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Study Guide: Final Exam

Agrarian
Referring to the culture of agricultural communities and the type of tenure system that determines access to land and the kind of cultivation practices employed there 
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Agribusiness
A set of economic and political relationships that organize agro-food production from the development of seeds to the retailing and consumption of the agricultural product
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Agriculture
A science, art, and business directed at the cultivation of crops and the raising of livestock for sustenance and profit
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Commercial Agriculture
Farming primarily for sale, not direct consumption
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Crop Rotation
Method of maintaining soil fertility in which the fields under cultivation remain the same but the crop being planted is changed
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Famine
Acute starvation associated with a sharp increase in mortaility
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Fast Food
Food that can be prepared and served very quickly, sold in a restaurant and served to customers in packaged form
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Food Security
Assured access by a person, household, or even a country to enough food at all times to ensure active and healthy lives
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Food Sovereignty
Right of peoples, communities, and countries to define their own agricultural, labor, fishing, food, and land policies that are ecologically, socially, economically, and culturally appropriate to their unique circumstances
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Globalized Agriculture
System of food production increasingly dependent upon an economy and set of regulatory practices that are global in scope and organization
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GMO (Genetically Modified Organism)
Organism that has had its DNA modified in a laboratory rather than through cross pollination or other forms of evolution
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Green Revolution
Export of a technological package of fertilizers and high-yielding seeds, from core to the periphery, to increase global agricultural productivity
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Hunting and Gathering
Society which feeds itself through killing wild animals and fish and gathering fruits, roots, and nuts
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Intensive Subsistence Agriculture
Practice that involves the effective use - usually through a considerable expenditure of human labor and application of fertilizer - of a small parcel of land in order to maximize crop yield
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Organic Farming
Farming or animal husbandry done without commercial fertilizers, synthetic pesticides, or growth hormones
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Pastoralism
Subsistence activity that involves the breeding and herding of animals to satisfy the human needs of food, shelter, and clothing
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Shifting Cultivation
System in which farmers aim to maintain soil fertility by rotating the fields within which cultivation occurs
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Slash-and-Burn
System of cultivation in which plants are cropped close to the ground, left to dry for a period, and then ignited
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Subsistence Agriculture
Farming for direct consumption by the produces; not for sale
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Undernutrition
Inadequate intake of one or more nutrients and/or calories
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Urban Agriculture
establishment or performance of a agricultural practices in or near an urban or city-like setting
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Centripetal Forces
Forces that strengthen and unify the state
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Citizenship
A category of belonging to a nation-state that includes civil, political, and social rights
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Decolonization
The acquisition by colonized people of control over their own territory
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Democratic Rule
A system in which public policies and officials are directly chose by popular vote
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Domino Theory
The theory that if one country in a region chooses or is forced to accept a communist political and economic system, then neighboring countries would be irresistibly susceptible to communism
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Geopolitics
State's power to control space or territory and shape the foreign policy of individual states and international political relations
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Human Rights
People's individual rights to justice, freedom, and equality, considered by most societies to belong automatically to all people
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International Organization
Group that includes two or more states keeping political and/pr economical cooperation with each other
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Nation
Group of people often sharing common elements of culture, such as religion or language or a history or political identity
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Nation-state
Ideal form consisting of a homogenous group of people governed by their own states
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Nationalism
Feeling of belonging to a nation as well as the belief that a nation has a natural right to determine its own affairs
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North/South Divide
differentiation made between the colonizing states of the Northern Hemisphere and the formerly colonized states of the Southern Hemisphere
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Orientalism
Discourse that positions the West as culturally superior to the East
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Self-Determination
Right of a group with a distinctive politico-territorial identity to determine its won destiny, at least in part, through the control of its own territory
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Sovereignty
Exercise of state power over people and territory, recognized by other states and codified by international law
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Supranational Organization
Collections of individual states with a common goal that may be economic and/or political in nature
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Territory
