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Urbanization, Centripetal and Centrifugal Movements. IB Geography II. PART 1: URBANIZATION. Bell Ringer: Make a list of 5 valid claims relating to patterns of urbanization you can see in the map. The Process of Urbanization.
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Urbanization, Centripetal and Centrifugal Movements IB Geography II
Bell Ringer: Make a list of 5 valid claims relating to patterns of urbanization you can see in the map
The Process of Urbanization • Urbanization: the process by which an increasing percentage of a country’s population comes to live in towns and cities. It may involve both rural-urban migration and natural increase.
Causes of urbanization • Rural to urban migration • Natural Increase
Rural – urban migration • Rural to urban migration – result of push and pull factors
Natural increase • The people that migrate into towns and cities tend to be young resulting in high levels of natural increase • high % of young adults = high levels of births • Falling death rates due to improved medical care means more babies are born than people dying, further increasing the urban population
Elbow Partner Discussions • Using the last two data slides, discuss this question: • Why are there higher rates of urbanization in developing nations compared to developed nations?
Graphing Global Urbanization Activity • Step 1: Take 5 minutes to read/annotate data set. Be sure to read definition of agglomerations for notecards! • Step 2: In elbow partners, answer the following questions: • How many urban agglomerations had a population greater than 10 million in 1950? Where were these urban areas? • Describe the changes in the number and location of urban agglomerations in 1975, 2000, and 2010. • What changes does the UN project for 2025?
Graphing Global Urbanization Activity • Step 3: Graph the Data. • Create a comparative bar graph showing bars for each of the following continents (N. America, S. America, Europe, Asia, Africa) and different colors for each time period in the handout • Y axis will be number of urban areas in each time period in each continent
Graphing Global Urbanization Activity • Step 4: Analyze the data. In one paragraph, answer the following prompt using data from your graph as resources. • Discuss changing patterns of urbanization from 1950-2025.
Centripetal Movements involve the migration of people into towns and cities
Urban Processes can be seen as inward and outward movements Inward Movement (Centripetal) Rural to urban migration, gentrification, re-urbanization, urban renewal Outward Movement (Centrifugal) Suburbanization, urban sprawl, counter-urbanization
Rural Push Factors • High rates of population growth have put pressure on natural resource such as water and energy and reduced the size of land holdings • New farming technology favors the rich farmer, but for others it leads to unemployment or underemployment • Migration for work is often the only option • (See complete list of rural push factors in yesterday’s notes)
Urban Pull Factors • Higher wages • More varied employment • Educational opportunities • (See complete list in earlier notes)
The Consequences of Urbanization • Economic Growth: • Urban economies are almost always more productive than rural ones • Industrial productivity is higher in cities. • Cities are usually responsible for a greater percentage of total GDP
The Consequences of Urbanization • Gentrification • The Reinvestment of capital into inner-city areas. • Improvement in residential areas • It is a type of filtering that may lead to the social displacement of poor people (as a place becomes gentrified, housing prices rise and the poor are unable to afford it– often times minorities)
The Consequences of Urbanization • Re-urbanization: (urban renewal) the development of activities to increase residential population densities within the existing built-up area of a city. • This may include the redevelopment of vacant land and the refurbishment of housing and the development of new businesses.
The Consequences of Urbanization • Brownfield Sites: abandoned or underused industrial buildings and land, which may be contaminated but have potential for redevelopment
Centrifugal Movements • Also known as Decentralization • The outward movements of a population from the center of a city towards its edge or periphery, resulting in the expansion of a city.
Suburbanization • Suburb: a residential area just outside the boundaries of a city. • Suburbanization: the outward growth of towns and cities to engulf surrounding villages and rural areas. This may result from the out-migration of population from the inner urban areas to the suburbs.
Urban Sprawl • The unplanned and uncontrolled physical expansion of an urban area into the surrounding countryside. It is closely linked with the process of suburbanization. • Good examples of Urban Sprawl include Mexico City • http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2401975/Amazing-aerial-photos-Mexico-City-natural-boundaries-stand-way.html
Counter-Urbanization • A process involving the movement of populations away from inner urban areas to a new town, new estate, commuter town or village on the edge or just beyond the city limits or rural-urban fringe. • Characteristic of wealthy cities in MEDCs • It is a response to increasing stress of overcrowding, congestion, pollution and crime.
Reasons for counter-urbanization Increased car ownership Increased wealth De-industrialization Relocation of industry/employment to rural urban fringe Desire for safe, pleasant environment, the rural ideal/utopia Perception of urban areas as dangerous, high levels of crime, racial/ethnic problems – ‘white flight’ Change in tenure from public/renting to private ownership. Sell property and move out.
The Consequences of Centrifugal Movements • Centrifugal movements involve a shift of population and economic activity from the center of the urban area to its periphery and beyond, which is detrimental to the center. • Construction of roads and buildings destroy open space and increases air pollution
Response to Consequences • Urban Planners have focused on ways of reviving the urban center(urban renewal/gentrification) and restricting new construction in urban hinterlands • Hinterlands: the zone surrounding a city
The Family Life Cycle • Intra-urban population movement may involve shifts of population during the family life cycle. • A person is likely to move around different zones of city depending on their age and their need for a house of a certain size.