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Check your understanding causes salt particles to group together (a process

termed flocculation) and become heavier, so


Answers they are deposited. Vegetation also increases the
rate of deposition by slowing down the water,
a process known as bioconstruction. There is a
regular succession of deposits. The finest deposits
Option A Freshwater – Drainage basins are removed furthest, medium-grade deposits are
Drainage basin hydrology and geomorphology deposited as steep-angled wedges, and the coarsest
1. Drainage basin: the area that is drained by a river material is deposited at the top.
and its tributaries. 10. Aquifers are rocks that contain significant
Endorheic: a closed drainage basin, i.e. one that quantities of water. They are permeable rocks such
does not reach the sea. as sandstone and limestone.
2. It allows the movement of energy and matter
across its boundary; therefore, it is an open system. Flooding and flood mitigation
3. A systems approach classifies parts of the
1. A storm hydrograph or flood hydrograph shows
hydrological cycle as stores, processes (inputs) and
how a river channel responds to the key processes
outputs, whereas a graphical representation uses
of the hydrological cycle. It is a graph on which
images to show the components of the cycle, and
river discharge during a storm or run-off event is
the direction of processes.
plotted against time.
4. Erosion in upland areas may produce waterfalls,
2. The river regime is the seasonal variation in the
gorges and potholes, whereas erosion in a lowland
flow of a river – and mainly depends on the
area is likely to produce meanders and ox-bow
amount and nature of precipitation, seasonal
lakes.
variations in temperature and evapotranspiration,
5. Upstream, the load is likely to be angular and and changes in vegetation cover.
larger, whereas downstream the load is likely to be
3. Floods with a very high magnitude have a low
rounder and smaller, due to attrition.
frequency, whereas floods with a high frequency
6. Interception: water that is retained by plant have a low magnitude.
surfaces and later evaporated away or absorbed by
4. Land-use zoning permits compatible land-uses in
the plant.
areas of high flood risk. For example, this may be
Evaporation: the process by which a liquid or a pastoral farming, recreational land-use or a nature
solid is changed into a gas. Evaporation increases reserve. In contrast, land-uses that are vulnerable
under warm, dry conditions and decreases under to floods, such as industry, residential and services,
cold, calm conditions. are only permitted in areas where the flood risk is
Infiltration: the process by which water soaks much lower.
into or is absorbed by the soil. 5. Physical factors that increase flood risk include
Groundwater: subsurface water contained in precipitation type and intensity, temperature and
permeable rocks. evapotranspiration, antecedent moisture, drainage
Base flow: the part of a river’s discharge that is basin size and shape, drainage density, porosity and
provided by groundwater seeping into the bed of a permeability of rocks and soils, gradient, vegetation
river. cover, and land-use.
7. Waterfalls frequently occur on horizontally bedded 6. Urbanization leads to an increase in the peak of
rocks. The soft rock is undercut by hydraulic action flood and a shorter time-lag due to:
and abrasion. The weight of the water and the • the creation of highly impermeable surfaces,
lack of support cause the waterfall to collapse and such as roads, roofs, pavements
retreat. Over thousands of years the waterfall may
retreat enough to form a gorge of recession. • the presence of smooth surfaces served
with a dense network of drains, gutters and
8. See Figure A.17 on page 14.
underground sewers, which increase drainage
9. When a stream flows into a standing body of
density
water it may form a delta. For deltas to be formed
a river needs to carry a large volume of sediment. • the reduction of the carrying capacity of
Deposition is increased if the water is salty, as this natural river channels caused by bridge
supports or riverside facilities.
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7. Deforestation may lead to increased flood risk due respond to the increased nutrient availability. This
to less interception, increased overland flow, and is an example of positive feedback. However, the
reduced evapotranspiration. increase in algae and plankton shade the water
8. Channelization may reduce flooding by having below, cutting off the light supply for submerged
larger river channels. In contrast, it may speed up plants. The prolific growth of algae, especially
the flow of water, and therefore reduce time lag. in the autumn as a result of increased levels of
Scouring of the channel to remove sediment may nutrients in the water and higher temperatures,
allow the river to carry more water, and reduce the results in anoxia (oxygen starvation in the water).
risk of flooding. 9. Salinization generally occurs in areas that are hot
9. Forecasting allows people to prepare for floods, e.g. and dry.
put sand bags in place, move furniture to a higher 10. Ethiopia (and other up-stream countries) may
level, evacuate if necessary. extract more water from the Blue Nile (and/or
10. Individuals may decide to evacuate or put flood White Nile), thereby reducing the amount that
protection measures into their homes, or take out reaches Egypt. In addition, climate change may
insurance, replace vegetation in their gardens with lead to higher temperatures and higher rates of
impermeable car parking spaces. evaporation, thereby reducing water supplies.

Water scarcity and water quality Water management futures


1. Physical water scarcity: a lack of available water in 1. Water saving: smaller-capacity baths hold less
which water resource development is approaching water; taking a shower rather than a bath saves
or has exceeded unsustainable levels; it relates water; taps with a low flow rate can be fitted to
availability to demand and implies that arid areas bathroom and kitchen sinks; taps with push-down
are not necessarily water scarce. mechanisms that automatically turn off after a
2. Economic water scarcity: a lack of water in which short time use less water than traditional screw
water is available locally, but not accessible for taps; turning off taps when not in use and fixing
human, institutional or financial capital reasons. dripping taps are important ways of saving water;
3. Water stress: occurs when per capita water supply dishwashers and washing machines should only be
is less than 1,700 cubic metres per year, and an used when they are full.
area is subject to frequent water shortages. 2. Water pricing charges people for the amount of
4. Many poor people do not have access to piped water they use. When pricing is absent, and people
water, and they may have to buy it from a vendor do not pay for the amount of water they use,
(seller), who may charge a high price for it. In wasteful practices may be encouraged.
contrast, most rich people have access to piped 3. Rainwater harvesting: making use of available
water, which is generally provided quite cheaply. water before it drains away or evaporates. Efficient
5. Virtual water: refers to the volume of water use or storage of water can be achieved in many
consumed or polluted for producing the product, ways, for example: irrigating individual plants
measured over its full production chain. rather than whole fields, covering expanses
of water with plastic or chemicals to reduce
6. The Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam is located
evaporation, storing water underground in gravel-
on the Blue Nile in Ethiopia.
filled reservoirs (again to reduce evaporation
7. Salinization: occurs when groundwater levels are
losses).
close to the surface. In clay soils this may be within
4. New technologies: include nanotechnology
three metres of the surface, whereas on sandy and
infiltration, membrane chemistry, seawater
silty soils it is less. Capillary forces bring water to
desalination, smart monitoring, intelligent
the surface where it may be evaporated, leaving
irrigation, wastewater processing, and mobile-
behind any soluble salts that it is carrying, leading
recycling facilities. Nanotechnology infiltration
to the development of saline crusts.
removes microbes, bacteria and other matter
8. Eutrophication is the increased amount of nitrogen
by using silver ions that destroy contaminants.
and/or phosphorus that is carried in streams, lakes
Membrane chemistry enables water to be
and groundwater, causing nutrient enrichment.
filtered and purified. Seawater desalination is
This leads to an increase in algal blooms as plants
the transformation of seawater into freshwater.

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Biomimicry refers to the mimicking of biological Option B Oceans and coastal margins
processes by which mangrove plants and fish
Ocean-atmosphere interactions
extract seawater using minimal energy. Smart
monitoring technologies help companies to ensure 1. Ocean currents are caused by the influence of
the quality of their water supply networks, while prevailing winds blowing steadily across the sea.
precision (intelligent) irrigation reduces the loss of 2. The cause of ocean acidification is mainly
water by irrigating individual plants rather than anthropogenic (human-made) sources – such as
whole areas. Improved recycling and treatment carbon emissions from industrial plants, power
of waste water also enable a greater quantity of stations, cars and planes. Some of the carbon
freshwater to be made available. that mankind emits remains in the atmosphere
5. During much of the twentieth century, wetlands and causes it to heat up, driving global warming.
were destroyed, altered, drained and removed to However, about 30 per cent of carbon dioxide is
make way for agriculture, settlements, transport absorbed by the oceans where it turns to carbonic
and industrial developments. acid.
6. The advantages of wetlands include water storage, 3. Many marine species are now threatened with
groundwater recharge, storm protection, flood extinction, fisheries face eradication, and coral
mitigation, shoreline stabilization, erosion control, reefs that protect coastal areas are starting to
and retention of carbon, nutrients, sediments erode. More acidic oceans are beginning to kill
and pollutants. Wetlands also produce goods that off coral reefs and shellfish beds and threaten
have a significant economic value, such as clean stocks of fish. Increasing ocean acidification will
water, opportunities for tourism, fisheries, timber, reduce calcification in corals and other calcifying
peat and wildlife resources. Wetland functions organisms, resulting in slower growth and weaker
can generally be grouped into three main types: skeletons.
regulation, provision of habitats, and production. 4. Warm ocean currents move water away from the
Wetlands are important regulators of water equator. In contrast, cold ocean currents move
quantity and water quality. Flood-plain wetlands, water away from cold regions towards the equator.
for example, store water when rivers over-top The major currents move huge masses of water
their banks, reducing flood risk downstream. over long distances.
Wetlands also regulate water quality. Reed beds 5. Many eastern oceans experience upwelling
and other wetland plants, for example, are known currents, in which the ocean currents move cold
as important regulators since they remove toxins water, rich in nutrients, from the ocean floor to
and excessive nutrients from the water. the surface. Such upwelling currents are found off
7. America’s Great Watershed Initiative (Mississippi the coast of Peru, California and south-west Africa.
Basin) or the Tennessee Valley Authority These nutrient-rich waters support important
are examples of integrated drainage basin fisheries.
management schemes. 6. The El Niño (Southern Oscillation) is a reversal
8. The Aswan Dam on the River Nile is an example of the normal atmospheric circulation in the
of a large dam scheme. southern Pacific Ocean, bringing warm water and
9. The advantages of large dams include flood low pressure to the eastern Pacific, and cool water
and drought control; irrigation; creation of and high pressure to the western Pacific. It occurs
hydroelectric power; improved navigation, and the once every 3–10 years. In contrast, La Niña is an
potential for recreation and tourism. intensification of normal atmospheric processes,
10. The disadvantages of large dams include water for example, increased flooding in normally humid
losses, salinization, groundwater changes, areas and increased drought in areas that are
displacement of population, drowning of relatively dry.
archaeological sites, seismic stress, channel erosion 7. The 1997–98 El Niño event is believed to have
(clear water erosion) beneath the channel, loss of caused an estimated US$36 billion worth
nutrients, and decreased fish catches. of damage. Farms in the Midwestern US
generally experience higher yields due to milder
temperatures. The US economy is believed to have
benefited by as much as $15 billion in the event.

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CHECK YOUR UNDERST ANDING: ANSWERS

Indonesia could experience a prolonged drought, 2. Longshore drift occurs when the swash carries
affecting coffee production, oil palm production material up the beach in a direction parallel to the
and its hydroelectric production during an El Niño prevailing wind, whereas the backwash operates
event. There were reductions in the Indian soya at right angles to the shore due to the steepness
bean harvest, wheat in Australia and rice in China. of the beach slope. The result is a net transfer of
Between 1984 and 2004, almost one-quarter of sediment along a beach.
the world’s crops were affected by El Niño events. 3. The coastal sediment system, or littoral cell
In 2016, the price of maize in Zimbabwe increased system, is a simplified model that examines coastal
by over 50 per cent compared with 2015, due to processes and patterns in an area. It operates at
an El Niño event. a variety of scales from a single bay to a regional
8. The conditions for the development of hurricanes scale. Each littoral cell is a self-contained cell, in
include: which inputs and outputs are balanced.
• sea temperatures must be over 27°C to a 4. Marine processes are those that are wave-based,
depth of 60 metres such as hydraulic action, abrasion and attrition,
whereas sub-aerial processes are land-based, such
• the low-pressure area must be far enough
as types of weathering and mass movement, e.g.
away from the equator so that the Coriolis
freeze-thaw weathering and landslides.
force creates rotation in the rising air mass
5. Wave-cut platforms (also called shore platforms)
• conditions must be unstable: some tropical are most frequently found in high-energy
low-pressure systems develop into hurricanes, environments and are typically less than 500 m
but not all of them. wide with an angle of approximately 1°. A model
9. Hurricanes bring heavy rainfall, strong winds of cliff- and shore-platform evolution shows how
and high waves, and cause other hazards such as steep cliffs are replaced by a lengthening platform
flooding and mudslides. Hurricanes also deliver and lower-angle cliffs, subjected to subaerial
enormous quantities of water to the areas they processes rather than marine forces. Alternatively,
affect. platforms might have been formed by frost action,
10. Oceans are the largest CO2 sink on Earth; The salt weathering or biological action during periods
major reservoirs of carbon dioxide are fossil fuels of lower sea levels and different climates.
(10,000 × 1012 kg of carbon), the atmosphere 6. The conditions for beach formation include a large
(750 × 1012 kg of carbon) and the oceans supply of material; longshore drift; an irregular,
(38,000 × 1012 kg of carbon). Oceans are also indented coastline; low-energy coastlines; and
a source of carbon dioxide. Photosynthesis by bioconstruction.
plankton generates organic compounds of carbon 7. Sand dune development is favoured by a large
dioxide. Some of this material passes through the supply of sand, high onshore wind speeds, low
food chain and sinks to the ocean floor where precipitation, and low humidity.
it decomposes into sediments. Eventually it is 8. Isostatic changes are localized changes in the
destroyed at subduction zones where ocean crusts relative level of the land and sea, caused by the
are subducted beneath the continental plates. depression of the Earth’s crust, such as due to the
Carbon dioxide is later released during volcanic weight of an ice sheet. In contrast, eustatic changes
activity. are worldwide changes in sea level caused by the
growth and decay of ice caps, thereby locking up
and later releasing water from ice.
Interactions between oceans and coastal places
9. Raised beaches can be caused by an isostatic rise
1. Constructive waves have a low wave height, long of the land relative to the sea, or a Eustatic fall in
wavelength, and the swash is stronger than the sea level, leaving the coastline as a raised, relict
backwash. They tend to deposit material on a feature.
beach. In contrast, destructive waves have a higher 10. Near the shore, where conditions are windy, arid
height, shorter wave length, and its backwash is and salty, the soil contains few nutrients and is
stronger than the swash. They are erosional in mostly sand – hence the dunes nearest the shore
nature. are referred to as “yellow dunes”. In contrast,

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towards the rear of the dune system “grey” dunes 3. The main sources of oceanic pollution include the
are formed – grey due to the presence of humus fishing industry, shipping (for example, transport,
in the soil. Conditions towards the rear of the tourism, fishing), offshore mining and extraction,
dune system are less windy, wetter and lass salty, illegal dumping at sea and discarded fishing gear.
hence more vegetation can survive, and eventually The main sources of marine litter include land-
decompose adding nutrients to the dune system. based activities such as discharge from storm water
drains, industrial outfalls, untreated municipal
sewerage, littering of beaches and rivers.
Managing coastal margins
4. Strategies to manage ocean pollution include
1. Managed retreat occurs when some areas are not coastal and beach clearing, booms to contain oil
considered worthy of protection and so are left to spills, the use of bombs and detergents to break up
be eroded (retreat) whereas others are protected. oil spills, recycling, and producing less waste.
2. Land-use zoning occurs when different land-uses 5. An ocean where there is international conflict/
are permitted in different areas; for example, in a insecurity is the South China Sea.
coastal area of some areas may be used for fishing, 6. The countries involved in the conflict in the South
others for yachting, others for recreation and China Sea include China, Taiwan, the Philippines,
tourism, and others for nature conservation. Malaysia, Brunei and Vietnam.
3. Storm surges may be caused by hurricanes, high 7. Capture fisheries harvest wild fish whereas
tides and tsunamis. aquaculture refers to fish that are reared in fish
4. Beach nourishment is a form of soft engineering farms.
which uses sand or shingle pumped from the 8. The Virtual Watch Room is a high-tech system
seabed to replace eroded sand. that can track vessels anywhere in the world. It
5. Coral reefs provide many benefits, including uses automatic identification systems (AIS) data,
protection of biodiversity, a source of seafood, the satellite data, radar, photographic images and radio
raw materials for new medicines, and ecosystem transmissions, and it gives alerts when a vessel
services such as recreational value and ecosystem enters prohibited waters and slows down to fishing
protection. speed. It can also see when a vessel’s catch is
6. Coastal management aims to prevent coastal transferred to another vessel.
erosion and reduce the impact of coastal flooding. 9. The use of satellite technology and radars allows
7. The benefits of sea walls are that they are easily trawlers to identify where fish shoals are located,
made and offer some protection in areas of high and to catch them. Satellites can also be used to
population density. track trawlers that are entering prohibited waters.
8. The main disadvantages of sea walls are that they 10. The environmental problems associated with
are expensive, may only last 30–40 years and their aquaculture include the depletion of other fish
foundations may be undermined by the scouring species on a global scale (in order to feed the
actions of waves. reared fish), sea lice and diseases spreading from
9. Exclusive economic zones are areas in which farmed salmon into wild stocks, pollution caused
a coastal nation has sovereign rights over the by uneaten food, faeces and chemicals used to
economic resources of the sea, seabed and subsoil, treat the salmon contaminating surrounding
extending up to 200 nautical miles from the coast. waters, organic debris with steroids and other
10. Geopolitics refers to the influence of Geography chemical waste contaminating coastal waters,
(for example, access to resources and location) in accidental escape of fish affecting local wild fish
international relations. gene pools.