Delimited area over which a state exercises control and which is recognized by other states
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Terrorism
Threat or use of force to bring about political change
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Central Place
A settlement in which certain products and services are available to consumers
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Central Place Theory
A theory that seeks to explain the relative size spacing of towns and cities as a function of people's shopping behavior
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Colonial City
A city that was deliberately established or developed as an administrative or commercial center by colonial or imperial powers
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Gateway City
Serves as a link between one country or region and others because of its physical situation
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Primacy
Condition in which the population of the largest city in an urban system is disproportionately large in relation to the second and third largest cities
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Shock City
City that is seen as the embodiment of surprising and disturbing changes in economic, social, and cultural life
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Squatter Settlements
Residential developments that occur on land that is neither owned nor rented by its occupants
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Urban Ecology
Social and demographic composition of city districts and neighborhoods
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Urban Form
Physical structure and organization of cities
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Urban System
Interdependent set of urban settlements withing a specified region
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Urbanism
Way of life, attitudes, values, and patterns of behavior fostered by urban settings
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World City
City in which a disproportionate part of the world's most important business is conducted
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Cycle of Poverty
The transmission of poverty and deprivation from one generation to another through a combination of domestic circumstances and local neighborhood conditions
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Redlining
Practice whereby lending institutions delimit "bad risk" neighborhoods on a city map and then use the map as a basis for determining loans
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3 Ways to Think About Agriculture
science- we do experiments to understand cultivation of livestock art- craft industry; creative; gardenbusiness- all directed at the cultivation of crops and the raising of livestock for subsistence profit
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Steps in Shifting Agriculture
Cut Vegetation Burn VegetationNutrients in vegetation are releasedPlant crops in naturally fertilized fieldRepeat planting until field yields diminishing returnsAbandon fieldsReturn to field in 20 years when regeneration has occured
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1st Agricultural Revolution
Development of seeds and the use of plows/draft animals
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2nd Agricultural Revolution
Occurred at the same time as the industrial revolution; dramatic improvements outputs, such as crops and livestock yields; new inputs to agricultural production, such as the application of fertilizers and field drainage
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3rd Agricultural Revolution
Mechanization - the replacement of human farm labor with machines Chemical farming - the application of synthetic fertilizers to the soil to enhance yieldsFood manufacturing - adding economic value to agricultural products through a range of treatments occurring of the farm and before the products reach the market
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Role of Transitional Corporations
takes money/jobs away from family-owned farms have lots of poweragribusiness - largest sector of the US economy
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Biotechnology
any technique that uses living organisms to improve, make, or modify plants or animals or to develop microorganisms for specific uses Positives: reduces agriculture production costs and resource management, saves environment from soil overuseNegatives: clone plants more susceptible to disease than real ones, farmers get left behind, so do peripheral economies because less crops come from them
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Political Geography
examines complex relationships between politics and geography deals with the phenomena occurring at all scales of resolution, from the global to the body.
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Citizen/citizenship
a category of belonging to a nation-state that includes the civil, political, and social rights
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Sovereignty
the state's power over people and territory that is recognized by other states and codified by international law
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Patriotism
a strong feeling, or love, towards a country that one is willing to die for it
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Imperialism
force used to conquer does not use any governmental intervention strictly authoritative
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Colonialism
formal establishment of rule by a sovereign power over a foreign population through the establishment of settlements
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Neocolonialism
forms of relations that exist today
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Domino Theory
ideologies that take root in one country spread across the world communism example -  Vietnam, Guatemala
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New World Order
made US the most powerful nation since capitalism triumphed communism. With this dominance comes worldwide promotion of liberal democracy and a global economy based on transnational corporate growth through organizations. It caused instability in parts of the world and formed radical forms of warfare and political practices such as terrorism
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Urban geographers
Study how urban areas evolve, relationships between urban and suburban/rural, and how land use occurs 
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World Population
what is made of up about 50% urban?
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Central business district
a city's nucleus of commercial land uses
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Modern Stock Market
the site where the globe's future food prices are determined; commodity prices are increasing
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