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World Regional Geography: Global Patterns, Local Lives

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More than any other text for the course, Pulsipher's World Regional Geography (WRG) shows students how individuals are affected by, and respond to, economic, social, and political forces at all levels of global, regional, subregional, local. It offers a vivid and inclusive picture of people in a globalizing world--men, women, children, both mainstream and marginalized citizens--not as seen from a Western perspective, but as they see themselves. The core topics of physical, economic, cultural, and political geography are examined from a contemporary perspective, based on authoritative insights from the most recent geographic theory.

Two Versions of the Text
World Regional Global Patterns, Local Lives
With Subregions
Third Edition
625 pages
January 2005 (©2006), 0-7167-1904-5
Text with Optional Student CD-ROM, 0-7167-6829-1

World Regional Global Patterns, Local Lives
Without Subregions
Third Edition
475 pages
January 2005 (©2006), 0-7167-6825-9
Text with Optional Student CD-ROM, 0-7167-6843-7

Paperback

First published March 15, 2002

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Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews
3 reviews
October 25, 2021
This is one text book that changed my life, and truly made me a globally-aware citizen. Everyone should take a course or read a book like this one. The author blends statistics with the life stories and histories of different subregions of the world. It uses clues like languages and location of valuable resources to explain modern borders and wars. I'm a forever fan!
Profile Image for Jane.
564 reviews9 followers
August 31, 2008
I used this book for a geography class a few semesters ago and decided to keep it. Part of the decision was based on the cover... the cute Thai children with their bubble gum. I have some fond memories of that geography class. The best memory was of the teacher though... she pointed to a world map and showed us the "mountains in Japan" which of course were not visible on a world map where Japan looks about an inch long.
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870 reviews68 followers
z-textbooks
July 19, 2016
Good, if sometimes disjointed set up. I thought it focused too much on the environmental impacts in the regions and not enough on the actual cultures. Photo essays were pointless and annoyingly referenced in the text. Very comprehensive, though, although most times to the point of being too much information.
Profile Image for Kelsey.
33 reviews15 followers
February 14, 2013
One of the best textbook reads ever. I actually enjoyed everything about this text.
Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews

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