Ocean management futures


Option C Extreme environments
1. Oceanic abiotic resources include oil, natural gas,
The characteristics of extreme environments
sand, shingle, gold, and manganese.
2. A quota is a limit on the amount of fish that can 1. Cold and high-altitude environments include
be caught. A conservation area is an area reserved polar, glacial areas; periglacial areas; high
for the recovery or preservation of species, and in mountains in non-tropical latitudes.
which no fishing can legally take place. 2. The climate of hot, arid environments is

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CHECK YOUR UNDERSTANDING: ANSWERS

characterised by high temperatures throughout 5. Pingos form due to the movement and freezing
the year. In semi-arid areas, annual rainfall varies of water under pressure. Two types are generally
between 250 mm and 500 mm, whereas in identified: open-system and closed-system pingos.
extremely arid areas the rainfall is less than 250 Where the source of the water is a distant elevated
mm per annum. source, open-system pingos form, whereas if the
3. Hot, arid areas are found in four main locations: supply of water is local, and the pingo arises due to
• the location of stable, high-pressure conditions the expansion of permafrost, closed-system pingos
at the tropics, for example the Sahara and the form.
great Australian deserts 6. Exotic or exogenous rivers are those that have
their source in another, wetter environment and
• a large distance from the sea (known as
then flow through a desert. Endorheic rivers are
continentality), such as the central parts of
those that drain into an inland lake or sea.
the Sahara and Australia and also parts of the
7. Salt crystallization causes the decomposition of
south-west USA
rock by solutions of salt. There are two main
• rain-shadow effects, as in Patagonia (South types of salt crystal growth. First, in areas where
America) and the Gobi Desert in central Asia temperatures fluctuate around 26–28°C, sodium
• proximity to cold upwelling currents, which sulphate and sodium carbonate expand by about
limit the amount of moisture held in the air, 300 per cent. This creates pressure on joints,
for example off the west coast of southern forcing them to crack. Second, when water
Africa, helping to form the Namib desert. evaporates, salt crystals may be left behind.
As the temperature rises, the salts expand and
4. Permafrost is permanently frozen sub-surface. To exert pressure on rock. Disintegration is found
be classified as permafrost the land must have been in hot desert areas where there is a large diurnal
frozen for at least two years. temperature range. In many desert areas, daytime
5. The Sami are an indigenous tribe living in a temperatures exceed 40°C, whereas at night they
periglacial area. are little above freezing. Rocks heat up by day and
6. The Sami practice nomadic pastoralism. contract by night. As rock is a poor conductor of
7. The Bedouin are an indigenous tribe in a hot, arid heat, stresses occur only in the outer layers. This
region. causes peeling or exfoliation to occur.
8. They wear long, loose-fitting clothing to help them 8. There are two types of wind erosion:
cope with the heat. • Deflation is the progressive removal of small
9. Hot, arid environments are associated with high material, leaving behind larger materials. This
pressure conditions. forms a stony desert, or reg. In some cases,
10. Hot desert areas and periglacial areas both have a deflation may remove sand to form a deflation
low annual rainfall (less than 5000 mm). hollow.
• Abrasion is the erosion carried out by wind-
Physical processes and landscapes borne particles. They act like sandpaper,
smoothing surfaces and exploiting weaker
1. Two forms of glacial erosion are plucking and rocks.
abrasion.
2. Two factors that affect glacial erosion are the 9. Alluvial fans are cones of sediment, deposited by
relative hardness of the particles and bedrock, and rivers owing to an abrupt loss of energy as they
the size and shape of the particles transported. The leave their mountain channels and enter a plain.
most effective abrasion occurs when hard particles 10. Barchan dunes require a constant wind supply, a
at the glacier base pass over soft bedrock. Large, high wind speed and a supply of sand.
angular debris abrades much more efficiently than
smaller, rounder debris. Managing extreme environments
3. The Matterhorn is an example of a pyramidal
1. Aridity refers to a lack of moisture/rainfall,
peak.
whereas infertility refers to poor soil conditions,
4. Drumlins are small oval mounds up to 1.5 km long
such as a lack of minerals/nutrients and/or organic
and 100 m high.
content.

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2. Essential oils is a better option for some farmers in pipelines, and changes in the vegetation cover,
arid areas because: rapidly destroy it. Thawing of the permafrost
• it is a new or additional source of income for increases the active layer, and subsequent
many people settlement of the soil causes subsidence.
Consequently, engineers have had to build
• it is labour-intensive and local in nature
special structures to cope.
• many plants are already known and used by
7. Resource nationalism is when a country maintains
the people as medicines, and are therefore
control over its own resources.
culturally acceptable
8. Some of the problems associated with tourism
• in their natural state the plants are not very in cold environments are that mountain
palatable, and they are not very valuable, so environments have a low carrying capacity and
are unlikely to be stolen are sometimes referred to as fragile. This means
• many species are looked upon as weeds - that the environment is easily damaged by human
removing these regularly improves grazing impact because of steep slopes, thin erodible soil
potential as well as supplying raw materials and vegetation that does not regenerate easily.
for the essential oils industry. 9. The advantages of tourism in hot, arid
environments include the relatively low capital
3. Copper at Rosemont, Arizona, USA is a mineral investment and the potentially high economic
resource development in a hot, arid environment. returns.
4. The main problems associated with mineral 10. Disadvantages of the tourism industry in hot, arid
development in hot, arid area include: areas include many long-lasting negative impacts
• exploitation may be difficult because many of unregulated, hasty tourism development. There
of these areas are remote, and investment in may be negative consequences that could affect
transport is expensive the social and cultural life there. Some of the
• housing and basic utilities such as water, proposed developments are out-of-character and
energy and waste disposal need to be provided unsustainable. Many of the jobs created may be
at the mines and in the settlements where seasonal and/or unskilled.
miners live
• the shortage of water may require desalination Extreme environments’ futures
plants to be built or groundwater reserves to 1. The eight members of the Arctic Council include
be tapped. This could cause the groundwater Canada, Denmark, Norway, Iceland, Finland,
to decline Sweden, Russia and the USA.
• environmental impacts include the 2. Two main mineral resources in the Arctic Ocean
introduction of exotic species are oil and natural gas.
• the mines and their wastes can be an eyesore 3. Resources that have been identified as the most
• mines can be a major source of dust that is likely sources of conflict in hot, arid areas are oil,
linked to an increase in respiratory problems. natural gas and water.
5. Oil in Alaska, USA. 4. The Nenets are the indigenous tribe that inhabit
6. The main problems associated with mineral the Yamal Peninsula.
developments in periglacial areas include: 5. They use the land for grazing their reindeer.
• the ecosystem is highly susceptible to
6. The Yamal Megaproject is a major oil and natural
interference because of the limited number of
gas project that Russia has begun to develop.
species involved
7. Oil and gas operations in the Yamal Peninsula
• the extremely low temperatures limit
destroyed over 64,000 km2 of tundra in just 10
decomposition, and hence pollution, especially
years of exploration. Fish yields on the River Ob
from oil, has a very long-lasting effect on
have decreased as fish spawning grounds have
periglacial ecosystems
been polluted. The River Ob used to provide 60
• permafrost is easily disrupted, posing per cent of the Former Soviet Union’s fish catch;
significant problems. Heat from buildings and nearly 30 fisheries on tributaries of the Ob have
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CHECK YOUR UNDERSTANDING: ANSWERS

been destroyed. Reindeer’s migratory routes have and a large circumference. In contrast, composite
been bisected by railroads, and some reindeer have volcanoes are formed by alternating eruptions of
been shot. fragmental material followed by lava outflows.
These volcanoes are characterized by slopes of 3°
8. Desertification is land degradation in humid and
near the summit and 5° near the base.
semi-arid areas – that is, not including non-desert
(arid) areas. It involves the loss of biological and 5. Primary hazards are the direct impacts of the
economic productivity and it occurs where climatic eruption, for example lava flows, ash fallout,
variability (especially rainfall) coincides with pyroclastic flows and gas emissions. In contrast,
unsustainable human activities. secondary hazards are due to the way that the
ejected material reacts or changes form. For
9. The causes of desertification include overgrazing,
example, ash may join with rainwater to form
overcultivation, deforestation, sedentarization of
mudflows (lahars), or heat from the volcano
nomads, use of marginal land, salinization of soil,
may melt snow and ice to trigger a glacial flood
development of cash crops, war and conflict, and
(jökulhlaup). Lahars, or volcanic mudflows,
inappropriate farming techniques.
are another hazard associated with volcanoes.
10. Climate change will have the effect of pushing A combination of heavy rain and unstable ash
increasing numbers of winter sports higher up increase the hazard of lahars.
mountains, concentrating impacts in an ever-
6. The focus is the point within the Earth where an
decreasing number of high-altitude areas. Since
earthquake takes place – that is, shallow-focus
2000, some patches of permafrost that have
near the surface, and deep-focus at great depth
existed for tens of thousands of years have
underground. In contrast, the epicentre marks
disappeared. Low altitude resorts in Italy, Germany
the point on the surface of the Earth immediately
and Austria may also have to move uphill in the
above the focus of the earthquake.
future. Others may have to rely on snow-making
machines. The snowline could rise to 1,800m, 7. Primary (P) waves or pressure waves are the
which could lead to a tourism loss of nearly $1.4 fastest and can move through solids and liquids
billion compared with the present. – they shake the earth backwards and forwards.
In contrast, secondary (S) waves or shear waves
move with a sideways motion and are unable to
move through liquids – they make the ground
Option D Geophysical hazards move horizontally, causing much damage.
Geophysical systems
8. Mass movements include any large-scale
1. The three main layers within the Earth include the movements of the Earth’s surface that are not
inner core, outer core and the mantle (which is accompanied by a moving agent such as a river,
divided into the lower and the upper mantle). glacier or ocean wave. They include very slow
2. The main internal heat flow within the Earth is movements, such as soil creep; fast movement,
large-scale convection currents. such as avalanches; dry movement, such as
rockfalls; and very fluid movements, such as mud
3. Subduction refers to the plunging of one plate flows.
beneath another. Subduction zones form where
an oceanic lithospheric plate collides with another 9. Shear strength refers to the in the internal
plate – whether continental or oceanic. Subducted resistance of a slope.
(lithospheric) oceanic crust remains cooler, and 10. Shear stress refers to the forces attempting to pull a
therefore denser than the surrounding mantle, mass downslope.
for millions of years; so once initiated, subduction
carries on, driven, in part, by the weight of the
subducting crust. The subducting plate drags or Geophysical hazard risks
pulls the rest of the plate behind it. 1. Most of the world’s earthquakes occur in clearly
4. Shield volcanoes are formed from very hot, runny defined linear patterns. These linear chains
basaltic lava. Because it is so hot, the lava can generally follow plate boundaries. Broad belts of
flow great distances. It builds up shield volcanoes, earthquakes are associated with subduction zones
which have gently sloping sides, a shallow crater (where a dense ocean plate plunges beneath a less-

9
dense continental plate), whereas narrower belts 9. The range of average annual deaths due to mass
of earthquakes are associated with constructive movements is 270–3,400.
plate margins, where new material is formed and
10. Earthquakes and tsunamis have had the greatest
plates are moving apart. Collision boundaries, such
impact in terms of loss of life between 2004 and
as in the Himalayas, are also associated with broad
2014.
belts of earthquakes, whereas conservative plate
boundaries, such as California’s San Andreas fault
line, give a relatively narrow belt of earthquakes Hazard risk and vulnerability
(although this can still be over 100 km wide). In
addition, there appear to be isolated occurrences of 1. The main plates that affect Haiti are the North
earthquakes. American plate and the Caribbean plate.

2. The Pacific Ring of Fire refers to the distribution 2. Around one million people were made homeless
and location of three-quarters of the Earth’s 550 and 250,000 were injured and in need of
historically active volcanoes around the rim of the emergency aid.
Pacific Ocean. This includes many of the world’s 3. (a) The 2010 Christchurch earthquake had a
most recent volcanoes, such as Mt Pinatubo (the magnitude of 7.1 and was responsible for one
Philippines), Mt Unzen (Japan), Mt Agung (Java), death.
Mt Chichon (Mexico), Mt St Helens (USA) and
Nevado del Ruiz (Colombia). (b) The 2011Christchurch earthquake had a
magnitude of 6.3, but was responsible for 185
3. The Hawaiian Islands are a chain of volcanic deaths.
islands that stretch northwest across the Pacific
Ocean. These volcanoes have been caused by the 4. Soufriere Hills began erupting in 1995.
movement of plates above a hot part of the fluid 5. The hazards associated with the Soufriere Hills
mantle. A hotspot remains stationary but as the volcano include pyroclastic flows, mud flows, ash
plates move over it, new volcanoes form over falls and building collapse.
millions of years, each one slightly apart from the
6. The reasons for landslides at Kalimpong are poor
previous one.
water management and slope disruption. The
4. The distribution of landslide fatalities tends to channel is dry towards the end of the dry season,
be more common in areas that have: active and is choked with garbage. This makes the
tectonic processes that lead to high rates of uplift channel unable to cope with the large flows that
and seismic events, high levels of precipitation occur during the monsoon season. The problem
including high annual totals and high short-term is increased by house building on steep slopes.
intensities, and a high population density. Some houses are built by first creating a terrace
5. The recurrence interval or return period is the by excavating into the slope. By creating a mini-
expected frequency of occurrence in years for an terrace to build on, a steeper slope is made behind
event of a particular magnitude. In general, small the terrace, and that increases instability.
events have a high frequency/short return period 7. Sri Lanka experiences landslide due to the
whereas large events have a very low frequency/ combination of a rugged terrain (for example, in
high return period. These are generalized into the Central Hills) and high rainfall, associated with
high-frequency/low-magnitude events versus low- the southern monsoon (May toSeptember) and
frequency high-magnitude events. the northern monsoon (December to February).
6. A VEI 8, or supervolcano, is a very high magnitude 8. (a) At least 24.
low frequency event. A VEI 8 ejects more than
(b) Tourism in the area has increased.
1,000 km3 of material, 10 times more than a VEI
7. The last eruption of a VEI 8 was about 74,000 9. The landslide problem is greatest Kalimpong as
years ago. the south-west monsoon approaches, i.e. June to
September.
7. The average number of earthquakes with a
magnitude of 8 or over is 1. 10. It is located at a destructive plate boundary, where
the Indo-Australian plate subducts beneath the
8. The range of average annual deaths due to
Eurasian plate.
volcanoes is 2–320
10
CHECK YOUR UNDERSTANDING: ANSWERS

