Title: New Society, 2e, Robert J. Brym, ed.
1Population
2SOME DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
- Identify one demographic trend that is likely to
affect you - at some point during your lifetime.
- Identify one demographic trend that has/will
affect - Canadian society.
3Population and Policy
- The main population phenomena are
- FERTILITY
- MIGRATION
- and MORTALITY.
4Processes and States
- DEMOGRAPHY studies the stock (or state) of
populations (their size, distribution and
composition) at a given time point and their flow
(or processes involving population change).
5The stock and flow of population are dynamically
interrelated. For example, P2P1B-DI-E,
where P2 is population at time 2, P1 is
population at time 1, B is births, D is deaths,
I is immigration and E is emigration.
6Malthus
- One of the two classical perspectives on
population processes is that of Malthus. - Positive checks on population.
- Preventative checks on population.
7Marx
- The second classical theory of population is
Marxs.
8Demographic Transition Theory
- An important modern demographic theory is the
THEORY OF THE DEMOGRAPHIC TRANSITION.
9Demographic Transition Theory
1
2
3
birth rate
death rate
growth
slow
fast
slow
stage
preindustrial
early industrial
mature industrial
Time
10World Population Growth
11World Population, 1750-2100 (in millions)
millions
Year
12World Population and Urban Growth, 1950-2020
2020
1950
2.5 billion
8.1 billion
13The Worlds Largest Cities, 1950 and 2000 (in
millions)
- 1950
- London 6.6
- New York 4.2
- Paris 3.3
- Berlin 2.4
- Chicago 1.7
- Vienna 1.6
- Tokyo 1.5
- St Ptrsbrg. 1.4
- Philadel. 1.4
- 2000
- Mexico C. 31.0
- Sao Paulo 25.8
- Tokyo 24.2
- New York 22.8
- Shanghai 22.7
- Beijing 19.9
- Los Ang. 17.1
- Bombay 16.8
- Calcutta 16.7
14Population Change in Canada Mortality
- Life Expectancy
- Infant Mortality
15Population Change in Canada Fertility I
- The baby boom of 1946-66 excepted, there has been
a long-term decline in the fertility rate, from 7
births per woman in the 1850s to under 2 in the
1980s. - COHORT COMPLETED FERTILITY
- TOTAL FERTILITY RATE
16Population Change in Canada Fertility II
- Immediate causes
- Economic causes
- Structural factors
- Cultural factors
17Population Change in Canada Immigration I
18Population Change in Canada Immigration II
19Population Growth, Canada by Province and
Territory, 1951-91 (in percent)
growth
Canada 201
20Immigration and Emigration, Canada, 1988-95 (in
000s)
000s
Year
21Some Key Demographic Formulae
- Birth rate births/1,000 population
- Death rate deaths/1,000 population
- Rate of natural increase (birth rate - death
rate)/10 - Net migration immigration - emigration
- Rate of net migration (net migration/1,000
population)/10 - Growth rate rate of natural increase rate of
net migration - expressed as percent per year