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Which urban movements are represented by these arrows A-D? Draw this diagram, and label the different land-use zones of this urban model. Make a note of WHO might be making these centripetal and centrifugal movements. D. B. C. D. A. B. Urban Residential Relocation Model: Types of Movement.
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Which urban movements are represented by these arrows A-D? Draw this diagram, and label the different land-use zones of this urban model. Make a note of WHO might be making these centripetal and centrifugal movements. D B C D A B Urban Residential Relocation Model: Types of Movement
Objectives from the Spec: Explain the location of residential areas in relation to wealth, ethnicity and family status (stage in life cycle). Task 2: Define ‘Residential Area’
WEALTH • How would wealth affect where urban residential locations are?
Burgess Model • Concentric Zones of land-use. Based on Chicago in 1950’S.
ETHNICITY • Does ethnicity or race have any bearing upon where people live?
Bangladeshi population in London • 1960s – 80s: decentralisation of white population to new towns • Remaining urban housing stock – old, occupied by immigrant populations: Indian, Pakistanis, Black and Caribbean, Africans and Bangladeshis. • Bangladeshis today are segregated in London Borough of Tower Hamlets : Late arrival, inability to speak English on arrival, wish to maintain cultural identity, povety– high concentration and overcrowding
Each group set up a google doc • Use p295
How does the human life cycle affect our residential choices? 0 yrs 90 yrs What stages can a person’s life be broken up into? How does their family situation change? Does this affect where / when they choose to move?