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GEOGRAPHY EDUCATION

Supporting geography educators everywhere with current digital resources.

Author

sethdixon

I am a geography professor at Rhode Island College.

Protests ‘no Turkish Spring’ says PM

PM Recep Tayyip Erdogan again condemns the anti-government protests in Turkey, saying they do not constitute a Turkish Spring.

Seth Dixon‘s insight:

Many young citizens are accusing the Turkish government of becoming increasingly authoritarian and have taken to the streets as they fear that their secular society will follow more traditional Islamic values (just last week, the sale of alcohol was outlawed).  Over 1,700 have been arrested in 67 cities in these protests in the last few days.

Tags: conflict, political, Turkey.

See on www.bbc.co.uk

Turkey

Not All English is the Same


“22 Maps That Show How Americans Speak English Totally Differently From Each Other”

Seth Dixon‘s insight:

An isogloss is a line that divides regions based on the words that are used to describe the same item or concept.  This series of 22 maps is a delicious way to visualize some of the lingusitic differences in the United States.  Why are these distinct vocabulary terms regionally used? 


Notice that this map shows that Rhode Island and Wisconsin are distinct in using the term “bubbler” where there rest of the country would refer to the same object as a drinking fountain (West) or a water fountain (South).


Tags: language, North America, mapping, regions.

See on www.businessinsider.com

The changing origins of U.S. immigrants

Back in 1992, most legal immigrants came from Latin America and Europe. Nowadays, they tend to come from Asia and Africa.

Seth Dixon‘s insight:

These statistics only include documented migrants although the number of undocumented migration (mostly from Latin America and the Caribbean) has declined since 2007. 


Tagsmigrationethnicity, race, population, podcast.

See on www.washingtonpost.com

Geography of Aspiration

Try to replicate it with development schemes all you want, but you’re overlooking what makes New York City—and other places of ambition—so great.

Seth Dixon‘s insight:

Part of the economic success of a city can be an overriding cultural ethos of the metropolitan area.  This elusive spirit of the city is often referred to as a sense of place which many sound ‘fluffy’ to some, but can have some very tangible impacts on the urban economic development.  This article answers the question, “How does a sense of place impact urban economic development?” by using various U.S. cities such as New York City, Portland and San Francisco.  

Tags: urban, economic, place, neighborhood.

See on www.psmag.com

Houston Is Unstoppable: Why Texas’ Juggernaut Is America’s #1 Job Creator

Houston is blessed by topography and geography. But the city’s recent success is really a masterclass in learning from history.

Seth Dixon‘s insight:

In this article from the Atlantic, Derek Thompson says that Houston combines some great advantages (1-stength in energy resources and 2-proximity to Latin America) to be the U.S. metropolitan region that has grown the most since the recession.

Tags: urban, economic.

See on www.theatlantic.com

Here’s what Pangea looks like mapped with modern political borders

Pretty wild, right? It’s a map of Pangea — a supercontinent that formed roughly 300 million years ago — mapped with contemporary geopolitical borders.

See on io9.com

The Complete Global Map of Abortion and Birth Control Laws

The complete global map of laws governing abortion and birth control.

Seth Dixon‘s insight:

This series of maps shows the cultural and legal differences around the world that impact access to abortion and birth control.

See on www.slate.com

Tips for the Google Maps Guessing Game

Seth Dixon‘s insight:

In this interview with Rosemary Wardley (senior GIS cartographer at National Geographic Maps) she offers tips on how to evaluate the landscape to do well on the game, GeoGuessr.  If you haven’t played GeoGuessr, you’ve got to try it out.  It displays 5 locations in GoogleMaps StreetView and you have to guess where the images are located.  You can pan and zoom in the StreetView to explore the landscape and find more context clues as to where that location is.  It’s a fantastic exploration exercise.   

Tags: landscape, place, trivia.

See on www.slate.com

How Chicago’s Housing Crisis Ignited a New Form of Activism

An innovative campaign to move “home-less people into people-less homes.”

Seth Dixon‘s insight:

Chicago’s poorer neighborhoods have experienced a severe decline as homes are being foreclosed at an alarming rate (62,000 vacant properties in Chicago and 40% of the homes underwater on the South and West Sides).  When sections of a neighborhood are left vacant or in disrepair, it can have a lead to negative impacts on the community.  To combat both the homelessness issue and the vacant home problem at the same time, “Cook County now plans to form what will become the nation’s largest land bank, an entity that will acquire thousands of vacant residences, demolishing some, turning others into much-needed rentals and holding onto others until they can be released, strategically, back into the market.”   

Tags: Chicagohousing, urban, economic, povertyplace, socioeconomic, neighborhood.

See on www.nytimes.com

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