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Human Population

This document provides an overview of key concepts related to human population, including: 1) It summarizes China's one-child policy, noting that it successfully slowed population growth but also led to unintended consequences like sex selection imbalance. 2) It describes current global population trends, noting that the world reached 7 billion people and population growth disproportionately impacts poorer developing nations. 3) It introduces concepts from demography like total fertility rate, life expectancy, and the demographic transition model which explains changing birth and death rates in industrializing societies.

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Amit Agrawal
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100% found this document useful (1 vote)
246 views

Human Population

This document provides an overview of key concepts related to human population, including: 1) It summarizes China's one-child policy, noting that it successfully slowed population growth but also led to unintended consequences like sex selection imbalance. 2) It describes current global population trends, noting that the world reached 7 billion people and population growth disproportionately impacts poorer developing nations. 3) It introduces concepts from demography like total fertility rate, life expectancy, and the demographic transition model which explains changing birth and death rates in industrializing societies.

Uploaded by

Amit Agrawal
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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HUMAN POPULATION

This lecture will help you understand:

 Human population growth


 Different viewpoints on this growth
 Population, affluence, and technology’s effects
 Demography
 Demographic transition
 Factors affecting population growth
 The HIV/AIDS epidemic
 Population and sustainable development
Central Case Study: China’s One-Child Policy

 In 1970, China’s 790 million people were exhausting


their resources and faced starvation if growth continued
 The government instituted a one-child policy
 The growth rate plummeted
 The policy is now less strict
 The successful program has had unintended
consequences
 Killing of female infants and an imbalance in male to
female ratios
 Increasing number of elderly and fewer young people in
the workforce
Our World at Seven Billion

 Populations continue to rise in most countries,


particularly in poverty-stricken developing nations
 Growth in poorer nations leads to stresses on
society, the environment, and people’s well-being
 China’s stringent policies have greatly slowed
growth there, but other countries may wish to slow
their growth without the measures used by China
 India’s growth continues and if not changed will
surpass China’s population
It would take 30 years, counting once each second, to count
to a billion! It would take 210 years to count to 7 billion!
The human population is growing rapidly

 Our population grows by over 70 million each year


 It took until 1800 to reach 1 billion
 In 1930 (130 years later) we reached 2 billion
 We added the most recent billion in 12 years
 Growth rates vary from country to country
 Some countries are over 3%, while other country’s
populations are shrinking
 The current world growth rate is 1.2%
 At this rate, the human population of the planet would
double in 58.3 years
Is population growth a problem?

 Better technology, sanitation, medication, and


increased food supply have increased growth
 Death rates drop, but not birth rates
 Infant mortality rate = the death rate in children; has
dropped dramatically
 Population growth was seen as good
 Support for elderly, a larger labor pool
 Thomas Malthus’s An Essay on the Principles of
Population (1798)
 Humans will outstrip food supplies
 War, disease, starvation reduce populations
Is population growth a problem?

 Neo-Malthusians: population growth will increase faster


than food production; cause famine and conflict
 Paul Ehrlich’s Population Bomb (1968) predicted that
civilization would end by the end of the 20th century
 Intensified food production fed more people
 Cornucopians argue that we will continue to find new
resources and technology to support people
 Environmental scientists argue that there are finite
resources
 Land is limited, extinct species are gone forever
 Quality of life will suffer with unchecked growth
 Less space, food, wealth per person
Some national governments now fear falling
populations
 Policymakers believe population growth increases
economic, political, and military strength
 But growth is correlated with poverty, not wealth
 Strong, rich nations have low growth rates
 Weak, poor nations have high growth rates
 Some nations offer incentives for more children
 Elderly need social services
 66% of European governments think their birth rate
is too low
 49% of non-European nations feel their birth rates are
too high
Population is one of several factors that affect
the environment
 The IPAT model: I = P × A × T × S
 Total impact (I) on the environment results from:
 Population (P) = individuals need space and
resources
 Affluence (A) = greater per capita resource use
 Technology (T) = increased exploitation of resources,
but also pollution controls and renewable energy
 Sensitivity (S) = how sensitive an area is to human
pressure (e.g., arid land vs. rainforest)
 Further model refinements include the effects of
education, laws, and ethics on the formula
Population is one of several factors that affect
the environment
 Impact equates to pollution or resource consumption
 Humans use 25% of Earth’s net primary production
 Technology has increased efficiency and reduced
our strain on resources, resulting in further
population growth
 For example, increased agricultural production
 Modern China’s increasing affluence is causing:
 Increased resource consumption
 Farmland erosion, depleted aquifers, urban pollution
Demography

