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Human Geography Revised ed. [Mīkstie vāki]

  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 480 pages, height x width x depth: 287x224x15 mm, weight: 975 g, illustrations
  • Izdošanas datums: 16-Mar-2013
  • Izdevniecība: McGraw Hill Higher Education
  • ISBN-10: 0071318062
  • ISBN-13: 9780071318068
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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 480 pages, height x width x depth: 287x224x15 mm, weight: 975 g, illustrations
  • Izdošanas datums: 16-Mar-2013
  • Izdevniecība: McGraw Hill Higher Education
  • ISBN-10: 0071318062
  • ISBN-13: 9780071318068
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
Geographers believe that phenomena on the earths surface are not random, but rather the result of a complex series of processes going on at the local, regional, national and international scale. Human Geography, 1e by Jon Malinowksi and David Kaplan, will introduce you to how geographers attempt to make sense of the diverse reality of human populations on the Earths surface. Human Geography, 1e uses a modular approach. Each of the 18 chapters are divided into page spreads to easily allow an instructor the flexibility to customize his or her course.
Preface xi
Chapter 1 Major Geographic Concepts 2(22)
1A Pattern and Process
4(2)
1B Absolute and Relative Location
6(2)
1C Place and Space
8(2)
1D Place Attributes and Significance
10(2)
1E Mapping Spatial Distributions
12(2)
1F Spatial Interactions and Distance
14(2)
1G Regions
16(4)
1H Idea of Landscape
20(4)
Chapter 2 Geography through the Ages 24(20)
2A Ancient Geography
26(2)
2B The Middle Ages
28(2)
2C The Age of Exploration
30(2)
2D The Birth of Modern Geography
32(2)
2E The Twentieth Century
34(2)
2F Behavioral and Humanistic Geography
36(2)
2G Structuralist Geographies
38(2)
2H Recent Decades
40(4)
Chapter 3 Population 44(26)
3A Population Growth in the Past
46(2)
3B World Population Today: The Americas
48(2)
3C World Population Today: Europe and Africa
50(2)
3D World Population Today: Asia and Oceania
52(2)
3E The Basic Demographic Equation and Fertility
54(2)
Fertility
54(2)
3F Mortality and Population Change
56(4)
Natural Population Change
56(4)
3G The Demographic Transition Model
60(2)
3H Population Profiles
62(2)
3I Population Change in the Future
64(2)
3J Population Planning
66(4)
Chapter 4 Geography of Health and Disease 70(20)
4A Health and Geography
72(2)
Human-Environment Relationships
72(1)
Culture
72(1)
Movement
72(2)
4B Human Ecology of Disease
74(2)
4C Disease Basics
76(2)
4D HIV/AIDS
78(2)
4E Common Diseases
80(4)
4F Snapshot of Global Health
84(2)
4G Geography of Health Care
86(4)
Chapter 5 Migration Flows 90(20)
5A Migration versus Movement
92(2)
5B Types of Migration
94(2)
5C Human Trafficking
96(2)
5D Refugees
98(2)
5E Why Do People Migrate?
100(4)
5F Consequences of Migration
104(2)
5G Migration History of the United States
106(4)
Chapter 6 Culture and Cultural Landscapes 110(24)
6A Culture and Cultural Geography
112(2)
6B Culture Complexes
114(2)
6C The Components of Culture
116(2)
6D Cultural Diffusion
118(4)
6E Culture Hearths
122(2)
6F Cultural Landscapes
124(2)
6G Folk Culture and American Foodways
126(2)
6H Popular Culture: House Types
128(2)
6I A Cultural Geography of Sports
130(4)
Chapter 7 The Geography of Language 134(20)
7A Basic Components of Language
136(2)
7B Dialects, Accent, Linguae Francae, Pidgins, and Creoles
138(2)
7C Language Families
140(4)
7D Geography of English
144(2)
7E Language Isolation and Language Extinction
146(2)
7F Toponymy
148(2)
7G Language Conflict
150(4)
Chapter 8 The Geography of Religion 154(28)
8A Classifying Religions
156(2)
8B Major World Religions
158(2)
8C Hinduism
160(2)
Hindu Worship
161(1)
8D Buddhism
162(2)
8E Judaism
164(2)
Jewish Worship
165(1)
8F Christianity
166(2)
Christian Worship
166(2)
8G The Spread and Distribution of Christianity
168(2)
8H Islam
170(4)
8I Other Large Religious Groups
174(2)
8J Landscapes of Religion
176(6)
Religious Landscapes
176(6)
Chapter 9 Race, Ethnicity, and Gender 182(20)
9A What is Ethnicity?
