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Western, John – Journal of Geography, 1986
Traces the history of the development of cities in South Africa, paying special attention to the development of urban social controls. Three eras are identified: (1) mercantilism, (2) imperialism, and (3) apartheid. Concludes that enormous human costs are entailed by these attempts at social engineering. (JDH)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Human Geography, Racial Discrimination, Racial Relations
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Phillips, Phillip D. – Journal of Geography, 1976
Changes due to the 1970 census figures and new Census Bureau methodology have caused new requirements for central cities, revised integration criteria, and consolidation of some metropolitan areas. (ND)
Descriptors: Census Figures, Desegregation Litigation, Dropouts, Human Geography
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Ritter, Fredric A. – Journal of Geography, 1971
Within geography, Black America can best be studied in the geography of cities. Topics suggested include sources of data, urban sprawl, arrangement and support of cities, urban demography, urban land values, urban land uses, and especially the geography of the black community within the city. (NH)
Descriptors: Black Community, Blacks, Dropouts, Geography
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Clarke, Colin G. – Journal of Geography, 1983
Kingston, capital of Jamaica, has been molded by three institutions: colonialism, the sugar plantation, and slavery. It has an enormous marginal population living in permanent poverty and not absorbable into the labor force. This marginality, fundamentally related to dependent capitalism, sustains itself by keeping wages low. (CS)
Descriptors: Colonialism, Demography, Developing Nations, Economic Development
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Dunn, James – Journal of Geography, 2004
People have been leaving rural environments and moving into urban environments. By 2007, the most people in the world will live in cities (United Nations 2002). Mexico illustrates this world trend closely. Mexico now publishes data on the Internet that can be used to study the movement of people within the country. A lesson is presented with…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Rural to Urban Migration, Urban Demography, Migration Patterns
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Conzen, Michael P. – Journal of Geography, 1983
The post-World War II American pattern of general urban growth, rapid suburbanization, and central city decline has now given way to reduced urban growth outside the Sunbelt, increased growth in nonmetropolitan areas, greater self-sufficiency for suburbs, and continuing depression in the central cities. Implications of these changes are discussed.…
Descriptors: Metropolitan Areas, Migration Patterns, Population Distribution, Population Trends
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Masilela, Calvin O. – Journal of Geography, 1994
Asserts that a common problem facing educators is finding suitable pedagogical tools that capture the realities of cities in developing countries. Presents a role-playing simulation exercise that supplements and complements the case study approach to this topic. (CFR)
Descriptors: Case Studies, Cross Cultural Studies, Cultural Awareness, Developing Nations