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Unit 2 Vocab Part 3 Test

Enter the letter for the matching Answer
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1.
Transhumance
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2.
Anti Natalist Theory
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3.
ESPeN hD
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4.
Pull Factor
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5.
Immigration Policies
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6.
Voluntary Migration
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7.
Rural-to-Urban Migration
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8.
Pronatalist Theory
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9.
Step Migration
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10.
Intervening Obstacle
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11.
Ravenstein's Laws of Migration
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12.
Malthusian Theory
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13.
Refugee
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14.
Internally Displaced Person
A.
Barriers that hold migrants back from continuing to travel.
B.
Most typical kind of migration trend, up to 55% of people live in urban areas today.
C.
Someone who has been forced to flee their home but never crosses an international border.
D.
Government programs designed to decrease the fertility rate and slow down population growth.
E.
Someone who has been forced to flee his or her country because of persecution, war or violence.
F.
Government programs designed to increase the fertility rate and accelerate population growth.
G.
Policies that look to control the population through laws targeting migration.
H.
Patterns and trends found in migration and migrants.
I.
Economic, Social, Political, and Environmental, and Demographic causes and effects of migration.
J.
Migration typically occurs in steps, migrants reach their eventual destination through a series of smaller movements.
K.
Positive conditions and circumstances of a location that encourages people to move to that place.
L.
Traditional migration of nomadic herders that move their livestock from high elevations in the summer and lower elevations in the winter.
M.
People migrate due to their own choices.
N.
Theory that population will grow exponentially while food output will not. This would result in a food shortage and famine due to overpopulation. Malthus said governments should intervene.
Type the Question that corresponds to the displayed Answer.
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15.
Migrants that travel within a country’s borders. Much more likely than transnational migration.
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16.
Counter to what Malthus said, Boserup claimed that as population increases, humans will develop new technologies to also increase production of food supply.
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17.
People relocate due to fears of violence or survival.
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18.
Migrants who travel internationally in order to find work as temporary laborers - typically a short period of time because the jobs cannot be filled by a country’s own labor force.
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19.
Theory that shows concerns about sustainable use of the environment - the earth’s resources cannot only sustain a finite (limited) population. Looks at more than just food output (unlike original malthusian theory).
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20.
Negative circumstances, events, or conditions present in a location that causes people to move away.
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21.
When people flee their own country and seek sanctuary in another country.
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22.
The permanent or semipermanent relocation of people from one place to another.
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23.
Immigrants migrate to a location based off of the recommendation of or reunification with family members, friends, or community members that have previously migrated to that location.
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24.
Migration from one country to another country.

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