geography 3-3 chapter 10

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missliss416  on April 19, 2012

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geography 3-3 chapter 10

Commodity Chain
series of links connecting the many places of production and distribution and resulting in a commodity that is on world market
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Commodity Chain series of links connecting the many places of production and distribution and resulting in a commodity that is on world market
Developing with respect to a country, making progress in technology, production, and socioeconomic welfare
Gross National Product The total value of goods and services, including income received from abroad, produced by the residents of a country within a specific time period, usually one year.
Gross Domestic Product The total value of goods and services produced within the borders of a country during a specific time period, usually one year.
Gross National Income The total value of goods and services produced by a country per year plus net income earned abroad by its nationals;
Per Capita GNI Total GNI divided by the population
Formal Economy The legal economy that is taxed and monitored by a government and is included in a government's Gross National Product; as opposed to an informal economy
Informal Economy Economic activity that is neither taxed nor monitored by a government; and is not included in that government's Gross National Product; as opposed to a formal economy
Modernization Model A model of economic development most closely associated with the work of economist Walter Rostow. This maintains that all countries go through five interrelated stages of development, which culminate in an economic state of self-sustained economic growth and high levels of mass consumption.
Context the geographical situation in which something occurs; the combination of what is happening at a variety of scales concurrently
Neo-Colonialism the seeking out of the regional culture and reinvigoration of it in response to the uncertainty of the modern world
Structuralist Theory A general term for a model of economic development that treats economic disparities among countries or regions as the result of historically derived power relations within the global economic system.
Dependency Theory A structuralist theory that offers a critique of the modernization model of development. Based on the idea that certain types of political and economic relations (especially colonialism) between countries and regions of the world have created arrangements that both control and limit the extent to which regions can develop.
Dollarization when a poorer country ties the value of its currency to that of a wealthier country, or when it abandons its currency and adopts the wealthier country's currency as its own
World-Systems Theory theory originated by Immanuel Wallerstein and illuminated by his three-tier structure, proposing that social change in the developing world is inextricably linked to the economic activities of the developed world
Three-tier structure with reference to Immanuel Wallerstein's world-systems theory, the division of the world into the core, the periphery, and the semi-periphery as a means to help explain the interconnections between places in the global economy
Millennium Development Goals UN targets for basic needs measures such as reducing poverty and hunger, adopted in 2000 with a target date of 2015
Trafficking when a family sends a child or an adult to a labor recruiter in hopes that the labor recruiter will send money, and the family member will earn money to send home
Structural Adjustment Loans Loans granted by international financial institutions such as the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund to countries in the periphery and the semi periphery in exchange for certain economic and governmental reforms in that country(e.g. privatization of certain government entities and opening the country to foreign trade and investment)
Neoliberalism The economic belief that free market forces, achieved by minimizing government restrictions on business, provide the only route to economic growth.
Vectored Diseases A disease carried from one host to another by an intermediate host.
Malaria an infective disease caused by sporozoan parasites that are transmitted through the bite of an infected Anopheles mosquito
Export Processing Zones zones established by many countries in the periphery and semi-periphery where they offer favorable tax, regulatory, and trade arrangements to attract foreign trade and investment
Maquiladoras The term given to zones in northern Mexico with factories supplying manufactured goods to the U.S. market. The low-wage workers in the primarily foreign-owned factories assemble imported components and/or raw materials and then export finished goods.
Special Economic Zones specific area within a country in which tax incentives and less stringent environmental regulations are implemented to attract foreign business and investment
North American Free Trade Agreement Agreement entered into by Canada, Mexico, and the United States in December 1992 and which took effect on January 1, 1994 to eliminate the barriers to trade in, and facilitate the cross-border movement of goods and services between the countries.
Desertification The encroachment of desert conditions on moister zones along the desert margins, where plant cover and soils are threatened by desiccation - through overuse, in part by humans and their domestic animals, and, possibly, in part because of inexorable shifts in the Earth's environmental zones.
Island of Development Place built up by a government or corporation to attract foreign investment and which has relatively high concentrations of paying jobs and infrastructure.
Nongovernmental Organizations International organizations that operate outside of the formal political arena but that are nevertheless influential in spearheading international initiatives on social, economic, and environmental issues.
Microcredit Program Program that provides small loans to poor people, especially women, to encourage development of small businesses.

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