Chapter 12 Population Growth and Urbanization - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Chapter 12 Population Growth and Urbanization

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Chapter 12 Population Growth and Urbanization Myth or Fact? The most important factor in controlling world population growth is technology, especially contraception. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 12 Population Growth and Urbanization


1
Chapter 12Population Growth and Urbanization
2
Myth or Fact?
  • The most important factor in controlling world
    population growth is technology, especially
    contraception.
  • U.S. cities are segregated because whites and
    non-whites dont want to live in the same
    neighborhoods.
  • The U.S. achieved zero population growth when the
    birthrate dropped below replacement rate in the
    1970s.
  • Suburban growth in the U.S. began because people
    wanted larger homes and more land.

Myth
Myth
3
Studying Population
  • Population
  • Total number of people inhabiting a particular
    geographic area at a specific time
  • Demography
  • Study of the size, composition and distribution
    of human populations
  • How these factors change over time

4
Elements of Demographic Change
  • Fertility
  • Actual number of children born
  • Crude birth ratethe number of live births a year
    per 1,000 in a population
  • Fecunditythe biological maximum number of
    children a woman could bear
  • Mortality
  • Number of deaths in a population
  • Crude death ratetotal number of deaths a year
    per 1,000 in a population
  • Infant mortalityrate of death among infants
    under 1 year
  • Life Expectancy
  • Average number of years people can expect to live
  • Rate of natural increase
  • The difference between crude birth and death
    rates
  • Migration
  • Permanent change of residence
  • Immigrationmovement into a country
  • Emigrationmovement out of a country

5
Global Fertility Rates
6
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7
Global Life Expectancy
8
Global Infant Mortality Rates
9
Global Migration
10
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11
World Population Growth
12
  • Doubling time
  • Years required for world population to double

13
Population Growth
14
Population Projections
15
Population Growth and Industrialization
16
U.S. Population Projections
17
World Population Trends
  • Demographic transition
  • Changing patterns of birth and death rates
    brought about by industrialization
  • Demographic gap
  • Gap between high birth rates and low death rates
  • Carrying capacity
  • The upper-size limit imposed on a population by
    its environmental resources
  • And that cannot be exceeded

18
Four Stages of Demographic Transition
Preindustrial Stage High Birth Rates and High
Death Rates
Early Industrial Stage High Birth Rates and
Declining Death Rates
Industrial Stage Declining Death Rates and
Declining Birth Rates
Postindustrial Stage Low Birth Rates and Low
Death Rates
19
Demographic Transition
20
NOVAWorld in the Balance The Population
Paradox
  • Video Presentation

21
Perspectives on Population Growth
  • Functionalism
  • Thomas Malthus Essay on the Principles of
    Population
  • Concern about population boom in Europe during
    Industrial Revolution
  • The Malthusian Theorem
  • Food production growth is additive
  • Population growth is exponential
  • The Malthusian Trap
  • Population growth as a social problem
  • Relationship between population growth and
    exhaustion of available resources

22
Perspectives on Population Growth
  • Conflict Theory
  • Population problems due to inequitable
    distribution of resources
  • Rather than lack of resources
  • Population as a social problem
  • When those in control artificially limit the
    available resources
  • In order to benefit one group or make a profit
  • Interactionism
  • Population a social problem
  • Focus on subjective experience of reality
  • Related to definitions about what is desirable or
    essential

23
Consequences of World Population Growth
24
Consequences of Population Growth
  • Crowding
  • Associated with other social problems
  • Poverty, violence, crime
  • Food shortages
  • Efforts focused on sea, farmland and yield
    increases
  • The Green Revolution
  • Biotechnology and modified species
  • Depletion of resources
  • Shortages of fossil fuels
  • Inter-group conflict
  • Competition for scarce resources
  • Space and food

