Defining and Investigating World Cities Session 10.

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Defining and Investigating World Cities Session 10

Transcript of Defining and Investigating World Cities Session 10.

Page 1: Defining and Investigating World Cities Session 10.

Defining and Investigating World Cities

Session 10

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Defining and Investigating World CitiesSessions 10 & 11: WORLD CITIES

UNIT 1: GOING GLOBAL

Learning Objectives1. To define a world city, million city and mega city2. To describe the causes (push and pull) of rural-urban

migration3. Describe and explain the global pattern of megacities,

including regional variations in growth rates

Session 11

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Starter: Obj 1: To define a world city, million city and mega city

• World cities = A city able to have an effect on global affairs through it’s socio-economic resources and importance in global networks

• Million cities = Metropolitan areas with a population in excess of 1 million inhabitants

• Mega cities = Metropolitan areas with a population in excess of 10 million inhabitants

List of largest cities: http://www.mongabay.com/igapo/cities.htm

Sort the cards to match definitions and examples

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Identify which category the following belong to and be ready to explain your answer

Brussels

Newcastle Upon Tyne

Delhi

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Identify which category the following belong to and be ready to explain your answer

• All of these cities are million cities • Delhi is the only ‘mega city’ (16,700,000) and has

the fastest growth rate of any megacity in the world (4.6% per year!)

• Brussels is the ‘Capital city’ of the European Union... Just over 1 million but an important world city.

• Newcastle Upon Tyne is the smallest million city in the UK, with a population of 1,100,000

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Urbanisation –p114-15 blue bookObj 2: To describe the causes (push and pull) of rural-urban migration

• What is urbanisation?Urbanisation is the increase in the proportion of people living in towns and

cities. • What causes urbanisation?Urbanisation occurs because people move from rural areas (countryside) to

urban areas (towns and cities). This usually occurs when a country is still developing.

The UN predicts that by 2030 60% of the world's population will live in urban environments.

• What is urbanisation?• What causes urbanisation? (create a definition plus a table of push and pull factors)

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Rural push factors Urban pull factors

•Lack of resources to support the growing population eg. Wood for fuel and shelter•Lack of employment opportunities (reliance on agriculture) •Lack of new opportunities•Poor infrastructure eg. Poor roads, plumbing, telephone connections•Lack of local healthcare/education•Mechanisation of agriculture may mean less need for people on the land

•Opportunities for employment (within formal and informal sectors)•Job opportunities in TNCs•Perceived quality of lifestyle•Provision of services and infrastructure•Modern Housing•The lure of a global hub•Improved transport makes travel to urban areas easier•Opportunities presented by development schemes•Relaxation of migration laws

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• Work in pairs• One partner read through and complete the

comparison worksheet for Los Angeles (pages 110-115 Digby et al)

• One partner read through and complete the comparison worksheet for Mumbai (pages -121 Digby et al/p116-117 edexcel text book)

• Together agree three similarities and three differences between the process of urbanisation in Los Angeles and Mumbai

Obj 2: To describe the causes (push and pull) of rural-urban migration

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Obj 3: Describe and explain the global pattern of megacities, including regional variations in growth rates

• Urbanisation is closely linked to development – areas currently experiencing the fastest urbanisation are NICs and LEDCs

Watch the following films. Urbanisation lagosWelcome to LagosAs you watch take notes on:Key facts and background informationChallenges and problems faced (video 1)Opportunities provided by urban living (video 2)

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Urbanisation in the late 20th centuryA more urban world – but how has this happened?

Describe and explain the global pattern of megacities, including regional variations in growth rates

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Urbanisation in the late 20th century

• The growth of an urban population BBC LINK

50’s/

60’s

• Europe/N.America are the most urbanised regions• Rapid growth in S.America and Africa

70’s/

80’s

• S.America continues to rapidly urbanise• Asia begins to urbanise at an increasing rate

90’s/

00’s/

beyond

• Urban pop in MEDCs stabilises• Highest urban growth rates found in Asia and Africa• Highest % increases in Africa...but volume in Asia much higher

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Mega City Exam practice - resources

exam questions on mega cities – you have 7 minutes to complete

a) What is a megacity? (1) b) Using the photographs and your own knowledge, complete the table to contrast

the characteristics of the two megacities shown

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Self Mark

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Answer part BYou have 15-20 minutes!

*10 Study Figure 10.(a) Suggest why there is an urgent need to improve residential slums such as Dharavi. (10)

(b) Explain why many megacities are currently experiencing rapid rates of growth. (15)

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Homework

1. Complete the 2 exam questions under timed conditions2. Start revising for the mock exam

Optional hmk:3. Watch Andrew Marr’s Mega Cities1: Living in the City –

Available on the LRC CLICK VIEWMake notes under the titles ‘winners’ and ‘losers’, making notes on mini case-studies to add to your understanding of mega-cities.

2. Watch the Lagos clips and make notes as per the slide instructions