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AP Human Geography Week #7. Fall 2013. AP Human Geography 10/14/13 http://mrmilewski.com. OBJECTIVE: Examine the laws of migration. APHugII-C.3 I. Journal#21 pt.A -Watch the following: Fleeing Somalia: refugees from the forgotten war II. Quiz#11 III. Journal#21 pt.B
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AP Human Geography Week #7 Fall 2013
AP Human Geography 10/14/13http://mrmilewski.com • OBJECTIVE: Examine the laws of migration. APHugII-C.3 • I. Journal#21 pt.A -Watch the following: Fleeing Somalia: refugees from the forgotten war • II. Quiz#11 • III. Journal#21 pt.B -notes on the laws of migration • Homework: Read p.104-108 • NOTICE: No School TOMORROW! • NOTICE: MEAP & PSAT Testing Wednesday Oct 16th • NOTICE: Journals 13-22 Due Wednesday Oct 16th • NOTICE: Parent Teacher Conf. Oct 17th 5-8PM • NOTICE: South America Map Test Friday Oct 18th • NOTICE: Chapter#3 Test Monday Oct 21st
ATTENTION FRESHMEN! • Those of you who have 9th graders please remind them that they are to be atschoolby 7:41 AM to take the MEAP test on this Wednesday, October 16th and that their assigned testing rooms can be found in the front entrance showcase.
The Week Ahead • Today- Journal#21 • Tomorrow-No School • Wednesday-Delayed Start for 10th ,11th, & 12th grades. -3rd Hour begins at 10:15AM -Journal#22 -Journals#13-22 Due! • Thursday- Parent Teacher Conference 5-8PM • Friday-South America Map Test
October 16, 20139th Grade MEAP TESTCHS Morning Testing 7:41am - 10:10am Buses will run at regular scheduled morning times for all testing students. All 9th graders will take the Social Studies MEAP Test. Non-testing students will not report until 10:15am. Non-testing students are to be at their bus stops at 9:45am. Career/Tech/Partnership classes do not meet.
MEAP Testers and Student Class Schedule for October 16, 2013AllCHS Students are to attend 3rd hour class as FIRST class of the day and attend their regularly scheduled lunch All lunches run at the regular scheduled times 3rd Hour 10:15am - 11:55am 1st Hour 12:00pm - 12:40pm 2nd Hour 12:45pm - 1:15pm 4th Hour 1:20pm - 1:50pm 5th Hour 1:55pm - 2:25pm 9th graders will take the Social Studies MEAP Test from 7:41am to 10:10am Buses will run at regular scheduled morning times for all testing students Non-testing students will not report until 10:15am Non-testing students are to be at their bus stops at 9:45am Career/Tech/Partnership classes do not meet Buses run at regular scheduled times for all students at the end of the day
The Refugee Problem • UN definition-person who migrates out of fear of being persecuted for reasons of race, religion, nationality, social status or political opinion. • Difficult to get an accurate count-governments manipulate the numbers. • Internal (intranational) refugees a bigger issue than external (international).
Characteristics of Refugees • Move with only what they can carry or easily transport. • Most move first on foot, bicycle, wagon or open boat-very low tech. transport. • Most have no official documentation such as passports, identification or other official papers.
Endemic African Problems: Weak and corrupt governments. Lack of national cohesion. Lack of a democratic tradition Historic ethnic conflicts Excessive number of weapons left over from the Cold War. Sub-Saharan Africa-over 8 million official international refugees-the largest # in the world. Collapse of order in Somalia Civil Wars in Liberia and Sierra Leone Sudan’s civil war Rwanda massacres and economic disaster. Regions of Dislocation-Africa
Refugees from Uganda’s civil war that began in the 1980s • Death toll 100,000 with 1 ½ million refugees
The Sudan –Fighting in the Darfur region of the Sudan has generated thousands of refugees. In eastern Chad, the Iridimi refugee camp is home to almost 15,000 refugees from the Darfur province, including the women in this photo.
South West & Central Asia: Kurds in Iraq, Turkey and Syria displaced during Gulf Wars. Palestinians displaced by several wars with Israel. Afghanistan-many refugees during the long Soviet occupation, Taliban regime and war. South and South East Asia: Civil War in Sri Lanka-Tamils versus Sinahlese Vietnam and Cambodia after the Vietnam War Myanmar (Burma) military rule has driven many to exile. Regions of Dislocation
Major Modern Migrations • Europe to North America & South America • Africa to the Americas (Slave Trade) • UK to Australia, New Zealand • India to East Africa, SE Asia • China to SE Asia • Eastern US to Western US • Western Russia to Eastern Russia
By the numbers • Europe-Before 1830s about 2.75 million left-1835-1935 75 million left for New World, (most from England & Germany) Australia, New Zealand and South Africa. • Africa-slave trade began in 16th cent. With Caribbean sugar plantation workers Early 17th cent. North America to work on cotton plantations • Most were from West Africa-Liberia to Nigeria and from coastal margins of Sahara. • Most 10 million out of 12 million went to Brazil and Caribbean for sugar plantations • East Africa slave trade also active Arab slave traders on Zanzibar along the Horn • India-British brought many Indians to South Africa and East Africa as well as Caribbean-(Trinidad, Guyana) as indentured servants. • China-SE Asia-tended to migrate to urban areas and engaged in trade -76% of Singapore 32% of Malaysia 14% of Thailand -3% of Indonesia (but it is 200 million)
From 12 to 30 million Africans were forced from their homelands in the 18th century. It took generations to restore the population balance.