 Demography = the application of population


ecology to the study of change in human populations
 All population principles apply to humans
 Environmental factors limit population growth
 There is a carrying capacity for all species, including
humans
 Humans raise the environment’s carrying capacity
through technology
 How many humans can the world sustain?
 1 billion to 33 billion: prosperity to abject poverty
 Population growth can’t continue forever
Demography is the study of human population

 Demographers study:
 Population size
 Density and distribution
 Age structure
 Sex ratio
 Birth, death, immigration, and emigration rates
 Population size
 Current world population is just over 7 billion
 Estimated to grow to over 9 billion by 2015
Population density and distribution

 Population size alone does not tell whole story


 People are not distributed equally over the planet
(clumped distribution)
 Highest density: temperate, subtropical, tropical
biomes and close to water
 Cities are local high-density areas
 Lowest density: away from water, extreme
environments
 Increased density impacts the environment
Age structure

 Age structure describes the relative numbers in each


age class within a population
 Age structure diagrams (population pyramids) show
age structure
 Wide base denotes many young
 High reproduction, rapid population growth
 Even age distribution: remains stable as births keep
pace with deaths
 Narrow base denotes fewer young than old
 Population will likely decline over time
Age structure

 Many populations are getting older


 Median global age today is 28, but it will be 38 by
2050
 The elderly will need care and financial assistance
 Taxes will increase for Social Security and Medicare
 But fewer dependent children may mean lower crime
rates, and the elderly can remain productive
Age structure

 China’s age structure is changing


 In 1970, the median age was 20; by 2050 it will be 45
 By 2050, over 300 million will be over 65
 Fewer people will be working to support social
programs to assist the elderly
Sex ratios

 Unequal sex ratios can impact population growth


 Human sex ratios at birth slightly favor males
 For every 100 females born, 106 males are born
 In China, 120 boys were reported for 100 girls
 Culture values males over females
 The government’s one-child policy
 Females have been selectively aborted
 The undesirable social consequences?
 Many single Chinese men
 Increased risk of HIV
 Teenage girls are kidnapped and sold as brides
Population change results from birth, death,
immigration, and emigration
 Whether a population grows, shrinks, or remains
stable depends on rates of birth, death, and
migration
 Birth and immigration add individuals
 Death and emigration remove individuals
 Technological advances caused decreased deaths
 The increased gap between birth and death rates
resulted in population expansion
Population change results from birth, death,
immigration, and emigration
 Immigration/emigration have become more
important
 War, civil strife, and environmental degradation cause
people to flee their homes
 Each year, 25 million refugees escape poor
environmental conditions
 This movement causes environmental problems
 No incentives to conserve resources
 Overall global growth rate has declined in recent
years
 But world population continues to grow
Total fertility rate influences population growth

 Total fertility rate (TFR) = the average number of


children born to each female
 Replacement fertility = the TFR that keeps the size
of a population stable (about 2.1)
 TFR has been decreasing in many nations due to:
 Industrialization
 Improved women’s rights
 Quality health care
 In Europe as a whole, TFR is now 1.6
 Natural rate of population change = change due
to birth and death rates alone (no migration)
Many nations are experiencing the
demographic transition
 In countries with good sanitation, health care, and
food, people live longer
 Life expectancy = average number of years that an
individual is likely to continue to live
 Has increased with reduced rates of infant mortality
 Demographic transition = a model of economic
and cultural change
 Explains the declining death and birth rates in
industrializing nations
 Populations undergo four stages
Many nations are experiencing the
demographic transition
 Pre-industrial stage = in pre-industrial societies,
both birth and death rates are high
 High birth rate to compensate for high infant mortality
 Population growth is slow
 Transitional stage = declining death rates due to
increased food production and medical care
 Birth rates remain high since people are not used to
the low infant mortality rates
 Population grows quickly
Many nations are experiencing the
demographic transition
 Industrial stage = birth rates fall as jobs provide
opportunities for women outside the home and
children are not needed in the workforce
 Difference between birth and death rates shrinks
 Population growth slows
 Post-industrial stage = birth and death rates are
low and stable
 Population stabilizes or even shrinks
Is the demographic transition a universal
process?
 It has occurred in Europe, the U.S., Canada, Japan,
and other nations over the past 200–300 years
 But it may or may not apply to developing nations
 The transition could fail in cultures that:
 Place greater value on childbirth
 Grant women fewer freedoms

