Description

Book Synopsis


Table of Contents

List of Figures xv

List of Plates xvii

List of Maps xx

List of Tables xxii

Acknowledgments xxiii

List of Abbreviations xxvi

A Guide to Reading the Second Edition of Human Geography: An Essential Introduction xxix

1 Introducing Human Geography 1

Chapter Learning Objectives 1

Introduction 2

What Is Human Geography? 3

One Planet, Many Cultures, Unconscionable Inequality 9

The Origins of Our Unequal World: The Rise,Reign, and Faltering of the West 9

Four Theories Explaining the Rise, Reign,and Faltering of the West 15

Conclusion 20

Checklist of Key Ideas 21

Chapter Essay Questions 21

References and Guidance for Further Reading 22

Website Support Material 23

2 Human Geography: A Brief History 24

Chapter Learning Objectives 24

Introduction 25

Telling the Story of the History of Human Geography 26

Human Geography in the Premodern Era 34

Human Geography in the Modern Era 35

Early Modern Period 35

Modern Period 38

Late Modern Period 43

Human Geography in the Postmodern Era 47

Postmodern Human Geography: On Relativisers and Responsibility 47

Postfoundational and Anti‐Relativist Human Geographies 48

Human Geographies in Real Time: Geocomputation and Spatial Data Science 51

Conclusion 53

Checklist of Key Ideas 54

Chapter Essay Questions 55

References and Guidance for Further Reading 55

Website Support Material 57

3 Big History: Watersheds in Human History 58

Chapter Learning Objectives 58

Introduction 59

Introducing Big History: From the Big Bang to the Sixth Mass Extinction! 59

First Watershed: The Origins of the Human Species 60

Second Watershed: First Migrations and the Peopling of the Planet 64

Third Watershed: The Development of Human

Culture and Invention of Settled Agriculture 71

Fourth Watershed: The Rise and Fall of Civilizations 78

Fifth Watershed: The Rise of Western Civilization from the Tenth Century bce? 82

Conclusion 85

Checklist of Key Ideas 86

Chapter Essay Questions 87

References and Guidance for Further Reading 87

Website Support Material 89

4 The Commanding Heights: A Brief History of the European World Capitalist Economy from 1450 90

Chapter Learning Objectives 90

Introduction 91

Key Concepts: Global Commodity Chains, Value Chains, and Production Networks 91

The Rise of the European World Economy, 1450–1945: Wallerstein’s World‐Systems Analysis 93

The Fate of the European World Economy After the Age of Empire 97

Stabilizing Capitalism: Parisian Regulation Theory 98

The Thirty Glory Years of Capitalism in the Core: The Fordist‐Keynesian Compromise (1945–1975) 99

An Early Response: The New International Division of Labor (NIDL) 101

Boom and Carnage in the Core: The Neoliberal Juggernaut (1979–Present) 106

2050: Toward a Fourth Industrial Revolution (IR4)? 112

Conclusion 118

Checklist of Key Ideas 119

Chapter Essay Questions 120

References and Guidance for Further Reading 120

Website Support Material 122

5 Power: The Governmental Machine of the West 123

Chapter Learning Objectives 123

Introduction 124

Power: The Governmental Machine of the West 124

The Rise (and Fall?) of the “European” Nation‐State 128

Beyond Medieval Polities: The Rise of the “European” Nation‐State from 1648 and 1848 128