25
Future Prospects Population Problems
  • Zero Population Growth
  • Nearly equal birth and death rates
  • Produce a zero rate of natural increase
  • Family Planning
  • Reproductive choices
  • Programs to change culture and values
  • Economic Development
  • In developing countries
  • Urbanization, education, rising standards of
    living
  • Incentives
  • Usually economic
  • Tax breaks, trust funds
  • Status of Women
  • Promote greater equality
  • Education, employment, political participation

26
The History of Cities
  • All humans organize lives into communities
  • Groups of people who share
  • A common territory
  • Sense of identity or belonging
  • Who interact with one another
  • Cities are
  • Relatively large, permanent communities
  • Reliant on surrounding agricultural communities
    for food supply
  • History of communities
  • Ancient small bands of hunter-gatherers
  • 8,000 BC larger villages with cultivation and
    domestication
  • 500 BC large cities

27
The Growth of Cities
  • Urbanization
  • Process whereby cities grow and societies become
    more urban
  • Industrialization (18th19th century)
  • Change in the U.S.
  • 1800 6 lived in cities
  • 2000 80 lived in cities
  • Suburbs
  • On the outskirts of cities
  • Less densely populated
  • Primarily residential
  • Suburbanization
  • Government policies (1930s)
  • Federal Housing Administration (FHA)
  • Veterans Administration (VA)
  • Economy and technology (1940s-50s)
  • Change in U.S.
  • 1970 75 of suburban residents both live and
    work in suburbs
  • 2000 60 of urban population lives in suburbs

28
Urban/Rural Makeup of U.S.
29
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30
How Urban Is Your State?
31
Urban Density in the U.S. (2006)
  • Population per square mile
  • U.S. average 79
  • Rural area average 15
  • Urban density
  • Minneapolis 1,800
  • Portland 3,000
  • Los Angeles 8,000
  • Philadelphia 10,000
  • Chicago 12,000
  • San Francisco 15,000
  • Isla Vista 18,000 (per ½ sq. mile)
  • New York City 27,000 (Manhattan 70,000)

32
Urban Density in the U.S.
33
Shrinking and Growing Cities
34
Global Cities 1,000,000 residents
35
Global Megacities 1975-2015
36
NOVAWorld in the Balance China Revs Up
  • Video Presentation

37
Problems in Cities in the U.S.
  • Economic Decline
  • Housing
  • Segregation
  • Crime
  • Educational Problems

38
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39
Problems in Cities in the U.S.
  • Economic Decline
  • Flight of people and jobs from cities
  • Financial collapse of cities in Northeast and
    Midwest
  • Housing
  • Deterioration and abandonment of neighborhoods
  • Inadequate affordable housing
  • Segregation
  • Ghetto
  • A neighborhood inhabited largely by members of a
    single ethnic or racial group
  • Exacerbates poverty, racial tensions
  • Crime
  • The larger the city, the higher the crime rate
  • More likely in inner-cities where poor and
    minorities live
  • Educational Problems
  • Poor communities cannot afford expenses

40
Urban Flight
41
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42
(No Transcript)
43
Perspectives on Urbanization
  • Functionalism
  • Urban conditions become social problems
  • When they become dysfunctional
  • When they lead to social disorganization
  • Conflict Theory
  • Urban conditions become social problems
  • Due to social inequality
  • Inner-city residents have little economic and
    political power
  • Interactionism
  • Urban conditions become social problems
  • When defined subjectively
  • Urban conditions worsened in 1980s-90s

44
Future Prospects Urban Problems
  • Federal Grants and Programs
  • Urban renewal and community block grants
  • Rebuild blighted areas
  • Provide low-cost housing
  • Stimulate private investment
  • Private Investment
  • Focus on making cities a better places to live
  • Enterprise zones
  • Community Development
  • Combines private and public resources
  • Involves community stakeholders in planning
  • Resettlement of Cities
  • Encouraging homeowners to move back to cities
  • Urban homesteading
  • Gentrification
  • Regional Planning and Cooperation
  • Many problems benefit from regional decision
    making
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