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Population, Urbanization, and the Environment

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Title: Population, Urbanization, and the Environment


1
Population, Urbanization, and the Environment
2
DemographyThe Study Of Human Population
  • From 250,000 years ago until just 250 years ago,
    the human population hovered around 500 million
  • About 1750 world population began to spike
  • The world population in 2005
  • 6.5 billion persons
  • We add about 74 million persons annually

3
Fertility
  • Fertility the incidence of childbearing in a
    societys population
  • Fecundity the potential for childbearing
  • Crude birth rate the number of live births in a
    given year for every thousand people in a
    population
  • Crude because it takes into account everybody,
    not just women of childbearing age

4
MortalityThe Incidence Of Death In A Population
  • Crude death rate
  • Number of deaths in a given year for every for
    every thousand people in a population
  • Infant mortality rates
  • Number of deaths among infants under one year for
    each 1,000 live births
  • Life expectancy
  • Average life span of a countries population (u.
    S. 2000 74.1 for males, 79.5 for females)

5
Migration Movement Of People In And Out Of A
Specified Territory
  • Voluntary migration due to economic push and
    pull factors
  • Involuntary migration forced migration due to
    war or other social conflict
  • Immigration movement into a territory
  • Emigration movement out of a territory
  • Rates
  • In-migration rate
  • The number entering for every 1,000 people
  • Out migration rate
  • Number leaving for every 1,000 people in the
    territory
  • Net-migration rate
  • Difference between in- and out-migration numbers

6
Population Growth
  • Fertility, morality, and migration all affect the
    size of the population
  • A handy rule of thumb for estimating population
    growth is to divide a societys population growth
    rate into the number 70

7
Population Composition
  • Sex ratio
  • Number of males compared to number of females
  • In the United States there were approximately 96
    males to 100 females because women usually
    outlive men in 2004
  • In India there were approximately 106 males for
    every 100 females because women were more likely
    to abort female fetuses and parent may provide
    less care for female children in 2004
  • Age-sex pyramid
  • A graphic representation of the age and sex of a
    population

8
Malthusian Theory Of Population Growth
  • Thomas Robert Malthus (1766-1834), warned of
    impending doom based on population projections
  • Population growth would approximate geometric
    progression (e.g., 2, 4, 8, 16) but food
    production would increase only in arithmetic
    progression (e.g., 2, 4, 6)
  • Result people reproducing at rates that
    exceeded their ability to produce sufficient food
  • Limits included artificial birth control (morally
    wrong) or abstinence (unlikely)
  • Seen as the dismal person because war and
    famine were our future

9
Demographic Transition Theory Population
Patterns Reflect A Societys Level Of
Technological Development
  • Stage one (preindustrial, agrarian)
  • High birth rates due to economic value of
    children and lack of birth control
  • Stage two (early industrial)
  • High birth rate and lowered death rate give boost
    to population growth (many of the developing
    nations today mirror this stage)
  • Stage three (mature industrial)
  • Birth rates begin to mask death rates as
    population surge drops as affluence transforms
    children into economic liability
  • Stage four (postindustrial)
  • Economic realities force drop in birth rates to
    the point where growth is stagnant or very slow

10
Critical evaluation
  • Malthusian Theory
  • Predictions flawed, European birth rate began
    dropping by 1850
  • Children becoming an economic liability rather
    than an asset
  • Use of artificial birth control
  • Ignored role of social inequality in world
    abundance and famine
  • Blames victims for their own problems
  • Demographic Transition Theory
  • Without a redistribution of global resources the
    planet will be divided into industrial haves
    and non-industrial have-nots

11
Global PopulationDepends Upon Which Side Of The
Equator One Is Discussing
  • The low-growth north
  • Zero population growth level of reproduction
    that maintains population at a steady state
  • Postindustrial societies
  • Have shown slow downs in birth rates
  • Under-population may be a problem
  • The high-growth south
  • Population growth is a critical problem in
    several poor countries
  • While birth rates have fallen (six to four
    children per woman), 180 nations are in trouble
    of overpopulation
  • In short,
  • For much of the world, mortality among children
    is dropping
  • Challenge is to control birth rates in poor
    countries as we did death in the past