Is the Sovereign Nation‐State Obsolete? Back to Medieval Polities? 132

Europe’s Nation‐States and Empires: Europe’s Scramble for the World 136

The Age of European Empires 136

Case Study: Europe’s Scramble for Africa 141

American Empire: The Eagle, the Bear, the Theocrat, and the Dragon 147

Conclusion 154

Checklist of Key Ideas 154

Chapter Essay Questions 155

References and Guidance for Further Reading 155

Website Support Material 158

6 Worlds of Meaning: Power, Landscape, and Place 159

Chapter Learning Objectives 159

Introduction 160

Enlightenment(s): The West’s Culture(s) 161

Cultural Geography and the Study of Western Culture 163

Sauerian Cultural Geography: Culture as a Superorganism 163

New Directions in Cultural Geography from the 1980s 165

Social Formations and Symbolic Landscapes 166

The West in the Cultural Landscape: On the Imperialism of the Straight Line 168

Haussmann’s Paris: The Capital City of Modernity 168

L’Enfant and McMillan’s Washington, DC, and National Mall 169

Worlds of Meaning: Landscapes of Power and Living Landscapes 172

The Ville and the Cite: Building and Dwelling in Western Spaces 172

Case Study 1: The Metropolis and the Mind: Early Conjectures 175

Case Study 2: Beyond the Pale – Clean Lines and Crooked Colonies 177

Case Study 3: Slums and Projects: The African‐American Search for a Sense of Place 183

Conclusion 186

Checklist of Key Ideas 186

Chapter Essay Questions 187

References and Guidance for Further Reading 187

Website Support Material 190

7 (Under)Development: Challenging Inequalities Globally 191

Chapter Learning Objectives 191

Introduction 192

Market Fundamentalism and the Promise of Convergence 194

Tracking and Mapping Development and Human Welfare from 1800 195

Geographies of Human Development and Poverty from 1800 197

Geographies of Income and Wealth Inequality from 1800 204

A Brief Annotated History of Development Theory and Practice 209

The Western Tradition of Development Theory and Practice 209

Challenging Inequalities Globally in the Twenty‐First Century 216

Development Alternatives and Alternatives to Development 220

Conclusion 222

Checklist of Key Ideas 223

Chapter Essay Questions 224

References and Guidance for Further Reading 224

Website Support Material 228

8 10 000 000 000: The Modern Rise in World Population from 1750 229

Chapter Learning Objectives 229

Introduction 230

Introduction to the Demographic Transition Model 231

Histories and Geographies of Demographic Transitions 234

The Demographic Transition Model and Mortality Decline 240

Explaining Mortality Decline 240

Policies for Improved Global Health 244

The Demographic Transition Model and Fertility Decline 247

Explaining Fertility Decline 247

Policies for Lowering and Increasing Fertility Levels 249

Demographic Transition: The Case of China from 1949 250

Conclusion 258

Checklist of Key Ideas 259

Chapter Essay Questions 259

References and Guidance for Further Reading 260

Website Support Material 262

9 A Planet in Distress: Humanity’s War on the Earth 263

Chapter Learning Objectives 263

Introduction 264

Perspectives on Humanity’s War on the Earth 264

The Pessimists: Rediscovering Malthus in the Age of the Anthropocene 264

The Optimists: Cornucopians and the Age of Green Technology and Clean Growth 269

The Political Ecologists: Marx in the Age of the Capitalocene 271

A Planet in Distress: The Global Climate and Ecology Crisis 273

Global Warming: Decarbonizing Our Overheating Planet 274

Biodiversity: Avoiding a Sixth Mass Extinction 278

Air Quality: Detoxing the Air We Breathe 282

Growing Waste: From “Cradle to Cradle” 282

Water Insecurity: Water, the New Gold? 284

Case Study: Tackling the Global Climate and Ecological Crisis in the Liverpool City Region 285

A New Model of Political Economy for a Cleaner and Greener Planet Earth? 289

Conclusion 291

Checklist of Key Ideas 291

Chapter Essay Questions 292

References and Guidance for Further Reading 292

Website Support Material 295

10 Homo urbanus: Urbanization and Urban Form from 1800 296

Chapter Learning Objectives 296

Introduction 297

The Modern Rise of the City from 1800 298

Europe, Capitalism, Industrialization, Urbanization, and the Industrial City 298

The Form of the Industrial City: The Chicago School of Urban Sociology and Beyond 302

The Creative Destruction of the Industrial City: Insights from Glasgow 306

Mapping the Urban Age 312

Urban Form After the Age of the Industrial City: The Shape of Things to Come? 315

