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Human Geography: Places and
Regions in Global Context, 5e
 Chapter 3: Geographies of Population
  Paul L. Knox & Sallie A. Marston
  PowerPoint Author: Keith M. Bell
Chapter Objectives
• The objectives of this chapter are to:
• Examine the national census and understand its
  limitations
• Investigate population distribution and structure
• Explore various population dynamics and
  processes
• Understand population movement and migration
• Discuss current population policies and debates
Chapter Outline
• The Demographer’s Toolbox          •   Population Movement and
  (p. 84)                                Migration (p. 107)
   – Censuses and vital records          – Migration types and definitions
   – Limitations of the census           – International voluntary
• Population Distribution and              migration
  Structure (p. 86)                      – International forced migration
   – Population distribution             – Internal voluntary migration
   – Population density and              – Internal forced migration
     composition                     •   Population Debates and
   – Age–sex pyramids                    Policies (p. 123)
• Population Dynamics and                – Population, resources, and
  Processes (p. 100)                       Thomas Malthus
   – Birth rates                         – Population policies
   – Death rates                         – Sustainable development and
   – Demographic transition theory         gender
                                     •   Conclusion (p. 124)
Geography Matters
• 3.1 Geography Matters—GIS Applications
  and Google Earth (p. 92)
  – How GIS and Google Earth can be used in marketing
    and urban planning
• 3.2 Geography Matters—The Baby Boom
  and the Aging of the Population (p. 97)
  – The burden of funding social security is shifting to
    Generations X and Y
• 3.3 Geography Matters—Internal
  Displacement (p. 108)
  – The flow of refugees globally—and the impacts of the
    “War on Terror” on internal displacement
Geographies of
                Populations
Population geographers depend on
   a wide array of data sources to
          assess the geography of
                      populations.

          Population geographers
  investigate “the why of where.”

 Two important factors that make
 up population dynamics are birth
                      and death.

  Push and pull factors impact the
 movement of populations around
                         the globe.

UN Millennium Summit: How can
  the global economy provide the
 world’s growing population with
  enough food and water and still
             support a sustainable
                    environment?
World Population Density, 2006




 Degree of accessibility, topography, soil fertility, climate and weather,
 water availability and quality, and type and availability of other natural
 resources are some of the factors that shape population distribution.
The Demographer’s Toolbox
    Demography is the study of the
         characteristics of human
                      populations.

     A census is a straightforward
 count of the number of people in a
            country, region, or city.

    Population experts employ data
  sources like vital records, which
        is a report of births, deaths,
       marriages, divorces, and the
     incidence of certain infectious
                            diseases.

             No census is entirely
                comprehensive (or
    comprehensible). All censuses
           tend to under-represent
          nonmainstream kinds of
   households, as well as homeless
                       individuals.

    Federal funding can have a real
          impact on peoples’ lives.
Population Distribution of Egypt, 2004
Population Density and Composition
• One way to explore population dynamics is in terms of
  density, a numerical measure of the relationship between
  the number of people and some other unit of interest
  expressed as a ratio.
• Crude density is the total number of people divided by
  total land area.
• Nutritional density is the ratio between the total
  population and the amount of land under cultivation in a
  given unit of area.
• Agricultural density is the ratio between the number of
  agriculturists per unit of farmable land in a specific area.
• Geodemographic analysis is the practice of assessing the
  location and composition of particular populations.
Population Density: Melbourne,
               Australia




Melbourne represents a classic low-density urban settlement predicated on a
quarter-acre home and garden enabled by the widespread use of automobiles. Since
the 1990s, Melbourne has begun to address this sprawling urban form through infill.
Population Density: Tokyo, Japan




Urban form in Tokyo is the result of many factors. Most important in terms of its
population size is its role as a central node in the world systems of cities. The urban
economy is complex, requiring a wide range of labor skills from professional and
managerial to low-skilled, service-oriented workers.
Health Care Density




