The list is organized according to the units found in the College Board Course description guide. She is also content adviser for AP Human Geography. Mackinder's heartland-rimland theory predicted, Mackinder's heartland-rimland theory predicted. D. that a nation from Eurasia would conquer the world. In the Heartland-Rimland model, what constitutes the heartland? 13. Cultural Patterns and Processes, Part 1—Basic Vocabulary and Concepts Concepts of Culture Acculturation Assimilation Cultural adaptation Cultural core/periphery pattern Cultural ecology Cultural identity Cultural landscape Cultural realm Culture Culture region Formal—core, periphery Functional—node Vernacular (perceptual)—regional self-awareness Diffusion types Expansion—hierarchical, contagious, stimulus, migrant Relocation Innovation adoption Maladaptive diffusion Sequent occupance syncretism/hybridity transculturation Folk and Popular Culture Adaptive strategies Anglo-American landscape Characteristics Commodification Architectural form Built environment Folk Culture Folk food Folk house Folk songs Folklore Maladaptive diffusion Material culture Nonmaterial culture Popular culture Survey systems/cadastral systems Traditional architecture Language Creole Dialect (social/regional) Indo-European languages Isogloss Language Language family Language group Language subfamily Lingua franca Linguistic diversity Monolingual/multilingual Official language Pidgin Standard language Toponymy Trade language Unit III. A. the Muslim takeover of the world. B. the rise of British colonialism. Manifest Destiny Median-line principle Microstate Ministate Nation National iconography Nation-state Non-governmental organizations (NGOs) Nunavut Raison d'etre Reapportionment Regionalism Religious conflict Reunification Sanctions Satellite state Self-determination Shatterbelt Sovereignty State Stateless ethnic groups Stateless nation Suffrage Supranationalism Territorial disputes Territorial morphology (compact, fragmented, elongated, prorupt, perforated) Territoriality Theocracy Treaty ports Tribalism UNCLOS (United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea) Unitary (examples) USSR collapse Women's enfranchisement Unit V. Agricultural and Rural Land Use—Basic Vocabulary and Concepts Adaptive strategies Agrarian Agribusiness Agricultural industrialization Agricultural landscape Agricultural location model Agricultural origins Agriculture Animal domestication Aquaculture Biorevolution Biotechnology Collective farm Commercial agriculture (intensive, extensive) Core/periphery Crop rotation Cultivation regions Dairying Debt-for-nature swap Diffusion Disadvantages of exporters Double cropping Economic activity (definitions, examples, locational factors) primary secondary tertiary quaternary quinary Effect of colonialism on agricultural production Environmental modification pesticides soil erosion desertification Extensive subsistence agriculture shifting cultivation (slash-and-burn, milpa, swidden) nomadic herding/pastoralism Extractive industry Farm crisis Farming Feedlot First Agricultural Revolution Fishing Food chain Forestry Globalized agriculture Green Revolution Growing season Hunting and gathering Intensive subsistence agriculture Intertillage Livestock ranching Market gardening Mediterranean agriculture Mineral fuels Mining Monoculture Nomadism/pastoralism Planned economy Plant domestication (location, role of women) Plantation agriculture Renewable/nonrenewable Rural settlement dispersed nucleated building material village form Sauer, Carl O. A number of terms repeat from unit to unit as they are used in different contexts. C. that the Japanese would conquer the Pacific Rim. 14. Cities and Urban Land Use—Basic Vocabulary and Concepts African cities Agglomeration Barriadas Bid-rent theory Blockbusting CBD (central business district) Census tract Centrality Centralization Central-place theory Checkerboard/leapfrog development Christaller, Walter City Cityscapes Colonial city Commercialization Communist urban landscape (microdistricts) Commuter zone Concentric zone model Counterurbanization Decentralization Deindustrialization Early cities Economic base basic nonbasic Edge City Emerging cities Employment structure (basic/nonbasic industries) Entrepot Ethnic neighborhood European cities Favela Female-headed household Festival landscape Gateway city Gender Gentrification Ghetto Globalization Great cities Greenbelts High-tech corridors Hinterland Hydraulic civilization Indigenous city In-filling Informal sector Infrastructure Inner city Invasion and succession Lateral commuting Latin American cities Medieval cities Megacities Megalopolis/conurbation Metropolitan area Multiple nuclei model Multiplier effect Neighborhood New Town Planning/New Urbanism Office park Peak land value intersection Planned communities Postindustrial city Postmodern urban landscape Primate city Racial steering Rank-size rule Redlining Restrictive covenants Sector model Segregation Settlement form nucleated dispersed elongated Shopping mall Site/situation Slum Smart growth