| Introduction to Geography, 8/e Arthur Getis,
San Diego State University Judith Getis Jerome D. Fellmann,
University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Population Geography
Objectives:After reading and studying this chapter you should be able to:
1.
Define the various measures basic to the analysis of population.
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| | | 2.
Construct a population pyramid from data on age and sex of a population.
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| | | 3.
Understand the cultural and physical factors which account for the geographic distribution of fertility,
mortality and natural increase.
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| | | 4.
Determine any country's position in the demographic transition from knowledge of its birth and death rates
and population growth rates.
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| | | 5.
Identify the differences in population growth characteristics between the developed world and the developing
world.
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| | | 6.
Discuss the affects of HIV/AIDS on population growth rates in developing countries.
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| | | 7.
Locate on a map the most densely populated and least densely populated areas of the world and explain their
geographic distribution.
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| | | 8.
Distinguish between areas that are overpopulated and those that are not based on carrying capacity.
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| | | 9.
Describe the relationship between urbanization and population growth and density.
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| | | 10.
Discuss population controls over time. Differentiate between natural population controls and artificial controls.
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| | | 11.
Evaluate Malthusian concepts of population growth in light of twentieth-century knowledge about
demographic processes.
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| | | 12.
Define population momentum and describe its implications for future population growth.
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| | | 13.
Understand the stages of the demographic transition model and be able to apply to present-day areas of the world.
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