 In this cartogram (a map/diagram fusion) , the core countries and
 China have the highest ratio of doctors to overall population. Most
 of Africa has the lowest ratio, reflecting another dimension of
 core–periphery inequality.
Population Pyramids, 2006




The shape of an age–sex pyramid varies depending on the proportion of people in
each cohort. The pyramid for the peripheral countries reveals that many dependent
children, ages 0–14, exist relative to the rest of the population. The core countries
pyramid illustrates the typical shape for a country experiencing low birthrates.
GIS Applications   •   The key to using GIS effectively in
                       marketing is the ability to link

and Google Earth       demographic data to particular
                       locations. This is known as
                       georeferencing.
                   •   Demographic data are linked to ZIP
                       codes and telephone prefix zones. Is it a
                       meaningful spatial relationship?
                   •   GIS is often used in locational analysis,
                       determining where to locate a business.
                   •   The potential for invasion of privacy
                       through the coupling of different sorts
                       of data sets is very real.
                   •   Google Earth enables users to go
                       anywhere on Earth by way of satellite
                       imagery, maps, terrain models, and 3-D
                       buildings. But skeptics believe it is a
                       surveillance mechanism in disguise.
                   •   Geospatial technologies offer solutions
                       to complex problems, but also frighten
                       others who foresee Orwellian outcomes.
U.S. Boomers, 1969–2000

                                        Old-age
                                      cohort: 65+
Youth cohort:
 ages 0–14




Middle cohort:
ages 15–64
Uses of Population Pyramids




Age–sex pyramids can vary within different census tracts of the same
city. The tracts show that even within a city, variation in populations can
be substantial. Information like this can be very valuable in decision-
making and policymaking at varying government levels, as well as
marketing through targeted mailings.
U.S. Baby Boom Crude Birthrate




 How do population geographers and demographers mark the beginning and
 end of a generation? What are these statisticians and analysts calling your
 generation? Is this a fitting moniker? Who belongs in your generation?
Baby Boom and the Aging
      Population
            • Demographic Factors
            • Political and Economic
              Factors
            • The Aging of the
              Population
            • The Impacts on Younger
              Americans
               – Generation X (1965–1975)
               – Naming the next generation:
                 Generation Y or Echo
                 Boomers, iGeneration or
                 NetGeneration
The Net Generation
Members of the Net Generation, people who are currently in their late
teens to late twenties, are faced with the awesome burden of having to
help support a huge, aging, baby boom population. They are likely to
continue to drive demand around increasingly sophisticated personal
technology.
World Crude Birthrate, 2007




Crude birthrates and crude death rates are often indicators of the levels of
economic development in individual countries. The doubling time is a measure of
how long it will take the population of an area to grow to twice its current size.
World Crude Death Rates, 2007




The global pattern of crude death rates varies from crude birthrates. Most apparent is
that the difference between highest and lowest crude death rates is relatively smaller
than is the case for crude birthrates, reflecting the impact of factors related to the
middle phases of the demographic transition.
Total Fertility Rate and
                Birth Control




Birth control programs coupled with improved educational and economic
opportunities for women have proved to be far more effective than birth
control policies alone. But in India, a good example of a pluralistic society,
issues of ethnicity complicate things because one ethnic group is fearful that
if it limits its births, it will soon be outnumbered by another ethnic group.
World Rates of Natural Increase, 2007




The difference between the CBR and CDR is the rate of natural increase, the
surplus of births over deaths; or the rate of natural decrease, the deficit of
births relative to deaths.
Demographic Transition Model
              •   A demographic transition is a
                  model of population change in
                  which high birth and death rates are
                  replaced by low birth and death
                  rates.
              •   Once a society moves from a
                  preindustrial economic base to an
                  industrial one, population grows
                  more slowly.
              •   The slowing of population growth is
                  attributable to improved economic
                  production and higher standards of
                  living brought about by better health
                  care, education, and sanitation.
              •   Some experts insist that the
                  usefulness of the model is
                  applicable only to the demographic
                  history of core countries.
World Infant Mortality Rate, 2007




