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Population APHG
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Population Key Issues Where is the world’s population distributed?
Where has the world’s population increased? Why is population increasing at different rates in different countries? Why might the world face an overpopulation problem?
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Population Terms Demography - The scientific study of population characteristics. Example: Birth Rates, Death Rates, Growth in More Developed –v- Developing. Overpopulation- The number of people in an area exceeds the capacity of the environment to support life at a decent standard of living. Density - The frequency with which something exists within a given unit of area
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Distribution and Density
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The World and the Top 10 – 2011 & 2016 2011 2016 World 6,987, 000,000
China 1,346,000,000 India 1,241, 000,000 United States 312, 000,000 Indonesia 238, 000,000 Brazil 198, 000,000 Pakistan 177, 000,000 Nigeria 162, 000,000 Bangladesh 151, 000,000 Russia 143, 000,000 Japan 128, 000,000 2016 World 7,418, 000,000 China 1,378, 000,000 India 1,329, 000,000 United States 324, 000,000 Indonesia 259, 000,000 Brazil 206, 000,000 Pakistan 203, 000,000 Nigeria 187, 000,000 Bangladesh 163, 000,000 Russia 144, 000,000 Mexico 129, 000,000
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Population Growth Video
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Population Distribution –
Descriptions of locations on the Earth’s surface where individuals or groups (depending on the scale) live. Dot Map of World Population – On this map, one dot represents 100,000 people
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Cartogram Countries are displayed by size of population rather than land area. Countries named have at least 50 million people.
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World Population Clusters
Two-thirds of the world’s population are concentrated in four regions: 1. East Asia (East China, Japan, S. Korea, Taiwan) - 1/5 of world population here 2. South Asia (India, Pakistan, Bangladesh) - bound by the Himalayas and a desert in Pakistan 3. Southeast Asia (Indonesia, Vietnam, Philippines) 4. Europe - population is concentrated in cities
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East Asia
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South Asia
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Southeast Asia
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Europe
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North America
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Ecumene The portion of Earth's surface occupied by permanent human settlement. Increased over time ¾ of world population lives on only 5% of the Earth’s surface
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Population Distribution
Densely populated regions Low lands Fertile soil Temperate climate Sparsely Populated Regions dry lands wet lands high lands cold lands
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Population Why is population increasing at different rates in different countries? Arithmetic Density Physiological Density Agricultural Density
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Density Arithmetic Density:
The total number of people divided by the total land area. Examples: Juneau Alaska – largest city in the US – by land area (3,225 Sq. Miles – 32,660).
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Density Physiological Density: Example: Singapore 982,641.
The number of people per unit of area of arable land, which is land suitable for agriculture. Example: Singapore 982,641.
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Egypt’s population distribution is closely linked to the proximity of water. In the north, the population clusters along the Mediterranean and in the interior, along the banks of the Nile River. (2004)
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Density Agricultural Density:
The ratio of the number of farmers to the total amount of land suitable for agriculture. US –v- India
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Demographic Transition Why is population increasing at different rates in different countries?
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Stages in Classic 4-Stage Demographic Transition Model (DTM)
(Some books show a 3-stage model; others mention a new 5th stage)
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Stage 1: “Pre-Industrial”
High birth rates and high death rates (both about 40) Population growth very slow Agrarian (Agricultural) society High rates of communicable diseases Pop. increases in good growing years; declines in bad years (famine, diseases) No country or world region still in Stage One
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Stage 2: “Early Industrial”
High birth rates (over 30) but death rates decline (to about 20) Huge population growth. RNIs increase sharply (pop. explosion); growth rate increases throughout Stage Two Growth not from increase in births, but from decline in deaths MDCs = starts early 1800s LDCs = starts after 1950s
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Stage 3: “Later Industrial”
Birth rates decline sharply (to about 15) Death rates decline a bit more (to about 10 or less) Note growth still occurs, but at a reduced and declining rate MDCs = starts in late 1800s LDCs = starts after 1980s* * Or hasn’t started yet
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Stage 4: “Post-Industrial”
Birth rates and death rates both low (about 10) Population growth very low or zero MDCs = starts after 1970s LDCs = hasn’t started yet Stage 5 (?): Hypothesized (not in Classic DTM) Much of Europe now or soon in population decline as birth rates drop far below replacement level
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Demographic Transition Model
Draw it! Stages: 1-5 and growth / CBR / CDR / NIR / Total Population Label the following countries: Afghanistan Germany Zambia Jordan Ukraine Uruguay Canada Mexico Hungary (Is that a country?) Iraq
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Population Pyramids Video
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Dependency Ratio Number of Working-age (16-64) Dependency ratio X 100
The number of people under the age of 15 and over age 64, compared to the number of people active in the labor force. 0-15 = Dependents 16-64 = Workers 65+ = Dependents DR = Number of Dependents (0-15 and 65+) Number of Working-age (16-64) Example: Too many old people (Eastern Europe) or too many young people (Sub-Saharan Africa) can cause problems. X 100
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Population Pyramids A country’s stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure Also called Age-Sex Pyramids
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Rapid Growth
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Slow Growth
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No Growth End of stage 4 Large number of “older people”
Very small % of young people
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What stage goes with each pyramid?
Developing Relatively Developed Developed (poor) (rich) What stage goes with each pyramid?
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National Scale
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Population Pyramids Video
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Population Pyramids Baby Boom
A cohort of individuals born in the United States between 1946 and 1964, which was just after World War II in a time of relative peace and prosperity. Echo Boom The generation born after the baby boomers; the "echo" of a generation boom (1980s-1990s)
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Demographic Momentum Demographic Momentum
Tendency for growing population to continue growing after a fertility decline bc of their young age distribution. This is important because once this happens a country moves to a different stage in the demographic transition model.
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Why might the world face an overpopulation problem? Population Control
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A Population Bomb? Thomas Malthus (1766-1834, England)
Population growing exponentially and resources growing linearly.
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A Population Bomb? Esther Boserup (1910 - 1999)
Population growth compels subsistence farmers to consider new farming approaches that produce enough food to take care of the additional people.
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Five stage Model
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Epidemiological Transition Model
Distinctive causes of death in each stage of the demographic transition.
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Epidemics: Infectious and parasitic diseases, famine Ex: Black Plague
Stage 1: Epidemics: Infectious and parasitic diseases, famine Ex: Black Plague
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Stage 2: Receding Pandemics Ex: Cholera, Smallpox
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Degenerative and human-created disease
Stage 3: Degenerative and human-created disease Ex: Cardiovascular disease and Cancer
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Delayed degenerative diseases Ex: Alzheimer's, Diabetes
Stage 4: Delayed degenerative diseases Ex: Alzheimer's, Diabetes
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Epidemiological Transition Model
Stage 5? Re-emerging infectious and parasitic disease Ex: Malaria, TB, Swine Flu, AIDS, Ebola, Zeka
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Slowing Growth How to change the J-Curve into an S-Curve:
Educate Women Reduce Child Mortality Anti-Natalism Eugenics not an option Eugenics - the science of improving a human population by controlled breeding to increase the occurrence of desirable heritable characteristics. Example – Nazi Germany
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Anti-Natalist Policies
Anti-Natalism An attitude that asserts a negative value towards birth in order to limit population growth. Example Cold War communism in Eastern Europe China Population Pyramid Video Video 2
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Pro-Natalist –v- Anti-Natalist Policies
Pro-Natalism An attitude that encourages childbearing. Example: Japan, France and present day Russia Japan Video
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