General

Cards (12)

  • Urban population
    people who live in urban areas
  • Urbanisation
    the process by which an increasing percentage of a countries population move into urban areas (such as towns and cities)
  • Mega-city
    an urban area with more then 10 million people in it
  • HIC
    high income country
    abundance of resources
    money - higher average income
    tourism
    higher literacy rates
    availability of education
  • LIC
    low income country
    war
    child labour
    lack of education - lower literacy rates
    pollution - poor air quality
    less resources - less safe drinking water
    poor hygiene - poor healthcare - low life expectancy
    poor quality of life - poor quality infrastructure
  • Natural increase
    more children are born then people die
  • rural to urban migration
    newcomers arrive in the city from the countryside
  • Urbanisation in HIC's
    HIC's experienced urbanisation in the 18th, 19th, 20th century
    now - majority of their populations live in urban areas - so the rate of urbanisation is slow
    the rate of natural increase is slow as women have less children
  • Urbanisation in LIC's
    LIC;s countries experience rapid urbanisation now
    the majority of their populations still live in rural areas - rate of rural-urban migration is high
    they move to cities due to push pull factors
    population in these cities is young - natural increase is high
  • Urbanisation in South America
    even though these countries are not amongst the richest - they experienced urbanisation early and it has now slowed
  • Push factors

    drive people away from an area
    war
    land degradation from farming
    extreme physical conditions - eg mountains
    farming is hard work with long hours and little pay
    limited food production
    lack of employment opportunities - lack of services - mechanism
    families don't own land - overpopulation
  • pull factors

    draw people into an area
    better paid jobs
    comfortable housing - higher quality of life
    Religious and political activities
    better services - eg school, health
    more reliable sources of food
    more investment