Future resilience and adaptation in the natural environment, and can be done by
residents.
1. Earthquakes accounted for 8% of the occurrence
of natural hazards between 1994 and 2013.
2. Lower middle income populations accounted for
35% of the deaths associated with disasters, 1994– Option E Leisure, tourism and sport
2013, and low income populations accounted for a Changing leisure patterns
further 33% of deaths.
1. Leisure is a broad term that includes sport,
3. Population growth is likely the impact of recreation and tourism. It is a freely chosen activity
geophysical hazards as there will be more people or experience that takes place in non-work time.
at risk, more people living in cities, greater
Sport involves physical activity, but it is
alteration of the physical landscape, and reduced
competitive and has professionals.
resilience of systems to cope with the increased
pressures. Tourism involves staying away from home for at
least one night for the purpose of leisure and it
4. Safe houses are houses which have had basic
includes day trips which might be international.
improvements made to them. For example,
Recently tourism has become more specialized
existing adobe walls can be reinforced with a
with niche tourism available for those with special
strong plastic mesh installed under plaster – in an
interests – silver tourism, adventure tourism,
earthquake these walls crack but do not collapse
ecotourism and others.
immediately, allowing occupants to escape. Plastic
mesh could also work as a reinforcement for 2. Any of the following three are acceptable answers:
concrete walls in Haiti and elsewhere. Researchers • Falling work demands – a reduction in the
in India have successfully tested a concrete house length of the working day.
reinforced with bamboo. A model house for
Indonesia rests on ground-motion dampers – old • An increase in disposable income – leisure
tyres filled with bags of sand. Such a house might pursuits can be costly.
be only a third as strong as one built on more • Growth in the provision of leisure activities.
sophisticated shock absorbers, but it would also
cost much less and be more likely to be adopted in • New technology (dishwasher) which allows
Indonesia. In northern Pakistan, traditional houses more free time.
are built of stone and mud, but straw, which is 3. In Europe and the USA, Men usually have
readily available, is far more resilient and also between 1 and 9 hours of leisure per week.
warmer in winter.
Women’s leisure time is reduced by domestic
5. Oarfish, toads, copperhead snakes and flamingos duties and parenting.
have all acted differently/strangely before the
4. HICs have the relative advantages of: more leisure
occurrence of an earthquake.
time, more disposable income and a greater range
6. Mt Pinatubo was successfully predicted by the of sporting facilities. These allow them to afford
USGS but an eruption at Mammoth Mountain Ski the training and equipment often required for
Area was incorrectly predicted. certain sporting activities.
7. Mt Sinabung and Mt Kelud erupted in 2014. 5. The level of attraction to a specific destination
8. Excavation and filling, drainage and the use of can be explained by positive attractions, such
restraining materials can all be used to stabilise as a favourable exchange rate. The number
slopes. of international arrivals is affected by factors
attracting them to a specific destination or
9. Short-term responses deal mainly with emergency negative factors which deter them from travelling.
relief and search and rescue, whereas long-term Deterrents might include a natural hazard, such
aid focuses on rehabilitation, and, increasingly, as the Asian tsunami in 2005 or an epidemic.
reconstruction. An intermediate factor that deters tourists from
10. GPS can be used to manage natural hazards by travelling at all might be international terrorism.
helping to contact trapped people, or track them, 6. Primary tourist resources are pre-existing natural
and it can be used to monitor and map changes
11
attractions and tourism for recreation. Examples those interested in cultural contrasts. Some types
might include: attractive beaches, warm, reliable of niche tourism have become so popular that
climate and scenic landscape. they have begun to resemble mass tourism and
there is little clear distinction.
Secondly tourist resources include
accommodation, catering, entertainment and
shopping – in other words, the man-made aspects
Tourism and sport at the local and national scale
of tourism
1. Primary resources are the natural features that
7. Young children adopt sporting activities near
originally attracted visitors to the area. Normally,
to home, such as bike-riding. Safety is a major
these would include beaches, mountains, rivers,
concern. With tourism parents are often reliant on
and so on. In order for the area to become
secondary resources and manmade make-believe
successful in terms of tourism it must provide
facilities, for example Disneyland Paris.
secondary resources or manmade facilities too.
Youths need space and their activities are often Initial basic provision of parking and toilets might
noisy and they repel other recreationalists. As be expanded to include hotels, entertainment,
tourists they must still take vacations with parents restaurants and other attractions. At the same
and are deterred by the cost. time, the natural primary resources must
be protected and conserved to ensure the
Middle age brings financial security when parents
sustainability of the tourist industry.
can afford a free choice of leisure activities and
they have more time. 2. Sporting facilities have a sphere of influence
upon which they depend in order to survive
In old age, sporting activity is usually limited
economically. The sphere of influence is the
by physical problems (arthritis and back ache).
catchment area around the facility, which provides
As tourists, elderly people find security when
custom. A large facility such as a stadium is
accompanied by others of the same age group and
expensive to run and therefore must attract a large
cruises are particularly popular in this age group.
number of supporters to get an adequate income.
8. Black and minority, ethnic, the elderly, lone Its sphere of influence is likely to be regional and
pensioners, local authority tenants and those with possibly national. A small sporting facility, such as
disabilities – all these groups have relatively low a local swimming pool, does not have the same
incomes or physical limitations. overheads and in order to survive it needs to draw
9. The development of LICs and improvement in from a much smaller area. Its sphere of influence
infrastructure at destinations. is therefore much smaller.

The increasing affluence both in the source and 3. The range is the distance that people are prepared
destination. to travel to use a particular sporting facility. A small
playground with a very limited number of facilities
The desire for new types of niche tourism in more will have a short range about 1 km, which means
exotic locations. beyond this people are not prepared to travel to
The interest in cultural differences. use the playground. However, a sports facility
offering a variety of indoor and outdoor activities
The improvement in long-haul journey times. might have a range up to 10 km. A top-level sports
Economy package deals. complex and athletic stadium will serve a large
population drawn from an even greater distance. It
The improvement in marketing through the
is been suggested that the threshold population for
Internet and social media.
an 18 hole golf course in the UK is around 30,000
The expansion of the tourist realm. people. People will be drawn from a wide area
10. Niche tourism is a response to mass tourism and and the relationship is reciprocal – they will be
a globalizing world of increasing sameness. It prepared to travel to use the superior facilities and
caters for people seeking a different experience. at the same time the sporting complex depends
Unlike mass tourism, it deals with small groups upon their support for economic survival.
with special interests. For example, dark tourism 4. Hot spots may be urban or rural, and both are
focuses on the macabre and tribal tourism attracts areas of intense tourist activity.

12
CHECK YOUR UNDERSTANDING: ANSWERS

Their attractions include: 7. The purpose of the buffer zone around a national
park is to reduce or eliminate human activities in
• andscape – mountains (Nepal), biodiversity
L
that area which might impact upon the central
(Amazon), hot deserts (Grand Canyon).
district of the park where most of the environment
• limate – hot and dry climates are preferred
C needs protection. There will be restrictions
and tourism is often seasonal where climate on resource use in the buffer zone in order to
changes over the year. enhance the conservation value of the protected
• ulture – language, customs (Oxford),
C area in the national park. Such a zone exists in
ancient artifacts and indigenous populations Killarney National Park, Northern Ireland.
(Namibia). 8. Threats include proximity to Killarney town and
• porting events – World Cup (Rio 2014)
S the large number of tourists. Their objective is to
Olympic Games (London 2012). conserve the natural environment of the park and
to protect it from tourist impact. There are several
Government investment and planning, such as the priorities:
creation of new resorts, improved infrastructure
and new attractions, may also be influential. • The control and eradication of the
rhododendron is the biggest conservation
5. Hotels are secondary tourist resources and their challenge facing the national park authorities.
theoretical location depends upon the type of It infests large areas of natural woodland. It is
customer they attract. In many tourist resorts, not natural to the area, which means that it
large international hotels occupy prime sites close easily dominates and excludes other endemic
to the CBD with sea views and tourist attractions species.
nearby (restaurants and entertainment). Their
overheads would be very high because of high • The removal of forestry plantations situated
land values. Consequently, they offer high-order in the restoration zone. The aim is to replace
facilities and services at a high cost. Away from the them with natural species.
tourist business district smaller guest-houses with • Markross House has been restored and
limited facilities are likely to attract regional or developed to attract those interested in craft
national custom and their overheads will be much activities. Ross Castle has been restored and
lower. Some hotels take advantage of semi-rural provision of tourist services improved.
locations, which are more accessible and cheaper
These improvements have all be developed and
land values allow them to occupy a large site and
undertaken after consultation with Kerry County
to provide a range of superior facilities, such as a
Council, Killarney District Council.
golf course or a spa.
9. Cities have a large sphere of influence and offer a
6. Oxford is a world-famous university city attracting
range of recreational facilities to suit local people
five million tourists per year and providing 5,000
and also those drawn in from a much larger area.
full-time jobs.
Leisure facilities will range from the smallest
The historic sites, which attract so many playground to large leisure centres, which may
international and national tourists include: the have national as well as international attraction.
Botanic Gardens, the Ashmolean Museum and the Thus, they have both lower-order and higher-
various colleges of Oxford University. order tourist attractions.
Oxford has become a tourist hot spot and will Tourists tend to concentrate in city centres where
remain so because: it is possible to find a tourist business district
• its historical features are perpetual (TBD) and the associated attractions such as
international hotels, concert halls, restaurants and
• the growing popularity of heritage tourism other attractions, which would be too expensive
• it provides a unique tourist experience for most locals to use regularly. The provision of
leisure facilities conforms to the socio-economic
• Oxford is accessible by public transport status of residents. Moving out from the centre
• Oxford is in a central location in the UK and you would expect to find lower-order services,
therefore part of the international tourist such as red light districts and playgrounds for
circuit. local children. Towards the edge of the city, land
13
is much cheaper and leisure facilities such as large • A rich cultural tradition with indigenous
stadia are found here. In the UK this rural/urban tribes, such as the Zulus.
zone attracts other leisure activities such as “pick-
• It is relatively a cheap tourist destination.
your-own”, garden centres and golf courses.
• English is widely spoken
10. The Oxford tourism strategy is designed to ensure
visitor satisfaction, encourage and increase tourist • Terrorism is not linked to this country.
spending within the city and minimize the 5. Advantages:
environmental problems that result from tourism.
It intends to: • Tourism brings in much foreign exchange and
accounts for 28% of GDP.
• provide a larger coach park and enforce on-
street parking regulations • It is labour intensive and provides direct and
indirect employment.
• increase use of public transport and park-and-
ride • It has stimulated economic development by
the generation of wealth and the multiplier
• encourage walking tours, registered effect.
sightseeing buses and cycles
Disadvantages:
• encourage visits to lesser-known attractions by
providing on street information • Tourist demand is volatile and has fluctuated
in response to external shocks, such as
• liaise with language schools to prevent the terrorism and short and long-term coastal
conflict between themselves and the general hazards.
public due to the street congestion they cause
• Depletion of natural resources and shortage of
• increase the number of off-season visitors water.
• reinvest the money generated through • Waste and pollution from tourists.
tourism and therefore make it sustainable.
6. Costs:
• Debts may take a long time to pay off.
Tourism and sport at the international scale
• The large number of tourists makes an impact
1. This is a form of niche tourism that involves on the environment and consumes resources,
exploration or travel to a remote area and some especially water.
level of perceived (sometimes real) risk.
• Large events have security risks and are prime
2. Heritage tourism is travelling to experience places, terrorist targets.
artifacts, sites and the indigenous people of an
area. It may be referred to as cultural tourism. • If the event is unsuccessful in this respect the
host experiences loss of international respect.
3. TNCs may be regarded as an asset to LICs when
they first attempt to fund development and tourist Benefits:
projects. However, TNCs very quickly assume a • Increased prestige for the country and the city
dominant role and become involved in almost concerned.
every aspect of tourist management. This includes
travel agents, flights, taxis, insurance, hotels, other • Economic spin-offs – trade and tourism in
accommodation and bookings. Their involvement particular.
may be a lever to economic growth, but a lack of • It gives stimulus to the local sporting facilities.
national ownership of hotels and airlines causes
• The event may make profit through sales of
the loss of tourist revenue (leakage).
radio and TV rights and merchandise.
4. South Africa has a number of natural assets:
7. The small land area and narrow resource base
• Rich and varied wildlife and game reserves, make manufacturing an unlikely development
for example. Kruger National Park. strategy.
• A warm climate attracting Europeans during Tropical islands such as those in the Indian Ocean
their colder months. and French Polynesia can offer perfect tourist
14
CHECK YOUR UNDERSTANDING: ANSWERS

features, such as beaches, climate and wildlife. streams and rivers.


Tourism is a good choice because it is not restricted 10. Example: The 2012 London Olympic Games
by quotas or tariffs like other exports.
This post-Olympic urban regeneration scheme
Tourism provides local jobs for local people, many aimed to improve living conditions and economy
of whom are untrained. They gain new language of one of London’s poorest districts – the Lea
and IT skills. Valley.
8. Mass tourism took off in the 1960s in Europe. It The UK government invested £30 million to
attracted the 18 to 30 age group and allowed for transform the Olympic site into the Queen
cheap, package holidays, which took advantage Elizabeth Olympic Park.
of economies of scale. Popular destinations were
Transport for London invested 6.5 million in
places like Benidorm in Spain, where holidays
transport infrastructure in preparation for the
consisted of crowded beaches and were organized
2012 games.
by foreign tour companies.
Other works included:
The disadvantages of mass tourism are:
• sustainable practices involving recycling of
• Environment – this is high-intensity tourism
90% of demolition waste and the planting of
impacting on small area.
300,000 wetland plants and 1000 new trees
• Excessive waste, noise, litter and, more
• 2800 housing units were created from the
seriously, consumption of local resources such
athletes’ village and 50% of these were
as water.
affordable housing for local people
• Conflict between locals and tourists is
• a community leisure centre and aquatic were
common.
opened in 2012.
• Destinations receiving large numbers of
visitors of this kind do not always benefit
from tourism and there is some degree of Managing tourism and sport for the future
leakage. This means that package holidays use 1. This is the perceived number of visitors that can be
their own agents, guides and airlines and the tolerated at one site. Older people tend to be less
impact they make on the local economy is crowd-tolerant and perceive the carrying capacity
minimal because the revenue is repatriated. to be lower than more tolerant younger people.
9. Heritage tourism is a form of niche tourism, which The general perception, irrespective of age is that
is becoming increasingly popular. It focuses upon a tourist area has reached carrying capacity when
historic buildings, local customs and artifacts and noise and tourist numbers are high enough to be
indigenous populations. It can take place both in perceived as a nuisance.
a rural or an urban setting. Machu Picchu is an
example of heritage tourism. A difference in perception might lead to conflicts
between two groups.
Disadvantages:
2. The carrying capacity of a tourist hotspot has been
• Cultural costs. exceeded when the following conditions exist:
• Cultural conflict and the abandonment of • Overcrowding
traditional customs by the indigenous tribes.
• Noise
• Adoption of westernized habits such as
alcohol. • Long queues

• Increasing local crime. • Difficulty finding parking spaces

Environmental costs: • Litter and overflowing disposal bins

• Where land is steep and deforested heavy rain • Inadequate and unattended toilets
causes serious erosion landslides. Urban hotspots are generally more resilient to
• Recent urbanization and the building of hotels intense tourist activity than rural ones because the
have resulted excessive waste and pollution of urban fabric is more resistant.
15
3. Ecotourism was designed to offer a different 890,000 hotels in 45 countries. It was claimed
experience for tourists who were interested that hotels that did not make the top five in their
in conserving wildlife and the environment. location will lose business, and poor reviews could
The principles of ecotourism were to conserve damage a hotel’s reputation indefinitely. Although
resources, to develop complexes that fitted with the reliability of the reviews is in question, people
the local environment, to involve local people change their holiday plans to avoid possible
to cause minimum pollution, and to respect the disappointment.
customers and practices of indigenous populations.
Facebook and booking.com are further sources
For many tourists ecotourism involves some of unvetted opinion that might make or break an
degree of sacrifice and of course some are not operator or hotel, or deter people from visiting a
prepared to do this and they like the convenience particular holiday destination.
of a flushing WC and hot water. Increasingly,
8. This is one of the cultural drawbacks of tourism.
ecotourism has adjusted to the desires of tourists
When visitors confront indigenous populations,
who are not prepared to make sacrifices for
envy may develop among the poorer local people
the conservation of the environment, hence
who see others from more developed countries
egotourism.
with the trappings of wealth, for example, cameras
4. The historical trends show almost geometric and tablets. It can lead to theft and tourists are
increase in the number of tourist arrivals in the advised to conceal such items and to avoid
world as a whole. For example, 1950 in total was demonstration of their wealth. For most residents
virtually zero, in 1975 it was 200 million, 2000 of this destination such tourist commodities
and 700 million, and the prediction for 2025 is 1.6 remain tantalisingly beyond their reach. As a
billion. The fastest-growing region in the world result, discontent grows amongst the hosts.
is Asia Pacific. Its share of the world total tourist
9. In the world of sport males are dominant and
arrivals was 22% in 2010 and is predicted to be
women face considerable challenges, especially if
30% in 2030. Whereas Europe’s share fell from
they are Asian.
51% in 2010 to 41% in 2030.
The chance of their anticipating in sported as
5. The general trend is that the emerging economies
Muslims is severely limited by the following
will experience a greater rate of increase in
factors:
international tourist arrivals by 2030. The regions
with the fastest growth rates are in Latin America, • Dress code – the need for modesty is not
Asia Pacific and in some parts of Europe such as always appreciated
the Eastern Mediterranean. The tourism growth in • Inadequate facilities – a prayer room and
the HICs will be relatively slow. provision of water for self-cleansing are
6. Diaspora tourism is a form of niche tourism seldom available.
whereby tourists take a holiday in their country • Lack of parental approval because they do not
of origin. Their behaviour differs from that of appreciate the need for physical fitness.
other international tourists in some respects.
For example, they tend to stay with friends and • Socio-cultural barriers – socializing
relatives and therefore do not spend much on and consuming alcohol are considered
hotels. They tend to use local facilities and also inappropriate for Muslim women.
local businesses, which can benefit the economy. • Communication – language barriers are often
Genealogy tourism (cemetery tourism) would an issue.
typically be taken in Great Britain by New
Zealanders and Australians attempting to trace • Lack of women-only sessions – this is a major
their origins and family tree. deterrent.

