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How does geography affect the economy?

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Platform Economic Geography. Influences of the Geographic Environment, Chapter 2. Journal of Economic Geography. How Geography Influences Economics Part 1: Geography Rules. How Geography Influences an Area's Economy Part 1: Geography Rules To a great extent, the geography of a settlement determines what kind of industry grows in that settlement.

How Geography Influences Economics Part 1: Geography Rules

Simply put, if you live on a river or the shore of an ocean, you're probably going to own a fish market or a trading company or something that uses the natural resource right under your nose. If you live next to an area that has a lot of coal deposits, you're probably going to work in a coal mine or in an industry that supports coal mining. Economic geography. Economic geography is the study of the location, distribution and spatial organization of economic activities across the world.

Economic geography

It represents a traditional subfield of the discipline of geography. However, in recent decades, many economists have also approached the field in ways more typical of the discipline of economics.[1] Economic geography has taken a variety of approaches to many different subject matters, including but not limited to the location of industries, economies of agglomeration (also known as "linkages"), transportation, international trade, economic development, real estate, gentrification, ethnic economies, gendered economies, core-periphery theory, the economics of urban form, the relationship between the environment and the economy (tying into a long history of geographers studying culture-environment interaction), and globalization. Theoretical background and influences[edit]

A Neighborhood Isolated: How Geography and Economics Cut Off Key Services - Promise Neighborhoods. By Derek Lieu Editor's Note: This feature is part of an ongoing series.

A Neighborhood Isolated: How Geography and Economics Cut Off Key Services - Promise Neighborhoods

As nonprofit leaders and volunteers in Washington's Parkside-Kenilworth neighborhood work to improve education and child-care services, they face an array of challenges. The neighborhood, wedged between Interstate-295 and the Anacostia River, is one of Washington's poorest. An Introduction to Geographical Economics.