Urban Environments Flashcards
(36 cards)
Urban Settlement
Area of habitation that provides services for payment to the surrounding countryside/area
as soon as a rural area has a shop is an urban settlement
Site
The land on which it is built
Situation of a settlement
refers to its relationship with the surrounding area
Different situations of a site
Defensive: difficult to attack (hill-top or island)
Hill-foot: sheltered, flat land for building/farming
Gap: lower, more sheltered land between two hills
Wet point - close to water in a dry area
Dry point - on higher dry area close to wetland
Route center - focus of routes from surrounding area
Bridging point - where bridges can built over a river
Hamlet
No places of worship, less than 100
Village
100 - 1,000 people
few services - pub, primary school, small shop
Small town
1,000 - 26,000
Limited range of services - hairdresser, primary and secondary schools, butcher
Large Town
26,000 to 100,000 people
Range or services - some specialist shops, further education, leisure center, dentist, bank, 1 Apple store
City
100,000 to 3,000,000
Wide range of services - chains, universities, entertainment facilities
Conurbation
3,000,000+
Abundant range of services, chains, specialist shops, airports, education, 5 Apple stores, luxury specialist shops
Urban function
its reason or purpose for being
Ex: Accommodation, mining town, transport hub, manufacturing, fishing, administrative
Multi-function center
Towns and cities that provide many functions
Urban Occupation
Different sectors of the economy
Primary Urban Occupation
Agriculture, from the land, (not much of this because of restriction in land size)
Secondary Urban Occupation
Manufacturing and factories (first industrial revolution like)
Tertiary Urban Occupation
Transportation, education, financial serviecs, health (more modern service sector)
Quaternary Urban Occupation
IT, research and development, information and knowledge based (21st century stuff)
Poverty Deprivations
Lacking something needed for well-being due to poverty
Ex: sanitary water, adequate schooling, food, housing, health care, electricity
Multidimensional poverty
People experience poverty differently and it looks different in every country and by different genders and ethnic groups
Why is it important to take a multidimensional aproach to poverty?
Does not summarize the aspect of living.
Can be used to create a more comprehensive picture of how someone is poor.
Captures the reality of poverty
Informal Economy
Jobs not legally recognized by a county’s government
Key aspects of the informal economy
- mainly in cities
- outsides of shops and mobile
- competition is large
- get in the way of the clients
Problems faced in country from informal economy
- Get in the way of clients and create unneeded/unfair competition with the stores that pay rent
- Ruin image of cleanliness/image of the area
- Do not pay taxes or rent, freeload and country is losing money
Problems for the people engaging in informal economy
- Discrimination
- Denys the people the right to have social security
- Not very long term benfical
- Can be very exploited by the higher ups