7. Social media such as TripAdvisor and Facebook are • Childcare – crèche facilities must be provided
widely used by people wishing to choose a type of if women are free to participate. Women are
holiday. They are a source of opinion and review responsible for all aspects of' childcare.
from those who have already participated in a 10. Physical disability is much more acceptable than
particular type of activity or holiday. TripAdvisor it was when the Paralympics first started in 1948.
was established in 2000 and by 2015 it listed Irrespective of sport disabled people are now
16
CHECK YOUR UNDERSTANDING: ANSWERS

included in many activities. The Olympics is no Risk factors associated with loss-adjusted life
exception and it would be extraordinary if they expectancy are:
were excluded from this event.
• Low socio-economic status.
Technology has also enabled those with mobility
• Chronic diseases and conditions – these are
problems to participate in a wide variety of sports,
associated with a significant loss in health-
and disability is no longer a major hindrance.
adjusted life expectancy.
• Gender – the estimates of health-adjusted life
expectancy for the diabetes cohort at age 55
Option F The geography of food and health had a life expectancy of 5.8 years for women
Measuring food and health and 5.3 years for men. HALE for countries.
The calculation method also includes a weight
1. Hunger is a strong desire for food when it is in
assigned to each type of disability adjusted by
short supply. It depends upon the availability of
severity.
food and the ability of people to access it.
5. This is a crude measure because the interpretation
Malnutrition results from inappropriate diet. This
of “doctor” varies.
may involve nutritional deficiency resulting in
disease such as marasmus and kwashiorkor. It may To view him/her in isolation is also unsatisfactory
also be caused by excessive eating, resulting in because the size and quality of the medical team
obesity and the technological support are both important.
2. This is the shift in dietary consumption that 6. An epidemic is an outbreak of disease that spreads
coincides with economic development, for across a large region affecting many. A pandemic
example, countries that are changing from high is an epidemic that has got out of control and the
carbohydrate consumption to high protein and extent can be global. A good example is the Black
fat consumption. India and China are making this Death, which killed 75 million people, and more
transition currently. recently and less deadly, the swine flu pandemic in
2009.
3. Calories provide energy, but consumption varies
globally from an average of 3800 per day in the US 7. IMR is the number of infant (<1 year) deaths per
to 1680 in Burundi. The average consumption for 1000 live births per year x 100.
LICs is 2680 and for HICs is 3400. This wide range A high IMR reflects upon the mother’s state of
makes this indicator unreliable and its unreliability health, living conditions and health provision. Risk
is increased by other factors: factors are:
• Societies with a more sedentary life style need • A very young mother, <15 yrs.
fewer calories. Whereas those employed in
farming or other active pursuits need more. • Low levels of education.

• Body size controls calorie consumption. • Bottle feeding

• Gender controls body size and occupation (to • Tropical climate


some degree). • Poor water quality
4. Health-adjusted life expectancy (HALE) is an • Poor sanitation
indicator of the overall health of a population. It
combines measures of both age- and sex-specific • Poor medical support
health data, and age- and sex-specific mortality 8. Diseases of poverty
data, into a single statistic. Health-adjusted life
Environmental causes – these derive from
expectancy is an indicator of the average number
generally poor living conditions affecting sanitation
of years that an individual is expected to live in
and water supply. Many LICs have humid tropical
a healthy state. It is a summary measure that
climates, in which disease-transmitting organisms
combines both quantity and quality of life. It can
and malarial mosquitos thrive. These are also ideal
be used to measure the burden of disease and
conditions for the growth of bacteria and insects
injury in the population, risk factors, and the
that spread disease.
performance of public health efforts.

17
Social causes – households in which parents are can also be calculated on a global scale
missing (possibly due to AIDS) struggle to avoid
2. Intensive farming systems have a high
disease.
labour or capital input per hectare. Primitive
Low income families are more susceptible to agricultural systems will be labour-intensive,
disease. such as subsistence rice growing, whereas
commercial systems such as tulip production in
Diseases of affluence
the Netherlands have a high capital input. This
These usually relate to sedentary lifestyles, lack of results from use of greenhouses and other energy
exercise, and excess calories. These can result in subsidies such as fertilizers.
diseases such as cancer and chronic conditions,
3. The energy efficiency ratio (EER) is the amount of
which can reduce quality of life.
the energy input into a farming system relative to
9. In 1990 the leading causes of premature death in the energy output. Farming systems such as agro-
China were: forestry in the tropics use energy from the sun and
(1) Lower respiratory infection natural fertilizers. They are energy efficient (EER
65). Conversely, greenhouse lettuce production
(2) Cerebrovascular disease in temperate areas requires large energy inputs
(3) Neonatal pre-term births (subsidies) for greenhouse lighting, heating,
transport of other inputs such as fertilizers and
In 2013 the three main causes of premature tests transport of lettuces to market. (EER 0.002)
were:
4. The diffusion of innovations was a process devised
(1) Cerebrovascular disease by Hägerstrand. In agriculture farmers’ adoption
(2) Ischemic heart disease of innovations (new technology, seeds, breeds
and techniques) depended upon several factors:
(3) Road traffic accidents
information, financial status, personal traits such
This change is typical of a LIC undergoing the age and level of conservatism and proximity to
epidemiological transition. other adopters.
10. LICs pass through the epidemiological transition Those elderly and conservative farmers living in
as they develop economically. In the early isolation with inadequate information were slow
stages of development their domestic situation to adopt and reluctant to change.
improves, especially where freshwater and good
5. As society moves from a state of food shortage
sanitation are concerned. Thereafter the incidence
to adequate supply and income per household
of infectious disease declines and their living
increases, diet usually changes.
conditions improve. With the gradual increase
in income they are able to afford a more affluent Several stages in this process can be observed:
lifestyle. The population becomes less likely to die (i) a mineral-deficient, high in carbohydrates and
from infectious diseases, but diseases of affluence, low in protein diet
such as heart disease and cancer, increase. As
they make this transition from infectious to (ii) the quantity of food increases and nutritional
degenerative, the death rate also rises on account status improves
of road accidents. The reason for this is that traffic (iii) with more income society begins to shift
is unregulated at this stage and safety devices and towards a diet high in protein and low in
precautions have not yet been enforced. Therefore carbohydrate. This is called the nutrition transition.
road accidents are inevitable and often fatal.
6. There are several types of disease diffusion:
China has passed through this transition since
1990, along with Egypt • xpansion diffusion occurs when the
E
expanding disease has a source and diffuses
outwards into new areas.
Food systems and the spread of disease • elocation diffusion occurs when the
R
1. The water footprint is a measure of the amount spreading disease moves into new areas,
of water consumed by a farming activity, an leaving behind its origin or source of the
industrial process, a river basin or a country, and it disease. An example could be a person
18
CHECK YOUR UNDERSTANDING: ANSWERS

infected with AIDS moving to a new location. • Bed nets (ITNs) sprayed with insecticide.
• ontagious diffusion is the spread of an
C • Indoor spraying with insecticide.
infectious disease through the direct contact of
• Vaccination – this attacks the life-cycle of
individuals with those infected.
the plasmodium parasite, but it is not yet
• ierarchical diffusion occurs when a
H commercially viable.
phenomenon spreads through an ordered
9. (a) Contagious – leprosy
sequence of classes or places, for example,
from cities to large urban areas to small urban (b) Infectious – cholera
areas. (c) Degenerative – cardio-vascular disease
• etwork diffusion occurs when a disease
N (d)
Non-communicative – Parkinson’s disease.
spreads via transportation and social networks.
Again, the spread of AIDS in Southern Africa 10. Cholera can best be controlled by the education
along transport routes is a creditable example. of vulnerable people exposed to humid tropical
environments where mosquitos thrive and the
In addition to the nature and pattern of spread disease is endemic. Cholera spreads easily in areas
there are several agents involved in this diffusion of temporary housing without fresh water and
process: good sanitation where transient populations live.
• Water borne, such as cholera The advice given will control the spread and lower
• Vector-borne, such as malaria, with which the its mortality rate especially amongst under-5s.
anopheles mosquito carrying the plasmodium • Effective hand-washing.
parasite is involved.
• Disinfection of areas of food preparation.
7. The impacts may be social and economic and can
be viewed at different scales: • Covering of disinfected water.

(i) Global scale • Avoidance of shellfish.

• I n 2015, 95 countries and territories had • Thorough heating of food.


ongoing malaria transmission. • Careful disposal of faeces.
• bout 3.2 billion people – almost half the
A • Separation of sewerage and water-supply
world’s population – are at risk of malaria. systems.
• ub-Saharan Africa carries a
S • Treatment for serious cases involves the use of
disproportionately high share of the global antibiotics.
malaria burden. In 2015 the region suffered
88 per cent of malaria cases and 90 per cent of • Oral rehydration therapy restores body fluid
malaria deaths. in all cases.

(ii) National scale


• Malaria can reduce national GDP by 5–6% per Stakeholders in food and health
annum due to employee absenteeism and the 1. This body was established by the UN and has three
costs of treatment. principal functions:
• Malaria deters investors and tourists, reducing (i) To eradicate hunger, food insecurity and
national income. malnutrition.
(ii) Household scale (ii) To eliminate poverty.
• African families lose 25% of their annual (iii) To ensure the sustainable management and
income through this disease. utilization of natural resources including land,
• Education is impacted, wages are lost through water, air, climate and genetic resources.
absenteeism, and income is severely reduced 2. Farmers were guaranteed a market for their
by the cost of treatment. produce and this had the following results:
8. There are three principal ways: (i) Overproduction – they knew they could sell

19
produce and so wanted to maximize their profit. nutrition would enable them to make provision
for periods of acute shortage, for example.
(ii) Concentration of production in one area,
Currently women are deprived of such rights and
which has the environmental consequences of
this would therefore have a negative impact on
monoculture.
food security at the household level.
(iii) Specialization in one type of produce had
8. The main causes of famine in Ethiopia have been:
economic consequences because a lack of diversity
was risky when prices were volatile. • Drought and flooding– recurrent or
prolonged drought has restricted the build-up
3. This involves TNCs that control agriculture in all
of food reserves. Flooding causes soil erosion
stages: production, processing and distribution.
and destroys land.
Large profits are achieved through economies of
scale, for example, in the case of McDonald’s and • Land holdings have decreased in size with
Tesco. population growth.
4. Advantages: • Land degradation – overpopulation has caused
overgrazing and overcultivation. All of these
• Training in new technologies
lower productivity.
• Increased investment
• Political unrest with Somalia has limited food
• Can open up remote areas for plantation production and destroyed food distribution
Disadvantages: lines.

• Deprives free access to markets • Unsuitable food aid.

• Transfer of inappropriate technology. • Population growth (Malthusian).

• Exploitation of farm workers. • Declining terms of trade.

5. TNCs increasingly control food production and • Rise in the price of staple foods on the world
can adversely transform the diets of people, market has impacted the ability for poor
particularly in LICs. TNCs are particularly keen families to access food.
on expanding the market in this area and urban 9. Media coverage is measured by the total length
populations no longer tied to agriculture are happy of articles published either in print or online by
to adopt the products they offer such as fast foods. six mainstream news outlets in the US and UK.
The dietary consequence is that urban populations TV coverage with emotive images, such as the
consume less carbohydrate, more protein and report on BBC by Michael Buerk on the Ethiopian
more fat. The combination of dietary change and famine of 1984–5, provokes a huge response.
a more sedentary lifestyle has resulted in serious Google searches and Twitter mentions are other
negative consequences to health. ways information is spread more rapidly.
6. People starve when they cannot access food The response to media exposure of a food
because its price relative to their income is too crisis depends upon the gravity of the crisis
high. It's possible that they may have exchange relative to other global news items, the length
entitlements. This is when they use belongings and of TV programs and newspaper articles, and
animals as a form of exchange instead of money the involvement of celebrities (Bob Geldof in
and thus they can overcome the crisis. High local Ethiopia). A food shortage receives less public
food prices may also result from drought and support if it is designated an “emergency” rather
other local conditions that reduce production and than a “famine” by the government.
increase the price.
10. Advantages: In the short term it relieves hunger,
7. Women are responsible for production and but in the long term it may create dependence
processing (cooking). Usually they look after
Disadvantages: Food aid depresses the price
livestock and therefore control the family's intake
and income of local producers. Some food aid is
of protein. Although women have an important
diverted to the military.
role in farming in LICs, they very often lack basic
rights such as land ownership and education.
Understanding the basics of agriculture and family
20
CHECK YOUR UNDERSTANDING: ANSWERS

Future health and food security and • Natural hazards


sustainability
• Poverty
1. As a country develops economically more food
Improvements since 1970:
waste is generated. This occurs because crude
harvesting methods cause waste, and poor • Government investment in HYVs and
infrastructure means that produce is frequently irrigation for rice production.
handled inappropriate and stored under unsuitable • Better storage and infrastructure have
conditions. Bruising and decay result in the case also helped to overcome problems of food
of fruit and vegetables, but other crops may be insecurity..
damaged; losses of rice can be up to 80% in less
developed parts of Asia. • Self-sufficiency exists in rice, eggs, potatoes,
vegetables meat and fish production, but
In HICs food waste could be minimized by: insecurity still remains at the household level
• buying locally and 50 million people are still food insecure in
Bangladesh.
• consuming imperfect (bruised and misshapen)
produce 5. With rapid urbanization in LICS, vertical farming
is a means of producing food all year in high-rise
• eating local foods in season
buildings.
• composting waste food.
Advantages:
2. These include:
• Involves no carbon-emitting transport.
• at the household level, annual storage of
• Food supplies are secure where no transport is
surplus food
involved.
• intensification using pesticides and artificial
• Indoor production does not involve the use of
fertilizers; this has adverse environmental
pesticides.
consequences
• The plants use 98% less water than
• extensification by putting a greater
conventional farming methods.
area of land under production; this is
environmentally undesirable with continuous Disadvantages:
urbanization • Electrical consumption is very high.
• GM crops • It is too technically advanced for many LICs.
• vertical farming • It is too costly to be a quick solution to food
• in vitro farming. insecurity.
3. These include: 6. Conventional livestock farming involves a large
amount of land and has environmental impacts
• Water supply may be guaranteed by irrigation.
such as methane (GHG) production. Some would
• Greenhouse light and heating allows for a argue that compared to conventional farming
longer growing season. in vitro is unnatural and may not be acceptable
to some people and therefore not economically
• Infertile soils can be fertilized.
viable.
• Drainage can reduce flooding.
Two months of in vitro production could deliver
• Irrigation provides essential water. up to 50,000 tons of meat from 10 pork muscle
• Insecticides, herbicides and fungicides can cells. This in vitro production does not involve the
eradicate pests. slaughter of animals therefore it is more humane.

4. Case study – Bangladesh. 7. Transnational biotechnology companies are taking


over global food production and more power
Problems of food production: should be given to farmers and consumers. The
• Land scarcity dominance of North American biotechnology
companies has threatened the self-sufficiency of

21
some farmers in the LICs. increasing the amount of exercise taken. There
may be other factors contributing to the problem,
Strict regulatory laws in the EU restrict adoption of
such as alcoholism and obsessive compulsive
GM crops and their sale.
eating disorders. These need to be addressed too.
GM crops might, if allowed, have relieved famine
Raising public awareness of the problem is a
in Zambia in 2003.
starting point, but in many cases the problem is
In some countries such as Venezuela, GM crops national and therefore difficult to solve.
are banned.
8. The incidence of degenerative diseases, such as
diabetes, has increased dramatically during the last
40 years. It brings other secondary conditions such
Option G Urban environments
as blindness and circulatory problems. The variety of urban environments

There are two approaches to treatment; lifestyle 1. Population size – city, large; village, small.
modifications; controlling diet (sugar) and taking Type of employment – city, diverse; village,
plenty of exercise to prevent disease in the first agricultural in LICs, retirees in HICs.
place. This approach is recommended by the
Number of administrative functions – city has
WHO and is less costly than medical alleviation
many; village, few or none.
of symptoms by the use of drugs. The more
technological aspects of treatment involving blood Evidence of residential and commercial zones
sugar monitoring are too expensive for LICs to – large cities develop distinct land use zones,
adopt. whereas villages are too small to develop these.
9. Pandemics are global epidemics and fortunately 2. Settlement hierarchies develop with the growth of
they rarely occur. population and urbanization. In one region there
may be several cities at the top of the hierarchy
They are complex to manage because populations
and as you descend this pyramid, the number of
have become much more mobile and, depending
settlements increases but their size decreases. A
upon the type of disease, they might be highly
diagram might very effectively substitute for text
infectious such as Ebola in 2015. Air travel is likely
here. Briefly identify these levels and name a
to have assisted the rapid spread of infectious
settlement in each one.
diseases.
3. The sphere of influence is the area around a
International differences in legislation and human
settlement which it serves. Normally, its size is
rights make laws difficult to enforce.
proportional to the size of the settlement it serves.
Isolation and containment regulations do not Whereas a village providing only basic shops and
always conform internationally. services will have a small sphere of influence, a
Economic differences may make some countries city provides these as well as high-order goods and
more vulnerable. services with a long range. The size of the sphere
of influence can change dramatically over time.
There must be medical agreement on symptoms, Settlements which offer seasonal attractions such
diagnostic methods and treatment and common as resorts will have larger spheres of influence
codes of practice. during the summer. An international sporting
10. Obesity is considered a disease of affluence and event such as the Olympics will vastly expand the
is caused by excessive consumption of food and city’s sphere of influence because its support is
a sedentary lifestyle. It is characteristic of urban international.
living and therefore more common in HICs. The 4. A sketch map of a city showing industrial zones
nutrition transition that is currently occurring in might substitute for text here.
LICs means that obesity is likely to develop there
too. Industrial location depends upon the type of
industry:
Its control depends upon individuals adopting a
healthier lifestyle. • Industries requiring skilled labour and or
access to customers close by such as fashions
This means reducing their calorie intake and also and newspapers are usually found in central
22
CHECK YOUR UNDERSTANDING: ANSWERS

locations. • Provides temporary employment for in-


migrants.
• Polluting industries (petrochemicals) or those
which import and process bulky raw materials • Uses local materials.
(sugar refining) require cheaper land and easy
• Rapid manufacturing production.
access such as ports.
• No long-distance commuting.
• Hi-tech and light industries (pharmaceuticals)
are located in accessible areas of clean air, Negative characteristics:
often along radial routes such as the M4 • Job insecurity.
corridor, west of London or Silicon Valley,
California. • Lack of pollution controls.

