Exam 15: Populations, Cities, and the Environment
Exam 1: Sociology and the Real World120 Questions
Exam 2: Studying Social Life: Sociology Research Methods125 Questions
Exam 3: Culture104 Questions
Exam 4: Socialization, Interaction, and the Self130 Questions
Exam 5: Separate and Together: Life in Groups132 Questions
Exam 6: Deviance122 Questions
Exam 7: Social Class: the Structure of Inequality138 Questions
Exam 8: Race and Ethnicity As Lived Experience127 Questions
Exam 9: Constructing Gender and Sexuality131 Questions
Exam 10: Social Institutions: Politics, Education, and Religion113 Questions
Exam 11: The Economy and Work104 Questions
Exam 12: Life at Home: Families and Relationships114 Questions
Exam 13: Leisure and Media128 Questions
Exam 14: Health and Illness99 Questions
Exam 15: Populations, Cities, and the Environment116 Questions
Exam 16: Social Change130 Questions
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What is the shift of large segments of the population away from the urban core and toward the edges of cities called?
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D
According to Georg Simmel, city dwellers relate to one another
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D
List one of the four major factors that New Malthusians credit with influencing reproductive lives in societies that promote large families.
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One of the four major factors that New Malthusians credit with influencing reproductive lives in societies that promote large families is the cultural or religious belief systems that value high fertility. In many societies, cultural norms and religious teachings encourage large families, often associating them with increased social status, economic benefits, or compliance with religious doctrines. These beliefs can strongly influence individual and collective decisions about family size and reproductive behavior, leading to a preference for larger families.
How do people with an anthropocentric relationship with the environment perceive nature?
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North Dakota has experienced one of the highest population growth rates in the United States in the recent past due to an oil boom. Which demographic variable explains this?
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Huge numbers of dispossessed U.S. farmers left places like Oklahoma and moved to California during the Great Depression of the 1930s. This is an example of
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________ is one of the categories of urbanites identified by Herbert Gans in his ethnography Urban Villagers.
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The study of human populations and their impact on the natural world is called
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________ contributed to the rapid population growth in Europe around the time of Thomas Malthus in the eighteenth century.
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How is the new ecological paradigm different from the attitudes of human exceptionalism that preceded it?
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Which of the following is an example of a way to collect demographic data?
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According to demographers, Milwaukee is a ________ because it has over 500,000 inhabitants.
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The Environmental Protection Agency claims that the United States has one of the safest supplies of drinking water in the world, but
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During the rise of suburbanization in the 1950s and 1960s, ________ were MOST likely to move away from the urban core to the suburbs.
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The attempt to reconcile global economic growth with environmental protection is called
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What is a person reducing if they start taking public transportation and riding a bicycle?
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Think about the town in which you are currently living. What changes could be made to make it more smart-growth friendly?
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Oxygen is an example of a renewable resource, as it is a natural resource that can be replenished by plants and trees.
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Modern economies require constant growth, and with that growth comes an ever-increasing need for resources called
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