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Human Populations

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Title: Human Populations


1
Human Populations
  • Chapter 4

2
Outline
  • Population Doubling Times
  • Malthus vs. Marx
  • Role of Technology
  • Two Demographic Worlds
  • Fertility and Birth Rates
  • Mortality and Death Rates
  • Population Growth Factors
  • Demographic Transition
  • Future of Population Growth

3
POPULATION GROWTH
  • For most of human history, humans have not been
    very numerous compared to other species.
  • It took all of human history to reach 1 billion.
  • 150 years to reach 3 billion.
  • 12 years to go from 5 to 6 billion.
  • Human population tripled during the twentieth
    century.

4
Table 4.1
5
Human Population History
6
Population Doubling Times
  • Rule of Thumb
  • In exponentially growing populations
  • 70 / annual growth Doubling Time
  • 70 / 2.0 35 years

7
LIMITS TO GROWTH
  • Thomas Malthus (1798) argued human populations
    tend to increase exponentially while food
    production is plentiful.
  • Humans inevitably outstrip food supply and
    eventually collapse.
  • Human population only stabilized by positive
    checks.
  • Humans are too lazy and immoral to voluntarily
    regulate birth rates.

8
Karl Marx
  • Population growth is a symptom rather than a root
    cause of poverty and other social problems.
  • Real causes of these problems are exploitation
    and oppression.
  • The way to slow population growth and alleviate
    many social problems is through social justice.

9
Malthus and Marx Today
  • Neo-Malthusians - Believe we are approaching, or
    have already surpassed, the earths carrying
    capacity.
  • We should make over-population issues our first
    priority.
  • Neo-Marxists - Believe eliminating oppression and
    poverty through social justice is the only
    solution to the population problem.
  • Wealth and resource distribution must be
    addressed.

10
The Role of Technology
  • Technological optimists argue that Malthus was
    wrong in his predictions because he failed to
    account for scientific progress.
  • Current burst of growth was stimulated by the
    scientific and industrial revolutions.

11
Can More People be Beneficial ?
  • More people mean larger markets, more workers,
    and increased efficiency due to mass productions.
  • Greater numbers also provide more intelligence
    and enterprise to overcome problems.
  • Human ingenuity and intelligence.

12
HUMAN DEMOGRAPHY
  • Demography - Encompasses vital statistics about
    people such as births, deaths, distribution, and
    population size.
  • October 12, 1999, UN officially declared the
    human population reached 6 billion.
  • Estimation at best.

13
Two Demographic Worlds
  • First is poor, young, and rapidly growing.
  • Less-developed countries.
  • Africa, Asia, Latin America
  • Contain 80 of world population, and will account
    for 90 of projected growth.
  • Second is wealthy, old, and mostly shrinking.
  • North America, Western Europe, Japan
  • Average age is about 40.
  • Populations expected to decline.

14
Estimated Human Population Growth
15
Table 4.2
16
Fertility and Birth Rates
  • Crude Birth Rate - Number of births in a year per
    thousand. (Not adjusted for population
    characteristics)
  • Total Fertility Rate - Number of children born to
    an average woman in a population during her
    reproductive life.
  • Zero Population Growth - Occurs when births plus
    immigration in a population just equal deaths
    plus emigration.

17
Fig. 4.5
18
Mortality and Death Rates
  • Crude Death Rate - Number of deaths per thousand
    persons in a given year.
  • Poor countries average about 20 while wealthier
    countries average about 10.
  • Some rapidly growing countries have very low
    crude death rates compared to slower growing
    countries, due to a higher proportion of young
    people in the population.

19
Life Span and Life Expectancy
  • Life Expectancy - Average age a newborn can
    expect to attain in any given society.
  • Worldwide, average has risen from 40 to 65.5 over
    the past century.
  • Greatest progress has been in developing
    countries.
  • Annual income and life expectancy are strongly
    correlated up to about 4,000.00 (U.S.).

20
Table 4.2
21
Life Expectancy
22
Demographic Implications of Living Longer
  • A population growing rapidly due to natural
    increase has more young people than a stationary
    population.
  • Natural Increase
  • (Crude Birth Rate - Crude Death Rate)
  • Both rapidly and slowly growing countries can
    have a problem with dependency ratio.
  • The number of non-working compared to working
    individuals in a population.

23
Age Structure Diagrams
24
Population Growth Opposing Factors
  • Pronatalist Pressures
  • Factors that increase the desire for children.
  • Source of pleasure, pride, comfort.
  • Source of support for elderly parents.
  • Current source of family income.
  • Social Status
  • Replace members in society as they die.
  • Boys frequently valued more than girls.

25
Birth Reduction Pressures
  • Higher education and personal freedom for women
    often result in decisions to limit childbearing.
  • When women have more opportunities to earn a
    salary, they are less likely to have children.
  • Education and socioeconomic status are usually
    inversely related to fertility in wealthier
    countries.

26
Birth Reduction Pressures
  • In developing countries, higher income often
    means families can afford more children, thus
    fertility often increases.
  • In less-developed countries, adding another child
    to a family usually does not cost much, while in
    developed countries, raising an additional child
    can carry significant costs.

27
United States Birth Rate
28
DEMOGRAPHIC TRANSITION
  • Model of falling death rates and birth rates due
    to improved living conditions accompanying
    economic development.
  • Pre-Developed Country - Poor conditions keep
    death rates high, thus birth rates are
    correspondingly high.
  • Economic Development brings better conditions and
    standard of living thus death rates fall. Birth
    rates stay constant or even rise.

29
Demographic Transition
  • Eventually, birth rates begin to fall.
  • Populations grow rapidly in time between death
    rates and birth rates fall.
  • Developed Countries - Transition is complete and
    both death and birth rates are low and population
    is in equilibrium.

30
Demographic Transition
31
Optimism or Pessimism
  • Some demographers believe the Demographic
    Transition is already taking place in developing
    countries, and world population should stabilize
    during the next century.
  • Others argue that many poorer countries are
    trapped in the middle phase of transition, and
    their populations are growing so rapidly that
    human demands exceed sustainable resource yields.

32
Social Justice
  • Still other demographers believe that in order
    for the Demographic Transition model to work,
    resources must be distributed more equitably.
  • The world has enough natural resources, but
    inequitable social and economic systems cause
    maldistribution.

33
FAMILY PLANNING
  • Family Planning allows couples to determine the
    number and spacing of their children.
  • Birth Control - Any method used to reduce births.
  • Traditional Methods
  • Long breast-feeding, taboos against intercourse
    while breast-feeding, celibacy, folk medicines,
    abortion, infanticide.

34
Birth Control
  • Current Methods
  • Avoidance of sex during fertile periods.
  • Mechanical barriers preventing contact between
    sperm and egg.
  • Surgical prevention of sperm or egg release.
  • Chemical prevention of sperm or egg maturation,
    release, or implantation.
  • Physical barriers to implantation.
  • Abortion

35
FUTURE OF HUMAN POPULATIONS
  • Most demographers believe the world population
    will stabilize sometime during the next century.
  • Projections of maximum population size
  • Low 8 billion
  • Medium 9.3 billion
  • High 13 billion

36
Summary
  • Population Doubling Times
  • Malthus vs. Marx
  • Role of Technology
  • Two Demographic Worlds
  • Fertility and Birth Rates
  • Mortality and Death Rates
  • Population Growth Factors
  • Demographic Transition
  • Future of Population Growth

37
Fig. 4.13
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