• Industries requiring a lot of cheap land • Unregulated working conditions.


for assembly production are found in the • Poor pay.
suburbs where they have access to motorway
transport and labour, for example, Hyundai 9. A household or group of individuals living under
car works at Busan, Korea. the same roof who are lacking one or more of the
following five characteristics:
5. Bid rent is the amount of rent a potential land user
is prepared to pay to occupy a particular zone. (i) Durable housing, built from permanent
materials.
6. Commercial activities in an urban area consist of
shops and offices. Their location is determined by (ii) Living space.
the rent they can afford relative to other land users (iii) Access to improved water supply.
(residential and industrial).
(iv) Access to improved sanitation.
Shops selling mostly high-order goods occupy the
(v) Secure tenure.
CBD where potential customers (pedestrians) have
the best access and high revenue allows businesses 10. The movement out of the city by retailers has
to afford the high rents. Offices tend to occupy the occurred because of push and pull factors.
edge of the CBD and access is also important, but Push factors at the centre: traffic congestion,
their revenues are lower so they can only afford difficulty with access, awkward deliveries and high
a more peripheral location. They may also choose land values and rents.
to occupy the upper floors of the CBD (above the
shops) where rents are cheaper. Pull factors out-of-town: out-of-town locations
offer more space, affordable land, access to
7. Four indicators are used: deliveries, access to customers (due to urban
(i) Physical – housing condition, levels of land, sprawl and counter-urbanization) and access to
water and air pollution. workers.
(ii) Social indicators – the levels of crime, standard
of health, education, and single parents. Changing urban systems
(iii) Economic indicators – access to jobs, low 1. Definition: centripetal movement of populations
wages. from rural to urban areas. This was typical of
(iv) Political indicators – voting opportunities and 19th-century Western Europe and USA and
local participation in improvement schemes. urbanization was the result. It is an urban process
ongoing in LICs.
8. Nature – the informal economy (sector) employs
60–70% of the urban working population in Urban effect
LICs. It may be divided into the bazaar economy • Young immigrants are likely to boost the BR.
(family workshops) and the street economy (street
traders). • Overcrowding and urban stress.

Positive characteristics: • Inadequate public services.

• Labour intensive. • Urban economic growth.


Rural effect
23
• Improved household income through the surrounding villages and countryside.
remittances from urban migrants.
This occurred in 19th century Europe when
• Ageing population. people migrated from congested inner city to
more open suburb (a centrifugal movement).
• Rural overpopulation and pressure on
More recently in LICs there has been a further
resources relieved.
expansion of the suburbs, fed by migrants from
2. Definition – this is the increasing proportion of rural areas (centripetal movement).
urban dwellers relative to rural dwellers in a
6. These are sites that are currently out of use and
country.
blighted by dereliction. They are often found in
It occurred in the HICs during the 19th century in the inner areas of HICs. Their original function
response to pressures and poor employment in the was often industrial, but also residential or
countryside. commercial. In a state of dereliction these areas
In urban areas the result was the creation of have low economic value but high potential.
wealth through manufacturing, a growing Redevelopment has increased their value and it
population as a result of young rural populations is preferable to redevelop Brownfield sites than
migrating to cities. On the whole natural increase to convert Greenfield sites to urban land uses.
in cities was significant and contributed to Brownfield sites may be costly to redevelop
urbanization but to a lesser extent than migration. because land is often contaminated, but the
ecological reward is high.
3. De-industrialization involves the declining output
and employment in manufacturing which may 7. During the 1980s when fixed line phone
occur at the same time as a rise in employment subscription took off, the government was
and output of service industries. This process has concerned about national security and wanted to
been occurring in HICs since the 1960s and has led keep the system within their control. However,
to the decline of cities that had an economy based when China was admitted to the WTO the whole
upon the manufacturing. process of globalization allowed foreigners to take
some part in the ownership of these new facilities.
Positive outcome – decline in workforce leads to The pattern of growth has been similar to that in
greater efficiency per worker. other countries:
Negative outcome – decline in workforce but no Fixed lines were first established in 1985 but they
associated increase in efficiency and there is no were overtaken by the mobile subscribers in 1997.
growth of services. Soon afterwards the Internet was established
4. Definition: counter-urbanization is the centrifugal and that continues to operate at a lower level
movement of people and businesses from urban of subscription. Establishment of an efficient
areas to the surrounding rural hinterland. It is telecommunications network was considered to
typical of HICs. be fundamental to the economic development and
global participation off Shanghai and also of China
Advantages as a whole.
• It relieves urban stresses. 8. Shanghai’s population has doubled since 1987
• Cheaper housing in rural areas for urbanites. to 23,000,000. The problems associated with this
growth are:
• Commuting is possible with improved
transport systems • r oad congestion and its associated high level of
pollution
Disadvantages
• r iver traffic on the Huangpu emitting products
• Traffic emissions, land and water pollution
of combustion
transferred from the city to the country.
• c ontaminated water supply as a result of
• Urbanization of the countryside.
pesticides and saltwater incursion
• Second homes deprive locals of housing
• rovision of fresh water to the remaining 20%
p
• Cultural change due to wealthy newcomers. of the population
5. The outward growth of towns and cities to engulf • provision of modern sewage systems to the
24
CHECK YOUR UNDERSTANDING: ANSWERS

remaining 30% of the population toxic gases. Industrial activity also contributes to
this.
• s olid waste disposal that has minimal
environmental impact– for example, 2. These include the following:
methane.
• Greater scattering of short-wave radiation by
9. The growth of Detroit was stimulated by the particulates.
automobile industry:
• Urban fabrics retain heat; concrete and tarmac
In 1903 the Ford Motor Company arrived have a low albedo and high thermal capacity.
followed by General Motors in 1908 and Chrysler
• Tall buildings can shade streets, reducing
in 1925.
incoming solar radiation, but their upper
Assembly line processes were introduced, which floors can become over-exposed to reflected
required very little training and therefore suited radiation due to glazing.
the African American migrants in the city.
• Low buildings reflect radiation and
During 1939 to 45 Detroit contributed to artillery
accumulate heat at low levels especially at
production and then in 1959 they developed
night.
Motown records. The economy had been
renowned for its innovative industries until the 3. (i) Lower average wind speeds due to the height
1960s. of the buildings and surface roughness.
10. The adverse economic conditions leading to (ii) Air pollution and photochemical smog.
outmigration (iii) Higher burning of fossil fuels domestically and
• Declining expenditure on infrastructure due commercially.
to declining income tax. (iv) Building fabrics have a low albedo which
• Poor provision of public transport due to allows them to retain and conduct heat.
automobile obsession. (v) The availability of surface water and
• De-industrialization. atmospheric moisture is reduced by the lack of
vegetation and efficient drainage systems.
• Lack of industrial diversity due to reliance on
the car industry. A combination of the above is responsible for
increasing the temperatures of the urban area
• Ethnic conflict (race riots) caused
above that of the surrounding districts by an
abandonment of city centre, depopulation and
average of 2 to 4°C; UHI.
dereliction.
4. Areas of high building density (CBD) have higher
Consequences of declining population
temperatures.
• Ageing city population remains after young
Airports, railway termini and highways with high
leave.
levels of combustion and heat emission have
• Sprawling city of 275 km² with inadequate higher temperatures.
infrastructure.
Lower than average temperatures are found in
• Brain drain – a low percentage of college open spaces such as parks, lakes and rivers where
graduates to lead the city out of recession. evaporation is higher and therefore temperature
marginally lower.
• Dereliction and neglect.
5. These are human inputs and they include:
Domestic and industrial heating, emissions
Urban environmental and social stresses
from manufacturing and motor vehicles, street
1. Towns and cities produce more dust than the heaters and cooking for cafes and restaurants, air
surrounding area. These particulates act as conditioning exhausts.
hygroscopic nuclei which help to create fog and
6. (i) Reducing petrol consumption.
photochemical smog in strong sunlight.
(ii) Increasing public transport provision.
Motor vehicle emissions containing harmful
amounts of low-level ozone, NOx, VOCs and other (iii) Car pooling and lift-sharing.
25
(iv) Increased use of bicycles and walking. • Heat
(v) NOx reduction by the use of catalytic • Noise
converters in cars.
• Waste
7. Crimes of all types occur where population
Social:
densities, and therefore opportunities, are greater.
Therefore, urban areas have a higher incidence • Overcrowding
of crime than rural areas. The type of crime • Crime
varies within the urban area. For example, the
highest incidence of grievous bodily harm and
pickpocketing occurs in the CBD where human Building sustainable urban systems for the
activities are most intense, levels of distraction future
are high and opportunities for crime are more
available. Out-of-town, greater wealth is evident 1. These include:
and the nature of crime changes to match this. • Evapotranspiration increases atmospheric
For example, burglary, car-theft and sexual moisture in cities.
offences are more common in these low-density
• Interception by vegetation reduces rainfall
neighbourhoods with limited police surveillance
impact, surface runoff and flood hazard.
8. Currently, Dharavi is an area of very dense
• Evaporation reduces city temperatures.
population where the informal economy
thrives. The living conditions are very poor • Vegetated surfaces have a lower albedo and
and overcrowding is a problem, but Dharavi’s absorb less heat than buildings.
inhabitants live and work with close family • They provide shade.
networks and this leads to a stable society.
• Green spaces in cities have aesthetic value.
Developers such a Mukesh Mehta recognize
Dharavi’s accessibility and would like to see • They provide sites for urban leisure.
Dharavi replaced by an international business 2. Unsustainable cities are usually large with
centre and amuch more affluent society, with the population and infrastructure covering an
emphasis on generating wealth. In other words extensive area. An eco-city is a sustainable city
they are competing with the people themselves with minimal environmental impact. It achieves
who do not want to move or change their way of this in a number of ways. It may not be possible to
life. Therefore this area is contested. adopt all of these options:
9. The causes: • Reducing the use of fossil – for example, by
• Airplanes at low altitudes. promoting public transport.

• Road traffic at high volumes during rush • Keeping waste reduction at a level that can be
hours. treated locally.

• Heavy trucks and emergency vehicles such as • Providing sufficient green spaces.
ambulances and police cars. • Reclaiming and re-using derelict land, such as
• Road drills. Brownfield sites.

• Noise levels exceeding 35 dB. • Encouraging active involvement in the local


community.
The consequences:
• Conserving the non-renewable resources.
• Hearing impairment.
• Using renewable sources.
• Neurosis.
3. It aims to reduce greenhouse gas emissions to 75%
• Anxiety. of the 1990 level by 2050.
• Depression. Increasing use of public transport – more energy-
10. Physical: efficient hybrid buses used, making their carbon
emissions 60% lower.
• Air pollution
26
CHECK YOUR UNDERSTANDING: ANSWERS

Water would be conserved. Unit 1 Changing population


Green spaces are increased through the use of roof Population and economic development patterns
gardens.
1. Physical factors that affect population distribution
The repaving of alleys with permeable and light- at a global scale include climate, soil fertility,
coloured materials to prevent rapid run-off, relief, access to water and availability of mineral
flooding and overheating. resources.
4. Urban waste which in many cases ends up in 2. Human factors that affect the distribution of
landfill sites emits methane which is a greenhouse population include mineral resources, ease of
gas and 20 times more damaging than CO2. communication and level of development.
Waste-to-energy conversion (WTC) is a solution in
3. Centrally planned economies; newly
urban areas whereby electricity can be produced
industrializing countries; low income countries
from the combustion of paper, cardboard,
and high income countries.
wood and food waste. WTC installations are
unsightly and not an ideal long-term solution. 4. Between 1990 and 1995, the pattern of migration
A more progressive approach is to adopt the was quite varied. The largest flows were to the
principle of waste minimization whereby the south-east and east, but there were also flows to
urban population sorts its waste by household the west. However, by 2000–2005, the sources
and business into categories – recyclable metals, of migrants were more concentrated (largely
plastics, glass and paper. Biogas can be generated from the eastern side of the country) and the
from types of biological and organic wastes. destinations were very much concentrated on the
south and east coastal regions.
5. Improvement of sanitation is important for LIC
cities because of the increasing volume of waste 5. Much of the land is too high/steep and too dry to
that is generated. Waste needs to be remove and support much agriculture or people.
treated, otherwise it could lead to the spread of 6. The Apartheid system was responsible for the
infectious diseases, such as polio and cholera. redistribution of population in South Africa.
7. Examples of projects that have benefitted the poor 7. The main areas of high population density in
include the bus rapid transport system in Bogota, South Africa include Gauteng/Mpumalanga,
Colombia and the cable car system linking El Alto Durban/KwaZulu-Natal, and Cape Town/Eastern
and La Paz, Bolivia. Cape.
8. Cities may lose populations due to counter- 8. Physical factors such as the amount of rainfall
urbanisation (high price of property, over- and distribution of mountains affect populations
crowding, pollution, crime and so on), natural density, as does the distribution of mineral
hazards (for example, Port au Prince, Haiti and resources and the apartheid/separatist policies of
New Orleans following Hurricane Katrina), ageing the South African government.
populations, deindustrialisation, out-migration etc.
9. In China 11 per cent of the population live on the
9. The risks associated with a narrow urban economy most densely populated 0.5 per cent of the land.
(for example, one based on heavy manufacturing
or tourism) could be vulnerability to changes in 10. Less than 4% of the population of China live on
demand, increased overseas competition, currency the least densely populated 50% of the area.
fluctuations, cheaper imports, changes in fashion
and so on.
Changing populations and places
10. Rapid urbanization can be a cause of poverty
because there might not be sufficient employment, 1. The main changes shown by the demographic
housing, school places, piped water, adequate transition model are those from high birth rates
sanitation or access to services to enable everyone and death rates to low birth rates and death rates.
to have a reasonable quality of life/standard of Death rates tend to fall earlier than birth rates,
living. allowing the population size to increase.
Towards the end of the transition, death rates
increase as the population ages.

