Regeneration EQ1 - How and why do places vary? Flashcards

1
Q

What is a place?

A

Geographical spaces shaped by individuals and communities over time

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2
Q

What is the rural-urban continuum?

A

The unbroken transition from sparsely populated or unpopulated, remote rural places to densely populated, intensively used urban places

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3
Q

What is dynamism?

A

The rate at which places change

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4
Q

What is regeneration?

A

Long term upgrading of existing urban, rural, industrial and commercial areas to bring about social and economic change on a long-term scale

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5
Q

How can economic activity be classified?

A
  • by sector (primary, secondary, tertiary, quaternary)
  • by type of employment (part time/full time, temporary/permanent, employed/self employed)
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6
Q

What is the primary sector?

A

Jobs involving the extraction or production of raw materials

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7
Q

What is the secondary sector?

A

Jobs involving the manufacturing or production of raw materials

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8
Q

What is the tertiary sector?

A

Jobs made up of different types of services from the public, private or voluntary sectors

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9
Q

What is the quarternary sector?

A

Jobs involving the provision of specialist services, which can include law, finance and ICT

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10
Q

What are the 3 types of employment?

A
  • employees with contracts (permanent or fixed)
  • workers (agency staff and volunteers)
  • self-employed (freelancers, consultants and contractors)
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11
Q

What are some of the controversial aspects of work?

A
  • Gender gap narrowed, but still exists (men paid 10% more on average than women)
  • Zero-hours contracts, designed for casual ‘piece work’ or ‘on call’ work
  • Illegal work
  • Temporary and seasonal work usually has low pay
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12
Q

How are differences in economic activity reflected?

A

By variations in social factors
- health
- life expectancy
- levels of education

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13
Q

What is a location quotient?

A

A mapable ratio that helps show specialisation in any data distribution being studied

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14
Q

What is gross value added?

A

A measure of the contribution to the economy of each individual producer, industry or sector

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15
Q

What is the postcode lottery?

A

The uneven distribution of local personal health and health services nationally, especially in mental health, early cancer diagnosis, and emergency care for the elderly

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16
Q

What is the Glasgow effect?

A

The impacts of poor health linked to deprivation

17
Q

How is health linked to economic sectors?

A

Variations in income can affect the quality of people’s housing and diets.
Geographical factors = spatial distribution of food - access to food and lifestyle choices
Variations in healthcare nationally - postcode lottery

18
Q

What are factors that impact life expectancy?

A
  • Gender
  • Income
  • Occupation
  • Education
  • Diet
  • Smoking
19
Q

How does education link to deprivation?

A

Education is inequal across UK - outcome (measured by examination success) is strongly linked to income levels
Children in poverty have lower educational achievement and are more likely to continue to underachieve (poverty trap)

20
Q

What is household food insecurity?

A

A household-level economic and social condition of limited or uncertain access to adequate food

21
Q

How are inequalities in pay levels across economic sectors and in different types of employment reflected?

A

In quality of life indices

22
Q

What is quality of life?

A

The level of social and economic well-being experienced by individuals or communities measured by various indicators such as health, happiness, educational achievement, income and leisure time

23
Q

What are functions?

A

The roles a place plays for its community and surroundings. These may be regional, national or even global, and can grow, disappear and change over time

24
Q

What are characteristics?

A

The physical and human aspects that help distinguish one place from another
e.g. location, natural features, layout, cultural traits, architecture

25
Q

What are the 4 main functions?

A
  • administrative
  • commercial
  • retail
  • industrial
26
Q

What are demographic changes?

A

Changes in characteristics of age structure and ethnic composition of an area (also includes gentrification)

27
Q

What are functional changes?

A

An area’s purpose shifting, often due to the people that live there

28
Q

What is gentrification?

A

A change in the social structure of a place when affluent people move into a location

29
Q

What are the positives of gentrification?

A

New investment attracted to the area, increased property values, crime rates drop, ease strain on public infrastructure while vacancy rates lowered, PME

30
Q

What are the negatives of gentrification?

A

Working class pushed out by rising prices, this can lead to social tension and conflict, social division, segregation

31
Q

What are the factors explaining reasons for change in a place?

A
  • physical factors
  • accessibility and connectedness
  • historical development
  • role of local and national planning
32
Q

What are the physical factors affecting the changing characteristics of places?

A
  • location
  • environment
  • technology
33
Q

What historical development factors affect the changing characteristics of places?

A
  • post production era
  • competition for optimum site of functions
  • changes in consumer trends
  • increased affluence (more leisure/tourism)
  • historic buildings
34
Q

What are the roles of planning by governments/other stakeholders that affect the changing characteristics of places?

A
  • national government policies
  • ‘plan led’ system, tight control over developments, zoning (Green Belts)
  • conservation area policies
  • central government intervention
  • local planning centres
  • image
35
Q

How can change be measured?

A
  • employment trends
  • demographic changes
  • land use changes
  • levels of deprivation (IMD)
36
Q

What are the 7 domains of deprivation included in the IMD?

A

Income, employment, education, health, crime, barriers to housing and services, living environment

37
Q

How does the IMD help identify places in need of regeneration?

A

Provides a relative scale for comparison rather than an absolute one
Shows changes over time
Good synopsis of deprivation (weighting of different domains)
Allows resources to be correctly allocated or crime targeted