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GROWTH OF HUMAN SETTLEMENTS AND RISE OF CITIES

1. Human groups would choose favorable, easily defended areas where they could stay for a while,
depending on the season
a. Settled
b. Nomadic
c. Semi-Nomadic
d. None

2. Group of people who choose to stay permanently, especially in advantageous locations


a. Settled
b. Nomadic
c. Semi-Nomadic
d. None

3. Refers to modern humans


a. Homo Habilis
b. Homo Erectus
c. Homo Sapiens
d. Neanderthal Man

4. The region of great abundance in the Middle East, the Cradle of Civlization
a. Fertile Crest
b. Fertile Crescent
c. Fertile Lands
d. None

5. The Great Step Pyramid Complex is located in


a. Turkey
b. Egypt
c. Jordan
d. Lebanon

6. Urban centers such as Harappa and Mohenjo-Daro can be found in what Civilization?
a. Sumerian
b. Han
c. Aztec
d. Indus-Valley

7. The Father of Urban Planning


a. Alexander of Macedon
b. Julius Caesar
c. Hippodamus of Miletus
d. None
8. Civilization which first to organize on a massive scale in Europe
a. Macedon
b. Roman
c. Jews
d. Babylonian

CHARACTERISTICS OF THE URBAN (ANCIENT)

9. The great enlargement of an organized population meant a much wider level of social
organizations.
a. Size and Density of Cities
b. Full-time Specialization of Labor
c. Concentration of Surplus
d. Class-Structured Society

10. Specialization of production among workers was institutionalized, as were as systems of


distribution and exchange.
a. Size and Density of Cities
b. Full-time Specialization of Labor
c. Concentration of Surplus
d. Class-Structured Society

11. There were social means for collection and management of the surplus production of farmers
a. Size and Density of Cities
b. Full-time Specialization of Labor
c. Concentration of Surplus
d. Class-Structured Society

12. A privileged ruling class of religious, political, and military functions organized and directed the
society.
a. Size and Density of Cities
b. Full-time Specialization of Labor
c. Concentration of Surplus
d. Class-Structured Society
Groupings of Theoretical Approaches to Urban Origin

13. Complex and large-scale trading networks stimulated the growth of urban society. Supply and
Demand for resources shaped settlement location and expansion.
A. Hydraulic Theory
B. Economic Theory
C. Military
D. Religious

14. The need for common protection against an external threat may have caused population
concentration or intensification of preexisting urban development
A. Hydraulic Theory
B. Economic Theory
C. Military
D. Religious

15. A well-developed power structure for formation and perpetuation of urban spaces was oft
appropriated into the hands of the religious elite. This unlikely to have been the sole factor for
urbanization
A. Hydraulic Theory
B. Economic Theory
C. Military
D. Religious

Types of Planning

16. Involved logical consideration of all possible factors and devt sectors necessary to make a plan
responsive to a wide audience
A. Rational Comprehensive Tradition
B. Disjointed Incrementalism
C. Mixed Scanning
D. Indicative Planning

17. a.k.a. muddling through from the classic article of C.Lindblom, considered a more realistic
approach to many situations w/c are dynamic
A. Rational Comprehensive Tradition
B. Disjointed Incrementalism
C. Mixed Scanning
D. Indicative Planning
18. this approach involves a combination of RCT & DI by attempting a strategic selection of core
goals, or a lose framework which can be assembled in more detail as implementation proceeds
A. Rational Comprehensive Tradition
B. Disjointed Incrementalism
C. Mixed Scanning
D. Indicative Planning

19. Lays down general guidelines and is advisory in nature, such as urban design guidelines or
community exhortations
A. Indicative Planning
B. Allocative Planning
C. Imperative Planning
D. Advocacy Planning

20. Designates land or other resources to certain stakeholders, such as for socialized housing, or
public open space
A. Indicative Planning
B. Allocative Planning
C. Imperative Planning
D. Advocacy Planning

21. impose or constrain implementation of certain rules. Generally top-down plans that spell out
what should be done, where, and who should do things. Typical of totalitarian or centralized
command governments
A. Indicative Planning
B. Allocative Planning
C. Imperative Planning
D. Advocacy Planning

22. planning for a certain devt agenda or social reform for general welfare, used by NGOs and
political lobbyists alt. to govt/private plans
A. Indicative Planning
B. Allocative Planning
C. Imperative Planning
D. Advocacy Planning
URP Key Concepts

23. refers to the phenomenon by w/c a community or settlement gradually or rapidly acquires an
urban character, also refers to growth in the proportion of population living in urban places
A. Urban
B. Rural
C. Regional
D. Urbanization

24. of, or relating to, or characteristic of a region


A. Urban
B. Rural
C. Regional
D. Urbanization

25. in relating to, or characteristic of the countryside rather than the town
A. Urban
B. Rural
C. Regional
D. Urbanization

26. of, or belonging to the city. Found in a city, or originating from a town
A. Urban
B. Rural
C. Regional
D. Urbanization

27. refers to a process of expansion of the city, residential areas spreading into the countryside
a. Suburbanization
b. Gentriication
c. Disurbanization
d. Planning

28. the transformation of an urban neighborhood into a haven for the well-to-do
a. Suburbanization
b. Gentriication
c. Disurbanization
d. Planning
29. refers to the overall popn loss in an urban area, shrink in terms of activity and actual form as
built-up areas breakdown
a. Suburbanization
b. Gentriication
c. Disurbanization
d. Planning

30. deliberate effort/activity to formulate/produce combination of


strategies,actions,programs,policies,and targets for the accomplishment of desired goals.
Objectives are for the betterment of existing conditions,maximization, and optimization.
a. Suburbanization
b. Gentriication
c. Disurbanization
d. Planning

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