The geography of poverty underlies the patterns on this map. These rates
reflect a number of factors including inadequate or completely absent
maternal health care, as well as poor nutrition for infants.
Migration Patterns
Mobility and Migration
• Mobility may be used to
  describe a wide array of
  human movement, ranging
  from a journey to work to an
  ocean-spanning permanent
  move.
   – Emigration and immigration
   – International migration and
     internal migration
   – Gross migration and net
     migration
   – Push factors vs. pull factors
   – Voluntary migration vs. forced
     migration
   – Refugees, IDPs, guest workers,
     and transnational migrants
Internal Voluntary Migration:
       Suburbanization
               •   By the early twentieth century,
                   residents fled to the suburbs to
                   get away from the new
                   immigrants and their increasing
                   hold over urban political
                   machines.
               •   Automobile dependency and
                   energy costs in the twenty-first
                   century will likely impact the
                   suburbs (and exurbs further
                   out) in a negative way.
               •   A general migration trend to the
                   west and south is apparent over
                   the past century.
Internal Forced Migration: Ethiopia
Another causality of ecological catastrophe is Ethiopia where late rains,
failure of crops, and soaring food prices have led to severe food crisis and
dislocation. This population dislocation caused by the degradation of land
and essential natural resources is called eco-migration.
Population Debates and Policies
                • Thomas Malthus and Neo-
                  Malthusians
                   – Food is necessary to the existence
                     of humans.
                   – The passion between the sexes is
                     necessary and constant.
                • William Godwin, Karl Marx,
                  and Friedrich Engels
                   – Human knowledge can overcome
                     population pressures with
                     technology and equitable
                     distribution of resources.
                • Moderates of this “population
                  and resources” argument see the
                  issue not as a population or
                  economic problem, but a
                  political one.
Population Policies and Programs
Improving the economic status of women is central to the success of
controlling population growth (as with these Afghani girls). Access to
education and employment security are seen as critical factors shaping a
woman’s decisions about how many children to have and when to have them.
UN World Summit—MDGs




