Geography 207 Economic Geography Professor William B. Beyers Teaching Assistant: Derik Andreoli What is economic geography? What are its roots, and to.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Civics: Government and Economics in Action
Advertisements

AP Human Geography Mr. Luthringer
Geography AS & A Level What will I learn on the course?  What factors influence people and our natural environment?  What are the economic forces that.
The Competitive City-State in the Global Economy: The Evolving Role of the University.
Chapter (1) The Central Concepts of Economics
1 Introduction to Economics II Economics 202 – Microeconomics University of Missouri-Kansas City.
Econ 355; Instructor: Nisha Malhotra Slide 1-1 Instructor: Nisha Malhotra Office: Buchanan Tower 1005, Office Hours: Wednesday
Doughnut Question: What is happening in this picture and why?
Chapter 9. Growth and the Environment Link to syllabus Skip: rule of 70 p Skip diminishing returns to capital, page 234.
1 Introduction. 2 Intro Look down Main St. in any town and you will see small businesses. In larger cities you will note the large corporations with office.
Chapter 1 Economic Geography: An Introduction Geographic Perspectives Economic Geography of the World Economy Globalization World Development Problems.
Chapter 11 Consumption To develop an historical overview of consumption and consumerism To summarize sociological, neoclassical, and Marxist views of consumption.
UMass Lowell Computer Science Analysis of Algorithms Prof. Karen Daniels Fall, 2001 Lecture 1 Introduction/Overview Wed. 9/5/01.
Geography 207 Economic Geography Professor William B. Beyers Teaching Assistant: Derik Andreoli What is economic geography? What are its roots, and to.
CHAPTER 12 General Equilibrium and the Efficiency of Perfect Competition © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall Principles of Microeconomics.
1 CIS / Introduction to Business GIS Winter 2005 Lecture 2 Dr. David Gadish.
Geography 207 Economic Geography Professor William B. Beyers Teaching Assistant: Anne Bonds What is economic geography? What are its roots, and to what.
UMass Lowell Computer Science Analysis of Algorithms Prof. Karen Daniels Spring, 2001 Lecture 1 Introduction/Overview Wed. 1/31/01.
Welcome to AP Human Geography
Geography 207 Economic Geography Professor William B. Beyers Teaching Assistant: Philip Neel What is economic geography? What are its roots, and to what.
World Economy Geography Instructor: Dr. Truong Thi Kim Chuyen
FUTURE COURSES AND CAREERS IN GEOGRAPHY. GEOGRAPHY: PATTERNS, PROCESSES AND INTERACTIONS CGF3M Grade 11 course This course examines the major patterns.
Computer Science 102 Data Structures and Algorithms V Fall 2009 Lecture 1: administrative details Professor: Evan Korth New York University 1.
ENVS& 100 Survey of Environmental Science Instructor: Tom Broxson Library 138 Office Hours: 11:00-12:00 M,T,W,Th, F and by appointment
CHAPTER 12 General Equilibrium and the Efficiency of Perfect Competition © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall Principles of Economics.
World Economic Geography Instructor: Dr. Truong Thi Kim Chuyen Weblog:
WEEK 1 INTRODUCTION. Course Objective  Students will be introduced to the concepts and the process of urban transportation planning in metropolitan areas,
Chapter 1 Business Principles. WHAT IS BUSINESS?
CDAE 266 Decision Making: Community Entrepreneurship Fall 2006.
Fig. 1-CO, p. 2. Study guide for Exams Be able to answer the questions from the study guide for the exam. I will not collect the answers. I usually answer.
An Overview of the Course 1. course description 2. textbook 3. requirements.
Lecture Section 001 Spring 2008 Mike O’Dell CSE 1301 Computer Literacy.
MRKT 370 – PRINCIPLES OF MARKETING FALL 2003 Dr. Ugur Yucelt Office Phone: Class Time: MW: 12:30-1:45 Office hours: MW:2:00-6:00 pm
Matter and Interactions 1 Fall 2006 Matter & Interactions I Physics Professor & Lecturer: Dr. Reinhard Schumacher Teaching Assistants: Ms. Elisa.
Alfred Weber August Biondi D Period. Alfred Weber Early Life -Born in Erfurt, Germany (Prussian Saxony) -Raised in Charlottenburg, Germany -Second.
Advanced Placement Human Geography
Design of a Typical Course s c h o o l s o f e n g I n e e r I n g S. D. Rajan Professor of Civil Engineering Professor of Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering.
Maps Top tens Lecture wrap up. Allergies For our exemplar Please me if you have concerns.
AP Human Geography What is it? Welcome to AP Human Geography Find a seat - set up your territory :-) Start the Icebreaker activity- try to meet at least.
Unit 1 Intro to Geography Notes Wed/Thurs, August 13/14, 2014 Chapter 1 Mrs. Dent.
Geography is not Cartography. Intradisciplinary: history, economics, political science, anthropology, sociology, etc. Interdisciplinary: science (environmental.
Chapter 8- Economics Questions What is economizing behavior and how does this concept relate to anthropology? How are critical resources such as land allocated.
Chapter 8 Economics.
Welcome in! L104, Ms. Ball AP Human Geography (APHUG)
AP HUMAN GEOGRAPHY MR. ROBLES* AP HUMAN GEOGRAPHY THE PURPOSE OF THE AP HUMAN GEOGRAPHY COURSE IS TO INTRODUCE STUDENTS TO THE SYSTEMATIC STUDY.
AP Human Geography Course Outline Geography: Its Nature and Perspectives 5-10% Population: 13-17% Cultural Patterns and Processes: 13-17% Political Organization.
Services and the New Economy: Elements of a Research Agenda William B. Beyers Department of Geography University of Washington Seattle, WA 98195
What are we seeing here? 10% What countries are in red? 10% each What country is in teal? 20% What countries are in yellow and blue? 25% each.
Sociology 2 International Sociology. Professor David John Frank 4107 Social Science Plaza A office hours:
AP Human Geography “HuG” It Out! Course Outline  Geography: Its Nature and Perspectives 5-10%  Population 13-17%  Cultural Patterns and Processes.
Semester-2 Academic Year 2010/2011 Wednesday Room : 209 Major : Management Lecturer : Muchdie, PhD in Economics  PhD in Economics, 1998, Dept.
Economic Geography Introduction 121EC A.Y. 2015/2016 Dr. Giuseppe Borruso Faculty of Economics University of Trieste .
Lecture-0 Topics in International Trade and Political Economy An overview of the course Carlos Llano.
Economics 235 Introduction to Agricultural Economics John D. Lawrence Spring 2004.
Introductory Economics. Definition of Economics Unlimited wants and needs combined with limited resources results in scarcity. Therefore, Economics studies.
Business Economics (ECO 341) Fall Semester, 2012
Geography 207 Economic Geography
Relationship marketing
ENVS& 100 Survey of Environmental Science Instructor: Tom Broxson Library 138 Office Hours: 11:00-12:00 M,T,W,Th, F and by appointment
World Regional Geography
Sociology 2 International Sociology
Geography 207 Economic Geography
Unit 5: Ch. 13 – 15 Foundations of Economics
Coach Smith AP Human Geography Coach Smith
Social Science Course Selection
new syllabus outline yellow is not in written portion
Course Outline Geography: Its Nature and Perspectives 5-10%
MICRO AND MACRO ECONOMICS
Exam Preparation Spring 2018
Presentation transcript:

