people to know: 1.carl sauer 2.thomas malthus 3.rostow 4.wallerstein 5.von thunen 6.weber...

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People to know:1. Carl Sauer2. Thomas Malthus3. Rostow4. Wallerstein5. Von Thunen6. Weber7. Christaller 8. Burgess9. Hoyt10. Harris Ullman

People to know:•Carl Sauer: cultural landscape•Thomas Malthus: population growth faster than food supply would mean disaster•Rostow: stage of economic development•Wallerstein: core-periphery model•Von Thunen: location theory for agriculture•Weber: location theory for industry/manufacturing•Christaller : central place theory•Burgess: Concentric urban model•Hoyt: Sector: urban model•Harris Ullman : multiple nuclei urban model

• Carl Sauer: cultural landscape

• Thomas Malthus: population growth faster than food supply

• Rostow: stage of economic development

• US economist Walter Rostow, argued that countries would progress through five stages

Progressive stages of economic growth.

Rostow Model

Strength of the Modernization model:

• Over the long term, all countries are capable of development.

• It has proved to works for some countries: Singapore, Hong Kong, South Korea, Taiwan (Asian Dragons) the American South, Czech Republic, Ireland

Rostow’s model did not account for regional constraints

• Wallerstein: core-periphery model

• Immanuel Wallerstein, a leading advocate of the approach characterizes the world system as a set of mechanisms which redistributes resources from the periphery to the core.

Dependency School of Thought/Model (1970s). Sees low development levels as

being a result of the LDCs economic dependency on the MDCs.

Von Thunen’s Agricultural Von Thunen’s Agricultural ModelModel

A land use model used to A land use model used to explain the importance of explain the importance of proximity to the market in proximity to the market in

the choice of crops on the choice of crops on commercial farms(this commercial farms(this created a concentric created a concentric

pattern: circles sharing pattern: circles sharing the same centersthe same centers)

Because farmers must pay to transport their produce to the market, and these costs are directly proportional to distance, the profit for each product declines as a straight line with increasing distance from the market

Weber’s least cost theory accounted for the location of a manufacturing plant in terms of the owner’s desire to minimize

three categories of costs. 1. Transportation

2. Labor

3. Agglomeration

Do Activity

Weber's model attempts to explain industrial location.

Weber used locational triangles to illustrate

the impact of transport costs on industrial location.

A. Transporting raw materials cost the

same as the finished product

B. Transporting raw materials costs less

than finished product (maybe finished

product delicate/more packaging)

C. Transporting raw materials costs more than finished product

(loss in bulk)

D. More of raw material from R2 needed than R1

• Christaller : central place theory

• Burgess: Concentric urban model

• Hoyt: Sector: urban model

• Harris Ullman : multiple nuclei urban model

CARL Sauer: Cultural Landscape

Malthus: Malnutrition

Malthus: too many mouths to feed

Rostow: Stages of development

Wallerstein: Humpty Dumpty sat on a wall

core

periphery

Von Thunen: Vons Transportation

Weber: Spiderman spins webs for man=manufacturing

Christaller: Christ has a central place in Christians hearts

Burgess: Bulls eye

Hoyt: Hot

Sector Model=Sexy model

Harris Ullman: Harris and Ullman have multiple partners

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