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United States · College BoardQ&A
Human GeographyQ&A by dot point
A short Q&A bank for every United States Human Geography syllabus dot point. Each question and answer is drawn directly from our worked dot-point page, so you can scan key concepts before opening the long-form answer.
Unit 1: Thinking Geographically
- Topic 1.2 Geographic Data: identify the types of geographic data, the methods of collecting them, and the technologies geographers use to gather and analyze spatial information.2Q&A pairs
- Topic 1.5 Human-Environmental Interaction: explain how the environment shapes human activity and how humans modify the environment, contrasting environmental determinism with possibilism.2Q&A pairs
- Topic 1.1 Introduction to Maps: identify different map types, the spatial patterns they show, and how map projections distort the real world.2Q&A pairs
- Topic 1.7 Regional Analysis: define a region and distinguish formal, functional, and perceptual (vernacular) regions, explaining how regional boundaries are drawn and contested.2Q&A pairs
- Topic 1.6 Scales of Analysis: define scale, distinguish the levels of analysis from global to local, and explain how conclusions change with the scale chosen.2Q&A pairs
- Topic 1.4 Spatial Concepts: define and apply the spatial concepts of location, place, distance, pattern, and the processes of distance decay, time-space compression, and flows.2Q&A pairs
- Topic 1.3 The Power of Geographic Data: explain how individuals, organizations, and governments use geographic data and geospatial technology to make decisions across scales.2Q&A pairs
Unit 2: Population and Migration Patterns and Processes
- Topic 2.9 Aging Populations: explain the causes of population aging and the economic, social, and political challenges and responses it brings.2Q&A pairs
- Topic 2.10 Causes of Migration: explain the push and pull factors, intervening obstacles and opportunities, and the laws and theories that account for why and how people migrate.2Q&A pairs
- Topic 2.2 Consequences of Population Distribution: explain how population distribution and density affect the environment, economy, politics, and society of a place.2Q&A pairs
- Topic 2.12 Effects of Migration: explain the economic, cultural, political, and demographic effects of migration on origin and destination places.2Q&A pairs
- Topic 2.11 Forced and Voluntary Migration: distinguish forced from voluntary migration and identify their major types, including refugees, internally displaced persons, asylum seekers, and transnational and internal migration.2Q&A pairs
- Topic 2.6 Malthusian Theory: explain Thomas Malthus's argument about population and resources, evaluate it against historical evidence, and contrast it with neo-Malthusian and critical responses.2Q&A pairs
- Topic 2.3 Population Composition: use age, sex, and dependency structure, read population pyramids, and explain what composition reveals about a society.2Q&A pairs
- Topic 2.1 Population Distribution: describe the factors that influence where people live and the methods used to measure population density and distribution.2Q&A pairs
- Topic 2.4 Population Dynamics: define and calculate the rates of fertility, mortality, and natural increase, and explain the factors that drive them.2Q&A pairs
- Topic 2.7 Population Policies: explain the goals and effects of pronatalist, antinatalist, and immigration-related population policies.2Q&A pairs
- Topic 2.5 The Demographic Transition Model: explain the stages of the Demographic Transition Model and the Epidemiological Transition, and evaluate the model's usefulness and limits.2Q&A pairs
- Topic 2.8 Women and Demographic Change: explain how women's changing social, economic, and political status influences fertility rates and population growth.2Q&A pairs
Unit 3: Cultural Patterns and Processes
- Topic 3.6 Contemporary Causes of Diffusion: explain how modern communication, transportation, and time-space compression accelerate cultural diffusion and create global interconnection.2Q&A pairs
- Topic 3.2 Cultural Landscapes: define the cultural landscape, explain how cultural attitudes and values are expressed in the built environment, and analyze the landscape as evidence of identity, power, and change.2Q&A pairs
- Topic 3.3 Cultural Patterns: explain how language, religion, ethnicity, and gender shape cultural patterns and landscapes, and analyze their distributions across regions and scales.2Q&A pairs
- Topic 3.7 Diffusion of Religion and Language: explain how religions and languages diffuse through migration, conversion, trade, and colonialism, and analyze the resulting patterns, including syncretism, pidgins, creoles, and lingua francas.2Q&A pairs