For people to attain the material standard of living of


North Americans, we would need the natural
resources of four and a half more Earths
Population and Society

 Many factors affect fertility in a given society:


 Access to family planning
 Rates of infant mortality
 Levels of women’s rights
 Level of affluence
 Importance of child labor
 Government support for retirees
Family planning is a key approach for
controlling growth
 Family planning = efforts to control the number and
spacing of children; the greatest single factor
slowing population growth
 Clinics offer advice, information, and contraceptives
 Birth control = effort to control the number of
children born by reducing the frequency of
pregnancy
 Contraception = deliberate prevention of pregnancy
through a variety of methods
 Rates range from less than 10% (14 countries in
Africa) to 84% (China)
Family planning is a key approach for
controlling growth
 Low use of family planning may have different
causes
 Rural areas may have limited availability
 Religious doctrines or cultural influences may reject
family planning
 Family planning gives women control over their
reproductive window = time frame where a woman
can become pregnant
 Potential to produce 25 children during the window
 Family planning may delay first reproduction, space
births, or “close” the window when desired family size
is achieved
Family-planning programs are working around
the world
 Funding and policies that encourage family planning
lower population growth rates in all nations,
regardless of level of industrialization
 Thailand’s educational-based approach to family
planning reduced its growth rate from 2.3% to 0.5%
 Brazil, Mexico, Iran, Cuba, and other developing
countries have active programs
 These entail setting targets and providing incentives,
education, contraception, and reproductive health
care
Empowering women reduces fertility rates

 Where women are freer to decide whether and when


to have children, fertility rates fall, and children are
better cared for, healthier, and better educated.
 Fertility rates drop most noticeably when women
gain access to contraceptives and family-planning
programs
 As women receive educational opportunities, fertility
rates decline
 Two-thirds of the world’s illiterate are women
 Education leads to delayed childbirth as women
pursue careers
Increasing affluence lowers fertility

 Poorer societies have higher population growth rates


 Consistent with the demographic transition theory
 High fertility to ensure some children would survive
and be able to contribute to farm labor
 More affluent societies can provide:
 Better medical care, reducing infant mortality
 Education for children (removing them from the
workforce and making them an economic liability)
 Social security for the elderly
 Educational opportunities for women
Increasing affluence lowers fertility

 Poverty exacerbates population growth; population


growth exacerbates poverty
 In 1960, 70% of all people lived in developing
nations
 As of 2010, 82% live in these nations
 99% of the next billion will be born in these nations
 Population growth in poor nations increases
environmental degradation
 Farming degrades soil in arid areas (Africa, China)
 Poor people cut forests, deplete biodiversity, and hunt
endangered species (e.g., great apes)
Expanding wealth can increase the
environmental impact per person
 Affluent societies have enormous resource
consumption and waste production
 People use resources from other areas, as well as
from their own
 Ecological footprints are huge
 People in affluent societies have larger ecological
footprints
 One American has as much environmental impact as
3.8 Chinese or 8 Indians or 14 Afghans
 Not only is the world population increasing, but the
consumption per person is also rising
Expanding wealth can increase the
environmental impact per person
 Biocapacity = the amount of biologically productive
land and sea available to us
 Ecological deficit = ecological footprint > biocapacity
 Ecological reserve = ecological footprint < biocapacity
 We are running a global ecological deficit
 Humanity’s global ecological footprint exceeds
biocapacity by 50%
 The richest 20% of the world’s population uses 86%
of the world’s resources
Population goals support sustainable
development
 1994 UN conference on population and development
 Rejected top-down, command-and-control approaches
that pushed contraceptives and preset targets
 Urged education and health care
 Urged addressing social needs (like poverty, sexism)
from the bottom up
 To generate a high quality of life for all people,
developing nations must slow population growth
 Developed nations must reduce resource consumption
Conclusion

 The human population is larger than at any other time


 Rates are decreasing but populations are still rising
 Most developed nations have passed through the
demographic transition
 Expanding women’s rights slows population growth
 How will the population stop rising?
 The demographic transition, governmental
intervention, or disease and social conflict?
 Sustainability requires a stabilized population to avoid
destroying natural systems and leave a quality world

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