1 / 66

Chapter 13

Chapter 13. This lecture will help you understand:. Human population growth Demography Affluence, technology, the status of women, and the environment Population control programs Demographic transition theory Consumption and the ecological footprint HIV/AIDS and human population.

woody
Download Presentation

Chapter 13

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 13

  2. This lecture will help you understand: • Human population growth • Demography • Affluence, technology, the status of women, and the environment • Population control programs • Demographic transition theory • Consumption and the ecological footprint • HIV/AIDS and human population

  3. Central Case: China’s One-Child Policy • Unfettered population growth posed challenges for China’s environment, economy, and political stability. • China tried to control its growth with a system of rewards and punishments to encourage one-child families. • The program decreased populationgrowth, but meant government intrusion in private reproductive choices.

  4. “Baby Six Billion” • The world’s population now exceeds 6 billion people. • The UN marked this symbolically by declaring a child born in 1999 in war-torn Sarajevo as the six-billionth baby. Figure 7.1

  5. World population has risen sharply • Global human population was <1 billion in 1800. • Population has doubled just since 1963. • We add 2.5 people every second (79 million/year). Figure 7.2

  6. Population growth rates, 1990-1995 • Growth rates vary from place to place. • Growth peaked at 2.1% in the 1960s; it has now declined to 1.3%. Figure 7.3

  7. Some say NO: People can find or manufacture additional resources to keep pace with population growth. Nations become stronger as their populations grow. Some say YES: Not all resources can be replaced. Even if they could, quality of life suffers. Nations do not become stronger as their populations grow. Is population growth really a problem?

  8. Modeling population and its consequences • Some models show population growth leading to resource depletion, which can result in declining food production, industrial output, and population. Figure 7.4

  9. Increasing our carrying capacity • Technology has allowed us to raise Earth’s carrying capacity for our species time and again. • Tool-making, agriculture, and industrialization each enabled humans to sustain greater populations. Figure 7.5

  10. Demography • Demography is the study of human populations. • Human populations exhibit the same fundamental characteristics as do populations of all other organisms.

  11. Population size: National populations • Nations vary from China’s 1.3 billion down to Pacific island nations of 100,000. • Shown are the 15 most populous countries, and selected others; 2002 data. Figure 7.6

  12. Population size: Future projections • Demographers project population growth trends to estimate future population sizes. Different fertility rate scenarios predict global population sizes in 2050 of 7.4 billion, 8.9 billion, or 10.6 billion. • All these projections assume fertility rates below today’s; at today’s rate, the population would reach 12.8 billion. Figure 7.7

  13. Population density and distribution • Humans are unevenly distributed, living at different densities from region to region. Figure 7.8

  14. Age structure • Age structure can influence population growth rates. Figure 7.9

  15. Age structure: Age pyramids • Canada (left) has a much slower growing population than does Madagascar (right). Figure 7.10

  16. Age structure: “Graying populations” • Demographers project that China’s population will become older over the next two decades. Figure 7.11a,b

  17. Age structure: “Graying populations” • China’s aging population will mean fewer working-age citizens to finance social services for retirees. Figure 7.11c

  18. Age structure: “Baby booms” • The United States’ “baby boom” is evident in age bracket 40–50. U.S. age structure will change as baby boomers grow older. Figure 7.12

  19. Sex ratios • A population’s sex ratio can affect its growth rate. Figure 7.13

  20. Factors affecting population growth rates • Population growth depends on rates of birth, death, immigration, and emigration. • (birth rate + immigration rate) • – (death rate + emigration rate) • = population growth rate

  21. Migration can have environmental effects • Immigration and emigration play large roles today. • Refugees from the 1994 Rwandan genocide endured great hardship, and deforested large areas near refugee camps. Figure 7.14

  22. Natural rate of population change • Change due to birth and death rates alone, excluding migration • Is often expressed in % per year

  23. China’s natural rate of change has fallen • China’s rate has fallen with fertility rates. It now takes the population 4 times as long to double as it did 25 years ago.

  24. Global growth rates have fallen • The annual growth rate of the world population has declined since the 1960s. • (But the population size is still rising!) Figure 7.15

  25. Fertility rates affect population growth rates • Total fertility rate (TFR) = average number of children born per woman during her lifetime • Replacement fertility = the TFR that keeps population size stable • For humans, replacement fertility is about 2.1.