Megalopolis: From Cities to Networks and Urban Galaxies? 316

Los Angeles: The 100‐Mile City and Our Postmetropolis Future? 316

Slums in the Global South: Urbanization Without Industrialization? 318

China’s Instant Megacities: State‐Orchestrated Urbanization? 321

Planetary Urbanization: Urban Studies After the Age of the City? 323

Conclusion 325

Checklist of Key Ideas 325

Chapter Essay Questions 326

References and Guidance for Further Reading 326

Website Support Material 329

11 The Walling of the West: Migration, Hospitality, and Settling 330

Chapter Learning Objectives 330

Introduction 331

The Great Human Diasporas 332

Diaspora (Διασποράς) 332

Case Study: The Atlantic Slave Trade and African Diaspora in the Americas 333

Global Migration Stocks and Flows: Definitions, Patterns, and Trends 341

Rethinking Integration: On the Politics of Hospitality 347

Host Country Integration: Policies and Outcomes 347

Thinking Integration: Assimilation, Multiculturalism, Diaspora Space, and Securitization 350

Rethinking Integration: Migrant Settling and Settling Services 354

Case Study: The Syrian Refugee and IDP Crisis 355

Conclusion 361

Checklist of Key Ideas 361

Chapter Essay Questions 362

References and Guidance for Further Reading 362

Website Support Material 365

12 At Risk: Hazards, Society, and Resilience 366

Chapter Learning Objectives 366

Introduction 367

Global Risks: Hazards by Likelihood and Impact 367

Understanding Risk: What Causes Hazards to Become Disasters and Disasters to Become Catastrophes? 370

Gilbert White: Pioneering Human Geographical Interest in Natural Hazards 370

When Hazards Become Disasters: Risk = Hazard × Vulnerability (R = H × V) 372

Mapping the World at Risk 375

Disaster Risk Reduction: What Stops Hazards from Becoming Disasters and Disasters from Becoming Catastrophes? 382

The Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction 2015–2030 382

Resilience Politics: Robustness, Recovery, Reform, or Redesign? 388

Conclusion 394

Checklist of Key Ideas 395

Chapter Essay Questions 396

References and Guidance for Further Reading 396

Website Support Material 398

13 Remaking the West, Remaking Human Geography 399

Chapter Learning Objectives 399

Introduction 400

Summary: Making the West, Making Human Geography 401

Remaking the West 405

Remaking Human Geography 409

Remaking the West, Remaking Human Geography 413

Conclusion 422

Checklist of Key Ideas 422

Chapter Essay Questions 423

References and Guidance for Further Reading 423

Website Support Material 426

Coda on Covid-19 428

Coda Learning Objectives 428

Covid‐19: The West’s Barium Meal? 429

Covid‐19’s Unexpected Geographies 432

Explaining Covid‐19’s Geographies: Risk = Hazard × Vulnerability 433

Exposure to Covid‐19: Uneven Geographies of Viral Load 434

Vulnerability to Covid‐19: Susceptibility, Adaptation, and Coping 436

Vulnerability Wrought by Socio‐structural Disadvantages and Heightened Susceptibility 437

Vulnerability Wrought by Weak Institutional Capacity for Advanced Adaptation and Preparation 439

Vulnerability Wrought by Poor Coping and the Speed, Quality, and Efficacy of Government Responses 441

Commentary: Disentangling Covid-19’s Complex Causality 442

Covid-19: A Portal to Another World? 447

Checklist of Key Ideas 450

Chapter Essay Questions 450

References and Guidance for Further Reading 450

Website Support Material 451

Glossary 452

Index 463

Human Geography

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    View other formats and editions of Human Geography by Mark Boyle

    Publisher: John Wiley and Sons Ltd
    Publication Date: 22/04/2021
    ISBN13: 9781119374718, 978-1119374718
    ISBN10: 1119374715

    Description

    Book Synopsis


    Table of Contents

    List of Figures xv

    List of Plates xvii

    List of Maps xx

    List of Tables xxii

    Acknowledgments xxiii

    List of Abbreviations xxvi

    A Guide to Reading the Second Edition of Human Geography: An Essential Introduction xxix

