다국어인구학사전입니다. 여러분들의 많은 이용바랍니다. The Demopaedia team will be present at the next International Population Conference in Busan.
If you attend the conference, please, come to our oral communication which will be held on Tuesday August 27, from 15:30 to 17:00 (Bexco, room 213). The new Korean dictionary will also be presented in a side meeting organized by the Planned Population Federation of Korea (PPFK) on "Population Issues & Official development assistance" (open to all) at 19:00 (Bexco, room 110).

다국어인구학사전, 두 번째 통합본, 한국어판

30

Demopædia
Eunyoung Shim (토론 | 기여)님의 2013년 5월 3일 (금) 16:58 판 (새 문서: <!--'''30'''--> {{CurrentStatus}} {{Unmodified edition II}} {{Summary}} __NOTOC__ === 301 === Population statistics are generally presented in terms of the {{TextTerm|geographical...)
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301

Population statistics are generally presented in terms of the geographical distribution of the population1 or the spatial distribution of the population1, and also by structure (144-4). Each population lives in a given area2 or territory2 (305-6), and the study of the geographical distribution3 or spatial distribution3 deals with the way in which they are distributed over the territory.

  • 2. Territory, n. - territorial, adj.

302

The territory (301-2) in which a population lives will generally be divided into sub-areas1. For administrative purposes it may be divided into administrative areas2, administrative units2 or administrative districts2 sometimes known as legal divisions2 or political divisions2. Geographers on the other hand, may divide the area into regions3 or zones4 which may or may not correspond to administrative units. The term "region" or "zone" may be used in a number of different senses and the areas referred to may be of very different sizes. Thus one speaks of the polar regions, of climatic zones or of metropolitan regions. The terms natural region5 and economic region6 are used by geographers. The term natural area7 is used in human ecology (104-5) to define an area occupied by a population with distinct characteristics.

303

Administrative units differ from country to country and over time in the same country, so that the same word may cover different situations. Minor civil divisions include townships1 and parishes1; major civil divisions receive names such as states2 or provinces2, and intermediary units are often called counties5 and districts6. In Canada, for example the main administrative division, by increasing order of size, are the township8, the county9 and the province10.

  • 1. Villages, boroughs and cities are other names sometimes given to the smaller administrative units. Municipality is a general descriptive term for minor civil division. In the United States, parishes are equivalent to counties.

304

A population may be settled1, sedentary1, or nomadic2, i.e., migrating back and forth within a given area and without fixed abode. Nomads who are in the process of becoming settled are called semi-nomadic3. Occasionally primitive peoples may have a territory allocated exclusively to themselves called a native reserve4 or reservation4.

  • 2. Nomadic, adj.- nomad, n.

305

A country1 is usually the territory (301-2) of a people2 (cf. 333-3) or a nation2. Persons belonging to a nation share, in general, a common culture. A state3 is a political body. The term may be used in two different senses: most commonly a state is a body possessing full sovereignty in its territory and over its inhabitants. However, a number of federations4 of federal states4 are divided into smaller units which are also called states5 and whose sovereignty is not absolute (e.g. in the United States of America and Australia). The term territory6 (301-2) is generally used for a geographical area, but it is occasionally used to denote a political unit which has been settled relatively recently. A distinction is sometimes made between self-governing territories7 and non-self-governing territories8.

  • 2. Nation, n. - national, adj.

306

Within a territory (301-2), certain terms are used to describe different kinds of conglomerations1 or aggregations1 of population, sometimes known as population aggregates1, population clusters1 or more generally as localities1. In rural areas, the smallest unit is referred to as a hamlet2, which generally consists of a very small collection of houses. A slightly larger conglomeration is the village3 which is generally a small community and which may have a mainly agricultural population. A town4 or city4 is a larger conglomeration in which there are in general few people engaged in agriculture, but the point at which the transition from village to town or city occurs is difficult to specify and varies in different countries. The seat of government of a territory (in the sense of 305-1), is called its capital5. In a county, the place where the local government is situated is called the county town6 or county seat6. Towns and cities may be further divided into districts7 or quarters7 and for electoral purposes into wards7.

  • 1. The term agglomeration is also used in this sense. See however 307-1.
  • 4. A very large town or city is sometimes called a metropolis, n. -Metropolitan, adj. Town, n. - urban, adj.

307

Continuously built-up areas may arise through the coalescence of neighboring localities which, while retaining their administrative independence, may constitute one agglomeration1, containing a central city2 and suburbs3 with specialized functions. The terms conurbation4 or metropolitan area4 are generally employed to designate a number of different agglomerations which, though geographically contiguous, have retained their own individuality. In many cases, however, the term conurbation is used as a synonym for agglomeration. The fusion of conurbations and large cities leads to the megalopolis5 or metropolitan belt5 which may extend over a large area.

  • 2. Another term used as synonym is urban nucleus.
  • 3. Other terms used as frequent synonyms are satellite communities and suburban zone.
    Suburb, n. - suburban, adj. - suburbanization, n.: the process of rapid population growth in the suburban zones adjacent to a large city. Densely populated areas contiguous to large cities are occasionally referred to as the urban fringe, and the zone marking the transition between urban and rural settlement, as the rural-urban fringe or exurbia.
  • 4. Urban populations are often regrouped in statistical areas such as the standard metropolitan statistical area (United States), the densely inhabited district (Japan) or the conurbation (England).

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여기로: Demopædia 소개 | 사전이용법 | 다운로드
장: 서문 | 1. 일반개념 | 2. 인구통계 | 3. 인구분포와 분류 | 4. 건강과 사망력 | 5. 혼인력 | 6. 출산력 | 7. 인구성장과 재생산 | 8. 인구이동 | 9. 인구학의 사회경제적 특성
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