Key Stuff Flashcards

1
Q

why changes in rural areas

A

LIC: limited local employment, poor living conditions, inadequate access to education and healthcare (push factors → urban areas)
MIC: allure of urban life, industrialisation and expansion of service sectors (pull factors → urban areas)
HIC: often propelled by migration of younger generations to urban areas for education and employment, leaving ageing pop in rural areas

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2
Q

consequences of rural depopulation

A
  • Economic: decreasing rural pop can = decline of local economies, reducing business ability to grow, so decreasing employment opportunities
  • Social: can erode community bonds, abandonment of cultural practices and traditions
  • Env: land abandonment, environmental neglect, loss of agri productivity
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3
Q

causes rural-urban migration

A

Economic:
- employment opportunities, rural are agri dominant esp in LIC, low paid and high risks (natural hazards), so not stable.
- urban areas more jobs with wider range available. promise stability.
- uni graduates looking for industry-specific
Social:
- Young ppl isolated in rural areas, want more diverse lifestyle
- investment in urban higher, so public services better (healthcare etc)
Education:
- colleges + unis high conc in urban

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4
Q

rural-urban migration impacts (rural)

A
  • population decline, leaving mostly ageing pop in rural area, more care needed
  • economic slow down, lots of job vacancies, less money contributed to economy, so businesses close and services under pressure from lack of workers.
  • brain drain as skilled workers move for better employment
  • dereliction, abandoned businesses + empty houses
  • cultures may fade as younger move out
  • men more likely to migrate, so higher proportion of women e.g. poland
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5
Q

rural-urban migration impacts (urban)

A
  • larger workforce, more economically active. boost economy, improves productivity
  • brain gain, skilled workers moving in for skilled jobs
  • overpopulation of cities, pressure on housing/services
  • more waste, env degradation
  • influx of migrants = locals unhappy with area changing to cater to migrants (political problems)
  • younger population structure
  • qual of life down as insufficient resources. squatter settlements can form from ppl moving to urban but cant afford
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6
Q

causes of urban-rural migration

A
  • search for better qual of life: crime, overpop, pollution, high cost of living push factors of urban. for ppl who want less costly, quieter life, or older ppl who arent looking for economic opportunity
  • HIC, more investment to rural, so not as isolated. jobs and services there so not against moving to rural
  • better transport links, ability to work from home etc, so easy to live in rural with good economic opportunities.
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7
Q

urban-rural impacts (urban)

A
  • relaxed pressure on services, so better healthcare, lower house prices etc
  • decrease in wealthy older ppl, so less money spent on businesses in area, decline in business and econ activity
  • lower avg age of area as often old ppl moving, could lead to issues such as anti social behaviour
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8
Q

urban-rural impacts (rural)

A
  • larger workforce in rural areas potentially, contribute to economy, improves productivity
  • increased pressure on services/housing who arent developed for larger populations. leads to increased house prices, means younger locals cant afford, and older immigrants buy houses.
  • more waste so env degradation
  • older population structure, ageing population?
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9
Q

consequences of urban growth

A

land use changes:
- prime agri lands lost to residential/retail/industrial/commercial purposes
- habitat and biodiversity loss
env impact:
- pollution (air, water, soil)
- resource depletion due to increased demand (water and energy)
lifestyle changes:
- more urban-like lifestyles, erodes rural character
- infra development: improved roads and telecoms can change landscape a lot

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10
Q

urbanisation

A

where an increasing proportion of the population in a geographical area lives in urban settlements.

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11
Q

urban growth

A

The absolute increase in physical size and total population of urban areas

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12
Q

suburbanisation

A

the process of population movement from urban areas to suburban areas on the outskirts of cities and towns

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13
Q

counter urbanisation

A

deconcentration of population in urban areas as people move out of suburban areas/cities into smaller towns and villages in rural areas

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14
Q

re-urbanisation

A

movement back to the city at a later stage in the urbanisation process. when people move back into inner city areas where populations had previously declined due to a range of social, economic and environmental issues

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15
Q

urban renewal

A

keeps the best elements of the existing urban environment (often safeguarded by planning regulations) and adapts them to new usage. helps to maintain some historic character of urban areas.
e.g. bank turned into restaurant, keeping the former’s look but altering inside to suit its new purpose.

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16
Q

urban redevelopment

A

complete clearance of existing buildings and site infrastructure and constructing new buildings, often for a different purpose

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17
Q

urban regeneration

A

involves both redevelopment and renewal.
in recent years, the term has become increasingly popular.

