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GEOGRAPHY EDUCATION

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The Spread of AIDS

A handful of AIDS cases were first recognized in the U.S. at the beginning of the 1980s. By 1990, there was a pandemic. In 1997, more than 3 million people became newly infected with HIV.

Seth Dixon, Ph.D.‘s insight:

The spread of AIDS/HIV since the 1980s has varied greatly over time and space.  The red lines represent Sub-Saharan countries and the dark blue line on this interactive is the regional average of Sub-Saharan African countries.  The regional trend was on the rise at the end of the 20th century, but is now on a slight decline (but still an major impact on the continent).  Countries such as Botswana and Zimbabwe have made some significant strides in limiting the spread of AIDS (Zimbabwe is the country that ‘peaked’ in 1997 and has had the steepest decline).

Tags: Africa, medical, development, infographic, diffusion.

See on www.npr.org

Essays on Geography and GIS

Seth Dixon, Ph.D.‘s insight:

This set of 19 short essays (around 3-4 pages each) is a great supplemental text.  I am eager to read them and other resources in the ESRI library.

Tags: GIS, ESRI, mapping, cartography, geospatial, edtech, geography education, unit 1 GeoPrinciples.

See on www.esri.com

ESRI book

What we can learn from Mexico

For more What in the World, watch GPS on Sundays at 10 a.m. and 1 p.m. ET.

By Global Public Square staff

Earlier this month, the president told a newspaper the solution to partisanship is politics and more politics.

Seth Dixon, Ph.D.‘s insight:

Quick facts about the “new” Mexico:

  • Mexico has more international trade deals (44) than any other country.
  • Mexico exports more manufactured products than all the other countries in Latin America combined
  • Mexico’s GDP is expected to grow by nearly 4% this year, twice as fast as Brazil (and the USA).
  • Mexico’s average income (PPP) is higher than China, India Russia or Brazil (Mexico could be a BRIC country if it didn’t ruin the acronym).

Does that help in explaining why Mexican aren’t leaving to go to the United States?  In fact, more Mexicans are leaving the United States than entering in a clear example of changing push and pull factors.

See on globalpublicsquare.blogs.cnn.com

A Poacher’s Redemption

Jeffrey Gettleman, The Times’s Nairobi bureau chief, reports on how Kenya’s wildlife conservation corps is learning from a reformed poacher how to counter the growing threat to elephants.

Seth Dixon, Ph.D.‘s insight:

In Somalia, former pirates are helping to patrol the coasts to prevent piracy.  This idea of reforming and recruiting past criminals is also seen in Kenya as former poachers are trying to protect elephants that are essential to the local ecology as well as the tourism-driven economy.   In addition to the attached video is this article which expands on these issues.

Tags: biogeography, tourism, Africa, consumption, resources, ecology, Kenya.

See on www.nytimes.com

Rapes Cases Show Clash Between Old and New India

A boom and social change are pitting young working women in the city against men from conservative villages.

Seth Dixon, Ph.D.‘s insight:

The recent resurgence of this issue had me looking through the archives and stumbled upon this 2011 article.  As urban expansion is booming in many Indian cities, the modern city expands into the countryside.  The cultural values of these two demographic groups are quite distinct.  Young, educated women are part of the modern cities’ workforce but in many conservative, traditional Indian villages, women working outside the home are seen as “lacking in virtue.”  In many of the recent gang rape cases, the perpetrators are less educated young men from surrounding villages and the victims are well-educated young working women that are a part of the new city.    

Public spaces, especially at night, are seen as masculine spaces in most traditional societies.  One of the mothers of an accused rapist succinctly explained this mindset thusly: “If these girls roam around openly like this, then the boys will make mistakes.”  This is seen as ‘Eve teasing,’ where women are perceived as responsible for the violence committed against them to maintain social order

This other NY Times article op-ed states, “India must work on changing a culture in which women are routinely devalued. Many are betrothed against their will as child brides, and many suffer cruelly, including acid attacks and burning, at the hands of husbands and family members.  India, a rising economic power and the world’s largest democracy, can never reach its full potential if half its population lives in fear of unspeakable violence.”

Tags: India, migration, South Asia, culture, urban, folk culture, megacities.

See on www.nytimes.com

The Best Posts for 2012

Global news with a spatial perspective: resources for educators and the inherently inquisitive. http://geographyeducation.org

Seth Dixon, Ph.D.‘s insight:

This list is a combination of two types of posts.  Some represent the best posts of Geography Education during 2012 as voted by you the viewers (measured by page views) and I’ve added a few that I feel where my ‘favorite finds’ of the year.  For more favorites, you can see the best of 2011.

      

Tags: best of 2012, zbestofzbest, geo-inspiration.

See on www.scoop.it

Best

Top 10 “Nat Geo Talks” of 2012

Live presentations have been a part of National Geographic since the 1800s, and today more than 140 are viewable online. See this year’s best.

Seth Dixon, Ph.D.‘s insight:

These talks are always quality presentations and this set of 10 videos is a part of the Explorers Journal sponsored by the National Geographic Society. 

See on newswatch.nationalgeographic.com

Spatial Patterns of the Gun Lobby

The National Rifle Association gives members of Congress a grade ranging from A to F.

Seth Dixon, Ph.D.‘s insight:

Since the Newtown CT tragedy, gun control and second amendment rights have been prominent in the minds on many Americans.  Your ideological position on what should be done in th future might be in part a product of geography.  How do most people feel about the second amendment where you live?  What about your local geography might influence those opinions? 

See on www.nytimes.com

At Year’s End, News of a Global Health Success

The stunning drop in global child mortality is proof that poor countries are not doomed to eternal misery. Here’s how it happened.

Seth Dixon, Ph.D.‘s insight:

Global health has substantially improved in the last two decades.  This article explores the improvements in global health that have been made this year, and the attached interactive feature allows users to explore the changes in global health risks.  

Tags: medical, historical, spatial.

See on opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com

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