The book is the outcome of a unique venture: a team of Chinese geographers and a team of American geographers collaborated on a new Comparative Geography of China and the United States. The book meets a high demand for comparative information about China and the United States, as the home of the two leading economies in a globalizing world. Comparisons of the two countries include the similarities and differences in their physical environments and natural hazards, the growth and changing spatial distribution of population and ethnic groups in China and the U.S., traditions and contemporary regional expressions of agriculture and food production as well as the rapidly changing urban and industrial patterns in both countries. The book also highlights the two countries interconnectedness, in trade and in the exchange of cultural, social, scientific & technological information. The volume serves as a major resource in geographic education as it contributes to a better and more comprehensive understanding of the formation and development of the two countries basic geographical patterns and processes.
Editors.- Preface.- Acknowledgements.- Chapter 1: Introduction to a Comparative Geography of China and the U.S.; Rudi Hartmann and Jingai Wang.- Chapter 2: Physical Geography of China and the U.S.; Jingai Wang, Honglin Xiao, Rudi Hartmann and Yaojie Yue.- Chapter 3: Population/ Ethnic Geographies of China and the U.S.; Lucius Hallet IV, Jingai Wang and Rudi Hartmann.- Chapter 4: Agriculture and Food Production in China and the U.S.; Mark Leipnik, Yun Su, Robert Lane and Xinyue Ye.- Chapter 5: Economic Geography; Hongmian Gong and Huasheng Zhu.- Chapter 6: International Trade Issues and Status for China and the United States; Gregory Veeck and Yuejing Ge.- Chapter 7: Megaregions of China and the U.S.; Russell M. Smith, Yuejing Ge, Rudi Hartmann, Xiaoping Dong and Yang Cheng.- Chapter 8: Regional Urban Economic Clusters; Susan Walcott anl#i