    1 Introducing Human Geography 1

    Chapter Learning Objectives 1

    Introduction 2

    What Is Human Geography? 3

    One Planet, Many Cultures, Unconscionable Inequality 9

    The Origins of Our Unequal World: The Rise,Reign, and Faltering of the West 9

    Four Theories Explaining the Rise, Reign,and Faltering of the West 15

    Conclusion 20

    Checklist of Key Ideas 21

    Chapter Essay Questions 21

    References and Guidance for Further Reading 22

    Website Support Material 23

    2 Human Geography: A Brief History 24

    Chapter Learning Objectives 24

    Introduction 25

    Telling the Story of the History of Human Geography 26

    Human Geography in the Premodern Era 34

    Human Geography in the Modern Era 35

    Early Modern Period 35

    Modern Period 38

    Late Modern Period 43

    Human Geography in the Postmodern Era 47

    Postmodern Human Geography: On Relativisers and Responsibility 47

    Postfoundational and Anti‐Relativist Human Geographies 48

    Human Geographies in Real Time: Geocomputation and Spatial Data Science 51

    Conclusion 53

    Checklist of Key Ideas 54

    Chapter Essay Questions 55

    References and Guidance for Further Reading 55

    Website Support Material 57

    3 Big History: Watersheds in Human History 58

    Chapter Learning Objectives 58

    Introduction 59

    Introducing Big History: From the Big Bang to the Sixth Mass Extinction! 59

    First Watershed: The Origins of the Human Species 60

    Second Watershed: First Migrations and the Peopling of the Planet 64

    Third Watershed: The Development of Human

    Culture and Invention of Settled Agriculture 71

    Fourth Watershed: The Rise and Fall of Civilizations 78

    Fifth Watershed: The Rise of Western Civilization from the Tenth Century bce? 82

    Conclusion 85

    Checklist of Key Ideas 86

    Chapter Essay Questions 87

    References and Guidance for Further Reading 87

    Website Support Material 89

    4 The Commanding Heights: A Brief History of the European World Capitalist Economy from 1450 90

    Chapter Learning Objectives 90

    Introduction 91

    Key Concepts: Global Commodity Chains, Value Chains, and Production Networks 91

    The Rise of the European World Economy, 1450–1945: Wallerstein’s World‐Systems Analysis 93

    The Fate of the European World Economy After the Age of Empire 97

    Stabilizing Capitalism: Parisian Regulation Theory 98

    The Thirty Glory Years of Capitalism in the Core: The Fordist‐Keynesian Compromise (1945–1975) 99

    An Early Response: The New International Division of Labor (NIDL) 101

    Boom and Carnage in the Core: The Neoliberal Juggernaut (1979–Present) 106

    2050: Toward a Fourth Industrial Revolution (IR4)? 112

    Conclusion 118

    Checklist of Key Ideas 119

    Chapter Essay Questions 120

    References and Guidance for Further Reading 120

    Website Support Material 122

    5 Power: The Governmental Machine of the West 123

    Chapter Learning Objectives 123

    Introduction 124

    Power: The Governmental Machine of the West 124

    The Rise (and Fall?) of the “European” Nation‐State 128

    Beyond Medieval Polities: The Rise of the “European” Nation‐State from 1648 and 1848 128

