Panic Revision For Mocks Flashcards

(38 cards)

1
Q

What is regeneration

A

The log term upgrading of existing places or more drastic renewal schemes

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2
Q

Classifying economic activity: primary sector - 4.1

A
  • Extracting raw materials from ground or sea
  • involves mining or farming
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3
Q

Classifying economic activity: secondary sector - 4.1

A
  • manufacturing and processing the raw materials into goods
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4
Q

Classifying economic activity: tertiary sector - 4.1

A
  • provisional sectors such as retail jobs
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5
Q

Classifying economic activity: quaternary sector - 4.1

A
  • high tech research and design
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6
Q

Classifying economic activity: quinary sector - 4.1

A
  • the highest levels of decision making in an economy
  • eg government officials
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7
Q

🌍 variations in pay and life expectancy in London vs north east - 4.1

A
  • London is more tertiary and quaternary sector - average wage of £44,370
  • north east is more secondary and tertiary - average wage is £31,000
  • QoL varies with male life expectancy in London being - 80
  • average male life expectancy in north east is - 63
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8
Q

What are the different functions - 4.2

A
  • administrative
  • commercial
  • retail
  • industrial
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9
Q

What is gentrification - 4.2

A
  • the arrival of wealthier people in an urban ditrsict which causes increases in rents, property values and changes to the areas culture
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10
Q

🌍 gentrification and function change in Nine Elms - 4.2

A
  • pre regeneration it was an industrial brownfield site with low population and derelict land
  • now its a high end residential and commercial space with rapid population growth and luxury apartments
  • Local residents have lower incomes and employment levels compared to those moving into the luxury apartments leading to gentrification and displacement of long term communities
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11
Q

What are the reasons for a change in function - 4.2

A
  • physical factors: accessibility, connectedness
  • historical planning
  • local and national planning
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12
Q

🌍 Physical factors changing a place - 4.2

A
  • proximity to large cities can cause change in an areas economic importance
  • Milton Keynes is located 50 miles from London and has direct train services to London, Birmingham and Manchester
  • turned it from undeveloped farm land to a residential commuter city
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13
Q

🌍 historical planning changing a place - 4.2

A
  • previous development and knowledge of locals mean that areas are more suited towards an industry
  • the redevelopment of Milton Keynes has turned it from a quiet residential area area to a major business centre with Santander and network rail HQing there
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14
Q

🌍 Government planning changing the function of a place - 4.2

A
  • government planning can increase or limit growth in an area
  • government planning and investment changes Milton Keynes from a rural area into a modernised town with business activity and transport links
  • the lack of planning in Middlesbrough has excaberbated the consequences of deindustrialisation with 20,000 people migrating out since 1990
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15
Q

Index of multiple deprivation - 4.2

A
  • an index that attempts to quantify deprivation in England by using 7 different domains with different weighting
  • splits England into 33,000 small areas with 1500 people in each
  • income
  • employment
  • education
  • health
  • crime
  • barriers to housing and services
  • living environment
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16
Q

🌍 regional and national influences on Worcester

A
  • influenced by industrial hubs like Birmingham
  • motorway and rail connections so is a popular commuter city
  • historical significance promotes funding
17
Q

🌍 regional and national influences on watchet

A
  • shaped by its rural and coastal environment
  • seaside destination plays an important role in its economy
  • less integrated transport networks
18
Q

🌍 global influences on watchet

A
  • port became obsolete due to competition from abroad
  • second home ownership has increased due to globalisation
  • beach attracts global tourists
19
Q

🌍 global influences on Worcester

A
  • job losses due to offshoring
  • migration especially from Poland and Romania
  • university attracts international students
  • global retail chains dominate
  • sift to online shopping means a declining high street
20
Q

🌍 reasons for regeneration in Worcester

A
  • declining footfall in the city centre
  • poor use of brownfields and underutilised riverside land
  • need to modernise infrastructure
  • desire to attract investment
21
Q

