Population geography
Population Geography is a division of Human Geography. It is the study of the ways in which spatial variations in the distribution, composition, migration, and growth of populations are related to the nature of places. Population geography involves demography in a geographical perspective. It focuses on the characteristics of population distributions that change in a spatial context. Examples can be shown through population density maps. A few types of maps that show the spatial layout of population are chloropleth, isoline, and dot maps.Demography studies:
- Study of people in their spatial distribution and density
- Increase or decrease in population numbers
- The movements and mobility of populations
- Occupational Structure
- Grouping of people in settlements
- The way from the geographical character of places e.g. settlement patterns
- The way in which places in turn react to population phenomena e.g. immigration
All of the above are looked at over space and time.
N.B.The boundary between population geography and demography is becoming more and more blurred.
Human geography
v • • e</div>
| | |
| Sub-Fields | Cultural geography · Development geography · Economic geography · Historical geography · Language geography · Marketing geography · Health geography · Military geography · Political geography · Population geography · Religion geography · Social geography · Strategic geography · Time geography · Urban geography |
| Approaches | Behavioral geography · Cultural Theory · Feminist geography · Marxism · Modernism (Structuralism · Semiotics) · Postmodernism (Post-structuralism · Deconstruction) |
Categories
Demography | Human geography | Population
