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Urban Geography

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Words
Definitions
central business district   the downtown or nucleus of a city where retail stores, offices, and cultural activities are concentrated; building densities are usually quite high; and transportation systems coverage  
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central place theory   a theory in the early 1900s that explains the size and distribution of cities in terms of competitive supply of goods and services to distribution of cities in terms of a competitive supply of goods and services to dispersed populations  
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colonial city   cities established by colonizing empires as administrative centers. Often they were established on already existing native cities, completely overtaking their infrastructures  
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concentric zone model   model that describes urban environments as a series of rings of distinct land uses radiating out from a central core, or central business district  
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edge city   cities that are located on the outskirts of larger cities and serve many of the same functions of urban areas, but sprawling, decentralized suburban environment  
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European cities   cities that were of that retain many of the same characteristics such as extreme density of development with narrow buildings and winding roads; church centered and high walls around the city  
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Exubanite   person who haas left the inner city and moved to outlying suburbs or rural areas  
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feudal city   cities that arose during the Middle Ages and that actually represent a time of relative stagnation in urban growth  
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getaway city   cities that, because of their geographic location, act as ports entry and distribution centers of large geographic areas  
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gentrification   the trend of middle- and upper income Americans moving into city centers and rehabilitating much of the architecture but also replacing low-income populations, and changing the social character of certain neighborhoods  
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hinterland   the market area surrounding an urban center, which that urban serves  
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industrial revolution   period characterized by the rapid social economic changes in manufacturing and agriculture that occurred in England during the late 18th century and rapidly diffused to other parts of the developed world  
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inner city decay   those parts of large urban areas that lose significant portions of their populations as a result of change in industry or migration to suburbs. Because of these changes, the inner city loses its tax base and becomes a center of poverty  
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Islamic cities   cites in Muslim countries that owe their structure to their religious beliefs. Islamic cities contain mosques at their center and wall guarding their perimeter.  
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Latin American cities   cities in Latin America that owe much of their structure to colonialism, the rapid rise of industrialization, and continual rapid increases in population  
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Medieval cities   cities developed in Europe during the Medieval Period and that contains such unique features as extreme density of development with narrow buildings and winding streets, an ornate church that is prominently marks the city center  
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Megacities   cites, mostly characteristic of the developing world, where high population growth and migration have caused them to explode in population since World War II.  
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Megalopolis   several, metropolitan areas that were originally separate but that have joined together to form a large, sprawling urban complex  
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metropolitan area   within the US, an urban area consisting of one or more whole county units, usually containing several urbanized, areas, or suburbs, that all act together as a coherent economic whole  
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multi nuclei model   type of urban form wherein cities have numerous centers of business and cultural activity instead of one central place  
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node   geographical centers activity. A large city, such as Los Angeles, has numerous nodes  
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primate city   a country's leading city, with a population that is disproportionately greater than other urban areas within the same country  
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rank-sized rule   rule that states that the population of any given town should be inversely proportional to its rank in the country's hierarchy when the distribution of cities according to their sizes follows a certain pattern  
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sector model   a model or urban land use that places the central business district in the middle with wedge-shape sectors radiating outwards from the center along transportation corridors  
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segregation   the process that results from suburbanization when affluent individuals leave the city center for homogenous suburban neighborhoods  
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squatter settlements   residential developments characterized by the extreme poverty that usually exist on land just outside of cities that is neither owned nor rented by its occupants  
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suburb   residential communities, located outside of city centers, that are usually relatively homogenous in terms of population  
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urban sprawl   the process of expansive suburban development over large areas spreading out from a city, in which the automobile provides the primary source of transportation  
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world city   centers of economic, culture, and political activity that are strongly interconnected and together control the global systems of finance and commerce  
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