Answer: Formal regions are objectively defined areas with clear, measurable uniformity in one or more attributes (e.g., political boundaries, climate zones). Informal regions (vernacular/perceptual regions) are subjective areas defined by people’s perceptions and cultural identity, with fuzzy boundaries (e.g., “the South,” “downtown”).
Explanation:
Assuming by “informal region” you mean a vernacular/perceptual region.
- Formal region:
- Basis: measurable, shared traits (political, climatic, economic, linguistic).
- Boundaries: relatively clear and mappable (e.g., country borders, Köppen climate zones).
- Data: defined using statistics or legal definitions.
- Example: France (political), Sahara Desert (physical), Corn Belt (agricultural).
- Informal (vernacular/perceptual) region:
- Basis: people’s beliefs, cultural identity, or common usage.
- Boundaries: vague, changing, differ between people or groups.
- Data: qualitative—based on perception, language, or cultural markers.
- Example: “the Midwest,” “the Bible Belt,” “Chinatown.”
Key contrasts: objectivity vs subjectivity; fixed/mappable vs fuzzy; quantitative definition vs qualitative perception. Formal regions are useful for analysis and administration; informal regions help explain cultural identity and how people experience places.