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18
Q

causes of urbanisation (rural-urban migration)

A

Push:
- high IMR in rural due to lack of clean water, elec and sanitation
- lack of infra e.g. roads shops and facilities
- natural disasters e.g. droughts make farming unreliable/unpredictable
- mechanisation of farming = high unemployment in rural
Pull:
- incentives/advertising campaigns to attract workers to move to city
- successful migrants encourage extended families to join them in urban areas
- more schools, doctors and healthcare services in urban
- more jobs with more reliable income

19
Q

consequences of (rapid) urbanisation LIC/MIC

A
  • migrants attracted by possibilities in city, but settle in shanty towns as can’t afford city, extreme poverty
  • inadequate housing for rural migrants due to over-urbanisation, where urbanisation > econ development, so high unemp and high demand for resources
20
Q

consequences of Urbanisation in HICs

A
  • traffic congestion = pollution (air and noise)
  • crime: as more ppl live in cities, higher chance of crime. social and economic inequalities trigger
  • urban sprawl: destroys agri land, parks and open space. conflict caused by stakeholders on rural-urban fringe
  • high cost of living due to comp for land
  • high infra costs for water/sewerage systems, schools and health services
21
Q

urbanisation in HIC - slow

A
  • most people alr live in urban area, so cant rapidly urbanise (83% in urban in Uk)
    rate of natural increase slowed as:
  • cost living high, so families not having kids/having less
  • contraception more readily available
  • careers increasingly important, reduced BR
  • women in workforce so decreased FR
22
Q

how do the 4 processes affect comp for land (HIC)

A

Urbanisation: price in CBD highest, inner city demand for housing from workers. higher class housing on outskirts.
Suburbanisation: CBD decline, ‘doughnut effect’ as wealthy move to suburbs. land rices rise on outskirts with increased demand
Counterurbanisation: land price in villages rise, second home ownership.
Re-urbanisation: land in inner city rises again as ppl return to city (increased demand for houses)

23
Q

what is the concept of a world city

A

a significant production point of specialised financial and producer services that make the globalised economy run
- producer services include accountancy, advertising, banking/finance and law
have major role in global affairs, centres of economic power and political/cultural influence

24
Q

how does the GaWC rank London? what does it signify? (globalisation and world cities)

A
  • London is one of 2 Alpha ++ cities on the GaWC ranking, NY is the other.
  • signifies London is more integrated than all other cities in terms of ‘advanced producer services’ including accountancy, banking/finance and law. London is a typical location for the HQ or significant offices of TNCs
25
Q

characteristics of a word city (London examples)

A

APS, a variety of int financial services including:
- insurance: Lloyds of London, AXA, Aviva
- Banking: HSBC, Barclays, NatWast
- Accountancy: PwC, Deloitte, EY
existence of financial HQ, a stock exchange and major financial institutions:
- the London Stock Exchange the most international of all stock exchanges, thousands of companies, more than 60 countries using it
Centres of culture and media communications for global networks
- 1/3 of Europe media companies have a global HQ in London, e.g. financial times
HQ of multinational corporations
- over half of UK’s top 100 listed companies (the FTSE 100) and over 100 of Europe’s 500 largest companies have HQ in central London. Major MNCs include PwC, Unilever, GSK
renowned educational institutions, attracting lots of int students
- 4 unis in London ranked high on Times World uni rankings: Imperial, UCL, KCL, LSE. Over 100k int students studying at the 4.
Other:
- high % of tertiary and quaternary jobs
- Major port and container facilities for trade
- high decision-making power @ global level

26
Q

how + why do world cities grow

A

urbanisation + pop growth:
- natural increase and immigration = population growth = large workforce so potential for markets
Growth of TNCs:
- TNCs operate in more than one country. estimated that top 300 TNCs control 1/4 of world’s assets. TNCs help to advance global economic connections - world cities major hubs of TNC HQ and operations
Comms and transport revolutions
- development of comms, containerisation and air travel allowed countries to connect and integrate into global economy. world cities grown because of this.
econ development
- world cities have grown as emergence of major manufacturing and service centres, saw as development of key transport nodes in global trading system

27
Q

world city hierarchy

A

alpha ++
- More integrated than all other cities and constitute their own high level of integration.
- London + NY
alpha +
- other highly integrated cities, that complement LDN and NY, largely filling in advanced service needs for Pacific Asia
- Tokyo, HK, Paris, Dubai, Singapore
alpha and alpha -
- v. imp world cities that link major econ regions and states into world economy
- Mumbai, Chicago, LA, Madrid, Toronto
beta
- slightly less important world cities that link their region/state into world economy
- Lisbon, Rome, Cairo, Copenhagen
gamma
- world cities linking smaller regions, major global capacity not in APS
- Zagreb, Lahre, Bristol, Islamabad