    Is the Sovereign Nation‐State Obsolete? Back to Medieval Polities? 132

    Europe’s Nation‐States and Empires: Europe’s Scramble for the World 136

    The Age of European Empires 136

    Case Study: Europe’s Scramble for Africa 141

    American Empire: The Eagle, the Bear, the Theocrat, and the Dragon 147

    Conclusion 154

    Checklist of Key Ideas 154

    Chapter Essay Questions 155

    References and Guidance for Further Reading 155

    Website Support Material 158

    6 Worlds of Meaning: Power, Landscape, and Place 159

    Chapter Learning Objectives 159

    Introduction 160

    Enlightenment(s): The West’s Culture(s) 161

    Cultural Geography and the Study of Western Culture 163

    Sauerian Cultural Geography: Culture as a Superorganism 163

    New Directions in Cultural Geography from the 1980s 165

    Social Formations and Symbolic Landscapes 166

    The West in the Cultural Landscape: On the Imperialism of the Straight Line 168

    Haussmann’s Paris: The Capital City of Modernity 168

    L’Enfant and McMillan’s Washington, DC, and National Mall 169

    Worlds of Meaning: Landscapes of Power and Living Landscapes 172

    The Ville and the Cite: Building and Dwelling in Western Spaces 172

    Case Study 1: The Metropolis and the Mind: Early Conjectures 175

    Case Study 2: Beyond the Pale – Clean Lines and Crooked Colonies 177

    Case Study 3: Slums and Projects: The African‐American Search for a Sense of Place 183

    Conclusion 186

    Checklist of Key Ideas 186

    Chapter Essay Questions 187

    References and Guidance for Further Reading 187

    Website Support Material 190

    7 (Under)Development: Challenging Inequalities Globally 191

    Chapter Learning Objectives 191

    Introduction 192

    Market Fundamentalism and the Promise of Convergence 194

    Tracking and Mapping Development and Human Welfare from 1800 195

    Geographies of Human Development and Poverty from 1800 197

    Geographies of Income and Wealth Inequality from 1800 204

    A Brief Annotated History of Development Theory and Practice 209

    The Western Tradition of Development Theory and Practice 209

    Challenging Inequalities Globally in the Twenty‐First Century 216

    Development Alternatives and Alternatives to Development 220

    Conclusion 222

    Checklist of Key Ideas 223

    Chapter Essay Questions 224

    References and Guidance for Further Reading 224

    Website Support Material 228

    8 10 000 000 000: The Modern Rise in World Population from 1750 229

    Chapter Learning Objectives 229

    Introduction 230

    Introduction to the Demographic Transition Model 231

    Histories and Geographies of Demographic Transitions 234

    The Demographic Transition Model and Mortality Decline 240

    Explaining Mortality Decline 240

    Policies for Improved Global Health 244

    The Demographic Transition Model and Fertility Decline 247

    Explaining Fertility Decline 247

    Policies for Lowering and Increasing Fertility Levels 249

    Demographic Transition: The Case of China from 1949 250

    Conclusion 258

    Checklist of Key Ideas 259

    Chapter Essay Questions 259

    References and Guidance for Further Reading 260

    Website Support Material 262

    9 A Planet in Distress: Humanity’s War on the Earth 263

    Chapter Learning Objectives 263

    Introduction 264

    Perspectives on Humanity’s War on the Earth 264

    The Pessimists: Rediscovering Malthus in the Age of the Anthropocene 264

    The Optimists: Cornucopians and the Age of Green Technology and Clean Growth 269

    The Political Ecologists: Marx in the Age of the Capitalocene 271

    A Planet in Distress: The Global Climate and Ecology Crisis 273

    Global Warming: Decarbonizing Our Overheating Planet 274

    Biodiversity: Avoiding a Sixth Mass Extinction 278

    Air Quality: Detoxing the Air We Breathe 282

    Growing Waste: From “Cradle to Cradle” 282

    Water Insecurity: Water, the New Gold? 284

    Case Study: Tackling the Global Climate and Ecological Crisis in the Liverpool City Region 285

    A New Model of Political Economy for a Cleaner and Greener Planet Earth? 289

    Conclusion 291

    Checklist of Key Ideas 291

    Chapter Essay Questions 292

    References and Guidance for Further Reading 292

    Website Support Material 295

    10 Homo urbanus: Urbanization and Urban Form from 1800 296

    Chapter Learning Objectives 296

    Introduction 297

    The Modern Rise of the City from 1800 298

    Europe, Capitalism, Industrialization, Urbanization, and the Industrial City 298

    The Form of the Industrial City: The Chicago School of Urban Sociology and Beyond 302

