Maps and Data
Migration
Regional Analysis
Theories/Policies and Key Concepts
Spatial Concepts
100

What is cartography?

The science of map making.

100

What is an example of a push-pull factor?

Push Factor: War

Pull Factor: Better Jobs

100

What is the Malthusian Theory?

The idea that population growth will outpace food supply, leading to catastrophe.

100

What is Absolute and Relative Location?

Absolute Location: Exact location using coordinates (latitude/longitude). 

Relative Location: The position of a place in relation to other places.

200

What is a Thematic Map?

Maps that tell a story, typically showing the degree of some attribute (e.g., choropleth, dot map).

200

What is Chain Migration?

Migration to a specific location because relatives or community members previously migrated there.

200

What is a Brain Drain?

Large-scale emigration of talented or educated people.

200

What is Site and Situation?

Site: The physical character of a place (climate, water sources, elevation). 

Situation: The location of a place relative to other places.


300

What is projection?

The process of transferring a 3D Earth onto a 2D surface, which causes distortion in shape, area, distance, or direction.

300

What is a Refugee?

A person forced to flee their country due to fear of persecution.

300

What is a Formal/Uniform Region?

An area within which everyone shares one or more distinctive characteristics.

300

What is the difference between a Pronatalist and an Antinatalist?

A pronatalist is someone who advocates for or believes it is a moral good to have children to increase birth rates, while an antinatalist is someone who believes that having children is morally wrong or advocates for a reduction in births.

300

What is Concentration?

The spread of something over a given area.

400

What is Remote Sensing?

Gathering data about Earth from satellites or aircraft.

400

What is an Internally Displaced Person(IDP)?

Someone forced to flee their home but remains within their country's borders.

400

What is a Functional/Nodal Region?

An area organized around a node or focal point.

400

What is an Intervening Opportunity/Obstacle?

An environmental or cultural feature that hinders or helps migration.

400

What is Distance Decay?

The diminished importance and eventual disappearance of a phenomenon with increasing distance from its origin.

500

What is a Map Scale?

The ratio of distance on a map to distance on the ground.

500

What is the difference between Interregional and Intraregional Migration

Interregional migration involves moving between different regions of a country, while intraregional migration involves moving within a single region.

500

What is a Vernacular/Perceptual Region?

 An area that people believe exists as part of their cultural identity.

500

What is an Epidemiological Transition?

Distinctive causes of death in each stage of the DTM.

500

What is Tine-Space Compression

The reduction in time it takes for something to reach another place due to technology.