AP Human Geography 10/15/13http://mrmilewski.com • NO SCHOOL: Professional Development Day. Happy Eid al Adha to all the people.
AP Human Geography 10/16/13http://mrmilewski.com • OBJECTIVE: Examine various migrations in recent world history. APHugII-C.3 • I. Journal#22 pt.A -Watch the following: Chinese Immigration • II. Practice South America Map Test • III. Journal#22 pt.B -notes on the laws of migration • IV: Journals#13-22 Due! • NOTICE: Parent Teacher Conf. Tomorrow 5-8PM • NOTICE: South America Map Test Friday Oct 18th • NOTICE: Chapter#3 Test Monday Oct 21st
Chinese Migration • British relocated many Asian during the colonial period as did the Dutch. • The Chinese migrated for economic opportunities as traders. • Today they make up: • 14% in Thailand • 32% in Malaysia • 76% in Singapore • 3% in Indonesia (about 7 million people!) http://www.migrationinformation.org/datahub/maps.cfm#2
http://upload.dailyweekee.com/wikipedia/en/thumb/e/e1/Census_Bureau_2000,_Chinese_in_the_United_States.png/450px-Census_Bureau_2000,_Chinese_in_the_United_States.pnghttp://upload.dailyweekee.com/wikipedia/en/thumb/e/e1/Census_Bureau_2000,_Chinese_in_the_United_States.png/450px-Census_Bureau_2000,_Chinese_in_the_United_States.png
International Migration Movement across country borders (implying a degree of permanence).
Historic US Migration • Westward to the frontier. • Black migration to northern cities in WWI and WWII period. • 1950s, 60s Cubans to Florida from Castro’s Cuba. • In recent decades the migration from the Rust belt to the Sunbelt took place. • Some blacks returned to the South.
Waves of Immigration-US 1820-2001 Changing immigration laws, and changing push and pull factors create waves of immigration.
U.S. Immigration Patterns • Immigration to the US from 1820-2001 • 1870 US Population was 40 million. • 72% lived in small towns or on farms. • 1900-1915 at least 15 million immigrants-mostly Eastern Europeans & Southern Europeans flooded into the US. • These new immigrants were different in religion & darker in complexion than previous immigrants. • By 1920, over half of the U.S. population lived in cities.
Migration to the US by region of origin. • Europeans made up 90% during the 19th cent. And as late as 1960 made up 50%. South Asia was the largest source for a brief time in the 1980s. • Latin America is now the main source. • Of European immigration-fueled by rapid population growth. • Germany sent the largest # with 7.1 million. • Italy 5.4 m. • UK 5.2 m • Ireland 4.8 m • Russia & former USSR 3.5 million
Guest Workers • Guest workers – migrants whom a country allows in to fill a labor need, assuming the workers will go “home” once the labor need subsides. - have short term work visas - send remittances to home country - France-many from Algeria - Germany-many from Turkey, Eastern Europe
Fun Facts • Only recently has Germany allowed the Turks-now 2nd or 3rd generation-to become German citizens • Nigeria kicked out its guest workers • Indonesia pulled out its many citizens in the Middle East before the 2003 Iraq War
AP Human Geography 10/17/13http://mrmilewski.com • OBJECTIVE: Review concepts in the second half of Chapter#3. APHugII-C.3 • I. Administrative Stuff -Attendance. • II. Film: Bend It Like Beckham -notes on film about migration and culture • NOTICE: Parent Teacher Conference Today 5-8PM • NOTICE: South America Map Test TOMORROW! • NOTICE: Chapter#3 Test Monday October 21st
AP Human Geography 10/18/13http://mrmilewski.com • OBJECTIVE: Demonstrate mastery of South America and review the concepts of migration, culture, race, ethnicity, gender, and sexuality. APHugII-C.3 • I. Administrative Stuff -Attendance • II. South America Map Test • III. Quiz#12 • IV. Complete Film: Bend It Like Beckham • NOTICE: Chapter#3 Test MONDAY!