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Unit 2 - Unequal spaces

Unit 2 - Unequal spaces. Recognising inequalities. Inequality. Inequality between different groups of people can be measured and thought of in different ways It is about unevenness- the ‘haves’ and the ‘have-nots’ Often we think about quality of life and standard of living

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Unit 2 - Unequal spaces

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  1. Unit 2 - Unequal spaces Recognising inequalities

  2. Inequality • Inequality between different groups of people can be measured and thought of in different ways • It is about unevenness- the ‘haves’ and the ‘have-nots’ • Often we think about quality of life and standard of living • Also income distribution, health and access to opportunities.

  3. What do we mean by an inequality? • Remember PEST! See pg 252 Philip Allan ECONOMIC INEQUALITY INSTITUTIONALISED INEQUALITY(Political) INEQUALITY TECHNOLOGICAL INEQUALITY SOCIAL INEQUALITY

  4. Unpacking the idea of unequal spaces: different types of inequality Inequality exists as the distribution of resources, wealth and opportunities is not evenly spread. In other words, how easy or difficult it is to get access to resources etc. Different groups will find it easier or harder to access certain resources .

  5. What are your experiences of inequality? Mine! • Copacabana beach front hotels v Rocinhafavela in Rio 20 minutes away on a bus! • Teacher’s salary and cleaner in a school in Bangkok • My private school v local school in Bath • University dissertation interviewing disabled v ‘able’

  6. To what extent do you agree with this quote: ‘The Richest Kids will play video games full of virtual violence whilst the poorest kids live in shanty-cities full of actual violence’ James Martin, The Meaning of the 21st Century

  7. Should classifying inequality be done according to PEST factors, or to scale (personal, local, regional, national, global)?

  8. 10 Qs of inequality! Match with the correct answers • World poorest 40 % account for __% of global income  • There are __,00 billionnaires in the world •  Just under __ billion people entered the 21st century unable to read a book / sign their names • In Swaziland almost ___% of people have HIV, highest in the world • Life expectancy in Kerala is 73 years compared to ___ in Bihar • ___% of the world’s population live in India • __% of Spain’s population would describe themselves as happy •  The Index of Segregation for AfricanAmericans is ___ •  There is a £___,000 difference in average salary between Surrey and Cornwall • Brick Lane, London has a ___% Asian / Asian British population 16 5 17 10 38 91 12 59 65 1

  9. Answers! • World poorest 40 % account for __% of global income 5 •  There are __,00 billionnaires in the world 12 •  Just under __ billion people entered the 21st century unable to read a book / sign their names 1 • In Swaziland almost ___% of people have HIV, highest in the world 38 •  Life expectancy in Kerala is 73 years compared to ___ in Bihar 59 •  ___% of the world’s population live in India 17 •  __% of Spain’s population would describe themselves as happy 10 •  The Index of Segregation for AfricanAmericans is ___ 91 •  There is a £___,000 difference in average salary between Surrey and Cornwall 16 •  Brick Lane has a ___% Asian / Asian British population • 65

  10. Match up the definitions below with these key words Absolute poverty Deprivation Disparity Affluence Relative poverty Standard of living Quality of life • The ability to obtain good and services through employment, income and wealth eg number of foreign holidays, quality and size of house, car ownership. • An abundant supply of money, goods and property. • There is an inequality or difference in income, status or opportunity - usually with spatial consequences. • A condition characterised by the lack of the most basic human needs, including food, safe drinking water, sanitation, education, housing etc. People are deprived of one or more of these basic human needs. • Lacking in relation to the standards that exist elsewhere in society. People are in the lowest income group and so may have inadequate housing, diet, amenities and services. • Lacking the resources to enjoy the living conditions and amenities usually experienced by those in the society they belong too. They may not have adequate housing, sufficient food or access to employment. • Cannot be measured just in terms of income and wealth. It is about access to services, personal satisfaction, the environment, peacefulness and sense of community.

  11. Did you get them? • Standard of living - The ability to obtain good and services through employment, income and wealth eg number of foreign holidays, quality and size of house, car ownership. • Affluence – An abundant supply of money, goods and property. • Disparity - There is an inequality or difference in income, status or opportunity - usually with spatial consequences. • Absolute poverty – A condition characterised by the lack of the most basic human needs, including food, safe drinking water, sanitation, education, housing etc. People are deprived of one or more of these basic human needs. • Relative poverty - Lacking in relation to the standards that exist elsewhere in society. People are in the lowest income group and so may have inadequate housing, diet, amenities and services. • Deprivation-Lacking the resources to enjoy the living conditions and amenities usually experienced by those in the society they belong too. They may not have adequate housing, sufficient food or access to employment. • Quality of life - Cannot be measured just in terms of income and wealth. It is about access to services, personal satisfaction, the environment, peacefulness and sense of community.