          The MDGs reflect the neoliberal turn in
          international development, with the
          intent of enabling peripheral countries
          to achieve core economic standards of
          wealth and prosperity.
End of Chapter 3
Discussion Topics and Lecture
            Themes
• Gather census data (the age and sex of the
  population) for the local community. Then use
  this information to construct an age–sex pyramid
  for the community. What features are revealed
  by the age–sex pyramid?
  – Census data for communities in the United States can
    be obtained from the U.S. Census Bureau’s website
    at http://www.census.gov/. Information for other
    countries can also be obtained from the U.S. Census
    Bureau’s website at
    http://www.census.gov/ipc/www/idb/ and from the
    Population Research Bureau’s site at
    http://www.pop.psu.edu.
Discussion Topics and Lecture
            Themes
• Have the students look at sample census
  questions on the Census Bureau’s website at
  www.census.gov. What kind of information is
  gathered by the census? Are there any potential
  problems in gathering this type of data?
  – In addition to counting the number of people in the
    country, the census also collects data on number of
    households in the country, people’s racial and ethnic
    associations, age, marital status, occupation,
    respondent’s type of residential structure, and many
    other details. Problems include ambiguity in racial and
    ethnic classification, under-representation of non-
    mainstream households and homeless people,
    among others.
Discussion Topics and Lecture
             Themes
• Using the image for Figure 3.2, what do you note about
  the distribution of the world’s population? What factors
  account for this uneven distribution? Why do some parts
  of the world have extremely low population densities?
   – Population is unevenly distributed around the world. Reasons for
     low densities include unproductive natural environments, such
     as desert, mountain, or tundra environments.
Discussion Topics and Lecture
               Themes
•   Again using the image for Figure 3.2, as well as the data in Table 3.1, discuss
    how North America compares in terms of its share of the world’s population
    and population density. Then discuss this information in the context of the
    immigration question in the United States. Does the United States have room
    for more immigrants?
     – North America (which in Table 3.1 does not include Mexico or any part of Latin
       America) contains only 5 percent of the world’s total population—a very small
       percentage. Students will have varying opinions as to immigration and potential
       overpopulation, but many may not realize that 95 percent of the world’s population
       lives outside of North America.
Discussion Topics and Lecture
            Themes
• Some of your students may belong to Generation X
  (people born between 1965 and 1980, approximately).
  Generations are often defined in terms of shared
  experiences. Ask the students what experiences their
  generation has shared, and how this creates a sense of
  being part of a generation. Does Generation X share any
  significant experience equivalent to the sharing of the
  Vietnam War, the Sexual Revolution, or the Civil Rights
  movement by the Baby Boom generation? Is it too early
  to tell what Generation X’s shared experiences might
  be?
   – The same question can be asked of members of that generation
     born after 1980. Are there noticeable differences in values and
     attitudes between students born before and after 1980?
Discussion Topics and Lecture
             Themes
• Overpopulation is often a popular topic with students.
  First, ask them whether they think the world—or parts of
  the world—is overpopulated today. Second, ask them
  how they define overpopulation. Many will likely respond
  “too many people in a place.” Then ask them if they think
  that places like Japan are overpopulated, despite
  Japan’s lack of food and other resources. The students
  should realize that overpopulation is a value-laden term,
  with many different possible definitions.
   – This question provides an opportunity to initiate debate on how
     values shape population policies such as those regarding
     immigration.
Discussion Topics and Lecture
            Themes
• How can Geographical Information Systems
  (GIS) be used in locating retail businesses?
  – This question allows the students to see one practical
    application of geographic methods. You or the
    students could try contacting local retailers (especially
    chain retailers, such as Starbucks or McDonald’s) to
    see if they will provide information about how they
    select their retail outlet locations. The Geography
    Matters 3.1 boxed text also provides information
    about this issue.
Discussion Topics and Lecture
            Themes
• How is the burden of social security and other public
  goods being shifted onto the “Baby Boom” generation?
   – Have the students use census data (see the discussion for
     Question #1, above, for details on how to gather census data)
     for the local region, state, or country as a whole and construct
     age–sex pyramids. Use these pyramids to show how the large
     “Baby Boom” cohort is aging, while the following generations
     (those born between 1965 and the present) are smaller,
     therefore putting pressure on those generations when baby
     boomers retire and become dependent on younger generations.
     Also see the Geography Matters 3.2 boxed text for more
     information.
Discussion Topics and Lecture
            Themes
• What natural disasters have taken place in
  or near the local community? How has this
  affected population?
  – Consult local histories, museums, or
    newspapers for information on what may have
    taken place in the local area. Students may
    also want to examine impacts of natural
    disasters in other areas, such as the impacts
    of hurricanes on the Gulf Coast.

