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World Regions in Global Context: Peoples, Places, and Environments

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For courses in world regional geography."
"
" Conceptual Exploration of World Regions and the Myriad Issues Critical to Geography Today "World Regions in Global Context" presents a strong global sensibility and an emphasis on current events, with examples of interdependent development, spatial and social inequality, and questions of spatial justice. The authors maintain that regions are the outcomes of the twin forces of globalization and regionalization. Therefore, each regional chapter stresses the global systems of connection that drive unique regional processes, making regions different. By studying regions, students not only learn the critical elements of different places, but also come to understand the fundamental processes that drive change. The Sixth Edition is a briefer, more visual text that still maintains its conceptual rigor by addressing today s critical geographic themes, incorporating deeper focus on sustainability issues, new human stories from the regions, cutting-edge data visualizations and infographics, including a completely modernized cartography program, and much more.
Also Available with MasteringGeographyTM This title is also available with MasteringGeography an online homework, tutorial, and assessment program designed to work with this text to engage students and improve results. Interactive, self-paced tutorials provide individualized coaching to help students stay on track. With a wide range of activities available, students can actively learn, understand, and retain even the most difficult concepts.
Note: You are purchasing a standalone product; MasteringGeography does not come packaged with this content. Students, if interested in purchasing this title with MasteringGeography, ask your instructor for the correct package ISBN and Course ID. Instructors, contact your Pearson representative for more information.
If you would like to purchase both the physical text and MasteringGeography, search for: 0134182723 / 9780134182728 "World Regions in Global Context: Peoples, Places, and Environments Plus MasteringGeography with eText -- Access Card Package" Package consists of: "0134183649 / 9780134183640 World Regions in Global Context: Peoples, Places, and Environments" "0134153669 / 9780134153667 MasteringGeography with Pearson eText -- ValuePack Access Card -- for World Regions in Global Context: Peoples, Places, and Environments"

544 pages, Paperback

First published November 19, 2001

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for Usfromdk.
433 reviews61 followers
March 9, 2016
In my opinion the authors of this book should be fired from whichever universities are currently employing them, and the fact that they are not, but are rather considered competent to teach young men and women, is a very strong argument that something is seriously wrong in some areas of the social sciences. The book includes pretty much everything that's wrong with this field: A completely crazy amount of political correctness and blatantly politicizing coverage, unsubstantiated claims galore, an unscientific approach to data/evidence, etc., etc. If you wanted to write a parody book mocking geographers and displaying why you shouldn't take such people seriously, it would be hard for me to do it any better than these authors have, even if that was presumably not their aim.

In this book almost everything that's wrong with this world is blamed on white people, colonialism, 'neoliberalism', and so on. 'Diversity' is great, multiculturalism is great, environmentalism is great, etc. Whenever they have to mention in some context or another that yet another socialist/communist government ran out of money because of insane policies, in this book it always somehow seems to be the 'neoliberalist' reforms which are to be blamed for the hardships that followed, when some measure of sanity was at least reestablished. A lot of times when it's not the Designated Bad Guys (white, Western people) who've done something wrong, or at least when it seems - even to these people - unreasonable to somehow argue that it's really those guy's fault, the bad things somehow just 'happened', whereas whenever blame can be directed at the Designated Bad Guys you're not in doubt as to who did something wrong. Reading a book like this one will likely make you think only white people can be colonialist and imperialist, and the Arab slave trade is almost not mentioned, nor is the manner in which e.g. Muslim expansion took place; in terms of India, I think it's fair to say that the authors are frankly lying about what happened, certainly in the context of their treatment of the Mughal Empire. Whenever a politically correct topic can in any way, shape or form be included in the coverage you can bet your a** the authors have included that topic in their coverage, regardless of whether it's even remotely relevant or a good use of space. The book contains multiple factual errors (for example Australia is not the driest continent - Antarctica is; and despite what the authors would have you believe, Europe is actually quite a bit larger than the countries of Southeast Asia - "The region [of Southeast Asia] covers an area of 4 million square kilometers (1.5 million square miles), about the size of Europe ..." p.446). Occasionally the authors outright come across as clueless idiots, e.g. when they're suggesting that a yearly tourism revenue of $2 million of the Golden Triangle is a reason to consider this a promising alternative to opium production and logging ("Bringing $2 million to the region each year, tourism is proposed as a more sustainable activity for the Golden Triangle than opium and logging.") (p. 479). For people who don't know, they're talking about a region where in the early 90es nearly two-thirds of the *Worlds* entire opium production was produced.