  12. Inequality at a global scale

  13. Billionaires • According to Forbes magazine released 2012 there are 1,226 Billionaires, and despite the financial turmoil witnessed last year, the tally was 1 percent higher than the previous year’s number. • The group’s total combined net worth is $4.6 trillion, almost the size of Russia and Germany’s GDP combined. The average worth of a listed billionaire is $3.7 billion. • Mexican telecom mogul Carlos Slim retained his status as the world’s richest person for the third year in a row, topping the list with a net worth of $69 billion. • Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates took second spot with $61 billion while Berkshire Hathaway’s Warren Buffett ranked third with $44 billion.

  14. Others…. • There are around 7 million millionaires • BUT it is a world of extremes!!!! • The poorest 40% of the world’s population only has 5% of global income • The richest 10% have 54% of the global income • 1.1 billion people live on less than a dollar a day • 2.7 billion live on less than 2 dollars a day

  15. Animation – income across the world • http://www.worldmapper.org/animations/income_animation.html

  16. Absolute poverty • Living on the equivalent of US$2 a day or less. In 2002, 43% of the world population lived on this little. In both Nigeria and Mali, 9 of every ten people survives on less than US$2 a day. • South America has a relatively small poor population, yet 39 million people have less than US$2 a day in Brazil.

  17. Absolute poverty

  18. If 1% of the world’s money spent on weapons by 2005 was used for education every child of primary school age could have attended school • The richest 50 million people in Europe and North America have the same income as 2.7 billion poor people • The 48 poorest countries only have 0.4% of world exports • 12% of the world’s people (in MEDCs) use 85% of the water • More than 800 million suffer from malnutrition • 1,1 billion do not have access to clean drinking water • 1200 children die every minute from preventable diseases.

  19. Distribution of income – p258 Philip Allan

  20. How rich are you? • http://globalrichlist.com/

  21. HIV prevalence • HIV, or Human Immunodeficiency Virus Infection, attacks the immune system. It eventually causes AIDS, which stands for Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome. With cases first recognised in the United States in 1981, AIDS increases the risk of many infections and tumours. • In 2003, the highest HIV prevalence was Swaziland, where 38%, or almost 4 in every 10 people aged 15 to 49 years, were HIV positive. All ten territories with the highest prevalence of HIV are in Central and Southeastern Africa. • Transmission of HIV is through sex, using infected needles and in the womb. Infected children are not shown here. HIV/AIDS often has an acquired social stigma.

  22. HIV

  23. Adult Literacy • About a billion people cannot read a book • Worldwide, 3.6 billion adults are literate; 82% of the adult population are able to read and write simple statements. Here adults include people aged 15 years and over. • The percentage of literate adults is lower than that of literate youth in every region of the world. • The largest populations of literate adults live in China, India and the United States. India has a literacy rate of 61%, the other two territories have rates of 91%.

  24. Adult Literacy

  25. Animation - Internet users across the world • http://www.worldmapper.org/animations/internet_users_animation.html

  26. Personal inequalities Internet speed!!! • P254 Philip Allan • Also of interest….internet use in Greece http://www.statistics.gr/portal/page/portal/ESYE/BUCKET/A1901/PressReleases/A1901_SFA20_DT_AN_00_2012_01_F_EN.pdf

  27. Processes leading to inequality? Many of the processes leading to inequality are interlinked

  28. Inequality, social exclusion and polarisation (increasing differences between different parts of society) can be divisive and socially damaging At the global scale there is much inequality with Mexico at the top of the league. Britain's inequality is well above the average for OECD nations, far greater than Sweden, Denmark, Holland, France or Germany http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/thereporters/markeaston/2010/01/is_inequality_iniquitous.html

  29. Spatial inequality p 256 Philip Allan

  30. India p 255 Philip Allan

  31. The negative multiplier effect - p 204 Pearson • Myrdal same up with cumulative causation theory and this is the opposite:

  32. Reading and notes… • Read Pearson p 204-212 and write notes!!!! • Have a look at living conditions in GREECE (published in Jan 2013) http://www.statistics.gr/portal/page/portal/ESYE/PAGE-livingcond/content/LivingConditionsInGreece_0113.pdf

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