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Human geography3

  • 1. Human Geography: Places and Regions in Global Context, 5e Chapter 3: Geographies of Population Paul L. Knox & Sallie A. Marston PowerPoint Author: Keith M. Bell
  • 2. Chapter Objectives • The objectives of this chapter are to: • Examine the national census and understand its limitations • Investigate population distribution and structure • Explore various population dynamics and processes • Understand population movement and migration • Discuss current population policies and debates
  • 3. Chapter Outline • The Demographer’s Toolbox • Population Movement and (p. 84) Migration (p. 107) – Censuses and vital records – Migration types and definitions – Limitations of the census – International voluntary • Population Distribution and migration Structure (p. 86) – International forced migration – Population distribution – Internal voluntary migration – Population density and – Internal forced migration composition • Population Debates and – Age–sex pyramids Policies (p. 123) • Population Dynamics and – Population, resources, and Processes (p. 100) Thomas Malthus – Birth rates – Population policies – Death rates – Sustainable development and – Demographic transition theory gender • Conclusion (p. 124)
  • 4. Geography Matters • 3.1 Geography Matters—GIS Applications and Google Earth (p. 92) – How GIS and Google Earth can be used in marketing and urban planning • 3.2 Geography Matters—The Baby Boom and the Aging of the Population (p. 97) – The burden of funding social security is shifting to Generations X and Y • 3.3 Geography Matters—Internal Displacement (p. 108) – The flow of refugees globally—and the impacts of the “War on Terror” on internal displacement
  • 5. Geographies of Populations Population geographers depend on a wide array of data sources to assess the geography of populations. Population geographers investigate “the why of where.” Two important factors that make up population dynamics are birth and death. Push and pull factors impact the movement of populations around the globe. UN Millennium Summit: How can the global economy provide the world’s growing population with enough food and water and still support a sustainable environment?
  • 6. World Population Density, 2006 Degree of accessibility, topography, soil fertility, climate and weather, water availability and quality, and type and availability of other natural resources are some of the factors that shape population distribution.
  • 7. The Demographer’s Toolbox Demography is the study of the characteristics of human populations. A census is a straightforward count of the number of people in a country, region, or city. Population experts employ data sources like vital records, which is a report of births, deaths, marriages, divorces, and the incidence of certain infectious diseases. No census is entirely comprehensive (or comprehensible). All censuses tend to under-represent nonmainstream kinds of households, as well as homeless individuals. Federal funding can have a real impact on peoples’ lives.
  • 9. Population Density and Composition • One way to explore population dynamics is in terms of density, a numerical measure of the relationship between the number of people and some other unit of interest expressed as a ratio. • Crude density is the total number of people divided by total land area. • Nutritional density is the ratio between the total population and the amount of land under cultivation in a given unit of area. • Agricultural density is the ratio between the number of agriculturists per unit of farmable land in a specific area. • Geodemographic analysis is the practice of assessing the location and composition of particular populations.
  • 10. Population Density: Melbourne, Australia Melbourne represents a classic low-density urban settlement predicated on a quarter-acre home and garden enabled by the widespread use of automobiles. Since the 1990s, Melbourne has begun to address this sprawling urban form through infill.
  • 11. Population Density: Tokyo, Japan Urban form in Tokyo is the result of many factors. Most important in terms of its population size is its role as a central node in the world systems of cities. The urban economy is complex, requiring a wide range of labor skills from professional and managerial to low-skilled, service-oriented workers.
  • 12. Health Care Density In this cartogram (a map/diagram fusion) , the core countries and China have the highest ratio of doctors to overall population. Most of Africa has the lowest ratio, reflecting another dimension of core–periphery inequality.
  • 13. Population Pyramids, 2006 The shape of an age–sex pyramid varies depending on the proportion of people in each cohort. The pyramid for the peripheral countries reveals that many dependent children, ages 0–14, exist relative to the rest of the population. The core countries pyramid illustrates the typical shape for a country experiencing low birthrates.
  • 14. GIS Applications • The key to using GIS effectively in marketing is the ability to link and Google Earth demographic data to particular locations. This is known as georeferencing. • Demographic data are linked to ZIP codes and telephone prefix zones. Is it a meaningful spatial relationship? • GIS is often used in locational analysis, determining where to locate a business. • The potential for invasion of privacy through the coupling of different sorts of data sets is very real. • Google Earth enables users to go anywhere on Earth by way of satellite imagery, maps, terrain models, and 3-D buildings. But skeptics believe it is a surveillance mechanism in disguise. • Geospatial technologies offer solutions to complex problems, but also frighten others who foresee Orwellian outcomes.