    The Creative Destruction of the Industrial City: Insights from Glasgow 306

    Mapping the Urban Age 312

    Urban Form After the Age of the Industrial City: The Shape of Things to Come? 315

    Megalopolis: From Cities to Networks and Urban Galaxies? 316

    Los Angeles: The 100‐Mile City and Our Postmetropolis Future? 316

    Slums in the Global South: Urbanization Without Industrialization? 318

    China’s Instant Megacities: State‐Orchestrated Urbanization? 321

    Planetary Urbanization: Urban Studies After the Age of the City? 323

    Conclusion 325

    Checklist of Key Ideas 325

    Chapter Essay Questions 326

    References and Guidance for Further Reading 326

    Website Support Material 329

    11 The Walling of the West: Migration, Hospitality, and Settling 330

    Chapter Learning Objectives 330

    Introduction 331

    The Great Human Diasporas 332

    Diaspora (Διασποράς) 332

    Case Study: The Atlantic Slave Trade and African Diaspora in the Americas 333

    Global Migration Stocks and Flows: Definitions, Patterns, and Trends 341

    Rethinking Integration: On the Politics of Hospitality 347

    Host Country Integration: Policies and Outcomes 347

    Thinking Integration: Assimilation, Multiculturalism, Diaspora Space, and Securitization 350

    Rethinking Integration: Migrant Settling and Settling Services 354

    Case Study: The Syrian Refugee and IDP Crisis 355

    Conclusion 361

    Checklist of Key Ideas 361

    Chapter Essay Questions 362

    References and Guidance for Further Reading 362

    Website Support Material 365

    12 At Risk: Hazards, Society, and Resilience 366

    Chapter Learning Objectives 366

    Introduction 367

    Global Risks: Hazards by Likelihood and Impact 367

    Understanding Risk: What Causes Hazards to Become Disasters and Disasters to Become Catastrophes? 370

    Gilbert White: Pioneering Human Geographical Interest in Natural Hazards 370

    When Hazards Become Disasters: Risk = Hazard × Vulnerability (R = H × V) 372

    Mapping the World at Risk 375

    Disaster Risk Reduction: What Stops Hazards from Becoming Disasters and Disasters from Becoming Catastrophes? 382

    The Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction 2015–2030 382

    Resilience Politics: Robustness, Recovery, Reform, or Redesign? 388

    Conclusion 394

    Checklist of Key Ideas 395

    Chapter Essay Questions 396

    References and Guidance for Further Reading 396

    Website Support Material 398

    13 Remaking the West, Remaking Human Geography 399

    Chapter Learning Objectives 399

    Introduction 400

    Summary: Making the West, Making Human Geography 401

    Remaking the West 405

    Remaking Human Geography 409

    Remaking the West, Remaking Human Geography 413

    Conclusion 422

    Checklist of Key Ideas 422

    Chapter Essay Questions 423

    References and Guidance for Further Reading 423

    Website Support Material 426

    Coda on Covid-19 428

    Coda Learning Objectives 428

    Covid‐19: The West’s Barium Meal? 429

    Covid‐19’s Unexpected Geographies 432

    Explaining Covid‐19’s Geographies: Risk = Hazard × Vulnerability 433

    Exposure to Covid‐19: Uneven Geographies of Viral Load 434

    Vulnerability to Covid‐19: Susceptibility, Adaptation, and Coping 436

    Vulnerability Wrought by Socio‐structural Disadvantages and Heightened Susceptibility 437

    Vulnerability Wrought by Weak Institutional Capacity for Advanced Adaptation and Preparation 439

    Vulnerability Wrought by Poor Coping and the Speed, Quality, and Efficacy of Government Responses 441

    Commentary: Disentangling Covid-19’s Complex Causality 442

    Covid-19: A Portal to Another World? 447

    Checklist of Key Ideas 450

    Chapter Essay Questions 450

    References and Guidance for Further Reading 450

    Website Support Material 451

    Glossary 452

    Index 463

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