Correct Answer
verified
View Answer
Essay
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) joining a conversation on a city stoop
B) asking for survey participants on the sidewalk
C) talking on cell phones while in a busy park
D) making eye contact with the street vendors
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) collective consumption
B) gentrification
C) aging in place
D) the aging of rural America
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) life expectancy
B) fecundity
C) the crude death rate
D) the life span
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) Nile River valley
B) central valley of Mexico
C) Chinese mainland
D) southern part of Italy
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) a conurbation
B) a metropolis
C) a megalopolis
D) urbanization
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) life expectancy
B) the demographic transition
C) fertility
D) life span
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) a secretary at a multinational paper manufacturing company
B) a housekeeper paid "under the table" (not reported for tax purposes) in suburban communities
C) a unionized garbage worker in the northeastern United States
D) a Walmart employee who strives for a better job but is unable to get one
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) Malthusianism
B) the demographic transition
C) the second demographic transition
D) economism
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) the globalization process is central, pushing cities to the margins of the economy
B) the space of the city is increasingly devoted to the needs of the wealthy and is made unlivable for the poor
C) affluent city dwellers flee the central city for its furthest margins
D) the poor "untouchables" transform the cityscape to serve their needs rather than those of the affluent
Correct Answer
verified
Essay
Correct Answer
verified
View Answer
Essay
Correct Answer
verified
Essay
Correct Answer
verified
View Answer
Multiple Choice
A) worse than ghettos
B) areas populated by poor people
C) ethnically exclusive areas
D) dirty parts of a large city
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) how many children an average woman could possibly have subtracted by the number of children the average woman actually has
B) the key factors in the second demographic transition that are at play in Ghana
C) which stage in the demographic transition best describes Ghana and then apply fertility statistics from that stage
D) the number of live-born children the average Ghanaian woman has
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) They both have populations that exceed 100 million people.
B) They both provide contexts of production.
C) They both produce services and financial goods exclusively and no material goods at all.
D) They are home to highly diverse populations, many of whom are immigrants.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) crude birthrate
B) fertility rate
C) fecundity rate
D) rate of population growth or decline
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) an unwillingness of the political leadership to try to save the most impoverished after struggling to save the lower-middle class and middle-class residents
B) a lack of education for the poor, preventing them from following instructions
C) a surplus of resources for the poor that had been squandered
D) a scarcity of resources for poor people
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) urban ecology or the ecological approach to urban analysis
B) urbanism as a way of life
C) the created-environment approach to urban analysis
D) collective consumption
Correct Answer
verified
Showing 1 - 20 of 69
Related Exams