  • 15. U.S. Boomers, 1969–2000 Old-age cohort: 65+ Youth cohort: ages 0–14 Middle cohort: ages 15–64
  • 16. Uses of Population Pyramids Age–sex pyramids can vary within different census tracts of the same city. The tracts show that even within a city, variation in populations can be substantial. Information like this can be very valuable in decision- making and policymaking at varying government levels, as well as marketing through targeted mailings.
  • 17. U.S. Baby Boom Crude Birthrate How do population geographers and demographers mark the beginning and end of a generation? What are these statisticians and analysts calling your generation? Is this a fitting moniker? Who belongs in your generation?
  • 18. Baby Boom and the Aging Population • Demographic Factors • Political and Economic Factors • The Aging of the Population • The Impacts on Younger Americans – Generation X (1965–1975) – Naming the next generation: Generation Y or Echo Boomers, iGeneration or NetGeneration
  • 19. The Net Generation Members of the Net Generation, people who are currently in their late teens to late twenties, are faced with the awesome burden of having to help support a huge, aging, baby boom population. They are likely to continue to drive demand around increasingly sophisticated personal technology.
  • 20. World Crude Birthrate, 2007 Crude birthrates and crude death rates are often indicators of the levels of economic development in individual countries. The doubling time is a measure of how long it will take the population of an area to grow to twice its current size.
  • 21. World Crude Death Rates, 2007 The global pattern of crude death rates varies from crude birthrates. Most apparent is that the difference between highest and lowest crude death rates is relatively smaller than is the case for crude birthrates, reflecting the impact of factors related to the middle phases of the demographic transition.
  • 22. Total Fertility Rate and Birth Control Birth control programs coupled with improved educational and economic opportunities for women have proved to be far more effective than birth control policies alone. But in India, a good example of a pluralistic society, issues of ethnicity complicate things because one ethnic group is fearful that if it limits its births, it will soon be outnumbered by another ethnic group.
  • 23. World Rates of Natural Increase, 2007 The difference between the CBR and CDR is the rate of natural increase, the surplus of births over deaths; or the rate of natural decrease, the deficit of births relative to deaths.
  • 24. Demographic Transition Model • A demographic transition is a model of population change in which high birth and death rates are replaced by low birth and death rates. • Once a society moves from a preindustrial economic base to an industrial one, population grows more slowly. • The slowing of population growth is attributable to improved economic production and higher standards of living brought about by better health care, education, and sanitation. • Some experts insist that the usefulness of the model is applicable only to the demographic history of core countries.
  • 25. World Infant Mortality Rate, 2007 The geography of poverty underlies the patterns on this map. These rates reflect a number of factors including inadequate or completely absent maternal health care, as well as poor nutrition for infants.
  • 27. Mobility and Migration • Mobility may be used to describe a wide array of human movement, ranging from a journey to work to an ocean-spanning permanent move. – Emigration and immigration – International migration and internal migration – Gross migration and net migration – Push factors vs. pull factors – Voluntary migration vs. forced migration – Refugees, IDPs, guest workers, and transnational migrants
  • 28. Internal Voluntary Migration: Suburbanization • By the early twentieth century, residents fled to the suburbs to get away from the new immigrants and their increasing hold over urban political machines. • Automobile dependency and energy costs in the twenty-first century will likely impact the suburbs (and exurbs further out) in a negative way. • A general migration trend to the west and south is apparent over the past century.
  • 29. Internal Forced Migration: Ethiopia Another causality of ecological catastrophe is Ethiopia where late rains, failure of crops, and soaring food prices have led to severe food crisis and dislocation. This population dislocation caused by the degradation of land and essential natural resources is called eco-migration.
  • 30. Population Debates and Policies • Thomas Malthus and Neo- Malthusians – Food is necessary to the existence of humans. – The passion between the sexes is necessary and constant. • William Godwin, Karl Marx, and Friedrich Engels – Human knowledge can overcome population pressures with technology and equitable distribution of resources. • Moderates of this “population and resources” argument see the issue not as a population or economic problem, but a political one.
  • 31. Population Policies and Programs Improving the economic status of women is central to the success of controlling population growth (as with these Afghani girls). Access to education and employment security are seen as critical factors shaping a woman’s decisions about how many children to have and when to have them.
  • 32. UN World Summit—MDGs The MDGs reflect the neoliberal turn in international development, with the intent of enabling peripheral countries to achieve core economic standards of wealth and prosperity.