28
Q

why might hierarchy of world city change

A
  • based on number of services and connections between cities
  • political disagreements (brexit)
  • movement of TNCs to other countries, cheaper
  • relative importance
29
Q

SPEEC factors affecting location of activities

A

S/C: characteristics of population, community needs. distribution of age groups, income levels, culture in city can affect retail, entertainment etc.
- areas w/ high conc family have more schools
Ec: availability of employment, some cities have distinct manufacturing zones, some have service-oriented economies. econ prosperity in areas attracts investments, = clustering of specific urban activities like high-end retail.
Env: climate, topography, natural features (rivers/mountains).
Pol: policies/zoning regs and infra investment can impact distribution of urban activities. govt initiatives etc

30
Q

urban planning

A
  • spatial organisation to balance resi needs w. commercial, recreational etc to maximise land use
  • infra development e.g. transport networks, utilities etc which influence location of businesses/resi areas bcs more accessible
  • sustainability and livability of area
31
Q

how and why urban areas change over time

A
  • tech advancements = tech hubs in cities etc
  • economic shifts: decline of manufacturing = growth of service sector
  • cultural/social trends: city centres desirable living space, so downtown areas revitalised
  • govt policies and investments: lead to redevelopment of declining areas
32
Q

CBD definition

A

the commercial centre of urban area. contains main shops, offices and financial institutions. most accessible part of city.

33
Q

CBD characteristics

A
  • high rise buildings
  • few houses/residents (only high rise flats to maximise space)
  • lacks open space (land = expensive, valuable)
  • transport focus
  • high order retail services
34
Q

spatial competition

A

where rival potential land users compete/bid for, or try to obtain the use of space (land or buildings).

35
Q

factors affecting spatial comp

A
  • potential for commercial success = some areas higher demand
  • areas w/ better transport links more sought after, makes more accessible
  • areas where high visibility and prestige are often high demand
36
Q

distance decay relationship

A

land value and rent decrease as you move further from the CBD

37
Q

land use optimization

A

theory suggests land is used for most economically profitable purposes at each location

38
Q

functional zonation

A
  • diff parts of city serve different purposes
  • urban areas, some services cluster in certain parts of town/city (e.g shopping/retail areas, residential, recreational)
  • silicon valley USA, regent street UK
  • exclusion/under-representation of other land uses (e.g. housing)
39
Q

what does functional zonation depend on

A
  • age of area, buildings get older as closer to city centre, but most CBD have been redeveloped etc
  • land values, increase rapidly from city boundary towards CBD
  • accessibility, some functions rely more heavily on transport connections
40
Q

bid rent theory

A
  • differing land users compete for land close to centre
  • based on idea that businesses want to maximise profitability, so willing to pay more for land close to CBD, less for land further away
  • more accessible the area (i.e the greater conc of customers) the more profitable
    therefore, the land use willing to pay most will get more central (businesses), land use able to pay least will be on peripheral location (residential)
41
Q

bid rent reasons

A
  • city centre has highest footfall
  • city centre has shops on oxford street, good for prestige, makes berand well known.
  • retail industries can afford to pay more,
  • industry want closeness to CBD but not in expensive
  • links from ports etc
  • residential is cheaper to live further and transport in
  • land in CBD expensive
42
Q

residential segregation

A

spatial separation of 2 or more social groups within a specified geographical area

43
Q

processes of residential segregation

A

Housing market operations:
- supply + demand leads to segregation, as high-demand areas unaffordable for lower-income groups
- allocation of public + priv investments = affluent areas get more investment (inequality)
Social:
- ppl choose to live near family, friends or other similar cultural backgrounds. leads to spatial segregation
- social networks can influence, lead to demographic clustering
Planning:
- zoning can lead to segregation, separating residential areas from commercial and industrial ones
- large scale development projects can lead to displacement of lower-income residents

44
Q

impacts of residential segregation

A

Social:
- fragmented communities, limited interactions between diff social, economic, ethnic groups
Services:
- segregated neighbourhoods have lack of service provision, no access to quality education, healthcare and other public services
- segregated areas lack efficient transport, so limiting mobility and access to employment
**Quality of Life: **
- segregated lower-income areas have env issues e.g. pollution / lack of green space
- health disparities, segregated communities facing higher rates of health issues