27
2. Ireland’s demographic transition model (after 10. The impact of forced migration may include the
the 1840s’ potato famine) was characterized by increase is internally displaced people or refugees;
rising death rates and falling birth rates (due to people living in poverty or forced to depend on
the emigration of young people, and the resulting aid for survival; a strain on health, education
ageing population). and public utilities; reduced access to water and
sanitation; spread of disease.
3. Natural increase is the increase in population as a
result of birth rates being higher than death rates.
4. Doubling time is calculated by dividing 70 (years) Challenges and opportunities
by the rate of natural increase (per cent), and is
1. The older dependency ratio refers to the balance
expressed in years.
between the number of over 65 year olds, and the
5. The highest rates of fertility (that is, over five working population that support them.
children per woman) are largely found in Sub-
2. Japan has an ageing population. Over 25% of the
Saharan Africa. There are a few exceptions
population is over 65 years old, and the percentage
found in the Middle east and West Asia and the
of young people is less than 15%, and falling
Philippines. The lowest fertility rates (fewer than
rapidly. The proportion of very old (over 75 years)
two children per woman) are largely found in
is increasing, and is set to become the dominant
high income and middle income countries such as
cohort by 2050. The shape of the population
Canada and the USA, Russia, China, the UK, most
pyramid tells us that Japan has a low birth rate
of Europe, Australia and Brazil.
and a low death rate.
6. The highest life expectancies are found in HICs,
3. Pro-natalist policies encourage people to have
such as Japan, South Korea, Canada, Australia,
children (for example, increased child allowance,
and north-west Europe.
provision of maternity and paternity care) whereas
Most other areas, such as the Americas, Eastern anti-natalist policies try to reduce the number of
Europe, MENA and most of Asia have life children that people have (for example, China’s
expectancies of over 70 years. historic one child policy).
The lowest life expectancies (less than 70 years) 4. China’s one-child policy is said to have reduced the
are found in Sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia. birth rate and fertility rate in China. It prevented
There are a few exceptions in South America and over 400 million births from taking place.
central Asia. The very lowest life expectancy (less However, it has also led to a gender imbalance in
than 50 years) are found in central north Africa. the country, infanticide and discrimination against
girls and women. It has also led to a shrinking
7. The dependency ratio is the number of young and
labour force.
elderly in relation to the adult working population.
In contrast, the ageing ratio is the number of 65+ 5. Girls in Kerala are educated to the same standard
year olds in relation to the number of 20–64 year as boys; there is open access to colleges and
olds. universities; jobs in health and education have
been open to women since the early 20th century;
8. The main reasons for the growth of megacities
women have independence in their personal life;
is migration (workers in seek of better paid jobs)
the sex ratio is the highest in India; life expectancy
and the age-structure of the population. Having a
is 74 years and the infant mortality rate is low.
youthful population structure leads to an increase
in the birth rate and a decrease in the death rate. 6. Most women are in low paid jobs so opening
higher paid jobs to women would help improve
Employment opportunities and investment by
their status. There are also very few women
companies and the government encourages people
employed in the legal system. Many women are
to move to megacities.
responsible for collecting water and fuelwood so
9. Different types of forced migration include greater availability of piped water would help.
conflict-induced displacement (for example, war Many women are subject to violence and sexual
in Syria); development-induced displacement (for harassment, many within their own household.
example, the Three Gorges Dam), and disaster-
7. The main ways of tackling trafficking include
induced displacement (for example, eruption of
increasing public awareness about the risks
Soufriere volcano, Montserrat).
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CHECK YOUR UNDERSTANDING: ANSWERS

involved as well as designing policies to prevent Radiation: the emission of electromagnetic waves
trafficking. Governments can start by having up- such as X-rays, short waves and long waves.
to-date registration of births and migration into an
3. The Earth’s atmosphere contains greenhouse gases
area.
whereas the soon’s does not. Greenhouse gases
By allowing trade unions, workers’ rights are more allow short-wave radiation to pass through but
likely to be protected and trafficking reduced. trap some of the out-going long-wave radiation.
The three Ps of anti-trafficking are: protection This heats up the atmosphere, and the Earth’s
i.e. increased efforts to protect foreign national atmosphere is about 33°C warmer than the
victims as well as non-immigrants; prosecution moon’s.
of traffickers related to forced labour and sexual
4. The Earth’s atmosphere consists of nitrogen (78
exploitation, and prevention – to assist other
per cent), oxygen (21 per cent), argon (0.9 per
governments to reduce trafficking.
cent) and a variety of other trace gases such as
8. Anti-trafficking measures have had limited carbon dioxide, helium and ozone. In addition,
success. Of the 128 countries covered in the there is water vapour and solids (in the form of
latest UN report, 15 per cent did not record a aerosols) such as dust, ash and soot.
single conviction. In addition, the number of
5. The term albedo means reflectivity. Light surface
countries that punished traffickers operating in
reflect more insolation whereas dark surfaces
their territory was very limited. Globally, less
absorb more. For example, fresh snow has an
than a quarter of suspects are convicted. Many
albedo of 75–90% whereas a black road surface
governments and NGOs believe that confiscating
has an albedo of 5–10%.
the proceeds of crime is appropriate and effective
as a punishment and a deterrent. It also disrupts 6. Cirrus is the cloud type that reflects most
criminal activity by cutting off some of the funding insolation.
available, creates an image that crime does not 7. A natural cause of global dimming is a volcanic
pay, and helps win over public support. Although eruption. An anthropogenic cause of global
many countries have laws that allow victims dimming is air pollution (soot, ash, sulphur
to claim compensation, trafficked people rarely dioxide, contrails).
receive any.
8. Rising temperatures, due to global warming, melts
9. The demographic dividend is the advantage that the polar ice caps resulting in less ice and lowers
a country receives when there is a bulge in the planetary albedo.
working/adult population.
Since ice is more reflective than water, less ice
10. The advantages of a demographic dividend leads to less reflection. Lowering albedo increases
include an increase in the size of the workforce, the amount of solar energy absorbed at the Earth’s
an increase in the savings rate; an increase in tax surface, and leads to an increase in temperature,
revenue for the country; healthier women with which results in less ice and so on.
fewer pressures at home; greater investment in
the health and education of children, and, greater 9. The greenhouse effect is the process by which
sending power for the household. certain gases (greenhouse gases) allow short-
wave radiation from the Sun to pass through the
atmosphere but trap an increasing proportion of
outgoing long-wave radiation from the Earth. This
Unit 2 Global climate – vulnerability radiation leads to a warming of the atmosphere.
and resilience In contrast, global warming is an acceleration of
The causes of global climate change the greenhouse effect, caused largely by human
production of greenhouse gases. It is also called the
1. (a) Short-wave radiation enhanced greenhouse effect.
(b) long-wave radiation. 10. The increase in the world’s greenhouse gases is
2. Convection: the transfer of heat by the movement linked to globalization. As globalization proceeds,
of a gas or liquid. there is increased industrialisation and trade.
These release huge amounts of greenhouse gases
Conduction: the transfer of heat by contact. as they operate. Many LICs and NICs are actively

29
industrializing and adopting a consumer culture. resources will make it increasingly difficult for
Industrial activity among the NICs has great farmers in many areas to irrigate fields. Crop types
potential to add to atmospheric CO2. Nevertheless, may need to change and changing water resources
the per-capita emissions in HICs are responsible for will either limit or expand crop production
much of the growth in atmospheric CO2. depending on the region and local weather
patterns.
7. The positive impacts of global climate change
The consequences of global climate change
on the UK include an increase in timber yields
1. The annual pattern of sea ice in the Arctic is a (up 25% by 2050), especially in the north;
maximum extent during winter (up to 14–16 a northward shift of farming zones by about
million km2) but a reduction in summer, down to 200–300 km per °C of warming, or 50–80 km
c. 5–8 million km2. The extent has been declining per decade, which will improve some forms of
since the late 1970s. agriculture, especially pastoral farming in the
2. It rose intially from around 7 million km2 in 1979 north-west; enhanced potential for tourism and
to over 8 million km2 in 1980 but has since fallen recreation due to increased temperatures and
erratically to a low of less than 4 million km2 in reduced precipitation in the summer, especially in
2012 and has recovered slightly to over 5 million the south.
km2 in 2014. 8. As global temperatures increase, sea level is
3. Temperatures projections for 2100 are +4°C predicted to rise as the ice caps and glaciers melt
(average) and >5.5°C (worst case), and for sea and due to the steric effect – the expansion of
level rise 40 cm (average projection) and > 80 cm water as it gets warmer, thereby leading to a slight
(worst case scenario). rise in sea level. By 2100, it is estimated that sea
levels will have risen by between 40 cm (average
4. A carbon sink is where the carbon goes to when prediction) and 80 cm (worst-case scenario).
used – 85% of the world’s carbon is stored in the Coastal flooding, caused by the melting of the
oceans, 2% in the atmosphere 5% in biomass and polar ice caps and the thermal expansion of the
8% in fossil fuels. As fossil fuels are burnt, about oceans, will particularly affect countries that have
40% of the carbon remains in the atmosphere, land below sea level, such as the Netherlands, and
32% on land, and 28% in the oceans. A carbon may lead to economic and social stress due to loss
source is where new carbon is produced – of land and resources.
photosynthesis on land and in the oceans produce
carbon dioxide, and volcanic eruptions release 9. Global climate change may lead to changes in the
carbon. Decomposition, respiration and human distribution of diseases. For example, up to 60
activities, such as cement production, also release million more Africans could be exposed to malaria
carbon. if world temperatures rise by 2°C. Mosquitoes
would be able to breed in areas previously too
5. Negative impacts from the rise in temperatures in cool for them. Other tropical diseases can also be
the UK include increased damage from storms, expected to spread as warmer conditions extend to
floods and erosion; an increase in sects but a higher latitudes.
reduction in the number of plant species; an
increase in soil drought, soil erosion and shrinkage 10. Global warming may well lead to an increase in
of clay soils. human migration. Already, some communities
are claiming to be environmental refugees,
6. If temperatures rise by 3°C, there will be in crop forced to leave their homes due to sea level rise
yields in some areas, such as in Africa and the caused by global warming. Residents of low-lying
Middle East. Changes in the location of crop- islands such as Kiribati in the South Pacific have
growing areas can be expected, with movements abandoned their homes.
north and south from the equator, for example,
movements of the corn belt and the wheat belt.
Many wheat-growing regions of the USA will Responding to climate change
become unviable by 2050. However, there will
1. The population groups most vulnerable to climate
be an increase in Canada’s growing season. Since
change include the very young, the elderly,
drought reduces crop yield, the reduction in water
those with disabilities, the poor, minority groups,
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CHECK YOUR UNDERSTANDING: ANSWERS

refugees and indigenous people. Carers, who are or a detailed timetable for achieving the goals.
generally women, are also vulnerable, because of Countries are expected to reduce their carbon
their burden of caring for the young, the elderly usage “as soon as possible”. However, there is no
and the sick. Single-parent households are often mechanism to force a country to set a specific
very vulnerable to climate change as they may target, nor is there any measure to penalize
combine many at-risk characteristics, such as age, countries if their targets are not met. The USA and
gender and poverty. China both agreed to limit greenhouse emissions.
2. The factors that increase vulnerability to climate 6. Adaptation refers to initiatives and measures
change include exposure (the degree to which to reduce the vulnerability of human and
people are exposed to climate change), sensitivity natural systems to climate change (adapting to
(the degree to which they could be harmed by the consequences of climate change) whereas
exposure to climate change) and adaptive capacity mitigation refers to attempts to reduce the causes
(the degree to which they could mitigate the of climate change.
potential harm by reducing their exposure or
7. Pollution management strategies for global
sensitivity).
warming include reducing atmospheric pollution,
3. In 1962, post-monsoon rainfall at Rajshahi was stopping forest clearance, increasing forest cover,
about 125mm, pre-monsoon rainfall 50mm, developing alternative renewable energy sources,
and monsoon rainfall just under 250mm. By improving public transport, setting national
2012, post-monsoon rainfall had fallen (to about limits on carbon emissions, developing carbon
100mm) but the pre-monsoon rainfall, and dioxide capture methods and developing recycling
monsoon rainfall (trend) had increased. programmes. These strategies aim to reduce the
amount of fossil fuels being burnt and to increase
4. Pre-disaster coping mechanisms include saving
the amount of carbon that is locked in trees.
money, selecting flood-resilient crop varieties,
diversifying income sources, preparing to shelter 8. Carbon capture and sequestration (CSS) refers to
at a friend’s or relative’s house, evacuating items attempts to capture the CO2 instead of allowing it
to a safe place, receiving flood warnings, building to accumulate in the atmosphere. Two main ways
dykes with sandbags, raising the base of the house, to do this have been proposed: capture the CO2 at
building machan (storage spaces) for saving goods. the site where it is produced (the power plant) and
During the disaster people may try to diversify then store it underground in a geologic deposit
their income, evacuate the family and belongings, (for example, an abandoned oil reservoir); allow
help other community members, and build the CO2 to enter the atmosphere but then remove
machan. After the disaster, people may search it using specially designed removal processes (for
for relief materials, repair damage to the house, example, collecting the CO2 with special chemicals
borrow money, sell their assets, and help other that attract the carbon). However, the amount of
community members. research and development of CSS is limited.
5. Under the Kyoto Protocol, high-income countries 9. Carbon taxes are environmental taxes on the
were required to cut their carbon emissions by burning of fossil fuel (coal, petroleum products
20 per cent by 2012, compared with their 1990 such as gasoline and aviation fuel, and natural
emissions. Low-income countries were not gas) in proportion to their carbon content.
obliged to meet specific targets. However, the These taxes are most effective if they are applied
USA did not sign the treaty, and although Canada internationally, but are also valuable nationally.
and Australia signed, they did not implement CO2 imposes high costs on society (including
it. At the same time, emissions soared in China future generations) but those who emit the CO2 do
and other rapidly industrializing nations. Under not pay for the social costs that they impose. The
the Paris Agreement, 2015, the key objective is result is the lack of a market incentive to shift from
to limit global warming to 2°C compared with fossil fuels to the alternatives. Economists have
pre-industrial levels. It also seeks for zero net suggested a carbon tax in the order of $25–$100
anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions between per tonne of carbon released.
2050 and 2100. To achieve a 1.5°C goal would
10. Civil societies play a major role in attempts to
require zero net emissions by 2030–50. Unlike the
address global climate change. They attempt
Kyoto Protocol, there are no country-specific goals
to educate people about the likely impacts of
31
climate change, and put pressure on international, as by-products of production. People in LICs, by
national, and local governments, as well as contrast, have less to spend on consumption and
companies and institutions to adopt a more the informal economy in LICs is responsible for
environmentally-friendly approach to their recycling many resources. A meat-eating diet,
business. For example, WWF pressurizing major prevalent in HICs where 30 per cent of the diet
mature economies and emerging economies may be based on animal protein, requires the use
to reduce greenhouse gas emissions; calls of much more land than a vegetarian diet. This is
on governments to sign up to international because animals use up about 90 per cent of the
agreements to reduce the use of fossil fuels and to food they eat for things like respiration, mobility
conserve forests and to work towards a transition and feeding; only a small percentage is converted
to 100 per cent renewable energy by 2050. into new biomass. Greenhouse gas emissions from
agriculture also affect footprint totals. Populations
more dependent on fossil fuels have higher carbon
dioxide emissions.
Unit 3 Global resource consumption 6. Annual renewable water resources in Africa
and security varies from over 10,000 m3/person/year in parts
of central Africa to less than 500 m3/person/year
Global trends in consumption
in North Africa, southern Africa and the Horn of
1. $1460 (accept up to $1500). Africa. Much of West Africa has between 4000 m3/
person/year and 10,000 m3/person/year.
2. The main growth of the middle class by 2050 is
predicted to be in Asia-Pacific. 7. HICs use water mainly for industry (59%),
followed by agriculture (30%) and domestic
3. The components of the ecological footprint include
(11%). In contrast, LICs use water mainly for
carbon (mainly consumption of fossil fuels),
agriculture (82%), followed by industry (10%)
fishing grounds (national yield yields), cropland
and domestic (8%).
(the amount of vegetables produced), built-up
land (and the loss of biodiversity and ecosystem 8. Virtual (or embedded) water refers to the way in
services), forest products (the release of carbon which water is transferred from one country to
and the loss of ecosystem services) and grazing another through its exports.
land (the amount of meat consumption).
9. More food will need to be produced in future
4. Ecological footprints can be reduced by reducing due to the increase in population and due to the
the amounts of resources it uses; recycling increase in standards of living/the growth of the
resources; reusing resources; improving the middle class. As people become better off, there is
efficiency of resource use; reducing the amount a change from a grain-based diet to one which is
of pollution it produces; transporting waste more varied, and includes more meat and dairy
to other countries to deal with; improving products.
technology to increase carrying capacity; importing
10. The geographical pattern of demand is projected
more resources from other countries; reducing
to shift from the OECD region to NICs. The major
its population to reduce resource use; using
consumers of energy are the HICs, although
technology to increase carrying capacity (for
demand for and use of energy resources by NICs
example, using GM crops to increase yield on the
has been rapidly increasing. Energy resources are
same amount of land), and, using technology to
used in large quantities for manufacturing and
intensify land use.
transport. LICs and MICs will continue to grow
5. LICs tend to have smaller ecological footprints faster than HICs but their consumption remains
than HICs because of their much smaller rates low by comparison.
of resource consumption. In HICs, people have
more disposable income, which means that
consumption and demand for energy resources Impacts of changing trends in resource
are high. HICs’ resource use is often wasteful consumption
and HICs produce far more waste and pollution 1. Food security is the availability and access to

