Deck 9: The Geography of Population

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Question
What, ultimately, does the current distribution of population reflect?

A) desire for coastal settlements
B) reliance on agriculture
C) desire for moderate climates
D) reliance on raw materials
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Question
Besides having a large population, what else do the most powerful countries in the world today also typically have?

A) strong culture
B) abundant land
C) strong economy
D) abundant resources
Question
Where in a hypothetical, developed country would the population with the least economic importance or political power relative to their size be located?

A) rural areas
B) urban areas
C) capital cities
D) coastal cities
Question
What term describes the long-term redistributions of population as people move to areas of greater economic opportunity?

A) demographic cumulative causation
B) rural-to-urban migration
C) demographic dividend
D) economic migration
Question
What is NOT a category of social difference?

A) Age
B) Biological organs
C) Gender
D) Race/ethnicity
Question
Where in the world would the lowest female participation rates likely be found?

A) Cambodia
B) United States
C) Afghanistan
D) Zambia
Question
Where would you expect to find the lowest average age of a woman giving birth to her first child?

A) Honduras
B) Japan
C) Hong Kong
D) Europe
Question
What term describes the way that societies construct and use racial categories in ways that embody political power?

A) socioeconomic categories
B) ethnicity
C) racialized groups
D) segregation
Question
What is the best description of an imposed ethnicity?

A) In the Persian Gulf, ethnic identities come from long histories of tribal distinctions.
B) Latinos in the US Census have been given distinct labels from the white majority.
C) In Canada, ethnically and linguistically French persons protect their distinct culture.
D) Kurds have retained their homogeneity and homeland across Syria, Turkey, and Iraq.
Question
What is NOT a likely reason for the emergence of a racial/ethnic neighborhood cluster?

A) People often prefer to live with people like themselves.
B) Such areas provide a comfortable, supportive role in a new society.
C) People often are forced to live with people like themselves.
D) Such areas allow minorities to assimilate with majority society easier.
Question
What term best describes the notion that social groups will mutually change one another and society as they interact in complex ways over successive generations?

A) assimilation
B) polyculturalism
C) melting pot
D) multicultural society
Question
What best describes a daily space-time path?

A) Each person's daily traces through space and time.
B) Daily space-time paths are constrained by fixed pegs.
C) Path prisms vary in their space-time availability ranges.
D) All of these.
Question
What is transhumance?

A) Traditional movement of migrating herders between greener sites for pasture.
B) Seasonal, instinctual migratory wild animal herds pursued by hunter-gatherers.
C) Traditional movement of mountain herders from summer to winter pasture.
D) Seasonal migrations of human hunter-gatherer groups between hunting grounds.
Question
When is rural to urban migration NOT a permanent move?

A) when it is seasonal and circular
B) when the migrant arrives alone
C) when it is one-way and anytime of the year
D) when the city job is only temporary
Question
What example best illustrates the intersection between transhumance and rural to urban migration?

A) Scottish sheepherders appear each spring in town to shear and sell their wool.
B) The Maasai in Eastern Africa pick up tourists in Kinshasa for tours of nearby reserves.
C) Coastal Inuits follow the summer's shift in day length northward to hunt seals.
D) The Bracero Program of 1942 allowed Mexicans entry to work in US as farm laborers.
Question
In developed countries with many dense cities, a high percent urban population, and a low percent rural population, what type of internal migration would you expect to be foremost?

A) suburbanization
B) urban-to-urban migration
C) rural-to-urban migration
D) transhumance
Question
What was a result of the forced migrations of the slave trade?

A) profits accumulated in Europe and Americas
B) over eight million West and Central Africans died
C) entirely new cultures emerged in the New World
D) all of these
Question
What is a remittance?

A) An important commodity for attracting investment capital from overseas.
B) A hypermobile form of investment capital that flows between wealthy countries.
C) A form of capital that economic migrants send back to their home country.
D) An aggregate measure of all the money a country earns from its economic migrants.
Question
What is NOT one of the characteristics of a gateway city?

A) destination of international migrants
B) high percentage of foreign-born residents
C) political and economic capital of a country
D) site of diasporic communities and hybrid identities
Question
What model of population movement represents the comparative assessment of characteristics between origin and destination that often characterizes the decision-making of voluntary migrants?

A) Ravenstein
B) Gravity
C) Lee's Push-Pull
D) Zelinsky
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Deck 9: The Geography of Population
1
What, ultimately, does the current distribution of population reflect?

