2. NO. CONTENT
1. INTRODUCTION TO WORLD REGIONAL GEPGRAPHY
2. ELEMENTS OF REGIONAL GRAGRAPHY
3. DEFINITION NATURE ENVIRONMENT
GLOBAL CLIMATE CHANGE
WEATHER
NATURAL HAZARD
NATURAL RESOURCES
4. DEFINITION HUMAN GEOGRAPHY
LANGUAGE
RELIGION
5. DEFINITION POLITIC GEOGRAPHY
TYPE OF GOVERNMENT
6. DEFINITION ECONOMIC GEOGRAPHY
TYPE OF ECONOMIC SECTORS
3. I N T R O D U C T I O N
The World Regional Geography is a study about the world's
regions.
This study is divided into two main branches which are:
Physical geography
(natural resources,global climate change and etc.)
Human geography
(language,cultural,politic,economics and etc)
4. ELEMETS OF
R E G I O N A L
GEOGRAPHY
N a t u r a l
Environment
H u m a n
Geographies
E c o n o m i c
G e o g r a p h i e s
5. N A T U R A L E N V I R O N M E N T
The natural environment encompasses all living and non-living things
occurring naturally, meaning in this case not artificial.
EXAMPLES OF NATURAL ENVIRONMENT
GLOBAL CLIMATE CHANGE
WEATHER
NATURAL HAZARD
NATURAL RESOURCES
6. G L O B A L C L I M A T E C H A N G E
Climate change may refer to a change in average weather
conditions, or in the time variation of weather within the
context of longer-term average conditions
also known as Global warming
cause :
- Ocean-atmosphere variability
- Life
- Human influnces
7. The conditions in the air
above the earth such as wind,
rain, or temperature,
especially at a particular
time over a particular area
8. A hazard is distinguished
from an extreme event and a
disaster. A natural hazard
is an extreme event that
occurs naturally and causes
harm to humans and
environment
9. Natural resources are resources that exist
without actions of humankind
• Natural resources are usually either
renewable or non-renewable
• The former refer to those resources
that can renew themselves in time. These
include living resources like forests or
non-living ones like wind
• Non-renewable resources, as the name
implies, are those that can no longer be
tapped once the available stock at a
site is exhausted. Once we use them,
there isn't any more
10. The study of the
interrelationships between
people, place, and
environment, and how these
vary spatially and temporally
across and between locations
.
includes :-
Languages
Religions
11. A language is a system of
communication which consists of a set
of sounds and written symbols which
are used by the people of a
particular country or region for
talking or writing.
examples for language in the world
> Malay > English
> Mandarin >Hindi
>Arabic
12. Religion is belief in a god or
gods and the activities that are
connected with this belief, such
as praying or worshipping in a
building such as a church or
temple.
Examples for religions in the
world
> Islam
> Hinduism
>Christianity
13. Political geography is concerned with the
study of both the spatially uneven outcomes
of political processes and the ways in which
political processes are themselves affected
b y s p a t i a l s t r u c t u r e s .
political geography adopts a three-scale
structure with the study of the state at the
centre, the study of international relations
and the study of localities below it.
The primary concerns of the subdiscipline
can be summarized as the inter-relationships
between people, state, and territory.
14. • is a form of government in which a single family rules from
generation to generation
• example : United Kingdom
MONARCHY
• is defined as a form of government in which power belongss
to the people
• example : Malaysia
DEMOCRACY
• is a form og government in which all power resides with a
few people or in a dominant group within the society
• example : Soviet UnionOLIGARCHY
• is a form og government in which people have no
participation.
• example : Cuba
AUTHORITARIANISM
• a form og government in which one person or political party
exercise absolute control
• example : North Korea
TOTALITARIANISM
15. Economic geography is the study of the location, distribution and spatial
organization of economic activities across the world.
types of economis sector
→ Primarily sector
→ Secondary sector
→ Tertiary sector
→ Quaternary sector
16. The primary sector is concerned with the extraction of raw
materials. It includes fishing, farming and mining.
The portion of an economy that includes light and heavy industrial
manufacturers of finished goods and products from raw materials.
Businesses that make up the secondary sector of industry often
require substantial machinery to operate, and they create waste that
can contribute to environmental pollution
17. The tertiary sector or service sector is the third of the three economic
sectors of the three-sector theory. The others are the secondary sector,
and the primary sector. The service sector consists of the production of
services instead of end products
The quaternary sector is based on knowledge and skill. It consists of
intellectual industries providing information services, such as
computing and ICT (information and communication technologies),
consultancy (offering advice to businesses) and R&D (research,
particularly in scientific fields)