AP Human Geography
Across
- 6. The set of changes in technology that increased manufacturing and productivity
- 8. The concept that ethnicities have the right to govern themselves
- 9. Specific areas within a country's borders where trade and business laws are different than in the rest of the country
- 10. Physical spaces within a country where regulations benefit foreign-controlled business
- 14. An act that provided for the political organization of the territories west of the Appalachian Mountains
- 17. Describes key decisions made by businesses about where to locate factories
- 18. Indicates the starting position for land use relative to the market
- 20. A model describing agricultural activity in terms of rent
- 21. A series of laws enacted by the British government that enabled land owners to purchase and enclose land for their own use
- 22. A global international organization dealing with rules of trade between nations
- 24. Describes the way city sizes within a region develop
- 27. Rapid diffusion of new agricultural technology, especially high-yield seeds and fertilizers
- 28. The origin of farming, marked by the domestication of plants and animals
- 29. This theory says that states are similar to living organisms and explains why some states are more powerful than others
Down
- 1. The idea that jobs may produce additional jobs
- 2. Helped form the state boundaries of Africa
- 3. An area organized into a political unit and ruled by a government that has control over its internal and foreign affairs
- 4. Mass production in the 20th century; assembly lines
- 5. States that larger and more close together places have a greater interaction than smaller, more far apart places
- 7. Ability of a state to govern its territory free from control of its internal affairs by other states
- 11. A range of pro-market and anti-government positions on the economy
- 12. Describes urban growth based on transportation technology in different epochs
- 13. A treaty that established the four zones of water boundaries
- 15. This theory says that controlling maritime areas of the world is essential to achieve global dominance
- 16. Allowed a shift un workforce beyond subsistence farming to allow labor to work in factories
- 19. Specially designated duty-free areas providing warehousing, storage, and distribution facilities for goods for trade
- 23. Explains the distribution of differently sized cities across a region
- 25. This theory says that land-based power is essential to achieve global dominance
- 26. A change in the production process in the late 20th century; job rotations