32
CHECK YOUR UNDERSTANDING: ANSWERS

sufficient, safe and nutritious food to meet the 8. The problems associated with incineration include
dietary needs and food preferences for an active air pollution (carbon dioxide, sulphur dioxide, and
and healthy life. particulates which can lead to acid rain and smog);
increased volume of traffic – this comes from the
2. Water is essential for the mining, extraction,
need to get the waste to the incinerators, again
refining and transport of energy sources. Water is
leading to greater air pollution, noise, vibration,
also needed for the production of hydro-electric
and accidents; toxic ash – this is usually equal to
power.
10–20 per cent of the mass of the original waste,
3. The water–food–energy nexus refers to the very and still needs to be disposed of in landfill; and, the
close links between these three sectors and the high initial capital cost.
ways in which changes in one sector have an
9. The export of waste to China provides
impact on one or both of the other sectors. The
employment and an income, but at a cost.
nexus approach stresses the need for stewardship
China imports more than 3 million tonnes of
of these resources.
waste plastic and 15 million tonnes of paper
4. Problems involved in trying to feed Asia’s and cardboard each year. Low wages and a
population include the high number of poor large workforce mean that this waste can be
and under-nourished people that live there, the sorted much more cheaply in China, despite
rapid growth in population and declining land the distance it has to be transported. E-waste
availability/head, the requirement of water- and contains toxic substances such as lead, mercury,
energy-resources to produce food, the change in cadmium, arsenic and flame retardants. Once in
demand for food (more varied foods, including landfill, these toxic materials seep out into the
more meat and dairy products), global climate environment, contaminating land, water and the
change disrupting traditional farming patterns, air. Workers at these sites suffer frequent bouts
and the growing demand for water from non- of illness. Guiyu in China has been described
agricultural sectors. as the e-waste capital of the world. Most of the
5. Most of the world’s rubbish (in kg per person per recycling takes place in people’s homes. The
day) is generated by HICs, in particular by the industry is worth $75 million to the town each
USA, Norway and Switzerland. The lowest rates year, but Guiyu’s population has elevated rates
are produced in LICs and NICs, mainly in sub- of lead poisoning, cancer-causing dioxins, and
Saharan Africa and in South Asia. High rates are miscarriages.
generally produced in HICs and oil-rich countries 10. Living near to landfill sites increases the risk
(South Africa is an exception), intermediate rates of health problems, including heart problems
are found in NICs (India is an exception), and the and birth defects. Landfill can give off gases
lowest rates in the poorest countries (Uruguay and such as methane and may contaminate water
Paraguay in South America are exceptions). supplies. When biodegradable waste such as food
6. (a) Germany has the best record of recycling in decomposes anaerobically, it releases methane,
Europe. which, as a greenhouse gas, contributes to global
warming. It is also explosive. Chemicals and heavy
(b) Romania has the worst record of recycling in metals can pollute the soil and groundwater.
Europe. Leachate that drains from organic waste also
7. (a) Goods that can be recycled include bottles, contains harmful substances, causing the same
cans, paper, plastic and some metals. problem. The noise, smell and vermin associated
with landfill means that they should be sited away
(b) Goods that can be reused include bottles, from residential areas.
containers, pots and bags (for example, ”bags for
life”).
(c) Goods that can be ”reduced” include Resource stewardship
packaging, water (boil only the amount of water 1. The Neo-Malthusians believe that the growth of
that is needed) and energy (turn off lights/walk population will deplete the world of its resources,
rather than drive). and that for human-kind to survive there needs
to be population control, an increase in food

33
production, and a redistribution of wealth to are rising; the concept of sustainable is an inter-
reduce global inequalities. generational one, and will never end; there are
many political and terrorist organizations for
2. Food production could be increased through use
which sustainable development is not their main
of fertilisers, irrigation, high yielding varieties of
focus.
crops, genetically modifies organisms, terracing
of steep slopes, drainage of wetlands, use of 10. Goal 10 attempts to reduce inequalities in gender;
indigenous species, and multi-cropping. Goal 8 attempts to eradicate human trafficking
and forced labour, which includes many women;
3. The term carrying capacity refers to the maximum
Goal 3 focuses on improving reproductive and
population that an environment can support.
maternal health; and Goal 4 aims to improve
4. Overpopulation occurs when there are too many education and training, which includes better
people, relative to the resources and technology education and training for girls and women.
locally available, to maintain an adequate
standard of living. In contrast, underpopulation
occurs when there are far more resources in an
area (such as food, energy and minerals) than Unit 4 Power, places and networks
can be used by the people living there. Canada Global interactions and global power
could theoretically double its population and still
1. The three components of the KOF Index are
maintain its standard of living.
(1) The economic dimension – long-distance
5. The four global commons include the high seas, flows of goods, capital and services, as well as
Antarctica, the atmosphere and outer space. information and perceptions that accompany
6. The “tragedy of the commons” refers the lack of market exchanges (36 per cent of the Index);
control over the way common resources are used (2) the social dimension – the spread of ideas,
and how the selfish acts of a few individuals/ information, images and people (38 per cent of the
nations can destroy the resource for others. Index); (3) the political dimension – the diffusion
of government policies (26 per cent of the Index).
7. Recycling of phones would generally occur close
to the market and result in reduced imports of 2. The New Globalization Index is based on finance,
phones, which are mainly produced in Asia. Only trade and politics, and social factors. It also differs
about 15 per cent of phones are currently collected slightly from the other Globalization indices in that
and recycled. Increasing collection rates to 50 per it measures the distance of goods traded.
cent would make a huge difference: second-hand 3. Britain declined as a superpower after World War
sales of phones would be profitable even after II, probably as a result of the World War costing
collection, processing and remarketing. the country in terms of finances, manufacturing
8. The aims of the Sustainable Development Goals capacity lost, the cost of rebuilding housing and
are to reduce extreme poverty by 2030, end infrastructure, and the cost of trying to run an
hunger and malnutrition, improve maternal and Empire pitted against the wishes of the British
child health, improve education and training, colonies desiring their independence.
ensure availability of sanitation and water, 4. The USA has by far the world’s largest and most
promote affordable energy, promote sustainable technologically advanced fleet of warplanes,
economic growth, develop infrastructure, reduce ships, tanks and artillery systems. These give it
inequalities within and between countries, make dominance over air, sea and land. Control of
settlements more sustainable, promote sustainable space and information are key aspects of US
consumption and production, combat climate military strategy for the 21st century. The US
change, conserve and promote sustainable use defence industry employs over 2 million people.
of the world’s seas and oceans, manage forests Approximately one in six households in the
sustainably, promote inclusive societies, and USA have someone employed in the military-
develop partnerships to implement the SDGs. industrial complex. Annual spending on defence
9. The SDGs may be difficult to achieve because they exceeds $100 billion a year. Federal funding for
are so ambitious; population continues to grow, military research is $40 billion a year, twice what
and standards of living (and so consumption) is spent on health, energy and the environment

34
CHECK YOUR UNDERSTANDING: ANSWERS

combined. The institutions and organizations that 10. The source of funding for the New Development
have developed over 50 years of intensive military Bank was initially $10 billion from each of Brazil,
spending have created vested interests with huge Russia, India, China and South Africa (that is, $50
political influence. billion), potentially rising up to $100 billion/year.
5. The USA invests about eight times as much in
defence as China, and about fourteen times that
Global networks and flows
of Russia. Although China has more military
personnel and tanks than the USA, the USA 1. World merchandise trade increased dramatically
has more planes and anti-aircraft weapons than between 2005 and 2008, but then fell sharply in
China. All three countries have a relatively similar 2009. It recovered and grew rapidly to 2011, and
number of submarines. then grew more slowly, until it fell between 2014
and 2015. Over the whole period, it increased
6. The G7 countries are all wealthy countries, and so,
by about 50%. The trade in services grew slowly
could be considered to have successful economies.
and steadily between 2005 and 2015. There were
However, it does not represent communist
minor falls in 2008–2009 and 2014–2015. Overall,
countries (Russia was suspended in 2014), nor
it increased by approximately 40–50%.
does it represent emerging economies or low
income countries. 2. The contribution to world trade in exports,
2011–2015, has been largely dominated by Asia
7. A cartel is an agreement by members of an
and Europe. The Americas have had a diminishing
organisation to control prices and keep them high,
role over the five-year period. Similarly, in terms
and to control production and supply of goods.
of imports, Asia has a dominant role in 2011, but
8. OPEC controlled the production and price of oil it decreases over time. Both Europe and North
throughout much of the 1970s and 1980s, giving America declines between 2011 and 2013, but
the Middle East increased political and economic increased during 2014 and 2015.
leverage. All world regions became increasingly
3. Top down development is usually large in scale
dependent on the Middle East. Arguably, this has
and can respond well to disasters, providing
provided an incentive for the old industrialized
emergency relief. It is carried out by governments
countries to increase energy conservation
and international organizations, often using
or develop alternative forms of energy. The
“experts”, and so may not involve local people in
importance of oil means that countries need to
the decision-making process. In contrast, bottom
maintain favourable relationships with OPEC
up development involves local communities, and
countries. It also means that there is a need for
is run by locals for locals. However, there is limited
political stability in the Middle East and a need to
funding available and it does depend on the skills/
reassess coal and nuclear power as energy options.
initiatives of local people, many of whom may
9. The IMF’s objective is to stabilize international have limited access to capital/equipment.
exchange rates and facilitate development.
4. Aid is effective when it provides humanitarian
Member states with balance of payment problems
relief. It can also provide external resources for
may request loans to help fill gaps between what
investment and finances projects that could not be
they earn and/or borrow from other official
undertaken with commercial capital. It may help
lenders and what they must spend to operate.
develop infrastructure, training and help introduce
However, the IMF has been criticized due to
and support better social and economic policies.
the Structural Adjustment Plans (SAPs) that
However, it may help promote dependency, and it
are imposed on troubled countries, in which
may be tied to the introduction of poor economic
governments sell as much of their national assets
and social policies. It might not necessarily reach
as they can, normally to western corporations
those for whom it is intended. It may be short-
at heavily discounted prices. Moreover, the IMF
term rather than long-term.
sometimes advocates “austerity programmes” –
increasing taxes even when the economy is weak 5. The main aid donors are (a) Saudi Arabia (1.8%
– to generate government revenue. The IMF is of GDP in 2014), UAE (1.26%) and Sweden
for the most part controlled by the major Western (1.0%) (b) USA ($33 billion), UK ($19 billion) and
nations. Germany ($17 billion).

35
6. Structural adjustment programmes (SAPs) are as free trade in goods and services, free movement
loans requiring the borrowing country to cut its of people and capital.
government expenditure, reduce the amount of
3. An export processing zone is a customs area in
state intervention in its economy, and promote
which it is possible to import materials, machinery
liberalization and international trade. SAPs are
and equipment for the manufacture of export
explicit about the need for international trade and
goods. In contrast, a free trade zone is a small-area
long-term economic growth.
offering storage and distribution facilities for trade
7. The largest regional migrations are from South and re-export of goods.
East Asia to the Middle East, drawn by the oil
4. Migration may be controlled through a quota
economy and the boom in the construction
system, border controls (such as the “wall”
industry. The largest flow between two single
between the USA and Mexico), deportation,
countries is from Mexico to the USA. There
issuing of visas that expire after a number of years,
are also important flows from the UK to India
and monitoring of migrants within a country.
and Nigeria, from the USA to China and the
Philippines, and from France to North Africa. 5. The volume of cross-border data flows in 2005
was relatively small. The largest flow (500–1000
8. The main flows in the heroin trade are from
Gbps) was between North America and the
Afghanistan to Pakistan, Iran and Central Asia.
European Union. Smaller flows (100–500 Gbps)
From Pakistan it is moved into a variety of places
linked North America with Asia, and with Latin
including China, South-East Asia, Africa, the
America. All other inter-continental flows were
Middle East and Iran. From Iran, the majority is
less than 50 Gbps. In contrast, in 2014 the flow of
passed through Turkey into Europe. From Central
date between North America and the European
Asia, most of the heroin passes through Russia and
Union was >20,000 Gbps, 45 times greater than
into Europe.
in 2005. Flows of between 5,000 and 20,000 Gbps
9. The Tata group have diversified into a wide range lined North America with Latin America and with
of products including chemicals, consumer goods, Asia, and the European Union with the Middle
services, energy, ICT, materials and engineering. East. There were also large flows (1,000-5,000
This allows them to share the risk of a down-turn Gbps) between Europe and Africa, Europe and
in any one sectors, and also allows them to access Asia, and between North America and Oceania.
different markets world-wide.
6. Distance decay suggests that areas that are close
10. Apple Inc. has received criticism for the treatment together are usually more likely to interact with
of workers in its supple chain due to allegations of one another, whereas areas far apart are less likely
poor working conditions, long hours, low wages to interact with one another. There is a decline in
and a high number of suicides and attempted- interactions as distance increases.
suicides among workers at the Foxconn factory,
7. The advantages of containers are that they are a
Apple’s principal supplier.
standard size, and so can be uploaded and off-
loaded from containers ships to railways/trucks
and vice versa very easily. Up to 90% of non-bulk
Human and physical influences on global
cargo is transported on containers stacked on rail
interactions
wagons/trucks and container ships.
1. A trading bloc is an arrangement among a group
8. The global distribution of fixed landlines shows
of nations to allow free trade between member
that most (over 28.44 per 100 people) are in North
countries but to impose tariffs (charges) on other
America and Australia-New Zealand. Exceptions
countries that may wish to trade with them.
include Iran and Uruguay. The lowest rate of fixed
Examples of trading blocs include the European
telephone lines (<5.6 per 100) are found in Sub-
Union (EU) and the Association of South East
Saharan Africa and South Asia. Exceptions include
Asian Nations (ASEAN).
Papua New Guinea and Honduras. In contrast,
2. A customs union has free trade between members, global variations in mobile cellular subscriptions
and all members operate a common external tariff per 100 people are very different. The highest
on imports from abroad. In contrast, common values (>139.66) are found in Russia, parts of
markets are customs markets which allow, as well North Africa and the Middle East, and in some

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CHECK YOUR UNDERSTANDING: ANSWERS

parts of Latin America and South East Asia. The and foster innovation; to reduce inequality
lowest rates (<44.93 per 100) are found in north- within and among countries; make cities and
central Africa and Madagascar. However, there human settlements inclusive, safe, resilient and
are relatively low rates (44.93–85.02 per 100) in sustainable; to ensure sustainable consumption
Canada and Mexico, as well as Southern Africa and production patterns; to take urgent action to
(excluding South Africa and Namibia) and South combat climate change and its impacts; conserve
Asia. and sustainably use the oceans, seas and marine
resources for sustainable development; to
9. Global variations in Internet use vary from over
protect, restore and promote sustainable use of
65.4 per 100 in most of North America, Europe,
terrestrial ecosystems, sustainably manage forests,
Russia, Japan, South Korea, Australia and the New
combat desertification, and halt and reverse land
Zealand (that is, the Global ”North”) to less than
degradation and halt biodiversity loss; to promote
12.25 per 100 in much of Sub-Saharan Africa,
peaceful and inclusive societies for sustainable
Western Asia and South East Asia. Exceptions
development, provide access to justice for all
include Chile, Malaysia and the UAE who are all
and build effective, accountable and inclusive
high users, and Cuba and Jamaica who appear as
institutions at all levels; and, to strengthen the
low users.
means of implementation and revitalize the Global
10. The availability of natural resources is a significant Partnership for Sustainable Development.
factor in world trade. Countries endowed with
2. The highest HDIs are in North America, Europe,
other raw materials, such as food products, timber,
Japan/South Korea and Australia/New Zealand.
minerals and fish, also have the potential to trade.
Exceptions include Saudi Arabia and Argentina.
Countries with a single resource product are
The lowest HDIs are found in Sub-Saharan
more vulnerable to climate extremes, disease and
Africa and south Asia. Papua New Guinea is an
currency fluctuations because they have fewer
exception.
alternative ways to earn foreign currency. Isolation
from world markets can be a major limiting factor. 3. The Gender inequality index is measured using
Increased transport costs and times may reduce (1) reproductive health – that is,maternal
access to markets. Countries that are landlocked mortality ratio and adolescent birth rates; (2)
may also have to pay substantial tariffs to export gender empowerment – that is, the proportion
their goods. of parliamentary seats held by women, and the
proportion of adult females and males aged over
25 years with some experience of secondary
school; and (3) economic status – that is, labour
Unit 5 Human development and diversity force participation by males and females aged 15
and over.
Development opportunities
4. Gender inequalities have been reduced
1. The main aims of the UN Sustainable between 1995 and 2014. There have been slight
Development Goals are to end poverty in all its improvements in school enrolment and in the
forms everywhere; to end hunger, achieve food labour (these started off at a high level of equality).
security and improved nutrition, and promote The main improvements have been ministerial
sustainable agriculture; to ensure healthy lives positions, seats in parliament and in administrative
and promote well-being for all ages; to ensure and managerial positions, which all started off at a
inclusive and equitable quality education and low level of equality.
promote lifelong learning opportunities for all; to
achieve gender equality and empower all women 5. Progress in gender equality in Colombia has
and girls; to ensure availability and sustainable largely benefited well-educated, urban women,
management of water and sanitation for all; to whereas many rural women are illiterate and
ensure access to affordable, reliable, sustainable poor, and continue to experience gender-based
and modern energy for all; to promote sustained, discrimination and violence.
inclusive and sustainable economic growth, full 6. Microfinance lending schemes aim to reduce
and productive employment and decent work poverty, address social issues including gender
for all; to build resilient infrastructure, promote discrimination, and enable market access for
inclusive and sustainable industrialization the poor. Most people who use microfinance
37
are people in rural areas, mainly farmers, who world are converging and becoming ever similar.
cannot access other forms of finance. They need New technologies such as the internet and satellite
to borrow money to improve their farms, and communications mean that the world is becoming
buy seeds and fertilizers and so on. Microfinance more global and more interconnected. The
schemes often focus on women, who in some increased speed of transport and communications,
societies are unable to own land or borrow money. the increasing intersections between economies
and cultures, the growth of international
7. Critics of microfinance argue that its interest rates
migration, and the power of global financial
are higher than those of commercial banks, that
markets are among the factors that have changed
some people will use the loans to pay for food or
everyday lives in recent decades.
health care rather than for starting or improving
their business, that many poor people are not 5. There are between 8 million and 15 million
entrepreneurs and so the loans may be wasted, Syrian diaspora. The first wave went to Brazil and
and finally, that microfinance loans may be used Argentina in the late nineteenth century. During
to pay off other loans rather than for business the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries,
purposes. many Syrians moved to the east coast of the USA,
especially New York, Boston and Detroit. Since the
8. People Tree’s eco-policy is to: promote natural
1979s, there has been an increase in the number
and organic farming, avoid polluting substances,
of Syrians living in other parts of the Middle East.
protect water supplies, use biodegradable
substances where possible, and, recycle materials 6. The consumption of Coca-Cola varies hugely.
where possible. Most of the countries in which there is a high
consumption are HICs or NICs, although they are
9. The main reason for the growth of the textile
not the richest counties. Mexico has the highest
industry in Bangladesh is the availability of cheap
consumption rate, followed by Chile and the USA.
labour – about 20 per cent of China’s minimum
The top five countries are all from the Americas.
wage.
South Africa is the only African nation to have a
10. Corporate social responsibility (CSR) refers to consumption higher than the worldwide average.
the attempts of companies to assess the social,
7. Coca-Cola with lime – available only in the USA,
economic and environmental impacts of their
Canada, Singapore, the UK, Belgium and the
activities, and reduce these impacts if necessary.
Netherlands; Coca-Cola clear (2016) – available
Its main advantages are that it offers, in theory
only in Canada, France and Australia.
at least, some form of protection to workers and
to the environment. However, companies might 8. Many urban landscapes in different countries
not follow their own CSR, or may sub-contrast to today look very similar. Tall towers are a feature
other forms. CSR may increase the price of goods of many cities. Industrial estates and science
to the consumer. parks are increasingly globalized, as TNCs
outsource their activities to access cheap labour,
vital raw materials and potential markets. Many
Changing identities and cultures cities have pedestrianized shopping centres,
1. Culture is a system of shared meanings used by open markets and out-of-town supermarkets.
people who belong to the same community, group The homogenization of urban landscapes has
or nation, to help them interpret and make sense occurred due to many factors: improvements in
of the world. These systems of meanings include communications technology (television, internet,
language, religion, custom and tradition, and ideas and so on), so that people in cities around the
about ”place”. world are aware of opportunities and trends in
other cities; increased international migration
2. Cultural imperialism is the practice of promoting and the spread of ideas and cultures; time–space
the culture, values or language of one nation in convergence, which allows faster interactions
another, less powerful one. between places; the desire of global brands (TNCs)
3. Global media complexes include Time-Warner, to reach new markets; improvements in standards
Disney, BBC, News Corporation and Universal. of living and aspirations to be part of a global
network of urban centres; and globalization of
4. The idea of an emerging global culture suggest that economic activity, culture (art, media, sport and
different places and cultural practices around the
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CHECK YOUR UNDERSTANDING: ANSWERS

