AP Human Geography
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show | A large settlement of people with an extensive built environment that functions as a center of politics, culture, and economics.
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First Urban Revolution | show 🗑
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Mesopotamia | show 🗑
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Nile River Valley | show 🗑
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show | Region in South Asia where the first urban revolution occurred around 2200 BCE.
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show | Region in China where the first urban revolution occurred around 1500 BCE.
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Mesoamerica | show 🗑
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show | The layout of a city, including the sizes and shapes of buildings and the pathways of infrastructure.
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Functional zonation | show 🗑
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show | Physical attributes of the location of a human settlement - for example, at the head of navigation of a river or at a certain elevation.
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show | The position of a city or place relative to its surrounding environment or context.
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show | The upper, fortified part of an ancient Greek city. Commonly a religious site.
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Rank-size rule | show 🗑
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Primate city | show 🗑
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show | Walter Christaller’s theory that the size and locations of cities, towns, and villages are logically and regularly distributed.
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Hinterland | show 🗑
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show | The zone of a city where businesses cluster and around which a city and its infrastructure are typically built.
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show | Urban area that is not suburban. Generally, the older or original city that is surrounded by suburbs.
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Suburb | show 🗑
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show | Transformation of farmland and small towns outside of an urban area into suburbs.
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show | Urban model that explains the distribution of social groups around a central business district (CBD) using 5 concentric zones with the newest built on the outskirts. Created by Ernest Burgess in 1925 based on Chicago, United States.
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show | A structural model of the American city centered on a central business district with distinct areas of manufacturing and residences extending in wedge-shaped zones from the CBD (like pieces of pie).
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show | Layout of American cities, including a central business district (CBD) and suburban business districts that each serve as nuclei around which businesses and residences cluster.
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Edge cities | show 🗑
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show | Modern city in which the old downtown plays the role of a festival or recreational area, and widely dispersed industrial parks, shopping centers, high-tech industrial spaces, edge-city downtowns, and industrial suburbs.
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show | Model of Latin American cities showing central plazas and wide streets commonly designed by Spanish colonizers. Designed to help see the layers of history built in cities in Latin America.
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Disamenity sector | show 🗑
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African City Model (DeBlij) | show 🗑
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show | Model of Southeast Asian cities showing a city with an old colonial port zone surrounded by a large commercial district and no formal CBD. Designed to help see the layers of history built in cities in Southeast Asia.
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show | Legal restrictions on land use that determine what types of building and economic activities are allowed.
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show | Redistribution of representatives based on population change. For example, seats in the U.S. House of Representatives are reapportioned across states after each census before each state redistricts.
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show | Rapidly changing racial or class composition of a neighborhood that occurs when real estate agents persuade residents to sell homes because of fear that another race or class of people is moving into the neighborhood.
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White flight | show 🗑
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Gentrification | show 🗑
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show | Homes bought in suburbs with the intent of tearing them down and replacing them with much larger homes, often referred to as McMansions.
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show | Large homes often built in place of tear-downs in American suburbs.
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show | The expansion of low density urban areas around a city. New urbanism a modern approach to planning and developing cities and communities that values walkability, attracting diverse incomes, and access to public spaces.
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New Urbanism | show 🗑
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show | Portion of the economy that is not taxed or regulated by government. Goods and services are exchanged based on barter or cash systems, and earnings are not reported to government.
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show | Residential neighborhoods where access is controlled in order to define exclusive space and deter movement of people and traffic through the neighborhood.
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show | How cities shape and are shaped by geopolitical processes at national, regional and global scales.
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Megacity | show 🗑
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show | Manufacturing conducted in slums, typically relying on intensive hand labor and low-cost machines.
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