Industrial Revolution
Economic Sectors
Measures of Development
Theories/Models of Development
Sustainability
100

What is Industrialization?

The process of converting production of goods from manual labor to machine made.

100

What are some examples of activities from the primary sector?

Resource gathering such as agriculture, fishing, mining, etc.

100

What is the GDP (Gross Domestic Product)?

The value of the total output of goods and services produced in a country in a year, not accounting for money that enters and leaves a country. 

100
What is the Brandt Line?

An imaginary line that separates the MDCs in the Northern Hemisphere from the LDCs in the Southern Hemisphere.

100

What is sustainability?

Meeting the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs. 
200

What is a direct effect of industrialization?

Furthers human development, creates new machines, and improves the production of goods. (Anything applied)

200

What is the tertiary sector?

The sector that provides services such as retail, healthcare, finance, education, and entertainment. 

200

What measures the factors that lead to development in the economy?

The Human Development Index (HDI)

200

What comprises Wallerstein's World System Theory?

A three-tier structure showing global development by country starting with periphery, moving to semi-periphery, and then core countries being the most developed. 

200

What is ecotourism?

A form of tourism based on the enjoyment of scenic areas or natural wonders that aims to provide a experience of nature or culture in an environmentally sustainable way

300

How does the availability of natural resources affect industrialization. 

Provides a source of materials to facilitate the process of industrialization and can make or break whether or not it happens. (Anything related) 

300

How does the primary sector directly affect the secondary sector?

Serves as a foundation by providing raw materials that are then harvested and taken to the secondary sector for manufacturing into finished goods. 
300

What does an economy that has commodity dependence experience?

A reliance on the export of primary commodities for a large share of its export earnings and economic growth

300

What are the 5 stages of economic growth based off Rostow's model? 

Traditional, Pre-Conditions to Take Off, Take Off, Drive to Maturity, and High Mass Consumption.

300

What's an example of an unsustainable use of land?

A brownfield, a property which has the presence of potential to be a hazardous waste, pollutant or contaminant. (former gas stations, dry cleaners)

400

How did industrialization expand/impact the middle class?

Growth of businesses and factories with rapidly growing job opportunities. 

400

What is the difference between the quaternary and quinary sector?

Quinary is related to high-level thinking, decisions, and data gathering on the government level, while quaternary is lower level knowledge, with research and information transfer at the city level. 

400

What opportunities do microloans provide for women?

Provides opportunity to create small businesses and improve standards of living
400

How is the dependency theory defined?

A structuralist theory that offers a critique of the modernization model of development. Stems from the idea of political and economic relations between countries/regions and the arrangements they have to  control/limit a regions development. 

400

What's the result of non-sustainable events?

Results in mass depletion's, the loss of diversity through a failure to produce new species

500

What were the global development and economic changes brought about from the Industrial Revolution?

Allowed countries to progress to the next stage of development, increased production, grew urbanization, and advanced technology. 

500

How does the size/reliance on a certain sector reflect a country's level of development? 

More developed countries may shift from primary to secondary and tertiary focused, reflecting more industrialization and services. 

500

What is the role of women in the workforce?

Roles of women change as countries develop, they have limitations and low equity in wages and employment opportunities

500

What is the location theory? 

An attempt to explain the locational pattern of economic activities and the manner in which its producing areas are interrelated. 

500

What energy is the most sustainable?

Renewable energy, something produced in nature more rapidly than it is consumed by humans