12
Growth In U.S. Cities
  • Colonial settlement (1624-1800)
  • Capitalisms impact upon small villages ensured
    transformation
  • Urban expansion (1800-1860)
  • Towns springing up along transportation routes
  • The great metropolis (1860-1950)
  • Impact of civil war (factory growth) ushered in
    growth
  • One-fifth of the population lived in cities
  • Urban decentralization (1950- to present)
  • Desertion of downtown areas for outlying suburbs

13
Cities
  • Metropolis and centralization
  • A large city that dominates the area
  • The suburbs and decentralization
  • Urban areas beyond the political boundaries of a
    city
  • Urban renewal efforts have gone on in attempts to
    revitalize central cities
  • Megalopolis
  • A vast urban area containing a number of cities
    and their surrounding suburbs SUPERCITIES

14
Urban Life
  • Urban life can be challenging and very different
    from early rural settings
  • Ferdinand Tonnies
  • Gemeinschaft close ties through kinship and
    tradition
  • Gesellschaft social relations are based on
    individual self-interest
  • Emile Durkheim
  • Mechanical solidarity social bonds based on
    common feelings and moral bonds
  • Organic solidarity social bonds based on
    specialization and interdependence
  • Georg Simmel
  • The development of a blasé attitude A strategy
    for social survival
  • Robert Park and Louis Wirth
  • Urban organization based on distinctive ethnic
    communities, commercial centers, and industrial
    districts
  • A human kaleidoscope

15
Critical Analysis
  • Ferdinand Tonnies Louis Wirth saw the decline
    of personal ties and traditional morality
  • Emile Durkheim Robert Park emphasized
    urbanisms positive points like greater autonomy
    personal choice
  • Wirth and others tended to paint with broad
    strokes overlooking effects of class, race
    gender
  • Cities intensify social differences observed most
    clearly when categories of people form critical
    masses

16
Physical Design of Cities
  • Urban ecology the study of the link between the
    physical and social dimensions of cities
  • Park Burgess concentric zones
  • Business districts ringed by factories ringed by
    housing
  • Hoyts wedge-shaped sectors
  • Industry forms along rail lines, new fashionable
    areas next to old fashionable areas
  • Harris Ullmans multi-centered model
  • Cities decentralize form many smaller centers

17
Physical Design of Cities
  • Social area analysis what people have in common
  • Family patterns
  • Social class
  • Race ethnicity
  • Berry Rees analysis ties many of the previous
    theories together

18
Urban Political Economy
  • Applies Karl Marxs analysis of conflict in the
    workplace to conflict in the city.
  • City life is defined by people with power.
  • Capitalism wealth and power in a few hands.

19
Environment Society
  • Ecology the study of the interaction of living
    organisms and the natural environment
  • Natural environment the earths surface and
    atmosphere including living organisms, air,
    water, soil and other resources necessary to
    sustain life
  • Ecosystem a system composed of the interaction
    of all living organisms and their natural
    environment
  • Environmental deficit profound and long-term
    harm to the natural environment caused by
    humanitys focus on short-term material affluence

20
Theories of Growth
  • Logic of growth more powerful technology has
    improved our lives and new discoveries will make
    the future better
  • Critical analysis progress can lead to
    unexpected problems, resources are finite
  • Limits to growth humanity must implement
    policies to control growth of population,
    production and resource use to avoid
    environmental collapse (neo-Malthusians)
  • Critical analysis long-range predictions are
    speculative

21
Solid Waste The Disposable Society
  • We consume so many products and many products
    have throwaway packaging
  • Recycling reusing resources we would otherwise
    discard

22
Water and Air
  • Water Supply
  • Water Pollution
  • Air Pollution

23
Environmental Terms
  • Rain forest regions of dense forestation most
    of which circle the globe near the equator
  • Global warming a rise in the earths average
    temperature caused by an increasing concentration
    of carbon dioxide and other gasses in the
    atmosphere
  • Environmental racism the pattern by which
    environmental hazards are greatest for poor
    people, especially minorities
  • Ecologically sustainable culture a way of life
    that meets the needs of the current generation
    without threatening the environmental legacy of
    future generations
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