Social structure Specialization Squatter settlement Street pattern grid dendritic access control Suburb Suburbanization Symbolic landscape Tenement Theme areas Threshold/range Town Underclass Underemployment Urban growth rate Urban function Urban hearth area Urban heat island Urban hierarchy (hamlet, village, town, city) Urban hydrology Urban morphology Urban Sprawl Urbanization Urbanized population World city Zone in transition Zoning ) W f µ ~ � ì î ÿ ‘ ¨ ¦ ı K L W z ‡ b w † « r � $ ¶ È J \ ¯ Y a © Ï Ñ ê ' 7 ’ ¨ ì ş $ 5 D ÷ # t u ~ ¿ » Ë ` u ı 1 ; õ ! D. that a nation from Eurasia would conquer the world. For example it focuses heavily on U.S economic influence but it pays little attention to the pervasive influence of the U.S culture. ! C. that the Japanese would conquer the Pacific Rim. Martha Sharma recently retired from the National Cathedral School in Washington, D.C., after teaching geography there for 21 years. Explain how political power is expressed geographically as control over people, land, and resources (eg. Some terms have been added to the list (in italics) where appropriate Unit I. Geography: Its Nature and Perspectives—Basic Vocabulary and Concepts Note: The following concepts transcend all units in AP Human Geography; they are central to all geographic thinking and analysis and could even be considered central to any definition of geography. AP Human Geography Question 19: ... Mackinder's heartland-rimland theory predicted. Industrialization and Development—Basic Vocabulary and Concepts Development Agricultural labor force Calorie consumption Core-periphery model spread effects backwash effects semiperiphery Cultural convergence Debt burden Dependency Theory Development Energy consumption Foreign direct investment Gender Gross Domestic Product (GDP) Gross National Product (GNP) Human Development Index Levels of development Liberal models of development Measures of development Neocolonialism North/South split (Brandt Line) Physical Quality of Life Index Positive/negative corelations Purchasing Power Parity Rostow, W. W. "Stages of Growth" model Structuralist models of development Technology gap Technology transfer Third World Transition economies World Systems Theory Wallerstein Industrialization Acid rain Agglomeration (excessive agglomeration) Agglomeration economies Backward linkages Forward linkages Ancillary industries Air pollution Aluminum industry factors of production location Assembly line production/Fordism Bid rent theory Break-of-bulk point Canadian industrial heartland Carrier efficiency Comparative advantage Cumulative causation Deglomeration Deindustrialization Economic sectors Economies of scale Ecotourism Energy resources Entrepot Export processing zone Fixed costs Footloose industry Fordist/Post-Fordist production Four Tigers GATT Glocalization Greenhouse Effect Growth poles Heartland/rimland Industrial location theory Industrial regions place fuel source characteristics Industrial Revolution origin diffusion Industry (receding, growing) Informal economy Infrastructure International division of labor Labor-intensive Least-cost location Major manufacturing regions Manufacturing exports Manufacturing/warehouse location industrial parks agglomeration shared services zoning transportation taxes environmental considerations Maquiladora Market orientation Microcredit Multiplier effect NAFTA NICs North American Manufacturing Belt (NAMB) Outsourcing Ozone depletion Plant location (supplies, "just in time" delivery) Postindustrial Refrigeration Resource crisis Resource orientation Special Economic Zones (China) Specialized economic zones Substitution principle Threshold/range Time-space compression Topocide Tourism Trade (complementarity) Transnational corporation Ubiquitous Variable costs Weber, Alfred Weight-gaining (bulk-gaining) Weight-losing (bulk-losing) World cities Unit VII. Cultural Patterns and Processes; Part 2—Basic Vocabulary and Concepts Religion Animism Buddhism Cargo cult pilgrimage Christianity Confucianism Diaspora Diffusion of major religions Distribution of major religions Ethnic religion Exclave/enclave Fundamentalism Geomancy (feng shui) Hadj Hnduism Interfaith boundaries Islam Jainism Judaism Landscapes of the dead Monotheism/polytheism Mormonism (Mormon landscape) Muslim pilgrimage Muslim population Proselytic religion Reincarnation Religion (groups, places) Religious architectural styles Religious conflict (interfaith/intrafaith) Religious culture hearth Religious toponym Sacred space Secularism Shamanism Sharia law Shintoism Sikhism Sunni/Shia Taoism Theocracy Traditional religion Universalizing Zoroastrianism Ethnicity Acculturation Adaptive strategy Assimilation Barrio Chain migration Cultural adaptation Cultural shatterbelt Ethnic cleansing Ethnic conflict Ethnic enclave Ethnic group Ethnic homeland Ethnic island Ethnic landscape Ethnic neighborhood Ethnicity Ethnocentrism Ghetto Plural society Race Segregation Social distance Gender Dowry death Enfranchisement Gender Gender gap Infanticide Longevity gap Maternal mortality rate Unit IV.