🌍 cathedral plaza regeneration

A
  • £20 million investment in the redevelopment project
  • revamped shopping and leisure spaces
  • new restaurants, gym etc
  • boosted footfall and improved visitor experience
22
Q

🌍 diglis basin regeneration

A
  • development of over 450 new homes
  • creation of cafes, restaurants and offices
  • construction of the diglis bridge (pedestrian and cycle) promoting connectivity
23
Q

🌍 positives of regeneration on Worcester

A
  • revitalised city centre
  • improved public spaces increasing tourism
  • new housing developments helping to meet local demand
  • economic diversification
24
Q

🌍 negatives of regeneration on Worcester

A
  • risk of gentrification and rising property prices especially in diglis
  • some areas eg Blackpole still face deprivation
  • reliance on external investment
25
🌍 reasons for regeneration in watchet
- loss of key industries leading to unemployment and economic downturn - underutilised harbour and brownfield sites - need to revitalise the town economy through promoting tourism
26
🌍 east quay development
- funded by a £5 million grant and a £1.5 million loan - features include art galleries, workshops, restaurants and holiday pods - aims to create 200 jobs and attract an additional 100,000 visitors
27
🌍 watchet esplanade enhancement
- improvements include new paving, seating, lighting and the planting of eight oak trees - the area now hosts markets and live performances
28
🌍 positives of regeneration on watchet
- diversification of the local economy through tourism and the arts - job creation and increased visitor numbers - enhanced community facilities and public spaces
29
🌍 negatives of regeneration on watchet
- ongoing concerns about coastal erosion - balancing tourism with the preservation of local character - increasing house prices
30
🌍 a successful place: San Franciscos functional and demographic changes
- function changes: people with lower paying creative jobs are being forced out and replaced by engineers and people in tech. Used to be a post-industrial city now a global tech and innovation hub home to apple, facebook, google etc - demographic changes: net increase of around 7000 people a year, people moving in tend to be younger white or Asian, people moving out tend to be less educated, older, African American and Hispanic, was 13% African American in 1970 now its less than 6%
31
🌍 a successful place: San Francisco strengths
- apple, facebook and twitter are based there - considered the global hub for tech - 87% of the population have access to high speed internet - among the highest gdp in US - 2% unemployment
32
🌍 a successful place: San Francisco limitations
- extremely high cost of living - median family house price is over $1.5 million - high taxation rates - one of the highest homelessness rates in US - decreasing diversity
33
🌍 unsuccessful regions: rust belt
- once the worlds biggest industrial region with coal - due to the global shift high unemployment - high income primary and secondary jobs replaced with low wage tertiary jobs - population decline led to brain drain - crime and dereliction - low spending revenue for local government - however low land prices could promote investment and regeneration
34
Variations in voter turnout - 4.5
in the 2015 general election - 78% of over 65s voted - 43% of 18-24 - only 55% of those in ethnic minority groups chose to vote - those in managerial positions was 75% - those in manual labour was 57% - turnout was lowest in deprived areas
35
Things that impact levels of engagement
Lived experience: how a persons life perspective is formed from their past experiences Lived experience can be impacted by - age - gender - ethnicity - length of residence - deprivation levels
36
Regeneration causing conflicts: studentification
- process in which neighbourhoods become dominated by student residential occupations causing a change in function - younger students bring anti social behaviour - conversion of family homes into student accommodation - increased pressure on local services - increase demand for local businesses - cultural exchange
37
Regeneration causing conflicts: sink estates
A sink estate is a housing estate with high levels of social deprivation, crime, unemployment, and poor-quality housing.
38
Regeneration causing conflicts: sink estates (lower Falinge)
- located in Rochdale housing around 1,000 people - consistently ranked as one of the most deprived areas in the UK Conflicting views on its future - local council wants it demolished and some residents from surrounding areas - some think its outdated - an asylum seeker finds it nice - it feels like home to many