory?

200

Something that motivates a person to migrate away from their place of residence.

What is a push factor?

200

A type of religion that is universally applicable to all people, regardless of race, ethnicity, culture, or geographic location.

What is a universalizing religion?

200

Attitudes, ideologies, institutions, or conditions that bind a state's population together and foster national identity.

What is a centripetal force?

200

This model postulates that economic development occurs in five basic stages that all countries must go through to become developed, often linearly.

What is Rostow's stages of growth?

200

This theory refers to how the price and demand for real estate change as the distance from the central business increases.

What is Bid Rent Theory?

300

A rate that is measured through the formula (Crude Birth Rate - Crude Death Rate)/1000.

What is the Natural Increase Rate?

300

The spread of ideas from authority figures or places of power to other people or locations.

What is hierarchical diffusion?

300

The manipulation of an electoral constituency's boundaries so as to favor one party or class.

What is gerrymandering?

300

This model describes the spatial relationship between developed regions and less developed regions, how developed regions reap resources and labor from developed regions.

What is the Core-Periphery Model?

300

This theory suggests that environmental factors influence the development of human qualities.

What is environmental determinism?

400

A place defined by a person's sense of place and does not have agreed on boundaries.

What is a vernacular region?

400

The merging of various distinct cultural or religious ideas to form a new idea.

What is syncretism?

400

A boundary that existed before the cultural landscape emerged and is often based on physical features such as rivers or mountains.

What is an antecedent boundary?

400

This model focuses on the relationship between the cost of land and the cost of transporting goods, determining where agricultural industries are located.

What is the Von Thunen Model?

400

This theory seeks to explain the number, size and range of market services in a commercial system or human settlements in a residential system.

What is Central Place Theory?

500

The number of people per unit area of arable land.

What is physiological density?

500

A language that is adopted as a common language between speakers whose native languages are different.

What is a lingua franca?

500

The fragmentation of an area, country, or region into smaller, and often hostile, independent states, often based on ethnic or cultural lines.

What is balkanization?

500

A set of principles that described migration patterns and behaviors during the late 19th century.

What are the Laws of Migration?

500

This theory suggests that if population growth continues unchecked, it will lead to famine, disease, and conflict as resources become insufficient.

What is Malthusian Theory?

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