Geography 207 Economic Geography Professor William B. Beyers Teaching Assistant: Derik Andreoli What is economic geography? What are its roots, and to what is it related? What are the goals for this course? What are the class requirements? What are the day-to-day mechanics?

Some key topics  Why locating businesses properly helps guarantee profitability  Why land use patterns arise in cities  Why regional economies grow or decline  How large, global corporations are reshaping the geography of production  How industrial systems are being reshaped by the information revolution  Why geography matters in economics!!

Economic Geography: Background Roots of Modern Economic Geography –Von Humboldt - Cosmos –Environmental Determinism –Commercial Geography –The Quantitative Revolution & Theoretical Geography –Applied Geography, Including Business Geographics –Regional Science, Urban Planning, Business Administration including Marketing

Goals For This Course A Comprehensive Survey of the Field Some Hands-on Experience using materials covered in the text & lecture An appreciation of how the materials we will cover are treated in more advanced courses and in related fields Recognition of both theoretical principles and their real-world application.

Course Requirements: Mechanics Two Midterm Examinations Final Examination The Examinations are based on the Textbook and the Lectures Three Research Exercises Participation in Discussion Sections Lecture notes: Available as links off course web page, but not all the graphics.

Grades and Points Point Distribution - Tentative Exam 1 and Exam 2: 100 points each Final Exam:100 or 150 points Research Exercises - 35 points each Grades: Class Median = UW Undergraduate Median =

About Beyers Seattle native, live in West Seattle, UW undergrad and Ph.D. graduate Economic Geography is my field Research Interests: –Service Economy; New Economy; Economic Trends in U.S. regions; Trends in the Rural West; Offshoring; Cultural Industries Other: Active in Service, University Committees, Former Chair in Geography Enjoy Teaching this Class Immensely.

This textbook The World Economy – by Warf and Stutz It is the 5 th Edition of this book A major remodel (4 th Edition) published in 2005, with minor changes in the 5 th Edition Pearson/Prentice Hall spent $1 million on the graphics It is quite comprehensive My ordering of our treatment of it will deviate somewhat from the chapter order

My TA – Derik Andreoli I get to choose who I want as TA for this class Derik is superbly qualified He is a Ph.D. program student, who started his undergraduate study in Geography at UW, and is about to receive his Ph.D. I would like to ask him to speak about his interests and background

Chapter 1 Economic Geography: An Introduction Geographic Perspectives Economic Geography of the World Economy Globalization World Development Problems Four Major Questions of the World Economy Political Economies Geographical Information Systems

Geographic Perspectives Barney Warf’s Style: anything goes The geographic perspective Key Point: Why are activities located where they are? Space and time are interdependent Economic Perspectives: Fig 1.2, Fig 1.3 Economic space is highly unequal Economic Geography as a field

Four Major Questions of the World Economy What should be produced, at what scale of output, and with what mix of inputs? How should factors be combined? Labor, capital, resource factors, etc. Where should production occur? Who should get output? How should it be divided?

Economics – Key Topics Allocation of Scarce Resources Markets for Production, Distribution, and Consumption The Division of Labor Solving What, How, What Price, What Quantity, and Where Production Takes Place Types of Economic Systems Neoclassical versus Behavioral and Structural Approaches