  • 34. Discussion Topics and Lecture Themes • Gather census data (the age and sex of the population) for the local community. Then use this information to construct an age–sex pyramid for the community. What features are revealed by the age–sex pyramid? – Census data for communities in the United States can be obtained from the U.S. Census Bureau’s website at http://www.census.gov/. Information for other countries can also be obtained from the U.S. Census Bureau’s website at http://www.census.gov/ipc/www/idb/ and from the Population Research Bureau’s site at http://www.pop.psu.edu.
  • 35. Discussion Topics and Lecture Themes • Have the students look at sample census questions on the Census Bureau’s website at www.census.gov. What kind of information is gathered by the census? Are there any potential problems in gathering this type of data? – In addition to counting the number of people in the country, the census also collects data on number of households in the country, people’s racial and ethnic associations, age, marital status, occupation, respondent’s type of residential structure, and many other details. Problems include ambiguity in racial and ethnic classification, under-representation of non- mainstream households and homeless people, among others.
  • 36. Discussion Topics and Lecture Themes • Using the image for Figure 3.2, what do you note about the distribution of the world’s population? What factors account for this uneven distribution? Why do some parts of the world have extremely low population densities? – Population is unevenly distributed around the world. Reasons for low densities include unproductive natural environments, such as desert, mountain, or tundra environments.
  • 37. Discussion Topics and Lecture Themes • Again using the image for Figure 3.2, as well as the data in Table 3.1, discuss how North America compares in terms of its share of the world’s population and population density. Then discuss this information in the context of the immigration question in the United States. Does the United States have room for more immigrants? – North America (which in Table 3.1 does not include Mexico or any part of Latin America) contains only 5 percent of the world’s total population—a very small percentage. Students will have varying opinions as to immigration and potential overpopulation, but many may not realize that 95 percent of the world’s population lives outside of North America.
  • 38. Discussion Topics and Lecture Themes • Some of your students may belong to Generation X (people born between 1965 and 1980, approximately). Generations are often defined in terms of shared experiences. Ask the students what experiences their generation has shared, and how this creates a sense of being part of a generation. Does Generation X share any significant experience equivalent to the sharing of the Vietnam War, the Sexual Revolution, or the Civil Rights movement by the Baby Boom generation? Is it too early to tell what Generation X’s shared experiences might be? – The same question can be asked of members of that generation born after 1980. Are there noticeable differences in values and attitudes between students born before and after 1980?
  • 39. Discussion Topics and Lecture Themes • Overpopulation is often a popular topic with students. First, ask them whether they think the world—or parts of the world—is overpopulated today. Second, ask them how they define overpopulation. Many will likely respond “too many people in a place.” Then ask them if they think that places like Japan are overpopulated, despite Japan’s lack of food and other resources. The students should realize that overpopulation is a value-laden term, with many different possible definitions. – This question provides an opportunity to initiate debate on how values shape population policies such as those regarding immigration.
  • 40. Discussion Topics and Lecture Themes • How can Geographical Information Systems (GIS) be used in locating retail businesses? – This question allows the students to see one practical application of geographic methods. You or the students could try contacting local retailers (especially chain retailers, such as Starbucks or McDonald’s) to see if they will provide information about how they select their retail outlet locations. The Geography Matters 3.1 boxed text also provides information about this issue.
  • 41. Discussion Topics and Lecture Themes • How is the burden of social security and other public goods being shifted onto the “Baby Boom” generation? – Have the students use census data (see the discussion for Question #1, above, for details on how to gather census data) for the local region, state, or country as a whole and construct age–sex pyramids. Use these pyramids to show how the large “Baby Boom” cohort is aging, while the following generations (those born between 1965 and the present) are smaller, therefore putting pressure on those generations when baby boomers retire and become dependent on younger generations. Also see the Geography Matters 3.2 boxed text for more information.
  • 42. Discussion Topics and Lecture Themes • What natural disasters have taken place in or near the local community? How has this affected population? – Consult local histories, museums, or newspapers for information on what may have taken place in the local area. Students may also want to examine impacts of natural disasters in other areas, such as the impacts of hurricanes on the Gulf Coast.

Editor's Notes

  1. http://www.earth.columbia.edu/sitefiles/File/about/director/documents/SCIAM032001_000.pdf