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Dec 21, 2024
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GEG 107 Development, Resources, and Sustainability Lecture Hours: 4 Credits: 4
Introduces economic aspects of cultural geography worldwide, including the study of development, agriculture, industry, services, settlement, urban landscapes, and natural resource issues. Special emphasis is placed on the unequal distribution of power in the U.S. with regard to employment, income, settlement patterns, urban land use, and natural resource management.
Prerequisite: Placement into WR 115 (or higher), or completion of WR 090 (or higher) with a grade of C or better; or consent of instructor. Student Learning Outcomes:
- Explain how development is measured, and describe characteristics of more developed and less developed regions.
- Compare and contrast agricultural production in more and less developed regions.
- Describe the global distribution of industry.
- Analyze how industrial and retail sites are selected.
- Identify key localizing factors for settlement and assess their relative importance.
- Explain central place theory and evaluate its usefulness.
- Discuss the internal structure of cities and describe urbanization and suburbanization.
- List and describe current resource management conflicts and formulate possible solutions.
- Assess how a geographic perspective provides insight into resource management issues.
- Analyze current world events from a geographical perspective.
Content Outline
- Thinking Geographically
- Discipline of geography
- Major geographic themes
- Reading maps
- Subfields of cultural and economic geography
- Globalization
- Development
- Human Development Index
- Development indicators
- Development through trade
- Agriculture
- Distribution
- Types of agriculture
- Subsistance
- Commercial agriculture
- Challenges for agriculture
- Industry
- Origin and distribution
- Industrial Revolution
- Major industrial regions
- Industrial location
- Situation factors
- Site factors
- Settlements and Services
- Distribution of cities
- Urbanization
- Types of services
- Central Place Theory
- Market area analysis
- Urban Patterns
- Defining urban settlements
- Central Business District (CBD)
- Urban structure and transportation
- Suburbanization
- Inner-city decline and renewal
- Resource Issues
- Renewable and nonrenewable resources
- Depleting, conserving, and reusing resources
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