  26. Total fertility rates by region • African nations have the highest TFRs. • European nations have the lowest TFRs.

  27. Demographic transition theory • Demographic transition = model of economic and cultural change to explain declining death rates, declining birth rates, and rising life expectancies in Western nations as they became industrialized • Proposed by F. Notestein in the 1940s-1950s

  28. Demographic transition: Stages Figure 7.18

  29. Demographic transition: Stages • The demographic transition consists of several stages: • Pre-industrial stage: high death rates and high birth rates • Transitional stage: death rates fall due to rising food production and better medical care. Birth rates remain high, so population surges. • Industrial stage: birth rates fall, as women are employed and as children become less economically useful in an urban setting. Population growth rate declines. • Post-industrial stage: birth and death rates remain low and stable; society enjoys fruits of industrialization without threat of runaway population growth.

  30. Female education and TFR • Female literacy and school enrollment are correlated with total fertility rate: • More-educated women have fewer children. Figure 7.16

  31. Family planning and TFR • Family planning, health care, and reproductive education can lower TFRs. • A counselor advises African women on health care and reproductive rights. Figure 7.17b

  32. Family planning and TFR • Nations that invested in family planning (green) reduced TFRs more than similar nations that did not (red). Figure 7.17a

  33. TFR decline in Bangladesh • Bangladesh reduced TFR from 7.1 to 4.6 in 25 yr, and is at 3.3 today. • Family planning, education, and outreach were responsible. From The Science behind the Stories

  34. HIV/AIDS and human population • AIDS cases are increasing rapidly worldwide. Figure 7.26

  35. HIV/AIDS and human population • Infects 1 in 5 people in southern African nations • Infects 5 million new people each year • Kills babies born to infected mothers • Has orphaned 14 million children • Has cut 15 years off life expectancies in parts of southern Africa Figure 7.27

  36. Poorer countries will experience most future population growth • 98% of the next billion people born will live in developing nations. Figure 7.20

  37. Population and the environment • Population growth can lead to environmental degradation. • Overpopulation in Africa’s Sahel region has led to overgrazing of semi-arid lands. Figure 7.21

  38. Affluence and the environment • Poverty can lead to environmental degradation… • BUT • wealth and resource consumption can produce even more severe and far-reaching environmental impacts.

  39. The ecological footprint • The cumulative amount of Earth’s surface area required to provide the raw materials a person or a population consumes and to dispose of or recycle the waste that is produced

  40. Ecological footprints • Residents of some countries consume more resources—and thus use more land—than residents of others. • Shown are ecological footprints of an average citizen from various nations. Figure 7.23

  41. The wealth gap • Residents of developed nations have larger houses, more possessions, and more money than residents of developing nations. • The richest 20% of the world’s people consumes 86% of its resources, and has >80 times the income of the poorest 20%. Figure 7.25

  42. Demographic fatigue and demographic transition • Many governments of developing countries are experiencing “demographic fatigue,” unable to meet the social, economic, and environmental challenges imposed by rapid population growth. • This raises the question: • Will today’s developing countries successfully pass through the demographic transition?

  43. The “IPAT” model • Shows how Population, Affluence, and Technology interact to create Impact on our environment. • I = P  A  T • Further factors can be added to the original equation of Holdren and Ehrlich to make it more comprehensive.

  44. Conclusions: Challenges • Human population is rising by 79 million people annually. • Many more people are born into poverty than into wealth. • Rich and poor nations are divided by a “wealth gap.” • HIV/AIDS is taking a heavy toll. • Population growth has severe environmental effects.

  45. Conclusions: Solutions • Expanding women’s rights is crucial to encourage the demographic transition. • Health and reproductive education and counseling can reduce fertility rates. • Education, medicine, and policies can lessen the toll of HIV/AIDS. • New “green” technologies can help reduce population growth’s environmental impacts.

  46. Viewpoints: Population control? Douglas Sylva Timothy Cline “Governments do not have an interest in further reducing fertility. Nor should they have the authority to do so.” “Access to reproductive health care, including family planning, is a basic human right.” From Viewpoints

  47. What Must We Have??

  48. WATER

  49. Fig. 13-07b

More Related