DeBlij Human Geography Chapter 12 terms

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pianolele729  on April 3, 2010

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human geography, Human Geography AP, human geography vocab.

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DeBlij Human Geography Chapter 12 terms

industrial revolution
the term applied to the social and economic changes in agriculture, commerce and manufacturing that resulted from technological innovations and specialization in late-eighteenth-century Europe.
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industrial revolution the term applied to the social and economic changes in agriculture, commerce and manufacturing that resulted from technological innovations and specialization in late-eighteenth-century Europe.
location theory a logical attempt to explain the locational pattern of an economic activity and the manner in which its producing areas are interrelated. The von Thunen model is a leading example.
variable costs costs that change directly with the amount of production (e.g. energy supply and labor costs).
least cost theory Model developed by Alfred Weber according to which the location of the manufacturing establishments is determined by the minimization of three critical expenses: labor, transportation, and agglomeration.
agglomeration a process involving the clustering or concentrating of people or activities. The term often refers to manufacturing plants and businesses that benefit from close proximity because they share skilled-labor pools and technological and financial amenities.
deglomeration the process of industrial deconcentration in response to technological advances and/or increasing costs due to congestion and competition.
break-of-bulk point A location along a transport route where goods must be transferred from one carrier to another. In a port, the cargoes of oceangoing ships are unloaded and put on trains, trucks, or perhaps smaller riverboats for inland distribution.
Fordist A highly organized and specialized system for organizing industrial production and labor. Named after automobile producer Henry Ford, this type of production features assembly-line production of standardized components for mass consumption.
just-in-time delivery Method of inventory management made possible by efficient transportation and communication systems, whereby companies keep on hand just what they need for near-term production, planning that what they need for longer-term production will arrive when needed.
intermodal connections Places where two or more modes of transportation meet (including air, road, rail, barge, and ship).
deindustrialization Process by which companies move industrial jobs to other regions with cheaper labor, leaving the region to switch to a service economy and to work through a period of high unemployment.
offshore With reference to production, to outsource to a third party located outside of the country.
Sunbelt The South and Southwest regions of the United States
Technopole Centers or nodes of high-technology research and activity around which a high-technology corridor is sometimes established.
distance decay The effects of distance on interaction, generally the greater the distance the less interaction.
locational interdependence theory developed by economist Harold Hotelling that suggests competitors, in trying to maximize sales, will seek to constrain each other's territory as much as possible which will therefore lead them to locate adjacent to one another in the middle of their collective customer base
primary industrial regions Western and Central Europe; Eastern North America; Russia and Ukraine; and Eastern Asia, each of which consists of one or more core areas of industrial development with subsidiary clusters
post-fordistworld economic system characterized by a more flexible set of production practices in which goods are not mass-produced; instead, production has been accelerated and dispersed around the globe by multinational companies that shift production, outsourcing it around the world and bringing places closer together in time and space than would have been imaginable at the beginning of the twentieth century
global division of labor phenomenon whereby corporations and others can draw from labor markets around the world, made possible by the compression of time and space through innovation in communication and transportation systems
outsourced with reference to production, to turn over in part or in total to a third party
friction of distance the increase in time and cost that usually comes with increasing distance

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