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5 Themes of Geography: -Location - The relative location and the absolute location (made of the latitude and longitude). -Place - The distinctive physical and human characteristics of an area.-Human - How humans interact with their environment. -Movement - The mobility of individuals, goods and ideas-the patterns and alter human
frontier. a zone where no state exercises complete political control. unitary state. places most power in the hands of central government officials. Study with Quizlet and memorize flashcards containing terms like state, sovereignty, microstates and more.
The increase of communication, connection, and reliance between people, countries, and businesses. Explained what has allowed globalization to become a trend in understanding modern human interaction.
AP Human Geography Chapter 14 Vocabulary: Globalization and the Geography of Networks (CNT13) The expansion of economic, political, and cultural processes to the point that they become global in scale and impact.
Throughout most of human history, boundaries were determined by frontiers where no political entity controlled the area. These were often large, uninhabitable regions such as deserts, oceans, and glaciers. But technological and communication advancements have allowed nations to protect there regions without the need of frontiers.
The syllabus cites a college-level human geography textbook from the AP Human Geography example textbook list, and includes examples of other resources such as data sources, websites, mapping resources, videos, and periodicals that will be used to teach the course content and skills.
Researchers examining ‘flaming’ - defined as hostile and aggressive interactions via text-based computer mediated-communication - have proposed theoretical frameworks to explain possible...