When the authors talk about various historical data and figures, such as e.g. the pre-discovery native American populations, no hint of the uncertainties surrounding those estimates are even mentioned. They repeatedly report official numbers from various communist societies known to systematically lie about these things, such as e.g. USSR growth rates, as if they were fact, and the thought does not seem to enter their minds that it might be a good idea to at least mention to the readers that these numbers might not be completely accurate. They don't seem to be aware of how uncertain/contested the East European GDP/growth/production numbers of the late 80s were/are; either that or they're pretending there's no uncertainty to make the regime look better - no reader should be in doubt after having read just a few chapters of this publication that the authors are sympathetic with policies usually associated with the far left. Many, though admittedly not all, of Stalin's and Lenin's crimes against humanity, which would most certainly have been talked about in great detail if they had been committed by white Westerners and the victims had been non-Whites, go unmentioned and in the book Cuba's experiment with communism has not been a complete failure impoverishing the nation, but rather the outcome has been 'debated [among] scholars and politicians' (p. 390). Through the coverage you indirectly learn that the by far worst performing nations in Southeast Asia have a communist past, but the authors never draw explicit attention to this fact; you could write a book where you would not draw attention to such things and it would make sense to do so, but given that they talk about 'the evils of neoliberalism' at every chance they get, in my opinion these deliberate and seemingly quite systematic omissions and lies just make the authors look like manipulative, highly untrustworthy people.

I could talk a lot more about the contents of this book and discuss in more detail all the reasons why I think the book is terrible and the authors are wrong/misrepresenting facts/misleading the reader in various ways, but: "[t]he amount of energy necessary to refute bullshit is an order of magnitude bigger than to produce it", and it's just not worth it. I did read the book to the end despite everything, and my reasons for doing so are that it does include some good data and some interesting observations along the way, and I also along the way got interested in knowing in more detail what sort of worldview these people had - a 'know your enemy' sort of thing. Now I know.
Profile Image for Julia Russ.
288 reviews
December 24, 2022
Oh, I did it. I ready every single page, every single caption, every single side note in this goddamn textbook. And that was the end of my final final, so I am too tired to get into this review too much, but I did truly enjoy this book. I think it's a great textbook, it was engaging, and also included perspectives that were never mentioned in my history books growing up — including statistics on gender inequality and (albeit brief) histories and injustices committed against indigenous populations throughout the world.

While some of the information felt a bit infantile (yes, I know about plate tectonics and that the majority of Japanese people speak Japanese) I did still learn quite a bit from this textbook. It is meant for an entry level world geography course, intended for very young minds that have never traveled and experienced the world before — so for those of us that aren't 17 and have actually traversed this globe of ours, some of the information felt a bit silly. But still, a lot of it was informative.

I will note — it was a bit funny catching on to the authors' obvious biases for certain regions. Whereas the plains in Russia were characterized as "barren" or "empty" the plains in the United States were noted as being "vast" and "plentiful". (Or along those lines, don't quote me, I'm tired.) Also, this edition really needs to be updated when it comes to the Uyghurs, the Russian invasion of Ukraine, Brexit, and with a section relating to the global consequences of the COVID-19 pandemic, just to name a few recent major events.
Profile Image for Tiff.
265 reviews5 followers
July 15, 2012
As geography books go, this one was actually pretty decent. It was a good book for my intro class, was well written, and the layout of each section was the same for each chapter, so it was easy to find things when flipping through. The content provided helped me learn quite a bit about the world, and I got an A in the class!
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