- Topic 3.8 Effects of Diffusion: explain the effects of cultural diffusion, including acculturation, assimilation, syncretism, multiculturalism, and the tension between a global culture and local identity.2Q&A pairs
- Topic 3.5 Historical Causes of Diffusion: explain how historical processes such as colonialism, imperialism, and trade diffused cultural traits, and analyze their lasting imprint on language, religion, and landscape.2Q&A pairs
- Topic 3.1 Introduction to Culture: define culture and cultural traits, distinguish material and nonmaterial culture, and explain how cultural traits, complexes, and regions vary across space and scales.2Q&A pairs
- Topic 3.4 Types of Diffusion: define cultural diffusion and distinguish relocation diffusion from expansion diffusion, including contagious, hierarchical, and stimulus diffusion.2Q&A pairs
Unit 4: Political Patterns and Processes
- Topic 4.8 Challenges to Sovereignty: explain the political, economic, and cultural forces that challenge state sovereignty, including devolution, supranationalism, ethnic separatism, terrorism, and globalization.2Q&A pairs
- Topic 4.9 Consequences of Centrifugal and Centripetal Forces: explain how centripetal and centrifugal forces affect the stability and cohesion of states, and analyze outcomes such as devolution, ethnic nationalism, and the effect of state shape.2Q&A pairs
- Topic 4.4 Defining Political Boundaries: define and classify political boundaries, including relic, superimposed, subsequent, antecedent, geometric, and consequent boundaries, and the difference between definition, delimitation, and demarcation.2Q&A pairs
- Topic 4.7 Forms of Governance: explain the difference between unitary and federal states, and analyze how the organization of power affects governance, representation, and the management of diversity.2Q&A pairs
- Topic 4.6 Internal Boundaries: explain how and why states create internal boundaries, including voting districts, and analyze redistricting, reapportionment, and gerrymandering.2Q&A pairs
- Topic 4.1 Introduction to Political Geography: define the state, nation, nation-state, stateless nation, and multinational state, and explain the concepts of sovereignty, territoriality, and self-determination.2Q&A pairs
- Topic 4.3 Political Power and Territoriality: explain how political power and territoriality are exercised over space, and analyze how neocolonialism, shatterbelts, and choke points shape the distribution of power.2Q&A pairs
- Topic 4.2 Political Processes: explain the processes that create and change states, including the rise of the modern state, colonialism, imperialism, independence, devolution, and self-determination.2Q&A pairs
- Topic 4.5 The Function of Political Boundaries: explain how political boundaries function, the types of boundary disputes (definitional, locational, operational, allocational), and how voting districts and maritime boundaries (UNCLOS) operate.2Q&A pairs
Unit 5: Agriculture and Rural Land-Use Patterns and Processes
- Topic 5.3 Agricultural Origins and Diffusions: explain the origins of agriculture in early hearths and the diffusion of plants, animals, and techniques, including the First Agricultural Revolution.2Q&A pairs
- Topic 5.6 Agricultural Production Regions: classify the world's major agricultural production regions and explain how they relate to climate, development, and intensive or extensive practice.2Q&A pairs
- Topic 5.11 Challenges of Contemporary Agriculture: explain the challenges of contemporary agriculture, including sustainability, food security, food deserts, and responses such as organic, local, and value-added farming.2Q&A pairs
- Topic 5.10 Consequences of Agricultural Practices: explain the environmental and societal consequences of agricultural practices, including pollution, soil and land degradation, water use, and changes to rural land use and society.2Q&A pairs
- Topic 5.1 Introduction to Agriculture: explain how the physical environment influences agriculture and distinguish the major types, including subsistence and commercial, intensive and extensive farming.2Q&A pairs
- Topic 5.2 Settlement Patterns and Survey Methods: explain rural settlement patterns (clustered, dispersed, linear) and the survey methods (metes and bounds, township and range, long lot) that shape rural land division.2Q&A pairs
- Topic 5.7 Spatial Organization of Agriculture: explain how large-scale commercial agriculture and agribusiness are organized, including economies of scale, vertical integration, and the commodity chain.2Q&A pairs