leisure activities) and political activity. 5. The Debswana mining venture is a 50:50 diamond
operation between De Beers and the government
9. Diaspora refers to the forced or voluntary dispersal
of Botswana. Debswana accounts for 50% of the
of a population sharing a common racial, ethnic or
government’s revenue, 70% of Botswana’s export
cultural identity, after leaving their settled territory
earnings. Some 80% of its profits go directly to the
and migrating to new areas.
government.
10. Diaspora groups take with them some of their
6. Resource nationalism occurs when a country
culture. This can be in the form of religion, music,
decides to take all, or a part, of one or more
sports, language and dress, for example. Where
natural resources under state ownership. It
there are sufficient numbers of a diaspora groups,
means that the government of the country
they may continue to practice some aspects of
receives the benefits of resource development.
their culture; for example, the Irish diaspora
Mining is a capital-intensive industry and much
continue to play Gaelic Games and support
of the equipment is extremely expensive. Many
traditional Irish music and dancing.
governments need the mining companies to
extract the resources. Companies worry that
Local responses to global interactions investments may cost billions of dollars, and
take up to a decade to get a return. They fear
1. There are many reasons for the rise of anti- that they may lose out on their investment if
immigration groups. The main concerns of those the government changes the contract details.
opposed to immigration are the perceived threats Although resource nationalism holds many
over competition for jobs, and the cost of housing, benefits for countries, the state must be prepared
education and healthcare. In some cases, notably to help industries when they face tough times. It
in LICs and NICs, environmental issues may also is important for the countries to give companies
be a concern, due to rapid population growth. enough return on their investments that they will
Some argue that certain immigrant groups isolate continue to invest in the future.
themselves from society and refuse to integrate
into mainstream society. If migrants are unable 7. PGA’s hallmarks are:
to assimilate into society, they may form ghettos. • A very clear rejection of capitalism,
Other concerns include increased crime rates and imperialism and feudalism, and all trade
the spread of infectious diseases. agreements, institutions and governments that
2. A UN enquiry into human rights in Eritrea claimed promote destructive globalisation.
that there were systemic human rights violations, • A rejection of all forms and systems of
widespread detention and indefinite military domination and discrimination, including, but
service. Hence, many Eritreans wish to leave the not limited to, patriarchy, racism and religious
country. In contrast, Europe is seen as a place of fundamentalism of all creeds. They embrace
opportunity – jobs, democracies and freedom to the full dignity of all human beings.
move around. There are more opportunities in
• A confrontational attitude, since PGA does
Europe than there are in Eritrea’s neighbouring
not think that lobbying can have a major
countries, hence many Eritreans migrate to
impact in such biased and undemocratic
Europe.
organisations, in which transnational capital is
3. Protectionism reduces trade between countries. the only real policy-maker.
This may be achieved through taxes on imports
• A call to direct action and civil disobedience,
(tariffs), limits on the volume of imports (quotas),
support for social movements' struggles,
administrative barriers (for example, food safety,
advocating forms of resistance which
environmental standards), subsidies to home
maximize respect for life and oppressed
producers as well as anti-dumping legislation and
peoples' rights, as well as the construction of
campaigns to buy nationally produced goods.
local alternatives to global capitalism.
4. The global economic slowdown since 2008 has
• An organisational philosophy based on
resulted in many HICs imposing protectionist
decentralisation and autonomy. (https://www.
policies, as they are being undercut by cheaper
nadir.org/ nadir/initiativ/agp/en/)
imports.

39
8. There has been large-scale political change in rubbish bins or obtained during a burglary.
Myanmar, from the decades of authoritarian Phishing relied on emails to trick people into
military rule to the democratic election of Aung revealing personal and financial information.
San SuuKyi of the National League for Democracy Spear phishing occurs when highly personalised
party in November 2015, and her swearing in as e-mails are sent to specific targets. Pharming
president in March 2016. Nevertheless, there are or spoofing refers to information that appears
still many important challenges ahead, notably relevant to the recipient, and encourages them
for Myanmar’s ethnic Rohingya community and to open an email. Smishing is the sending of text
for minority religious groups. Fears have been messages to potential victims. Vishing refers to
raised that a population control bill tabled by the messages sent by voice that are designed to corrupt
government could be used to enforce population the recipient’s voicemail and phone. Data can also
control on the largely stateless Rohingya be collected from lost or stolen laptops or from
population. In 2014 the Myanmar government discarded laptops that have not been wiped clean.
expelled humanitarian groups, thus preventing
3. Vulnerable groups include university students and
healthcare and aid for the Rohingyas. They remain
military personnel, medical patients and even the
highly discriminated against.
deceased. In urban areas in Florida, whites were
9. In 1982 Burma’s Citizenship Act created three most likely to be the victims of identity theft (72
categories of citizen: national, associate and per cent) and Hispanics the least (1 per cent).
naturalized. Full citizenship was only for national
4. Global supply-chain risks are influenced by
ethnic groups such Bamars, Mons and Rakhines,
many factors: physical environmental factors
and for those whose ancestors had been in Burma
include natural disasters, extreme weather
since before the first Anglo-Burmese war (1824).
events and epidemics; political factors include
The government claimed that the Rohingyas
protectionism, trade restrictions, and conflict;
entered the country after 1948. Thus, the
economic factors include currency fluctuations
Rohingyas became stateless.
and trade restrictions; and, technological factors
include disruption to transport networks and ICT
networks.
10. There are many reasons why the Arab Spring
was more successful in some countries. These 5. Profit repatriation is the return of a company’s
include: strong civil societies – countries with foreign-earned profits or financial assets to that
strong civil societies were more successful than company’s home country.
those without because they were able to transform
6. Some TNCs have avoided paying tax because they
the country after political change; the degree of
have made a deal with a national government to
state censorship – in countries where there was
invest in that country, in return for a low tax rate.
widespread media coverage, mass violence by the
government and the military was supressed; social 7. Drones have many advantages: they can be
media – countries with greater access to social used for surveillance in natural and man-made
media were more able to mobilize support for disasters, to survey damage, locate victims, help
the protests; support of the national military; the the police search for lost children and monitor
mobilization of the middle class – countries with large crowds. They can be used to make structural
a strong, vocal middle class were more likely to surveys of buildings, to monitor environmental
see political change than countries with a weak or conditions and to provide farmers with
limited middle class. information. However, concerns exist about the
use of drones for military manoeuvres and for
surveillance. Drones used in war are operated far
from the conflict zone and may thus desensitize
Unit 6 Global risks and resilience armed personnel to war and killing. In addition,
Geopolitical and economic risks drones have caused many civilian fatalities.
1. Cybercrime refers to criminal activity using the 8. 3D printers have great potential in engineering,
internet/computers/computing. medicine, the military, construction, architecture,
education and the computing industries. In 3D
2. There are a number of types of identity theft.
printing it is possible to use a variety of different
Trashing is the retrieval of documents from
materials. 3D printing allows manufacturers to
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CHECK YOUR UNDERSTANDING: ANSWERS

create complex 3D objects in a short time. There crustaceans, Daphnia – an important basis of
is little waste involved, as products are built up the food chain. Their place has been taken by a
rather than reduced in size. In addition, designs plankton species, Holopedium. It is larger than
can be transferred over the internet. However, Daphnia and its jelly-like coating largely protects
3D printing technology poses risks. The lack it from predators, so some other species have lost
of legislation and regulations concerning the their food supply.
technology means that it can be used to create
3. The main areas affected by pollution by shipping
weapons, parts of weapons, guns, knives and
include narrow shipping lanes, such as in the
counterfeit goods. Internationally, where gun
Indian Ocean between Singapore and Sri Lanka,
controls are strict and real firearms less easily
and others in the Red Sea, the Gulf of Aden, the
available, the impact of this may be great. Critics
Mediterranean Sea and along the route from
argue that 3D printing will replace labour in
Singapore to China. Such tracks are less evident in
increasingly complex tasks, as technology already
the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans, where ships are
has with ATMs, online banking, mobile payment
not concentrated in narrow zones. However, there
systems and so on.
are also high rates of pollution off major trading
9. Globalization had led to increased nationalism areas such as the east coast of the USA and the
in many places. The cause of the increase in western coast of Europe.
nationalism was due, in part, to poor economic
4. The carbon footprint for trade in food is complex
growth following the financial crash of 2008, rising
and includes food production, storage, distribution,
inequality, and, in Europe, rising immigration.
retailing and consumption. Total carbon emissions
The changes brought about by globalization led
for transport and storage are 420g/unit of
many people to look for stability in national or
production, and production emissions are over
local features, such as a shared culture, history or
140 g/unit product.
language. This new nationalism takes many forms:
protectionist policies such as trade barriers, policies 5. The flow of foodstuffs around the world has its
favouring domestic workers, anti-immigration own carbon footprint and link the main producers
measures and resource nationalism. and consumers. Most countries in the world are
linked with food production and consumption.
10. China and Japan have become investment
In contrast, the largest carbon footprint associated
competitors within Asia. There is competition
with the flow of goods mainly links east Asia
to build transport infrastructure and industrial
(China as a net exporter) with North America,
supremacy in Asia. Moreover, both countries
Europe and Japan (net importers) and the Middle
have built up their defence export industries.
East and west Asia/Russia (neutral). The Southern
There is a possibility of this competition spilling
Hemisphere accounts for none of the world’s
over into military conflict. Both China and Japan
largest flow of CO2 associated with the transfer of
have increased their military capacity to protect
goods.
their overseas investments. There is also growing
concern that China’s military might respond to 6. Population flows have an impact of carbon
a perceived threat in the South China Sea and footprints. For example, in the USA, CO2
initiate a conflict in the region. emissions of the average immigrant (legal or
illegal) in the USA are 18 per cent lower than
those of the average native-born American;
Environmental risks immigrants produce four times more CO2 than
they would have in their countries of origin; legal
1. Dry deposition of pollutants occurs typically close
immigrants have a much larger impact than illegal
to the source of emission and damages nearby
immigrants because they have higher incomes
buildings and structures. Wet deposition, by
and higher resulting emissions, and are more
contrast, occurs when the pollutants are dissolved
numerous.
in precipitation, and may fall at great distances
from the sources. 7. Developed countries have more robust green
laws, greater social supervision and more effective
2. Many of the lakes in north-east Canada have
governments; pollution emissions are higher
lost their calcium due to acidification. Calcium
in developing countries, where environmental
is required for the survival of tiny, plankton-like
regulations and their enforcement are weaker.
41
These less regulated environments give richer farming for farmers and labourers, fairer trade,
nations a chance to export their waste and and reducing shocks from energy changes and
pollution. The environmental vulnerability of climate change; essential services – the provision
developing countries to pollution is due to their of health education, water and sanitation; rights
underdeveloped systems as well as their need for in crisis – assistance given during conflicts and
the economic benefits of the polluting industries. after disasters, attempts to prevent conflict,
improve peacekeeping and allow reconciliation;
8. Agribusiness is large-scale, intensive, high-input,
gender justice – support for women’s leadership
high-output, commercial nature of much modern
and increase the number of women receiving an
farming, which is increasingly globalised in the
education.
demand for cheaper food.
4. Oxfam was initially founded to deal with famine
9. The main impacts of globalised farming on
relief whereas now it has a wider interest in
Happy Valley, Kenya include: the use of 25 per
development support (reducing poverty),
cent of the water previously available to over
microcredit schemes and humanitarian support.
100,000 small farmers; the use of land previously
used by nomads; pollution from pesticides and 5. The membership of Oxfam is quite limited. With
deforestation caused by migrant workers from the the exception of India, all members are from HICs
growing shanty towns foraging for fuel. – North America, Europe, Japan, Australia and
New Zealand. Observer countries include South
10. The concept of food miles describes how far
Africa and Brazil.
food has travelled before it appears on a plate.
The greater the distance, the greater the carbon 6. Reshoring is the relocation to the home country
footprint due to transport. However, it is also of a business’s or company’s operations that were
important to consider how the food has been overseas. Reshoring is taking place in many HICs
transported and even packaged; frozen food, due to rising transport costs, a relative lack of
for example, has higher energy costs. Critics skilled labour in LICs compared with HICs, rising
also argue that transport cost is only part of labour costs in LICs and NICs, greater risks in the
the environmental impact of food production supply chain, a tradition of manufacturing and
– there could be other costs such as reduction public demand to maintain employment in HICs,
in biodiversity, eutrophication, decreased water consumers in HICs increasingly demanding quick
quality and increased risk of flooding. delivery times, and higher levels of R&D in HICs.
7. Crowdsourcing is the process of sourcing
Local and global resilience ideas, services, finances and information from
the public via the internet in order to benefit
1. The main focus of the WWF is to restore from the collective abilities of a large group of
populations of keystone species – species that are people. Crowdsourcing allows for the creation of
important for their ecosystem or people, including social networks of experience and knowledge.
elephants, whales and tuna – and to reduce It allows for the rapid transmission of ideas
ecological footprints in terms of carbon emissions, and opportunities, which would have been
cropland, grazing, forestry and water. more difficult in the era before the internet.
2. Critics argue that the WWF is too close to some Crowdsourcing is a high-technology, bottom-up
large companies, such as Coca-Cola and IKEA. It approach to empowering communities around the
receives large donations from corporations ($80 world.
million in 2010). A documentary Silence of the 8. Cybersecurity, or computer security, is the
Pandas (2011) criticized WWF’s involvement with protection of information systems, hardware
TNCs responsible for destruction of the natural and software from theft or damage, as well as
environment. In 2016 Survival International the protection of information on computers and
complained that the WWF was using eco-guards related technology. The need for cybersecurity
who had abused the rights of indigenous people in is increasing as more and more people and
the Cameroon rainforest. organizations rely on computers and the internet.
3. Oxfam’s main interests in the development Common targets are large organizations,
process include: economic justice – improving government departments, military computer
systems and airline carriers.
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CHECK YOUR UNDERSTANDING: ANSWERS

9. Cybersecurity is difficult to manage because there


are no international regulations or common rules
to abide by. Moreover, national security may
be vulnerable to attacks from another country,
making any international treaty difficult to
regulate and enforce.
10. The advantages of e-passports include faster
checking in and border clearance, crime detection,
improved security as e-passports are difficult to
forge, so security is improved. Disadvantages
include the possibility of hacking into the system
and changing the data, and illegal use of the data.

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