184(2)
9B The Life of an Ethnic Group
186(2)
9C The Geography of Ethnicity
188(4)
Ethnic Neighborhoods
188(3)
Ethnic Islands
191(1)
9D Ethnicity in the United States
192(2)
9E Ethnic Provinces
194(2)
Chinese Ethnic Regions and Hanification
194(2)
9F Gender and Geography
196(2)
9G The Global Geography of Gender
198(4)
Chapter 10 A World of Nations and States 202(24)
10A Sovereignty, Legitimacy, and Territoriality of Political Units
204(2)
10B History of Political Forms
206(2)
10C History of States
208(2)
10D Variations in Modern States
210(2)
10E Four Markers of a Nation
212(2)
10F The Relationship between Nations and States
214(2)
10G Nationalism as an Ideology and Force in Statecraft
216(2)
10H Boundaries and Borderlands
218(4)
10I Geopolitics and the Global Order
222(4)
Chapter 11 Geography of Governance and Representation 226(28)
11A Territoriality
228(2)
11B Political Economy and Functions of the Modern State
230(2)
11C Theories of the State
232(2)
11D Citizenship
234(2)
11E Subdividing the State
236(6)
11F Cores and Capitals
242(4)
11G Peripheral and Special Regions
246(2)
11H Electoral Geography
248(2)
11I Electoral Systems and Manipulation
250(4)
Chapter 12 Environment and Conservation 254(24)
12A How Geographers See the Environment
256(2)
12B Natural Hazards
258(2)
12C Natural Disasters
260(2)
Earthquakes
260(1)
Hurricanes/Typhoons/Cyclones
260(1)
Tornados
261(1)
12D Human Geography and Water
262(2)
12E Human Geography and Air Pollution
264(2)
12F Solid Waste
266(2)
12G Hazardous Waste
268(2)
12H Geography of Fossil Fuels
270(2)
12I Population Growth and the Environment
272(2)
12J Environmental Justice
274(4)
Chapter 13 Urbanization and Urban Networks 278(22)
13A Urban Beginnings
280(2)
13B Early Spread of Urbanism
282(2)
13C Urbanization in an Era of Capitalism
284(2)
13D Industrial Cities
286(2)
13E The Urbanization Curve
288(2)
13F Urbanization Patterns around the World
290(2)
13G Agglomeration Economies and Urban Functions
292(2)
13H Urban Hierarchies and the Rank-Size Relationship
294(2)
13I Globalization and World Cities
296(4)
Chapter 14 The Changing Structure of the City 300(22)
14A Early Urban Morphology
302(2)
14B Three Historical Urban Types
304(2)
14C Land Values, Densities, and Urban Form
306(4)
14D Transportation and Modern Urban Growth
310(4)
14E Housing the City
314(2)
14F Urban Development in Europe and Japan
316(2)
14G Cities in Less Developed Countries
318(4)
Chapter 15 The Geography of Economic Activity and Agriculture 322(22)
15A Small-Scale Economic Systems
324(2)
15B Large-Scale Economic Systems
326(4)
15C Economic Categories and Measures of the Economy
330(2)
15D Origins of Agriculture and the Process of Domestication
332(4)
15E Different Types of Agriculture
336(2)
15F Theory of Rural Land Use
338(2)
15G Agricultural Globalization, Then and Now
340(4)
Chapter 16 Geographies of Production and Consumption 344(24)
16A Growth of Mass Production and an Industrial World
346(2)
16B Factors of Production and Changing Geographies of Industrial Location
348(2)
16C Industrialization and the Early Development of the US Space Economy
350(2)
16D Modern Shifts in US Manufacturing
352(4)
1 Shifting Labor Costs
353(1)
2 Car Ownership and Highways
354(1)
3 Petroleum
354(1)
4 High Technology
355(1)
5 Role of Government
355(1)
16E The Geography of High Technology
356(2)
16F Globalized Manufacturing and the Rise of Transnational Corporations
358(4)
16G Geographies of Consumption
362(2)
16H Consuming Places: Geographies of Tourism
364(4)
Chapter 17 Distribution and Transportation 368(22)
17A Growth of Trade
370(2)
17B Reasons for International Trade
372(2)
17C What Determines the Flow of Trade?
374(2)
17D Concepts in Transportation
376(2)
17E Developing Transportation Networks in the United States
378(2)
17F Modern Urban Daily Transportation
380(2)
17G Geographic Aspects of US Retailing
382(4)
17H Changing Geographies of Retailing in the Internet Age
386(4)
Chapter 18 Development and Geography 390
18A Meanings of Development and Development Disparities Today
392(4)
18B Modernization and Economic Development
396(4)
18C World Systems Perspective on Development
400(4)
18D Profiles of Development: The Bottom Billion
404(2)
18E Possible Solutions to the Development Crisis
406(2)
18F Export-Led Approaches to Development
408(2)
18G Structuralist and Sustainable Development Models
410
Glossary G-1
References R-1
Credits C-1
Index I-1
Jon C. Malinowski received his B.S. in foreign service from the Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University and earned his M.A. and Ph.D. in geography from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He has been a member of the geography faculty at the United States Military Academy at West Point since 1995. In addition to scholarly articles, he is the co-author of several books, including geography texts and trade books on summer camp and West Points changing landscape. His research interests have focused on spatial cognition, childrens geographies, and cultural geography and he has taught courses on Asia, North America, the Middle East and Africa, world regional geography, human geography, behavioral geography, economic geography, and the historical geography of the Hudson Valley. In addition to teaching and research, Dr. Malinowski has held administrative positions in the Environmental Perception and Behavioral Geography Specialty Group of the Association of American Geographers and in the Geography Program at the Academy. He also serves as a member of the Board of Directors for YMCA Camp Belknap in Tuftonboro, New Hampshire.





David H. Kaplan is a professor of geography at Kent State University. He received his Ph.D. from the University of Wisconsin at Madison and his B.A. from The Johns Hopkins University. Dr. Kaplan has published over 40 peer-reviewed articles and chapters, and he has seven books published: Segregation in Cities, Nested Identities, Boundaries and Place, Urban Geography, Landscapes of the Ethnic Economy, Perthes World Atlas, and the four-volume Nations and Nationalism: A Global Historical Overview. His research interests include nationalism, borderlands, ethnic and racial segregation, urban and regional development, housing and finance, and transportation. In his free time, he enjoys spending time with his family, cooking, bicycling, skiing, and gaining a deep appreciation of different places.