- Topic 5.9 The Global System of Agriculture: explain how agriculture operates in a global system of trade and interdependence, including the roles of more and less developed countries and the global supply chain.2Q&A pairs
- Topic 5.5 The Green Revolution: explain the technologies of the Green Revolution and evaluate its benefits and costs for food supply, the environment, and farmers.2Q&A pairs
- Topic 5.4 The Second Agricultural Revolution: explain the technological and organizational changes of the Second Agricultural Revolution and their effects on production, labor, and population.2Q&A pairs
- Topic 5.8 The Von Thünen Model: explain the Von Thünen model of agricultural land use, how transport cost and land rent produce concentric rings, and evaluate the model's assumptions and limits.2Q&A pairs
- Topic 5.12 Women in Agriculture: explain the roles and contributions of women in agriculture across the world, and analyze how their work and access to resources vary by region, development, and culture.2Q&A pairs
Unit 6: Cities and Urban Land-Use Patterns and Processes
- Topic 6.10 Challenges of Urban Changes: explain the economic and social challenges of urban change, including housing, segregation, gentrification, redlining, and access to services.2Q&A pairs
- Topic 6.11 Challenges of Urban Sustainability: explain the environmental and infrastructural challenges of urban sustainability, including sprawl, sanitation, climate, and disamenity.2Q&A pairs
- Topic 6.2 Cities Across the World: explain how the attributes and influences of urbanization vary across the world, including differences between more and less developed countries.2Q&A pairs
- Topic 6.3 Cities and Globalization: explain how globalization influences urban patterns and processes, including the role of world cities and the urban hierarchy of global influence.2Q&A pairs
- Topic 6.6 Density and Land Use: explain how density, bid-rent, zoning, and infill shape urban land use, and analyze the effects of low-density development and sprawl.2Q&A pairs
- Topic 6.7 Infrastructure: explain how infrastructure influences the function and growth of cities, and how it relates to a city's economic and political role.2Q&A pairs
- Topic 6.5 The Internal Structure of Cities: explain the models that describe the internal structure of cities, including the Burgess, Hoyt, multiple-nuclei, and regional urban models.2Q&A pairs
- Topic 6.1 Origin and Influences of Urbanization: explain the processes of urbanization and suburbanization, and the site and situation factors that drive the growth and decline of cities.2Q&A pairs
- Topic 6.4 The Size and Distribution of Cities: explain the models that describe the size and distribution of cities, including the rank-size rule, the primate city, and central place theory.2Q&A pairs
- Topic 6.9 Urban Data: explain how qualitative and quantitative data are used to analyze urban patterns, including census data, and the quality of life in cities.2Q&A pairs
- Topic 6.8 Urban Sustainability: explain the strategies of urban sustainability, including smart growth, New Urbanism, greenbelts, and transit-oriented development.2Q&A pairs
Unit 7: Industrial and Economic Development Patterns and Processes
- Topic 7.7 Changes from the World Economy: explain how the global economy has changed, including outsourcing, offshoring, post-Fordist production, special economic zones, and newly industrializing economies.2Q&A pairs
- Topic 7.2 Economic Sectors and Patterns: explain the economic sectors and the location theories, including Weber's least-cost theory, that explain where economic activities occur.2Q&A pairs
- Topic 7.3 Measures of Development: explain how economic and social indicators, including GDP, GNI, the HDI, and the GII, are used to measure development.2Q&A pairs
- Topic 7.8 Sustainable Development: explain the concept of sustainable development, including its environmental, economic, and social dimensions and the trade-offs it involves.2Q&A pairs
- Topic 7.1 The Industrial Revolution: explain how the Industrial Revolution began, the role of energy and technology, and how industrialization diffused and transformed society.2Q&A pairs
- Topic 7.5 Theories of Development: explain the theories of economic development, including Rostow's stages of growth and Wallerstein's world-systems theory, and their critiques.2Q&A pairs
- Topic 7.6 Trade and the World Economy: explain how comparative advantage, complementarity, trade agreements, and international institutions shape the global economy.2Q&A pairs
- Topic 7.4 Women and Economic Development: explain the role of women in economic development, including labor participation, gender gaps, and the role of microfinance.2Q&A pairs