A summary of the topics of globalisation and diverse places that make up the dynamic places section of the exam. They are a set of condensed notes making them perfect to review to learn the key pieces of information required.
A level Geography Topic 4a REGENERATION REVISION NOTES (Pearson Edexcel)
Edexcel A-Level Geography Topic 4B Diverse Places Summary + Case Studies
Edexcel A-Level Geography Topic 3 Globalisation Summary + Case Studies
All for this textbook (18)
Written for
A/AS Level
PEARSON (PEARSON)
Geography 2016
Unit 2 - Dynamic Places
All documents for this subject (58)
Seller
Follow
joannaem
Reviews received
Content preview
Summary of Dynamic Places
Globalisation
Understanding globalisation
- economic = growth of TNCs, online purchasing, ICT supports growth of complex spatial divisions of labour for firms
- social = social interconnectivity, global improvements in education + healthcare, migrants
- political = international organisations, growth of trading blocs
- cultural = Western culture traits, circulation of ideas + information, glocalisation + hybridisation
- globalisation works through = trade, colonialism and co-operation
Acceleration of globalisation
- ‘’shrinking world’’ = reduces time it takes to trade and communicate globally, encouraged growth in trade
- quick communications help businesses = transfer money, employees and orders, keep in touch with production,
- global flows = capital, information, tourists, migrants, commodities
- developments in transport and trade = steam power, railways, container shipping, jet aircraft
Key players in globalisation
- after WW2 to stabilise the world economy and avoid a return to conditions that prevailed during Great Depression
- World Bank = to reduce poverty
- WTO = advocates trade liberalisation
- IMF = encourages developing countries to accept FDI and open up economies
Working outside main trade blocs
- inter-governmental organisations - needed to achieve WTO’s aim
- some develop informal economic partnerships
TNC’s and globalisation
- glocalise
- locate manufacturing plants in SEZs – will eventually sell products there
- offshoring parts to cheaper locations and outsourcing parts usually administration and data to 3 rd parties
- use of faster transport and rapid communication systems
- just-in-time business model
Measures of globalisation
KOF Index
- economic globalisation i.e. cross border, transactions and volume of FDI
- social globalisation i.e. cross border contracts, information flows
- political globalisation i.e. number of foreign embassies in country, membership of different organisations
- each set of different indicators = scaled
AT Kearny
- political engagement i.e. participation in international organisations treaties and organisations
- technological connectivity i.e. number of internet users, hosts and servers
- personal contact i.e. telephone calls, travel, remittance payments
- economic integration i.e. volumes of international trade and FDI
- worked out using a complex points and weighing system for the 4 individual indicator rankings
- more holistic indicators and volume of trade – allows US to be number 3
, Switched on and switched off worlds
- global cores best placed to specialise and produce goods – moved by demographic, finance and trade flows
- global core-periphery model – offshoring + outsourcing come from core, downward transition areas lose out to FDI
- as countries globalise, certain characteristics change: flows, technologies, movements and media
- economic, environmental, political, social and physical isolation
Global shift
- outsourcing and offshoring of industry through FDI
- 3 factors accelerated global shift = individual Asian countries began to allow overseas companies to access markets,
TNC’s began to seek new areas for manufacturing + outsourcing services, FDI began to flow into the emerging Asian
countries
- impacts on LICs = biodiversity loss, education, poverty reduction, low wages, lack of union, loss of tradition
- impacts on HICs = inner city spiral deprivation, depopulation, development of new technology, dereliction
Growth of mega cities
- 60% of growth due to rural-urban migration
- 40% of growth due to high birth rates (natural increase)
- urban pull = nightlife, school + healthcare, govt security, offer promotion + advancement into professional roles
- rural push = seasonal employment, crop failure, wars, agricultural modernisation reduces need for rural labour
- shrinking world technology ‘’switch on’’ people in remote and impoverished areas
- social challenges = lack of clean water, private companies who invest target high earners first, short supply of homes
- environmental challenges = sprawling slums at city edge, rivers + lakes polluted, air pollution
Global interconnections and rapid urbanisation trends
- global hub = highly-globally connected city that has natural resources i.e. coastline and human resources i.e. labour –
found at countries with varying levels of development, growth due to elite, low waged and internal migrants
- low waged migrants = help infrastructure, entry visas tied to specific jobs, cheap flow of labour
- elite migrants = help knowledge economy, investments made
- host locations = skilled workers to fill skill gaps, tensions, pressure on services, some host members cannot get jobs
- source locations = loss of skilled (brain drain), remittances boost income, closure of services, dependent population
- rural-urban migration uncommon in HICs – rural areas have changed
- challenges facing megacities – transport, food + water supply, urban employment, healthcare + education
Rise of a global culture
- cultural diffusion = spread of cultural change
- can happen through force, cultural imperialism (hard power) i.e. spread around world using force or soft power i.e.
shape global culture through their influence over global media
- Westernisation – joint role played by European and North American countries in bringing about global cultural change
– i.e. changed people’s diets, more people are speaking English
- global media coverage of Paralympics, Gay Pride marches etc may erode discrimination and prejudice
Cultural erosion
- migration, improvements in communications and global marketing cause cultural erosion - people no longer confined
to developing an identity based on the place they live
- developed countries are better equipped to protect its cultural heritage than developing world
- social impacts = learn new languages, languages become extinct, loss of tradition, indigenous people hunt endangered
species for food or to sell
- economic impacts = privatisation, people from tribes can work in farming, TNCs can provide useful skills for locals
The benefits of buying summaries with Stuvia:
Guaranteed quality through customer reviews
Stuvia customers have reviewed more than 700,000 summaries. This how you know that you are buying the best documents.
Quick and easy check-out
You can quickly pay through credit card or Stuvia-credit for the summaries. There is no membership needed.
Focus on what matters
Your fellow students write the study notes themselves, which is why the documents are always reliable and up-to-date. This ensures you quickly get to the core!
Frequently asked questions
What do I get when I buy this document?
You get a PDF, available immediately after your purchase. The purchased document is accessible anytime, anywhere and indefinitely through your profile.
Satisfaction guarantee: how does it work?
Our satisfaction guarantee ensures that you always find a study document that suits you well. You fill out a form, and our customer service team takes care of the rest.
Who am I buying these notes from?
Stuvia is a marketplace, so you are not buying this document from us, but from seller joannaem. Stuvia facilitates payment to the seller.
Will I be stuck with a subscription?
No, you only buy these notes for $3.86. You're not tied to anything after your purchase.