A) desire for coastal settlements
B) reliance on agriculture
C) desire for moderate climates
D) reliance on raw materials
B
2
Besides having a large population, what else do the most powerful countries in the world today also typically have?

A) strong culture
B) abundant land
C) strong economy
D) abundant resources
C
3
Where in a hypothetical, developed country would the population with the least economic importance or political power relative to their size be located?

A) rural areas
B) urban areas
C) capital cities
D) coastal cities
A
4
What term describes the long-term redistributions of population as people move to areas of greater economic opportunity?

A) demographic cumulative causation
B) rural-to-urban migration
C) demographic dividend
D) economic migration
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 20 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
What is NOT a category of social difference?

A) Age
B) Biological organs
C) Gender
D) Race/ethnicity
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 20 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
Where in the world would the lowest female participation rates likely be found?

A) Cambodia
B) United States
C) Afghanistan
D) Zambia
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 20 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
Where would you expect to find the lowest average age of a woman giving birth to her first child?

A) Honduras
B) Japan
C) Hong Kong
D) Europe
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 20 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
What term describes the way that societies construct and use racial categories in ways that embody political power?

A) socioeconomic categories
B) ethnicity
C) racialized groups
D) segregation
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 20 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
What is the best description of an imposed ethnicity?

A) In the Persian Gulf, ethnic identities come from long histories of tribal distinctions.
B) Latinos in the US Census have been given distinct labels from the white majority.
C) In Canada, ethnically and linguistically French persons protect their distinct culture.
D) Kurds have retained their homogeneity and homeland across Syria, Turkey, and Iraq.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 20 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
What is NOT a likely reason for the emergence of a racial/ethnic neighborhood cluster?

A) People often prefer to live with people like themselves.
B) Such areas provide a comfortable, supportive role in a new society.
C) People often are forced to live with people like themselves.
D) Such areas allow minorities to assimilate with majority society easier.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 20 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
What term best describes the notion that social groups will mutually change one another and society as they interact in complex ways over successive generations?

A) assimilation
B) polyculturalism
C) melting pot
D) multicultural society
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 20 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
What best describes a daily space-time path?

A) Each person's daily traces through space and time.
B) Daily space-time paths are constrained by fixed pegs.
C) Path prisms vary in their space-time availability ranges.
D) All of these.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 20 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
What is transhumance?

A) Traditional movement of migrating herders between greener sites for pasture.
B) Seasonal, instinctual migratory wild animal herds pursued by hunter-gatherers.
C) Traditional movement of mountain herders from summer to winter pasture.
D) Seasonal migrations of human hunter-gatherer groups between hunting grounds.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 20 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
When is rural to urban migration NOT a permanent move?

A) when it is seasonal and circular
B) when the migrant arrives alone
C) when it is one-way and anytime of the year
D) when the city job is only temporary
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 20 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
What example best illustrates the intersection between transhumance and rural to urban migration?

A) Scottish sheepherders appear each spring in town to shear and sell their wool.
B) The Maasai in Eastern Africa pick up tourists in Kinshasa for tours of nearby reserves.
C) Coastal Inuits follow the summer's shift in day length northward to hunt seals.
D) The Bracero Program of 1942 allowed Mexicans entry to work in US as farm laborers.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 20 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
In developed countries with many dense cities, a high percent urban population, and a low percent rural population, what type of internal migration would you expect to be foremost?

A) suburbanization
B) urban-to-urban migration
C) rural-to-urban migration
D) transhumance
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 20 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
What was a result of the forced migrations of the slave trade?

A) profits accumulated in Europe and Americas
B) over eight million West and Central Africans died
C) entirely new cultures emerged in the New World
D) all of these
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 20 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
What is a remittance?

A) An important commodity for attracting investment capital from overseas.
B) A hypermobile form of investment capital that flows between wealthy countries.
C) A form of capital that economic migrants send back to their home country.
D) An aggregate measure of all the money a country earns from its economic migrants.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 20 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
What is NOT one of the characteristics of a gateway city?

A) destination of international migrants
B) high percentage of foreign-born residents
C) political and economic capital of a country
D) site of diasporic communities and hybrid identities
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 20 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
What model of population movement represents the comparative assessment of characteristics between origin and destination that often characterizes the decision-making of voluntary migrants?

A) Ravenstein
B) Gravity
C) Lee's Push-Pull
D) Zelinsky
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 20 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
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Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 20 flashcards in this deck.